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The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

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176 sLAde goRton: A hALf centuRy in poLitics<br />

erated a l<strong>and</strong>slide <strong>of</strong> votes in the House to scrap the 747 amendment.<br />

“When they went to conference, we had no chance,” Gorton says. Weinberger<br />

did agree to buy <strong>and</strong> test three used 747’s, a puny consolation prize<br />

but better than nothing. 10<br />

the Mount st. heLens National Volcanic Monument established by Congress<br />

in 1982 was a bipartisan victory for the <strong>Washington</strong> delegation, including<br />

Gorton, Jackson <strong>and</strong> Congressman Don Bonker, the ambitious<br />

Democrat from Vancouver who represented the area around the volcano.<br />

Underwhelmed by the Forest Service response, Bonker <strong>and</strong> his staff developed<br />

the preservation legislation. Environmentalists pushed to have<br />

the area declared a National Park, which would have been more restrictive<br />

than the deft compromise Reagan signed into law.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Forest Service now manages 110,000 acres for research <strong>and</strong> recreation,<br />

while Weyerhaeuser retained some 45,000 acres within the blast<br />

zone, trading the rest <strong>of</strong> its holdings to the Forest Service for other l<strong>and</strong>.<br />

Company foresters nurtured 18 million Douglas fir seedlings on an ashcovered<br />

wastel<strong>and</strong> that once looked as it might never produce another<br />

tree. Inside the national monument, logging is prohibited. Dr. Jerry<br />

Franklin <strong>and</strong> other Northwest forest ecologists have learned important<br />

lessons from one <strong>of</strong> the world’s most unique biological laboratories. Nature<br />

proved to be remarkably resilient—more so by far than Uncle Sam.<br />

Chronic budget shortfalls have compromised Forest Service maintenance<br />

<strong>of</strong> the visitors’ centers, roads <strong>and</strong> trails. <strong>The</strong> debate over access <strong>and</strong> development<br />

is ongoing. 11<br />

the seAttLe schooL BoARd’s hotly debated program to achieve desegregation<br />

by busing children out <strong>of</strong> their neighborhoods generated a statewide<br />

ballot measure that found 66 percent <strong>of</strong> the voters opposed. In 1982,<br />

as Ken Eikenberry, Gorton’s successor as attorney general, was prepping<br />

to defend the initiative’s constitutionality, Gorton introduced legislation<br />

that would have prohibited any arm <strong>of</strong> government—including the U.S.<br />

Supreme Court—from using busing to promote integration <strong>of</strong> public<br />

schools. Even the adamantly anti-busing Jesse Helms <strong>of</strong> North Carolina<br />

voted no, worried that Gorton’s plan would be too vulnerable to a court<br />

challenge. It was defeated, 49-42. Flayed by liberals, Gorton made no<br />

apologies. “I felt then <strong>and</strong> feel today that assignments by race for whatever<br />

reason are blatant violations <strong>of</strong> the plain language <strong>of</strong> the 14 th Amendment,”<br />

he said three decades later.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Supreme Court narrowly disagreed, ruling that the initiative, not

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