June 23, 2017 CapitalPress.com 3 Ranchers fume as ‘Rainbow Family’ sets up camp By ERIC MORTENSON Capital Press Rainbow gathering The annual Rainbow Family gathering, which could attract 10,000- 30,000 people, is taking place in Flagtail Meadow on the Malheur National Forest off of Forest Road 24 west of Seneca. Mt. Vernon Area in detail y River John Da John Day 26 26 Canyon City STRAWB ERRY MALHEUR NATIONAL FOREST 49 Forest R oad 21 For e MALHEUR NATIONAL FOREST a ulin Pa - e Ize d 2 t Roa 4 res Fo MO UN TA INS 395 st The U.S. Forest Service acknowledged there isn’t much it can do about a “Rain- bow Family” gathering ex- pected to bring thousands of counter-culture types to the Malheur National Forest in Eastern Oregon over the next two weeks. The organizers don’t have a permit, and the Forest Ser- vice’s response to that has angered area residents such as rancher Loren Stout, who lives near the gathering spot and has a federal grazing per- mit on land adjacent to it. He said the Forest Service would punish ranchers if they ignored permit requirements and tapped a spring for drink- ing water like the Rainbow Family has done. Stout said it took him two years to get a National Environmental Poli- cy Act permit to drill an ex- ploratory mining hole. “People are furious over this,” Stout said. “Not because it’s a friggin’ bunch of hippies, it’s the different standards.” An estimated 500 to 700 people have already set up camp at Flagtail Meadow off Forest Road 24, near the towns of Seneca and John Day. The 46th annual Nation- al Rainbow Gathering could draw 15,000 to 20,000 July 1-7, and is being held without a permit required of anyone else who would want to stage such an event on federal for- est land. Ryan Nehl, deputy For- est Service supervisor on the Malheur and the agency administrator for the event, planned to take a permit form to organizers at the gathering spot June 21. “I don’t have a lot of faith they will sign it,” Nehl said. In that case, the Forest Service will impose an operational plan for the gathering to fol- low, and could take action if those conditions are violated. But Nehl said the Forest Service will not attempt to stop the gathering. “It’s a risk-based deci- sion,” he said. “To try and kick them off the land would present a danger to employees R oad 15 395 63 Approximate site of Rainbow Family gathering s F or e Seneca Source: U.S. Forest Service and the public.” The event is put on by the Rainbow Family of Living Light, a loosely organized group that annually picks a spot for its gathering and in- t Ro ad 16 N 2 miles Alan Kenaga/Capital Press vites like-minded people to attend for multiple days of music, camping, dancing and communal hanging out. The gatherings have been held since the 1970s. On a Facebook page set up for this year’s event https://www.facebook.com/ groups/246284825703234/, one person posted, “If we were in control we would all have free energy, everyone would be housed and fed and we’d be having song circles every day.” “What is the pants policy at this event?” another poster asked. He was assured that nudity should be expected. In other postings, people urged fellow “family” mem- bers not to upset locals by panhandling or “gas jugging,” meaning to beg for gaso- line. Others caution against “spanging,” a slang reference to asking for spare change. A stabbing among Rainbow members during a meeting in the Umatilla National Forest earlier in June has area resi- dents worried about what the larger gathering will bring. A community meeting was scheduled June 23, in John Day to let residents ask ques- tions of Forest Service and law enforcement personnel. The meeting is from 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. in the Juniper Hall Conference Room of the Malheur National Forest Headquarters, 431 Patterson Bridge Road. The Forest Service mobi- lized an incident command team that includes 30 agency law enforcement offi cers from around the country, and has marked areas such as creeks that campers should stay out of. Oregon State Police, BLM offi cers, Grant County sher- iff’s deputies and John Day police are available to help the incident team, Nehl said. Meanwhile, rancher Stout said the Forest Service is “try- ing to put grazers out of busi- ness” but lets the Rainbow bunch do what they want. He said the gathering spot is a major Native American ar- chaeological site and the area has eight springs that could be damaged. He said the “takeover of federal ground” is no different than the Bundy group’s occu- pation of the Malheur Nation- al Wildlife Refuge headquar- ters. “I hate to say that,” Stout said. Cascade-Siskiyou litigation halted during Trump review By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Oregon wineries, food processors oppose proposed work week limit By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press SALEM — Oregon’s food processors and wineries are alarmed by a bill to reduce the maximum number of hours that manufacturing employees can work per week. The proposal originated as an attempt to clarify how to calculate overtime paid to Or- egon’s manufacturing work- ers, which had recently been in dispute. However, the most recent version of the bill being con- sidered by Oregon lawmakers would limit the maximum work week to 72 hours for manufacturing jobs, which food processors and wineries argue will impair their ability to handle the infl ux of crops during seasonal peaks. Work weeks are currently limited to 91 hours. Paying overtime is ex- pensive, so food processors would prefer to have enough workers as to avoid lengthy work weeks, said J.L. Wilson, a representative of the North- west Food Processors Associ- ation. However, such companies are often located where crops are grown, not where there’s an abundance of people, so they don’t have a suffi cient labor pool from which to pull, he said. As a result, these proces- sors must rely on existing employees working longer during periods of peak pro- duction, Wilson said during a June 20 hearing on House Bill 3458. “This is going to funda- mentally disadvantage rural Oregon,” he said of the pro- posed limit. “They wouldn’t do it if they didn’t have to, in many instances.” Similarly, harvest irregu- larities can force growers to suddenly provide wineries with larger amounts of grapes than expected, resulting in un- predictably heavy work loads, said Ellen Brittan of Brittan Vineyards in McMinnville, Ore. Wineries have little choice but to extend work hours to prevent the fruit from rotting, she said. “You just have to deal with it.” Some workers at Brittan Vineyards have logged as many as 86 hours per week, but they do so willingly to maximize overtime pay, she said. “They want to be sure they can make a signifi cant amount of money during this short window of opportunity,” Brittan said. “We have people fi ghting for those overtime hours.” Not all Oregon employers are upset about the most re- cent version of HB 3458 be- fore lawmakers. Associated Oregon Indus- tries, a nonprofi t represent- ing businesses, believes the 72-hour work week will be challenging but is acceptable as long as overtime rules are clarifi ed. Last year, the state’s Bu- reau of Labor and Industries changed its guidance for man- ufacturing employers, fi nding that workers must be paid for both daily and weekly over- time hours combined. Tradi- tionally, they simply had to pay whichever amount was greater. For example, someone who worked 11 hours for two days and eight hours for three days spent a total of 46 hours at work that week, earning six hours of weekly overtime pay. Since the person also ex- ceeded the 10-hour daily cap twice, that counted toward two daily overtime hours. Employers would usually just pay the worker for six hours of weekly overtime, but under BOLI’s new guidance, they must combine the daily and weekly overtime hours to pay for eight hours of total overtime. A bill originally proposed in the Senate amended the law to allow employers to return to the traditional overtime ap- proach, but groups represent- ing workers objected to the change. As a result, the proposal resurfaced in the House as HB 3458 with the addition of a work week limit of 60 hours. Under an amendment to the bill currently before the House Rules Committee, that limit was revised to 72 hours per week for 90 days under hardship circumstances. Marke Clarke in Medford, Ore., and Senior U.S. District Judge Richard Leon have granted the federal government’s motions to suspend litigation in all three cases until Sept. 24, a month af- ter Zinke’s report is due. While the lawsuits largely center on the expansion’s effect on logging, the national monu- ment’s larger boundaries have also upset ranchers who graze cattle in the area. According to the plaintiffs, restrictions on logging in the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument are unlawful be- cause much of the new acreage is governed by the O&C Act of 1937, which requires sustain- able production. Apart from the loss of har- vestable forestland, timber companies worry the expan- sion will draw more complaints about logging on private prop- erty adjacent to the monument or surrounded by it. Counties that receive a por- tion of logging proceeds, mean- while, are concerned about re- duced revenues. While grazing would be al- lowed within the monument, ranchers worry the designation will effectively curtail the practice due to skewed envi- ronmental studies. CONGRATULATIONS F. Gilberston OF CRESWELL You’ve won a $200 VISA gift card by sharing your opinion about Capital Press and CapitalPress.com in our recent market survey. Thank you to everyone who participated in the survey. Your input will help us bring you an even better newspaper and website. To subscribe, call 800-882-6789 or visit CapitalPress.com SEVENTEENTH ANNUAL NOVEMBER 14, 15 and 16, 2017 20,000 Sq. Ft. 25-2/#5 Companies claim 72-hour limit would hinder processing during seasonal peak periods Courtesy of Bob Wick/BLM A view of Mt. Shasta from the Cascade-Sisyiyou National Monu- ment near Ashland, Ore. Three lawsuits challenging expansion of the monument have been put on hold pending a review by Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke. 25-4/#13 Eric Mortenson/Capital Press Workers at A to Z Wineworks in Newberg, Ore., sort grapes during the 2014 harvest in this fi le photo. Oregon’s wineries and food processors oppose a bill that would limit work weeks to 72 hours, arguing it would hinder periods of peak production. Litigation has been halted in three lawsuits over Oregon’s Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument while its expansion is reviewed by the Trump ad- ministration. Timber companies and county governments have fi led one lawsuit in Oregon and two others in Washington, D.C., challenging the Obama admin- istration’s decision to nearly double the monument’s size from roughly 53,000 acres to 100,000 acres. Under the Trump admin- istration, that designation and numerous others are being re-evaluated by U.S. Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke, who’s expected to submit a report on the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument by Aug. 24. Due to the possibility the “designation could ultimately be changed in ways that would affect this litigation,” attorneys for the Interior Department be- lieve that “deferral of further ju- dicial proceedings is thus war- ranted,” according to a court document. U.S. Magistrate Judge