WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2021 | SILVERTONAPPEAL.COM PART OF THE USA TODAY NETWORK Allowing marijuana businesses a sticky proposition Bill Poehler Salem Statesman Journal USA TODAY NETWORK Thorin Thacker said he didn’t intend to get into the marijuana retail business. He was the mayor of Mill City in 2016 when voters in cities were allowed to choose whether they would allow mari- juana businesses after the substance was legalized for recreational use in Oregon. Mill City voters chose 53% to 46% to not allow such businesses. In the same election, voters in neighboring Gates voted to allow them. After leaving office in 2017, Thacker and a business partner opened Canyon Cannabis in Gates within view of High- way 22, the only dispensary on the high- way between Salem and Bend. But after the business burned down in the Labor Day wildfires of 2020, he is advocating for voters in Mill City on Nov. 2 to reconsider their stance and allow marijuana-related businesses. Also in the special election, voters in the Stayton Rural Fire District are being asked to increase their property taxes to pay for nine additional full-time fire- fighters and emergency medical techni- cians. Ballots for the election will be mailed to voters Oct. 13. The Marion and Linn County elections offices will be open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Nov. 2 to accept ballots. Mill City marijuana Voters in Oregon chose to legalize recreational marijuana in 2014, but cit- A PATCH OF FALL ies and counties are permitted to decide whether to allow retail sales in their communities. In the November election, voters in Mill City will choose whether to allow dispensaries to sell marijuana for med- ical and recreational purposes, as well as manufacturing and production of marijuana, in their city. Canyon Cannabis’s Gates location was a total loss in the wildfires, and very little of it was insured or insurable – See VOTERS, Page 4A Marion County fails to update crime data tracking system Dianne Lugo Salem Statesman Journal USA TODAY NETWORK The data that could tell the Marion County Sher- iff 's Office whether hate crimes are on the rise, or when a certain neighborhood is experiencing a rash of burglaries is sitting in a shared computer drive, un- readable and unusable by state and national law en- forcement. It is one of a handful of agencies in the state and the country that missed the FBI deadline to switch to an improved method of reporting crime data to Ore- gon State Police and federal officials. The FBI gave them four years to get it done. “They can still submit their data to OSP, but it’s just going to be saved on a shared drive and nothing will be done with that data because ... there’s no way to translate that data into something readable,” Mel- oni Morrison, Interim UCR Program Coordinator at Oregon State Police, said. Transition to a newer system Kyler Miholer looks for a pumpkin at Greens Bridge Gardens in Jefferson. The farm kicked off fall with a u-pick pumpkin patch, corn maze and other activities. PHOTOS BY ABIGAIL DOLLINS/STATESMAN JOURNAL 7 pumpkin patches and corn mazes in the Mid-Valley Whitney Woodworth Salem Statesman Journal USA TODAY NETWORK The mid-Willamette Valley has a plethora of pumpkin patches, includ- ing: Bauman’s Farm & Garden For years, crowds have flocked to Bauman’s Farm for the annual Harvest Festival, with features mazes, a mas- sive pumpkin patch, farm animals, rides, and apple cider donuts. When: Harvest Festival hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. until Oct. 30. Where: 12989 Howell Prairie Road NE, Gervais. For more information: 503-792- 3524, baumanshf.com Beal Pumpkin Patch Salo Crowther, 11, looks at chickens at Greens Bridge Gardens. See PUMPKINS, Page 4A Don’t expect a call from a contact tracer in some places Bill Poehler Salem Statesman Journal USA TODAY NETWORK If you had dinner with a friend who turned out to have COVID-19, don’t expect a call from a contact trac- er. At least not in some places in Oregon. Marion and Lane counties said they have had so many new cases recently that their public health de- partments are in ‘surge protocols,” meaning they only contact people who are exposed in workplace out- breaks and congregate care settings. According to the Oregon Health Authority, sporadic cases of COVID-19 – ones that weren’t traced back to a known case – have skyrocketed since early in the summer. In the most recent week reported by the OHA, the week of Sept. 11, there were more than 10,000 sporad- ic cases in the state. There were about 1,000 the week of June 26. Marion County has so many cases of COVID-19 that the county’s public health division is primarily tracking cases in congregate care settings like nurs- ing homes and workplace outbreaks, according to Marion County Health & Human Services spokesper- See TRACER, Page 4A Vol. 140, No. 42 Online at SilvertonAppeal.com News updates: h Breaking news h Get updates from the Silverton area Photos: h Photo galleries Serving the Silverton Area Since 1880 A Unique Edition of the Statesman Journal QEAJAB-07403y For years, the FBI has collected and provided crime statistics nationwide through its Uniform Crime Reporting Program relying on the traditional Summary Reporting System to collect and aggregate a monthly tally of crimes. The National Incident-Based Reporting System, first introduced in 1988, was implemented “to im- prove the overall quality of crime data collected by law enforcement,” according to the FBI website. The newer system allows law enforcement to re- port more details about each crime incident. It also allows agencies to report on separate offenses within the same incident, such as when someone is assault- ed in the midst of a robbery. The newer system also collects additional infor- mation on victims, known offenders, relationships between victims and offenders, arrestees, property involved, and day and time of the crime. In 2016, the FBI gave law enforcement agencies a deadline to transition to the newer system. "SRS sunsetted January of 2021 and we were en- couraging all SRS or non-reporting agencies to go to NIBRS or ONIBRS and start reporting that way," Mor- rison said. "Marion County was unable to meet that deadline." OSP "did everything we could to get them to meet the deadline and since they were unable to, we just save their data and don't do anything with it," she said. "There's nothing we can do with it." In a 2016 memo about the transition, former FBI Director James B. Comey cited "recent events" that "underscored the importance of having informed conversations about policing and crime policy." Those conversations concluded with the decision to discontinue SRS reporting. “Once complete, the FBI will have faster access to more robust data that is necessary to show how safe our communities are and to help law enforcement and municipal leaders better allocate resources to prevent and combat crime,” Comey said. “Through the NIBRS, law enforcement agencies can be more transparent and accountable to the communities they serve.” With a fuller context of crimes, the statistics are vital for more informed policing. The data is also nec- essary for the FBI and other local agencies to spot trends and respond. Marion County among the few Last year, fewer than 10,000 of nearly 18,000 par- ticipating agencies submitted data via the newer sys- tem. In Oregon, 207 of the 234 law enforcement agen- cies submitted data to the FBI for its 2020 Hate Crimes Report, fewer than in 2019. Most of those were very small communities, although Lane County Sheriff 's Office also did not submit data. According to OSP data, Marion County appears to be the only Oregon agency still submitting under the old format. U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland has charged FBI officials across the country with identi- fying the agencies that did not provide their data, special agent in charge of the Portland Field Office Kieran L. Ramsey said when announcing the new re- See SYSTEM, Page 4A