Senate approves stalking legislation ■ NORTHWEST SALEM (Al’) — Oragon would l» one of (he majority of state* that have out lawnd ''stalking" undttr a hill approved unanimously Wednesday by a Senate panel. l he measure endorsed by the Senate judiciary Committee. SH now goes to the full Senate and appear* to have little or no opposition. The measure is the result of a number of cases in which vic tims. usually women, have been regularly followed or contact ed by people showing obsessive behavior toward them. The bill says stalking would be defined as repeated and unwanted contact with someone "without legitimate purpose" that causes the victim to be apprehensive about his or her safe ly The hill is supported by the American Civil Liber ties Union, associations of district attorneys and defense lawyers and the stato Commission for Women. About two dozen states have passed anti-stalking laws The bill allows n police officer to issue a protec ‘Stalking la Ilka pornography. It '* hard to define, but we know It when we see it/ — Fred Avera. Polk County district attorney tivn order on the spot directing someone suspected of stalking to stop The order would he reviewed within three business days by a court, which could extend the ban by issuing an order of its own. Stalking would he a misdemeanor with maximum penalties of one year in jail anil a $2,500 fine under the hill The samo penalties would apply to violating protective orders. A second conviction of any of those offenses would be a felony carrying up to five years in prison and a $100,000 fine. David Fidanque. executive director of the ACLU of Oregon, said the measure fits the organization's goal that the kind of activity that amounts to stalking is more narrowly worded than the conduct needed to obtain a protective order This focuses the law on the effects of the conduct rather than on the behav ior itself, he said. Fidanque said it would be easier to prove intent in a case in which someone had violated a protective order than when no order had been issued Folk County District Attorney Fred Avera. representing the district attorneys association, said stalking is the kind of behav ior for which it is difficult to draft a criminal law. "Stalking is like pornography." Avera told the committee. “It's hard to define, but wo know it when we see it." The measure also authorizes victims to file civil lawsuits seeking protective orders and monetary damages against stalk ers. Legislators fight over parking WASHINGTON (AP) — Like two drivers ready to (.orne to blows over a parkin# space at a jammed shopping renter. Sen John Mcflain and Rep. Peter DeFaxio are mixing it up over free airport parking for Congress. McCain. R Aril. said Wednesday that DeFaxios defense of the reserved, preferential spaces closest to the terminals here has inspired McCain to redouble his efforts to eliminate "separate hut unequal treatment” of government officials "In contrast to you. apparently. 1 think it is desirable that the various special privileges and perquisites offered to members of Congress have come under intense scrutiny from the public and the media." McCain wrote in a pointed letter to DeFaxio. "U the benefits we receive cannot withstand the light of public debate, they deserve to be modified or eliminated." DeFaxio. D-Ore . said McCain has set his sights on an "imaginary perk" to try to deflect attention from last year's ethics probe into the senator’s involvement in the savings and loan scandal. "Here is a gentleman who has been up to his neck in savings and loan problems that cost Amer ican taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars. Now he is leading the fight against the egregious offense of congressional parking." DeFaxio said in an interview. McCain was not immediately available for a response Wednesday, hut his spokesman returned fire at DeFaxio. Press secretary Scott Galley, who hails from Can* by. Ore., said DeFaxio "has placed himself in that rare status along with the spotted owl and Fidel (iastro by his impassioned defense of the royal and pam[Hired treatment of which a shrinking num ber of members of Congress think they deserve at the expense of the working people of this coun try." DeFazio. who makes at bast 25 round trips from Washington to Oregon annually, said his free park ing spot is cheaper to the government than getting a travel reimbursement for a $40 cab trip to the air port or forcing a staff member to drive him. The controversy began in March when Rep. Dan Glickman. D-kan . urged his colleagues to end the preferential parking for members of Congress, diplomats and Supreme Court justices at Wash ington National and Dulles airports. DeFazio responded with a memo that said the limited flight schedule forces him to compress meetings and occasionally miss votes on the House floor. "I suppose there are other options. I could trav el home less like many senior members and lose touch with my district." he said. DeFazio dosed the memo with pointed sarcasm, saying. "Yep. it's a real abuse, a real perk, it's what's really wrong with Congress... "Try a real reform or give track $30,000+ of your pay like I do if you want to make a statement." he said. The $30,000 was a reference to the money DeFazio and other members return to the Treasury each year from a congressional pay increase they opposed two years ago. DeFazio followed up with a letter to McCain on April 22. "I urge you to set an example, drive yourself to Dulles Airport, park in remote parking, pay for your own parking, don’t take travel reimburse ment. eschew the pay raise like I did. In short, get real." McCain said he has not accepted the pay raise. He said he has been traveling to Arizona on a weekly basis for 10 years and has used the free parking, but wants to end the practice now. Oregon breaks records with wet April PORTLAND (AP) — If you I hough t it was exceptionally wet in April, even for Oregon, you're right. In downtown Portland and at Portland International Airport, it was the wettest April on record. Downtown, where records have been kept since the 1870s. 7 ‘16 inches of rainfall broke the April record of 7.88 inches set in 1883. At the airport, where the National Weather Service has had its official reporting station since 1940, 5.26 inches of rain fell, easily breaking the old record of 4.72 inches set in 1955. Above normal rainfall was reported at locations across Ore gon In Eugene, 7.85 inches fell, 4.74 inches above normal. Salem had its fourth-wettest April on record with 5.64 inch es. Normal April rainfall in Salem is 2 42 inches. Other rainfall totals included: Pendleton — 1.85 inches. .81 inches above normal: Klamath Falls — 1.58 inches, .89 inches above normal; Medford — 1.83 inches, .67 inches above normal: and Astoria — 8.95 inches, 4.35 inches above normal. The weather service says the 90-day outlook colls for above normal rainfall In Western Ore gon and near-normal rainfall in Eastern Oregon. The drenched April still left the Portland airport 3.46 inches below normal for the water year, which runs from Oct. 1 to Sept. 1. MOVIE RENTALS FREE MEMBERSHIP! 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