3A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • MONDAY, JANUARY 23, 2017 Safety, alleviating poverty at top of DHS list Spending plan ‘disappointing’ By CLAIRE WITHYCOMBE Capital Bureau SALEM — Oregon Depart- ment of Human Services Director Clyde Saiki says leg- islators face “tough choices” in the next six months as they consider where to cut back on programs for children, seniors and people with disabilities. The heads of the legisla- tive budget-writing commit- tee, Joint Ways and Means, released a preliminary spend- ing plan Thursday. The spending plan — what legislators called a “frame- work” — calls for about $2.9 billion in spending on human services for the next budget cycle. That’s an increase from the agency’s most recent biennial budget of $2.7 billion, but state Sen. Richard Devlin, D-Tuala- tin, and Rep. Nancy Nathan- son, D-Eu- gene, said that the $2.9 bil- lion amount is actually nearly Clyde Saiki 9 percent less than what the department needs to maintain the current level of services. The plan accounts for a $1.8 billion shortfall in state funds legislators say is needed to maintain service levels across state government. Cost increases can be attributed to wage and benefit growth for state employees as well as adjustments for popu- lation growth and inflation. On Friday, Saiki said that from where he stands, that spending plan was not “very surprising, but disappointing.” The Department of Human Services, which has a range of responsibilities from admin- istering nutritional support to poor families to overseeing the state’s foster care system, makes “The top two priorities are really about safety for children and other vulnerable populations, all the people we serve. The second priority is lifting people out of poverty.” Clyde Saiki director, state Department of Human Services up a significant chunk of the state general fund every year. Saiki said that as the agen- cy’s budget goes through the legislative process, the agency would be focused on safety and alleviating poverty, which he said align with Gov. Kate Brown’s own preferences. He also noted that the budget framework presented by leg- islators was merely the begin- ning of the process. “The top two priorities are really about safety for children and other vulnerable popula- tions, all the people we serve,” Saiki told a meeting of service providers and recipients in Salem on Friday. “The second priority is lifting people out of poverty.” In the past year, the depart- ment has been under the microscope after reports of abuse and systemic problems in state foster care. The agency hired a new Philomath School District says football hazing dates to 2010 Highlighted after Warrenton incident last July Associated Press CORVALLIS — Hazing at Philomath High School hap- pened for years before it came under scrutiny following an incident last summer at a foot- ball training camp in Warren- ton, according to the school district’s attorney. Philomath School Dis- trict lawyer Paul Dakopolos said there is evidence of haz- ing incidents involving the school’s football team, wres- tling team and boys’ basketball team dating to at least 2010, The Corvallis Gazette-Times reported. The information came from an investigation conducted by Dakopolos’ office after the dis- covery of a hazing incident at a football training camp at Camp Rilea last July. A 22-year-old former volunteer coach has entered a no contest plea to charges in the incident. Prosecutors have said that the coach failed to protect the students. Eleven freshmen had intimate parts of their bodies targeted. Dakopolos said his investi- gator interviewed eight current students, two former students, a parent of a former student, all varsity football coaches at the training camp, a junior var- sity football coach and coaches of other sports. However, most alleged victims and the alleged perpetrator declined to be interviewed by the investiga- tor, Dakopolos said. The investigation found that all the junior varsity coaches and the head coach were aware of the inappro- priate physical contact during the training camp, Dakopolos said. The victims were scared during the incidents and some said they did not report the hazing because coaches were in the room when some of it happened, according to Dakopolos. School coaches have reported hazing in the past, but the administration did not pass the information as required by law to law enforcement or the state Department of Human Services, Dakopolos said. “The failure to discipline student athletes and coaches involved in incidents of hazing has created a misperception that the behavior is accept- able,” he said. The school district plans to take several actions to pre- vent future hazing, accord- ing to Superintendent Melissa Goff, including more training for coaches, addressing hazing at parental information meet- ings and adding anti-bullying and anti-hazing training to the school’s curriculum. Washington faces deadline on REAL ID Requirements are for security By RACHEL LA CORTE Associated Press OLYMPIA, Wash. — Last month, signs started pop- ping up at airports nationwide warning travelers that unless their driver’s licenses are from states already in compliance with federal identification requirements or states with a limited extension, they’ll need additional documentation to board domestic flights starting in January 2018. With that looming deadline, lawmakers in Washington state are trying to bring the state into compliance with the REAL ID Act, a 2005 federal law that requires state driver’s licenses and ID cards to have security enhancements and be issued to people who can prove they’re legally in the United States. Washington is the only state in the country that does not require proof of legal pres- ence in the U.S. to get a stan- dard state driver’s license or ID. However, the state already offers, but does not mandate, enhanced driver’s licenses and IDs that require proof of U.S. citizenship and are valid under the federal law. The state’s Senate and House transportation com- mittees held separate hearings Thursday on bills that have been introduced seeking to bring the state into compliance with REAL ID. Just 25 states and the Dis- trict of Columbia are cur- rently in compliance with the law, according to the Depart- ment of Homeland Security’s website. Washington, Minnesota and Missouri are the only three states that are not compliant with the law and don’t have an extension from the federal government, meaning millions of residents who currently have standard driver’s licenses now need additional ID for access to some military bases and federal facilities. They’ll eventually be required to show AP Photo Looming deadline for Washington state to comply with federal REAL ID law. additional documentation for air travel unless the Legisla- ture acts. Two other states — Maine and Montana — are also not in compliance and have a grace period that will make them subject to enforcement start- ing on Jan. 30. On Thursday, Pennsylvania and Kentucky — which had originally been sub- ject to the Jan. 30 compliance date — were given a limited extension through June 6, join- ing a handful of other states with limited extensions until that date. Eighteen other states and territories have extensions until Oct. 10. In addition to the measures introduced in Washington, Maine, Minnesota, Missouri, Oklahoma, Oregon, and South Carolina all have introduced bills related to REAL ID com- pliance this year, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. The proposed bills in Washington state would create a two-tiered licensing system that would keep the current enhanced license and would create a standard state license that would be marked indicat- ing it is not valid for federal purposes. child welfare director, Lena Alhusseini, who started work in November. The department is expected to release a unified Child Welfare improvement plan before the legislative ses- sion begins Feb. 1. It was unclear, on the first day of Donald Trump’s presi- dency, what support would be like from the federal govern- ment for antipoverty programs the department administers. Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, for exam- ple, is distributed in the form of a block grant from the fed- eral government and is imple- mented by states. In addition, for some pro- grams, if the state makes cuts to its own funding for some- thing, that can also mean the loss of matching funds from the federal government. At Friday’s meeting, ser- vice providers and recipi- ents also expressed concerns about the effects of the pos- sible repeal of the Affordable Care Act. Human services officials have laid out a number of options for areas where antic- ipated spending could be cut back — 15 percent, or more than $486 million in general fund money, in potential cuts. Those options include reducing funding for personal services, eliminating a live-in care program, and eliminat- ing quality care incentive pay- ments for providers of child- care to kids who receive government subsidies. Although those options are on the table as legislators start crafting the state budget, Saiki said he would advocate for increased child welfare staff and for rate increases for peo- ple working directly with peo- ple receiving services; for fos- ter parents; and for groups providing behavioral rehabili- tation services for children and teens. The Capital Bureau is a collaboration between EO Media Group and Pamplin Media Group. Company hopes to build pot-friendly RV park in Medford Associated Press MEDFORD — An Ore- gon company wants to build a pot-friendly RV park. A company that sup- plies warehouse space for marijuana growers is eye- ing property near Lake Sel- mac in Josephine County. The park will be called Smoke on the Water, Grow Condos Chief Executive Officer Wayne Zallen said. If the project moves for- ward, the company hopes to expand with camp- grounds in other marijua- na-friendly states. The RV parks would include tent camping and a pot dispen- sary, he said. The company already has a 15,000-square-foot facility in Eagle Point, where it offers for lease or sale indoor grow spaces, which are all occupied. The company is also work- ing toward building a 48,000-square-foot com- mercial marijuana process- ing facility in Eugene. The project, called Nug- getville, was submitted to Eugene in December. The 40-page plan shows blue- prints for four warehouses on a 2.65-acre site on industrial property. “Eugene rolled out the red carpet,” Zallen said. The city made staff avail- able to provide feedback on proposed drafts, he said. Grow Condos in pro- motional materials said the four buildings could hold more than 30 grow- ers. The industrial spaces would be sold at $150,000 to $175,000 each. “It’s all coming together,” Zallen said of the company’s various plans. NOW HIRING CLATSOP CRUISE HOSTS VOLUNTEER COORDINATOR Applicant must be at least 21 years of age and have a high school diploma or equivalent. Must work well with people. The Volunteer Coordinator is an independent contractor position. 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