STATE 6A — THE OBSERVER SATURDAY, APRIL 17, 2021 Redistricting compromise lifts Oregon’s legislative logjam By PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — The Oregon House has broken its leg- islative logjam with each party making a concession. Minority Republicans gained a voice in shaping the redrawing of legisla- tive and congressional dis- trict boundaries. The rel- evant House committee will have Democratic and Republican co-leaders — and the House Republican leader was added to the committee for an even 3-3 split. In return, majority Democrats can proceed with more than 80 bills, most of them noncontro- versial, without having to have them read aloud before fi nal votes. Republi- cans had refused to waive the bill-reading require- ment, which slowed the House to voting on a trickle of bills each day, depending on the length of their texts. No one was talking about the tacit agree- ment, which came swiftly Wednesday, April 14, after the House convened more than an hour late for a scheduled evening ses- sion. The public session was delayed because of the backstage talks between the parties. The House resumed its session Thursday morning. For Democrats, the bipartisan agreement allows the House to pro- ceed with discussion and votes on a backlog of bills, most of them having emerged from committees without dissent. For Republicans, the agreement will result in them and Democrats having to agree on plans that emerge from the House Redistricting Committee to redraw legislative and congressional district lines after the 2020 Census. The deal does not apply to the Senate, where the counterpart committee has three Democrats and two Republicans. It is similar to what hap- pened in 2011, when the House was tied at 30 Dem- ocrats and 30 Republicans, and the relevant committee was similarly split. That Legislature reached a com- promise plan then, the fi rst in a century, that was not challenged in court. Incentive to get along As a result of an April 9 Oregon Supreme Court decision, both parties — and both chambers — have an incentive not to stall. Andrew Selsky/Associated Press, File In this April 26, 2017, fi le photo, lawmakers in Oregon’s House of Repre- sentatives sit in session in Salem. Reaching a surprise deal Wednesday, April 14, 2021, legislative Democrats in Oregon have agreed to relinquish a powerful advantage in redrawing the state’s political districts for the next 10 years in exchange for a commitment from Republicans to stop blocking bills with delay tactics. The court laid out a new timeline for lawmakers to come up with a legis- lative redistricting plan because census-block data from the federal govern- ment will be unavailable until late summer. If law- makers fail to come up with a plan by the new deadline of Sept. 27, the task will fall to Democratic Secretary of State Shemia Fagan — and she will not be bound by what lawmakers have done. Republicans would like to avoid having this task fall to a former Democratic senator who has been in the secretary of states’ offi ce only a few months. And any plan can be challenged in the Supreme Court, which is the fi nal arbiter. So which communi- ties might see the biggest change after redistricting? During briefi ngs in Feb- ruary to House and Senate redistricting committees, a population expert at Port- land State University said legislative districts based in Washington County, Deschutes County and those straddling the Mult- nomah-Clackamas line will have to shrink because their populations have grown beyond the average. Dis- tricts based on the coast and most areas east of the Cas- cades will need to expand boundaries. That could result in more urban lawmakers, and fewer rural lawmakers, across the state. The court case last week does not directly involve congressional redistricting, which will be done by a special panel named by the court if lawmakers fail to reach agreement. Unlike legislative redistricting, congressional redistricting is not mentioned in the Oregon Constitution. logjam came in the form of one motion and one announcement at the close of a brief House session Wednesday night. Republican Rep. Duane Stark of Grants Pass moved to waive the con- stitutional requirement for all bills to be read in full before a vote on fi nal pas- sage. This motion is usu- ally routine, but it requires a two-thirds majority to suspend the rule — and the 23 Republicans had opposed it on a couple of previous Democratic-led attempts to waive it. After Stark’s motion was approved on a voice vote — it was not recorded — the House moved to adjourn the evening ses- sion near its scheduled time of 9 p.m. Then Speaker Tina Kotek, a Democrat from Portland, announced changes to the House Redis- tricting Committee. Demo- cratic Rep. Andrea Salinas of Lake Oswego will be joined as co-chairwoman by Republican Rep. Shelly Boshart Davis of Albany. Also, House Republican Leader Christine Drazan of Canby was added as a member, so there will be three Democrats and three Republicans. Other members are Democrats Wlnsvey Campos of Aloha and Khanh Pham of Portland, and Republican Daniel Bonham of The Dalles. La GRANDE AUTO REPAIR 975-2000 www.lagrandeautorepair.com MOST ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY AVAILABLE Compromise agreement The end of the House Joe Horst ACDelcoTSS Marcio Jose Sanchez/Associated Press, File In this July 28, 2020, photo, a member of the “Wall of Moms” protest group marches with other demon- strators during a Black Lives Matter protest at the Mark O. Hatfi eld United States Courthouse in Portland. A woman who formed part of a “Wall of Moms” is suing federal authorities for allegedly using excessive force and arresting her without probable cause. Lawsuit describes night of fear for ‘Wall of Moms’ protester By ANDREW SELSKY Associated Press SALEM — A lawyer who formed part of a “Wall of Moms” con- fronting militarized U.S. agents is suing fed- eral authorities, claiming excessive force was used against her and she was arrested without probable cause. In the lawsuit fi led in federal court in Portland, Jennifer Kristiansen also accused an unnamed fed- eral agent of groping her breast and buttocks as he trapped her against a wall, leading her to fear she would be raped. Named as defen- dants are Gabriel Russell, regional director of the Department of Homeland Security’s Federal Protec- tive Service, supervisors and 29 ground-level agents who are not named because they wore no name tags. Spokespersons for the DHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the lawsuit, fi led Monday, April 12. The lawsuit details how, for one woman seeking to protect Black Lives Matter protesters from milita- rized agents, one night turned into a traumatic experience. On July 20, Kris- tiansen joined over 100 Wall of Moms protesters and walked to the federal courthouse in Portland. It was the third night of Wall of Moms protests, in which women wearing yellow T-shirts and clothing stood in line, arms locked, to support Black Lives Matter protesters who were facing off against federal agents deployed by the Trump administration. Outside the courthouse, federal offi cers sent chem- ical agents and fl ash bangs into the crowd, then pushed them back with billy clubs. One agent accused Kris- tiansen, who is 5 feet tall and weighs 100 pounds, of hitting him, the law- suit says. Kristiansen says she has never struck a law enforcement offi cer. “After ascending the courthouse steps but prior to entering its doors, Defendant John Doe 63 violated Ms. Kristiansen by forcing her face fi rst against the courthouse wall. Ms. Kristiansen was placed in fear for her safety and believed she would be raped when Defendant John Doe 63 molested her while blocking her vision and trapping her against the wall, using his left hand to grab her breast and his right hand to reach up her skirt and grab her but- tocks,” the lawsuit says. Kristiansen was taken into the courthouse, searched, interrogated and denied water, food and a blanket while being held overnight and most of the following day in a cell. She was charged with assaulting a federal agent and failing to obey orders. After a review of video evidence showing that Kristiansen had neither assaulted nor approached an offi cer, a judge granted a prosecutor’s motion to dismiss the charges.