
The local officials sought help from the district office of the Washington Department of Transportation. District Administrator Leon Winger reported that Oregon officials agreed to ease the paperwork requirements, but the fee is required by statute to finance schools and couldn’t be waived. Oregon officials have agreed to hold further talks on sharing costs.
Ringen presented a draft letter which, after discussion, the commissioners agreed to send the letter, under the signature of Trott, the board chair, to the Oregon Department of Lands expressing dissatisfaction with the situation. Points included:
—"Of course the $750 in fees is not a huge sum, but it is hard to explain the necessity of this fee to those county employees the Wahkiakum County Commissioners have laid off since the first of the year due to our failing county revenues and increasing costs of government. Are you for us or against us?”
—Following the Clatskanie slide, Oregon Department of Transportation asked Wahkiakum County to run the ferry as a detour. “ODOT has reimbursed us for our extraordinary costs associated with that effort,” the letter said, “however, I bring this up to point out the importance of this interstate link to the lower Columbia River communities. Why doesn’t the State of Oregon contribute to the regular cost of operation of the interstate ferry instead of charging us a fee for providing a needed transportation service?”
—"If the State of Oregon continues to insist passing their cost of government on to this small struggling county, I see little choice except to recommend to the county commissioners that a surcharge be placed on all vehicles with Oregon license plates which wish to use the ferry Wahkiakum. In my opinion, it is a sad state of affairs when one of the states in the United States preys upon a small local government agency in a bordering state to line its coffers.”