STATE 6A — THE OBSERVER TUESDAY, MAY 11, 2021 Grants to Black Oregonians resume after state sett les lawsuit John Day logging company lawsuit leads to settlement to distribute $5.3 million By JAMIE GOLDBERG The Oregonian/OregonLive SALEM — Oregon once again began dis- tributing grants last week through its unique $62 million coronavirus relief fund for Black Oregonians. Organizers of the fund distributed $49.5 mil- lion to Black Oregonians, Black-owned businesses and Black-led nonprofi ts across 31 Oregon counties last fall, but they agreed to hand over their remaining funds to a federal court and stop allocating grant money in December after a John Day logging com- pany and Portland coff ee shop challenged the con- stitutionality of the state fund. The state and orga- nizers of the fund reached a settlement with John Day logging company Great Northern Resources in March, allowing them to recoup $5.3 million from the court to distribute to Black Oregonians. Fund organizers began distributing that money last week. They are using the funds to provide grants to people and organiza- tions that applied for sup- port late last year but never received funding due to the legal case. The fund is not accepting new grant applications. “We are working as fast as possible to notify appli- cants and distribute awards, while ensuring security and compliance,” said Anthony Jordan, president of The Contingent, the nonprofi t administering the grants. As part of the settlement, Oregon is also using its own risk fund to pay grants to up to 1,252 non-Black appli- cants that sought funding through the program before Dec. 8. The court is con- tinuing to hold an additional $3.5 million deposited by fund organizers until the state pays out those grants. While the state and fund organizers reached a settle- ment with Great Northern Resources, the constitu- tionality of the fund may still be litigated through a separate ongoing lawsuit brought against the fund by Maria Garcia, the Mexican American owner of a down- town Portland coff ee shop. Approximately $42,000, the maximum grant that Garcia would have qualifi ed for if she were eligible for a grant through the fund, is still being held by the court while that case continues. Oregon lawmakers voted last July to set aside 4.5% of the federal pandemic relief money received by the state to seed the fund. Oregon appears to have been the only state that allocated fed- eral coronavirus relief dollars to individuals and business owners of a specifi c race. Oregon’s embatt led state forester quits Consultant’s report, department critics highlight agency problems By TED SICKINGER The Oregonian/OregonLive SALEM — Peter Daugh- erty, Oregon’s state for- ester and the leader of the long-struggling Depart- ment of Forestry, has sub- mitted his resignation to the state board that oversees the department, eff ective May 31. Daugherty has led the agency since 2016, and his tenure has been marked by deep fi nancial problems within the department, a dysfunctional relationship with the Board of Forestry and the loss of state law- makers’ confi dence, even as the agency is looking for a massive infusion of new resources to better respond to the state’s increasingly severe wildfi re seasons. The Oregonian/OregonLive in recent years documented many of the agency’s trou- bles in its Failing Forestry series. Daugherty’s resigna- tion comes in the wake of a scathing report from an outside accounting consul- tant, MGO, that described a fundamental lack of fi nan- cial controls and oversight within the agency. The report was reviewed in a hearing this week before the Natural Resources sub- committee of Ways and Means, prompting some incredulity from law- makers, who said they were aware of the problems in general but found details the fi rm uncovered eye- opening and troubling. His resignation also comes after Gov. Kate Brown was able to remake the state forestry board, which is responsible for hiring and fi ring the state forester. The previous board had put Daugherty on what amounted to a per- formance improvement plan, but the new board chair, Jim Kelly, said it was time for a change. “You cannot have an eff ective state forester unless they have the confi - dence of the governor and the legislature,” Kelly said, “and clearly that isn’t the case with Peter.” At the hearing Wednesday, May 5, Sen. Kathleen Taylor, D-Port- land, laid a good deal of the blame for the agency’s problems on the Board of Forestry. “It’s no secret that I’m not a supporter of having a Board of Forestry,” she said. ‘I don’t support that. I believe the Legislature should be overseeing the straw for Daugherty. In his resignation letter, he said he had discussed the deci- sion with the governor’s offi ce and decided it would be in the best interest of the newly reconstituted board and the department to select a new state for- ester. Daugherty said his last eff ective day in offi ce would be May 28. In an email to staff , Daugherty said leading the department had been the highlight of his long career in forestry. He said the “Oregon faces enormous challenges on our forests to protect water quality, manage fi re, and respond to climate change. I hope the board can take this moment to turn the page and move the agency into the 21st Century.” — Bob Van Dyk, the Oregon policy director of the Wild Salmon Center, Department of Forestry. The board has been given this awesome responsibility by the public ... and I’m concerned the board did not do its duties of overseeing the department.” Rep. Jeff Reardon, D-Portland, said MGO’s report was just the begin- ning of the actions that need to be taken. Rep. Paul Holvey, D-Eu- gene, said many of the shortcomings called out in the report had been noted in an audit of the depart- ment by the Secretary of State in 2015. “We are six years later dealing with the same damn issue and I don’t see any improvement,” he said. “And so either the Legis- lature needs to step in and do something dramatic or … I really appreciate (the report), but it just solidi- fi es and exemplifi es what we’ve been dealing with for years. I’m just so frus- trated that I don’t see any improvement.” The airing of the report may have been the last agency’s “executive team is committed to supporting the transition and helping prepare Oregon’s next State Forester for the challenges and rewards that come with this role, both of which are immense.” The board’s control over the employment of the state forester left the governor’s offi ce and legislators with less control as the agen- cy’s fi nances spun out of control in recent years and the board took no defi n- itive action. Lawmakers had, however, demanded that Daugherty begin sub- mitting monthly fi nancial reports to the co-chairs of the Ways and Means Committee. Brown, meanwhile, also expressed deep frustration last fall with her inability to remake the board and bring stronger fi nancial exper- tise to its ranks, as law- makers from timber-de- pendent counties joined Republicans to kill her slate of board nominees. That changed this spring, as the Senate confi rmed three of her nominees to the board, eff ectively remaking it. “The board will soon meet to discuss leadership during this time of tran- sition,” said Liz Merah, a spokesperson for Brown. “While the board has statu- tory authority in appointing the State Forester, the gov- ernor is interested in a national search for someone who can further drive the agency as a national leader in fi ghting wildfi res, while at the same time adapting to new technology and changing conditions on the ground.” Merah said there were no severance payments accompanying Daugherty’s departure. His salary was just over $182,000 a year. Reached at his home in Eastern Oregon, Kelly, the new board chair, said Daugherty’s decision to resign was reached mutu- ally and the board would look to hire an interim replacement with strong fi nancial expertise, as the agency needs to get its fi nancial house in order before it can do anything else eff ectively. Kelly said he thinks the dynamics on the board already have changed. “There’s reason to believe we have the chance to create a highly functional board and have that trust reestablished,” he said. Bob Van Dyk, the Oregon policy director of the Wild Salmon Center, and a frequent critic of the department, said Daugh- erty’s departure was long overdue. “Under Daugherty’s leadership, critical voices on the Board of Forestry were marginalized and bul- lied,” he said in an emailed statement. “Oregon faces enormous challenges on our forests to protect water quality, manage fi re, and respond to climate change. I hope the board can take this moment to turn the page and move the agency into the 21st Century.” STATE NEWS BRIEFS Prineville Reservoir fi rst Oregon park to get ‘dark sky’ nod PRINEVILLE, — Prineville Reservoir State Park has been certifi ed as an International Dark Sky Park and is the fi rst Oregon park to make the list of the places around the world with the least nighttime light pollution. The certifi cation rec- ognizes the exceptional quality of the park’s night skies as well as eff orts to install environmentally responsible lighting and educate the public about light pollution. Prineville Reservoir joins only 174 locations worldwide to have fol- lowed the rigorous appli- cation program. The park’s location in central Oregon makes it more critical as a place to enjoy star-gazing without light pollution, according to the Dark-Sky Associ- ation. To compete for the designation, park staff had to replace harsh outdoor lights with soft yellow and red lighting to reduce sky- glow, the Oregon Parks and Recreation Depart- ment said in a statement. The designation will bring tourists from light-polluted cities and should attract astrono- mers of all levels, said Bill Kowalik, chair of the Oregon Chapter of the International Dark-Sky Association. Second police offi cer indicted in BLM fl ag vandalism case FOREST GROVE — A second Forest Grove police offi cer is facing a criminal charge in the case of an offi cer accused of vandalizing a home where a Black Lives Matter fl ag was displayed last fall. Offi cer Bradley Schuetz was indicted Thursday, May 6, by a grand jury on one count of offi cial mis- conduct, The Oregonian/ OregonLive reported. He was arrested, cited and released, police said. Schuetz picked up offi cer Steven Teets from the crime scene on Oct. 31, 2020, and drove him home instead of arresting him, investigators said. Teets faces charges of second-degree criminal mischief and second-de- gree disorderly conduct for allegedly walking into the driveway of a Forest Grove couple’s home, set- ting off the alarm on their truck, hitting the Black Lives Matter fl ag outside their garage and kicking their front door. The residents called police and another offi cer arrived and identi- fi ed Teets. Schuetz then responded and took Teets home, investigators said. Teets was off -duty at the time. Schuetz was on duty. Teets has been on administrative duty while the Washington County Sheriff ’s Offi ce investi- gated the incident. Schuetz is on paid leave. Oregon Forest Service to reduce wild horse population PRINEVILLE — The U.S. Forest Service will reduce the wild horse pop- ulation east of Prineville to a level horse advo- cates say could lead to the herd’s elimination. The most recent esti- mate of wild horses on the Big Summit Wild Horse Territory of the Ochoco National Forest puts the population between 130 and 150, Oregon Public Broadcasting reported. The management plan approved Friday, May 7, will decrease the herd to 47-57 horses total over the next fi ve years. Offi cials say “excess” horses will be captured and put up for adoption. “We want to make sure that we manage this herd for its genetic via- bility,” said Kassidy Kern, public aff airs offi cer for the Ochoco National Forest and Crooked River National Grassland. The agency will use contraception and steril- ization to limit population. The Forest Service said it will not euthanize horses as part of this plan. — Associated Press A Smarter Way to Power Your Home. REQUEST A FREE QUOTE! ACT NOW TO RECEIVE A $300 SPECIAL OFFER!* (844) 989-2328 *Off er value when purchased at retail. Solar panels sold separately. 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