STATE SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 2021 THE OBSERVER — 7A House panel ponders linking fi rearms storage, narrower ban By PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — Legislation that combines proposed requirements for fi rearms locks and safe storage with a narrower ban on fi rearms in public buildings is gaining political momentum in the Oregon House. The House Rules Com- mittee heard a proposal to combine elements of two bills, one awaiting a vote of the full House and a second that has already passed the Senate. If it happens, the House would have to take only one vote, instead of two, on a fi rearms regula- tion bill — and the Senate would have to vote only on whether to accept the fi nal version. “In this legislation we kind of mash them together,” House Repub- lican Leader Christine Drazan of Canby, who sits on the committee, said during a presentation on Wednesday, April 21. Republicans were already dead set against House Bill 2510, which awaits a vote of the full House scheduled on April 26. The House Health Care Committee advanced it on March 30 on a party-line vote. That bill would require the storage of fi rearms with trigger or cable locks, in a locked container or in a gun room. An off ense is a Class C violation, which carries a maximum fi ne of $500, unless someone under age 18 obtains access, in which case it is a Class A viola- tion with a maximum fi ne of $2,000. No jail time is imposed for violations. Its chief sponsor is Rep. Rachel Prusak, D-West Linn, who has advocated it on behalf of a constituent since her election in 2018. She said she would sup- port it becoming part of a broader bill. “No one is under the illusion that enacting a safe storage law will stop all gun violence,” Prusak said. “Many responsible gun owners already lock up their guns. The goal of this safe-storage fi rearms bill is to change the behavior of the portion of gun owners whose careless actions lead to death and injury of others.” Split view of changes The Rules Committee proposes to combine it with a narrower version of Senate Bill 554, which passed the Senate on a 16-7 vote March 25. All votes for it came from Democrats; one Dem- ocrat joined six Republicans against it, and the rest were Elaine Thompson/Associated Press, File Semi-automatic rifl es are displayed on a wall at a gun shop in Lynnwood, Washington, on Oct. 2, 2018. Lawmakers in Oregon are considering a gun storage law that would be among the strongest in America. excused or absent. The original bill would bar all fi rearms from state buildings, including the Capitol, and local govern- ments would have the option of barring them from their own buildings. In essence, the ban would apply to the estimated 300,000 holders of concealed-handgun licenses, who are now exempt from weapons bans in public buildings. The proposed amend- ment would narrow the scope of the Senate bill. The proposed ban would apply to the Capitol, but not other state buildings. (State courts, which are often in buildings maintained by counties, already ban weapons by orders of the presiding judges.) It would allow boards of the seven state universities, 17 community college dis- tricts and 197 school dis- tricts to bar fi rearms from their buildings, but not their grounds. Unlike the Sen- ate-passed bill, cities, coun- ties and special districts would not be allowed to bar fi rearms borne by con- cealed-handgun licensees. Sen. Ginny Burdick, D-Portland and a longtime supporter of fi rearms reg- ulation, said the proposed change goes too far. “I’ve been in this pro- cess a long time, and I understand the neces- sity for compromise,” she said at a hearing. “But the amended version goes way too far in terms of weak- ening the bill.” Though the proposal would still bar fi rearms inside the Capitol, she said, “In the climate we live in, state buildings need to be included.” She also said if school boards have discretion to bar fi rearms from their buildings, their grounds need to be included, “because sports activities can get pretty hot, as we all know, and they need to be covered.” As passed by the Senate, public sidewalks and streets are excluded from regulation. Sen. Floyd Prozanski, a Democrat from Eugene who leads the Senate Judiciary Committee, off ered substi- tute language. “It only seems appro- priate for us to give local control to school boards, community colleges and universities to make the determination what is best for them and their prop- erties, not just their build- ings,” he said. The House committee is considering other amend- ments, including one by Rep. Brian Clem, D-Salem, that would enable local gov- ernments to regulate fi re- arms in public parks. He also proposed an amend- ment that would do away with state preemption of most local fi rearms ordi- nances — a law that dates to 1995 — but conceded it would go nowhere. Previous killings Oregon has experienced two notable instances of gun violence in schools. In 1998, two died and 25 were wounded at Thurston High School in Springfi eld after expelled student Kipland Kinkel shot his parents to death. Kinkel, who was 15 at the time, is in a state prison. In 2015, an assistant professor and eight students died, and eight were wounded, by a student gunman at Umpqua Community Col- lege near Roseburg. The gunman took his own life. Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum said she has taken part in marches spon- sored by Students Demand Action, part of the national group Everytown for Gun Safety. “This bill makes a clear opportunity for Oregon leaders to show our young people that we hear them and we care about their safety,” Rosenblum said to the committee. “It takes a small but important step in ensuring that Oregonians can learn safely without the threat of gun violence.” WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU ! I-84:Upper Perry to Richland Interchange Bridge Repairs In 2022, we will be repairing six Interstate 84 bridges at various interchanges in eastern Oregon. The bridges are located between the Exit 256 Upper Perry Interchange (five miles west of La Grande) and the Exit 302 Oregon Highway 86 / Richland Interchange (two miles north of Baker City). To collect feedback about the upcoming project we are holding a virtual open house. ONLINE OPEN HOUSE April 26 through May 7 https://odotopenhouse.org/openhouse/i-84-upper-perry-to-richland-interchange-improvements Please take a few minutes to visit the site during this time to review our plans, pictures and traffic impacts information, and then let us know if you have any comments. Overview: Each bridge requires repairs and upgrades to fix a variety of deficiencies. We will repair bridge decks and joints, seal cracks, replace bridge and approach rails, and install protective screening. We will design the project this year and construct it in 2022. We appreciate your review and feedback. It will help us construct a better, safer project. Scan with mobile device ODOT is pleased to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). If you need special accommodations or alternate language formats to participate in this open house event, please contact us (contact information below). Alternate formats available upon request, or call statewide relay at 711. For more information, please contact Tom Strandberg, ODOT Public Information Officer at 541-663-6261, or email thomas.m.strandberg@odot.state.or.us Ellen Morris Bishop/Wallowa County Chieftain, File Paddlers prepare to embark at Wallowa Lake State Park in August 2020. The Oregon Senate next week considers a bill to safeguard the public from bias and hate crimes committed on public lands. The law would prohibit people convicted of bias crime committed while on state waters or publicly owned outdoor recreation land from entering areas under the jurisdiction of the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department for up to fi ve years. Proposed law would ban bias off enders from public wilderness By ISABELLE TAVARES Columbia Insight via AP StoryShare SALEM — When Chad Brown, Navy vet- eran and fl y fi sherman, parked his car before setting out to a river, he never expected he’d return to fi nd his brake lines cut. But they had been. His apparent off ense? Being a Black man fi shing in Oregon. Brown — who recounted his experience with backwoods bias for Columbia Insight in 2020 — was one of more than 20 Oregon residents who testifi ed earlier this month before an Oregon Senate committee on bias they’ve experienced in outdoor spaces. On April 8, Oregon’s Senate Energy and Envi- ronment Committee approved legislation that safeguards the public from bias and hate crimes committed on public lands. People convicted of a bias crime on public lands or waters will not be allowed in those areas for up to fi ve years. Their permits, licenses and tags would be revoked for the same period for crimes com- mitted while angling, taking shellfi sh, hunting or trapping. “There are people in my district who are afraid to go to a state park, to get on a river in a boat,” Sen. Lew Frederick, D-Portland, told Salem’s Statesman Journal. “They believe if someone decides to harass them because of their race, their ethnicity, nothing will happen.” The Oregon State Police, Oregon Depart- ment of Fish and Wildlife and Oregon State Marine Board have expressed support for the bill. “The conservation community cannot be silent on issues of jus- tice, equality and access to the outdoors,” said Kevin Gorman, execu- tive director of Friends of the Columbia Gorge, in a press release. “At a time when hate and bias crimes are increasing around the country, including here in the Pacifi c Northwest, we can and must do better.” Outdoor recreation ‘a risky endeavor’ A bias crime, or hate crime, is propelled by bias against someone based on their race, color, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, disability or national origin. People convicted of a fi rst- or second-degree crime fall under the new bill. The legislation comes at a time when hate crimes have spiked to their highest levels in more than a decade, according to a 2020 FBI report, and when public attention, in particular, has been focused on hate crimes against members of Asian communities. In Oregon, reported bias crimes between Jan- uary and April 2020 rose 366%, according to Oregon Public Broadcasting. Robin Morris Collin, professor at Willamette University College of Law, testifi ed that public harassment can not only be harmful to those experi- encing the behavior, but to those witnessing it. “These actions may exclude Black, indigenous and people of color and others including LGBTQI persons, and these eff ects ripple outward to others who observe and avoid these behaviors,” Morris Collin said. “The com- bined eff ect makes public outdoor recreation a risky endeavor for those who do not want to confront these behaviors or the contexts in which they may become vulnerable.” Next steps If passed into law, it’s unclear how the bill would be enforced. But violators can’t roam too far. Oregon is one of 48 states that partici- pate in the Wildlife Viola- tors Compact, according to Shannon Hurn, deputy director of Oregon Depart- ment of Fish and Wildlife. “This Compact allows for the revocation of a license(s) to occur across all of the participating states,” said Hurn during public testimony. “This prevents individuals from just applying outside the state where the criminal act occurred, and con- tinuing to participate and harvest wildlife in other states.” The bill allows courts to sentence violators to com- munity service, including habitat restoration, main- tenance of outdoor recre- ation facilities and anti- bias training. The bill is heading to a voice vote of the Senate on Wednesday, April 28.