NORTHWEST/NATION Tuesday, May 4, 2021 THe OBseRVeR — 7A U.S. begins reuniting families separated at Mexico border By ELLIOT SPAGAT Associated Press SAN DIEGO— The Biden administration said Monday, May 3, that four families that were separated at the Mexico border during Donald Trump’s presi- dency will be reunited in the United States this week in what Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro May- orkas calls “just the begin- ning” of a broader effort. Two of the four families include mothers who were separated from their chil- dren in late 2017, one Hon- duran and another Mexican, Mayorkas said, declining to detail their identities. He described them as children who were 3 years old at the time and “teenagers who have had to live without their parent during their most formative years.” Parents will return to the United States on humani- tarian parole while author- ities consider other lon- ger-term forms of legal status, said Michelle Brane, executive director of the administration’s Family Julio Cortez/Associated Press a migrant man, center, holds a child as he looks at a u.s. Customs and Border Protection agent at an intake area after crossing the u.s.-Mexico border March 24, 2021, in Roma, Texas. The Biden administration said Monday, May 3, that four families that were separated at the Mexico border during donald Trump’s presidency will be reunited in the united states this week in what Homeland security secretary alejandro Mayorkas calls “just the beginning” of a broader effort. Reunification Task Force. The children are already in the U.S. Exactly how many fam- ilies will reunite in the U.S. and in what order is linked to negotiations with the American Civil Liber- May Day marches lead to arrests in Seattle, Portland Associated Press SEATTLE — At least 20 people were arrested during May Day demonstrations in Seattle and Portland in support of immigrants and worker rights, officials said. Seattle police said 14 people were arrested Sat- urday, May 1, for crimes including obstruction, prop- erty destruction, reckless driving and assault as sev- eral unpermitted marches wound through the down- town area. Demonstra- tors threw bottles, rocks, paint, paint-filled eggs and raw eggs and threw lighted flares into the roadway, offi- cers said. About 150 people par- ticipated in a permitted march in support of immi- grant and worker rights, The Seattle Times reported. They also called for open borders, equality in vaccine access and spoke against hate crimes against Asian people, racism, police bru- tality and white supremacy. “Our people have built multiracially with the Black working class, with Native folks with Latinx folks around the world to fight for a different vision of this planet, where we can live, where we can breathe, where we can be safe,” said JM Wong of Massage Parlor Outreach Project said during a speech in the center of Seattle’s China- town International District. In Portland, peaceful demonstrations during the day gave way to violent demonstrations at night. About 100 people marched toward the area around city hall on Saturday night, where there were multiple reports of vandalism and broken windows at busi- nesses, police said. Officers declared the gathering a riot and ordered people to leave. They later announced six arrests. Officers deployed crowd dispersal munitions at a smaller group of people who gathered outside the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Southwest Portland. National news briefs Supreme Court won’t take Maryland bump stock ban case WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court is declining to take up a challenge to Maryland’s ban on bump stocks and other devices that make guns fire faster. The high court on Monday, May 3, turned away a challenge to the ban, which took effect in October 2018. A lower court had dismissed the challenge at an early stage and that decision had been upheld by an appeals court. As is typical, the court didn’t comment in declining to take the case. Maryland’s ban preceded a nationwide ban on the sale and possession of bump stocks that was put in place by the Trump administra- tion and took effect in 2019. The Supreme Court previ- ously declined to stop the Trump administration from enforcing that ban. Both Maryland’s ban and the nationwide one followed a 2017 shooting in Las Vegas in which a gunman attached bump stocks to assault-style rifles he used to shoot con- certgoers from his hotel room. Fifty-eight people were killed and hundreds were injured. U.S. to launch trade talks on COVID-19 vaccine distribution WILMINGTON, Del. — The U.S. top trade nego- tiator will begin talks with the World Trade Organiza- tion on ways to overcome intellectual property issues that are keeping critically needed COVID-19 vaccines from being more widely distributed worldwide, two White House officials said Sunday, May 2. The White House has been under pressure from lawmakers at home and governments abroad to join an effort to waive patent rules for the vaccines so that poorer countries can begin to produce their own generic versions of the shots to vaccinate their populations. The U.S. has been crit- icized for focusing first on vaccinating Americans, particularly as its vaccine supply begins to outpace demand and doses approved for use elsewhere in the world but not in the U.S. sit idle. U.S. Trade Represen- tative Katherine Tai will be starting talks with the trade organization “on how we can get this vaccine more widely distributed, more widely licensed, more widely shared,” said White House chief of staff Ron Klain. Klain and national secu- rity adviser Jake Sullivan said the administration will have more to say on the matter in the coming days. Sullivan said the admin- istration believes pharma- ceutical companies “should be supplying at scale and at cost to the entire world so that there is no bar- rier to everyone getting vaccinated.” Klain said the U.S. has sent India enough of the raw materials it needs to make 20 million vaccine doses. India is battling a deadly new surge in corona- virus infections and deaths. — Associated Press ties Union to settle a federal lawsuit in San Diego, but Mayorkas said there were more to come. “We continue to work tirelessly to reunite many more children with their parents in the weeks and months ahead,” Mayorkas told reporters. “We have a lot of work still to do, but I am proud of the prog- ress we have made and the reunifications that we have helped to achieve.” More than 5,500 children were separated from their parents during the Trump administration going back to July 1, 2017, many of them under a “zero-toler- ance” policy to criminally prosecute any adult who entered the country ille- gally, according to court fil- ings. The Biden administra- tion is doing its own count going back to Trump’s inauguration in January 2017 and believes more than 1,000 families remain separated. While family separa- tion ended in June 2018 under court order, Biden has repeatedly assailed the practice as an act of cruelty. An executive order on his first day in office pledged to reunite families that were still separated “to the greatest extent possible.” The ACLU is happy for the four families but their reunifications are “just the tip of the iceberg,” said attorney Lee Gelernt. Among the more than 5,500 children known to have been separated, more than 1,000 may still be apart from their parents and more than 400 parents have yet to be located, he said. “We need the Biden administration to pro- vide relief to all of them, including providing them a permanent pathway to citi- zenship and care,” Gelernt said. The reunifications begin as the Biden administra- tion confronts the third major increase in unaccom- panied children arriving at the border in seven years. It has made strides moving children from overcrowded Border Patrol facilities to U.S. Department of Health and Human Services shel- ters, which are more suited to longer-term stays until children are placed with sponsors in the United States, typically parents or close relatives. The average stay for an unaccompanied child in Border Patrol custody has fallen to about 20 hours, below the legal limit of 72 hours and down from 133 hours in late March, May- orkas said. Nuclear waste tank in Washington may be leaking By NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS Associated Press RICHLAND, Wash. — An underground nuclear waste storage tank in Washington state that dates to World War II appears to be leaking contaminated liquid into the ground, the U.S. Department of Energy said Thursday, April 29. It’s the second tank believed to be leaking waste left from the pro- duction of plutonium for nuclear weapons at the Hanford Nuclear Reserva- tion. The first was discov- ered in 2013. Many more of the 149 single-walled storage tanks at the site are suspected of leaking. Tank B-109, the latest suspected of leaking, holds 123,000 gallons of radioac- tive waste. The giant tank was constructed during the Manhattan Project that built the first atomic bombs and received waste from Hanford operations from 1946 to 1976. The Hanford site near Richland in the south- eastern part of the state elaine Thompson/Associated Press, File a sign at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation stands near Richland, Wash- ington. Officials say an underground nuclear waste storage tank that dates to World War II appears to be leaking contaminated liquid into the ground. The u.s. department of energy said Thursday, april 29, 2021, the tank holds 123,000 gallons of radioactive waste left from the pro- duction of plutonium for nuclear weapons. produced about two- thirds of the plutonium for the nation’s nuclear arsenal, including the bomb dropped in 1945 on Naga- saki, Japan, and now is the most contaminated radio- active waste site in the nation. A multibillion dollar environmental cleanup has been underway for decades at the sprawling Hanford site. The Washington state Department of Ecology and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency were notified April 29 that the tank was likely leaking. “There is no increased health or safety risk to the Hanford workforce or the public,” said Geoff Tyree, a spokesman for the Energy Department. “Contamina- tion in this area is not new and mitigation actions have been in place for decades to protect workers, the public and the environment.” The tank had been pre- viously emptied of pump- able liquids, leaving a small amount of liquid waste inside, the agency said. Systems in the area capture and remove contaminants that reach the groundwater and ensure the protection of the Columbia River, the agency said. The leak from was first suspected in March 2019, when there appeared to be a drop in the level of its liquid waste. Monthly checks showed the level stable until July 2020, when another drop was detected, and the Depart- ment of Energy launched an investigation. State officials said the tank is leaking about 3.5 gallons per day. “It’s a serious matter whenever a Hanford tank leaks its radioactive and dangerous chemical waste,” Ecology Director Laura Watson said, adding “this highlights the critical need for resources to address Hanford’s aging tanks, which will continue to fail and leak over time.” La Grande School District Date: Thursday, May 6, 2021 Time: 5:30 p.m. – 7:00 p.m. Place: At your local area Elementary School. (Where your child will be attending school) What to Bring: 5 BEFORE 2019 September 1, 2021 Bring your child to meet the Kindergarten teachers. For further information, please contact one of the following: Central School – Connie Ingerson – 541.663.3501 Greenwood School – Eva McKinney – 541.663.3601 Island City School – Dena Tams – 541.663.3271