An editorial from the fine folks at the Democrat Herald out of Albany:
The Archives Division of the Secretary of State has done a great job with the online version of the latest Oregon Blue Book.
The printed edition may be quicker to use in some cases, especially if you know where to look. But it’s not out yet, and the online edition is more extensive.
For one thing, it includes an explanation of the state budget that is both lucid and brief, a huge achievement. That description also reminds people of the unvarnished truth, namely that the overall budget approved for 2009-11 was 25 percent higher than the previous one, swelled largely by the infusion of federal stimulus grants. That postponed some of the economies that are all the more painful now.
The online Blue Book has extensive sections on counties including long lists of places that have public records. The one for Linn County for some reason includes the Corvallis School District but no Linn County districts. If that’s an oversight, it should be easy to fix because after all, this is only a virtual book.
The most entertaining part of the online version has to be the picture display related to Oregon’s efforts to allow women to vote. There are news photos, cartoons and campaign posters and cards — all amusing or instructive or both.
It’s nice to be reminded that contrary to Oregon’s conceit in several other areas, our state was far from the first to adopt the women’s vote.
Idaho was first in 1896, Washington followed in 1910, and even California beat Oregon on this progressive issue by granting women the vote in 1911. Oregon men didn’t get around to it until 1912, and not by much. They passed an initiative for women’s suffrage by 61,265 yes to 57,104 no.
That vote total is the kind if information you can dig up in a matter of seconds if you have a printed copy of an old Blue Book in your bottom desk drawer, ready to be deployed at a moment’s notice.
Online, you have to click various places and wait each time. You get there too, but it takes awhile. Which is why people who rely on the book a lot are eagerly awaiting the printed version, which is coming out next month. (hh)







Recent User Comments