A3 THE DAILY ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2019 Portland withdraws from FBI’s terrorism task force Court grants EPA new hearing on pesticide ban A 3-2 vote by the City Council Farm groups support the move By AMELIA TEMPLETON Oregon Public Broadcasting Portland is out of the FBI-led Joint Terrorism Task Force again. The Portland City Coun- cil voted 3-2 Wednesday to withdraw the city’s police offi cers from the federal task force , a partnership between federal agencies and local law enforcement. Commissioners Jo Ann Hardesty, Amanda Fritz and Chloe Eudaly supported the change. They worry there is not enough civilian over- sight to ensure Portland offi - cers abide by civil rights laws and say there isn’t enough evidence to show the task force has made Port- land safer. “The current president has made clear his animos- ity toward Muslims, immi- grants and people of color,” Fritz said, noting that the FBI has not followed through on promises to provide more, regular information on the group’s work since Portland re-entered the partnership several years ago. “I found it hard to trust the JTTF under President Obama. It’s impossible now.” The vote is a signifi cant win for Hardesty, the new- est city commissioner, who ran last year on a promise to get Portland out of the fed- eral task force. “For a whole year, I talked about this on the cam- paign trail, and everywhere I went, people were con- cerned about whether or not their data was collected and used in a way that was against Oregon state law,” she said. “We are here today because I am about keeping promises.” Hardesty and Fritz had made their positions clear before Wednesday’s meet- ing. Eudaly ended up being the deciding vote and said she does not have confi - By DON JENKINS Capital Press Bradley W. Parks/Oregon Public Broadcasting Millie Hobaish urged Portland to leave the FBI-led Joint Terrorism Task Force. dence city leaders have enough oversight to pre- vent Portland offi cers from engaging in police work that targets immigrants and other groups. “Even good people can make bad decisions, espe- cially in a fl awed system,” she said. “I don’t trust the system the JTTF functions within. I do not trust the administration who oversees it. … Do you feel safer today than you did fi ve years ago? I don’t either.” Mayor Ted Wheeler and Commissioner Nick Fish voted against leaving the task force. Wheeler said he respected his colleagues’ decision and reasoning — but disagreed. “I absolutely believe that the JTTF is highly imper- fect. It could do much bet- ter,” he said. “As the police commissioner, I cannot sup- port a policy that appears to favor politics or ideol- ogy over the safety and well-being of Portlanders. While values are extremely important, values alone can- not protect the safety of the community.” Fish asked his colleagues to slow down and con- sider tweaks to, rather than a wholesale rejection of, Portland’s relationship with the FBI-led group. They declined. “The FBI will continue doing this work without our involvement,” Fish said. “I’d rather have our values at the table. Why would we walk away and forfeit our opportunity for oversight of their work?” Portland is the second West Coast city to withdraw from the task force since President Donald Trump took offi ce. San Francisco withdrew its offi cers from the group in 2017. The city withdrew once before, under Mayor Tom Potter, entered into a convoluted “as needed” relationship under Mayor Sam Adams and then rejoined in full under Mayor Charlie Hales in 2015. The city’s resolution does not end the task force’s work or its partnerships with six other local law enforcement agencies . During the debate, fed- eral offi cials stressed that they will continue to work with Portland offi cers when needed. But city offi cers will cease their participation within 90 days. “The FBI’s mission is to protect the American peo- ple and uphold the Consti- tution. With the withdrawal of the city of Portland from the Joint Terrorism Task Force, that mission doesn’t change,” Renn Cannon, the FBI’s special agent in charge for Oregon, said in a writ- ten statement. “… To this end, the FBI will continue to partner formally with other members of the JTTF as well as informally with cities and counties across the state to share informa- tion and address threats as appropriate.” U.S. Attorney Billy J. Williams, in a statement, called the decision “a mis- take that defi es logic. It’s disappointing that in spite of the overwhelming evi- dence presented of JTTF successes in Oregon and across the nation, a majority of the City Council chose a politically-expedient broad- side against the federal gov- ernment over the safety and well-being of their constituents. “The law enforcement community’s duty and com- mitment to ensuring public safety and protecting civil rights will not be deterred by the politics of the moment.” The 9th U.S. Cir- cuit Court of Appeals will reconsider outlawing chlorpyrifos, a pesticide banned by a three-judge panel in August, but that farm groups say is vital to food production. A new hearing is a vic- tory for the U.S. Environ- mental Protection Agency, as well as farm groups. A majority of the court’s judges has voted to set aside the August ruling and rehear the case in late March in San Francisco. A time and date has not been set. The case will be heard by 11 judges drawn by lot from the court’s ros- ter of judges. The EPA asked for rehearing after it was ordered in a 2-1 deci- sion to cancel all uses of chlorpyrifos. The American Farm Bureau Federation and more than two dozen other farm groups fi led a court brief supporting the EPA’s motion. The farm groups argue banning chlorpyrifos would wreak havoc on U.S. agriculture. In use on farms since 1965, chlorpy- rifos is approved for more than 50 crops and is also used to protect livestock from disease-carrying insects. The case stems from a petition to ban chlorpyrifos fi led in 2007 by the Natural Resources Defense Coun- cil and the Pesticide Action Network North Amer- ica. Environmental groups claim total exposure to the pesticide on food, in drink- ing water and the environ- ment harms the brains of young children. Under a court order to make a decision, the EPA under President Barack Obama proposed ban- ning the pesticide in 2015, but delayed mak- ing a fi nal decision until the change in administra- tions. Faced with a new deadline from the court, the Trump administration’s EPA denied the petition in March 2017 and said it would continue assessing chlorpyrifos. The August ruling was written by visiting Judge Jed Rakoff of the U.S. Dis- trict Court for the Southern District of New York. The majority ruled that the EPA could not justify its deci- sion in the face of evidence that residue on food causes neurodevelopmental dam- age to children. The EPA argues the rul- ing was premature because the science is unsettled and was too broad because the ban also applied to non-food uses. The U.S. Department of Agricul- ture , under the Obama and Trump administrations, has defended chlorpyrifos as safe and in some cases the only effective chemical against dangerous pests. The lawsuit to ban chlorpyrifos was fl ied by the League of United Latin American Citizens, Pesticide Action Net- work North America, Nat- ural Resources Defense Council, California Rural Legal Assistance Founda- tion, Farmworkers Asso- ciation of Florida, Farm- workers Justice Green Latinos, Labor Council for Latin American Advance- ment, Learning Disabili- ties Association of Amer- ica, National Hispanic Medical Association, Pin- eros Y Campesinos Unidos Del Noroeste and United Farm Workers. The non- profi t law fi rm Earthjustice represents them. Washington State Attor- ney General Bob Ferguson has intervened in the case, urging a ban. He is joined by attorneys general in Maryland, Massachusetts, New York and the District of Columbia. States weigh bills addressing Native deaths, disappearances By MARY HUDETZ Associated Press rural district include the death of 14-year-old Henny Scott. Her body was found by a search party two weeks after she went missing in December. Harris and Scott’s fam- ilies complained authori- ties were slow to search for the victims after they were reported missing. “It’s always been this way. We’ve always had missing women and chil- dren,” Peppers said. “The voices are just louder now.” In New Mexico, Lente said his measure would call for the New Mexico Indian Affairs Department to lead a task force joined by authori- ties across jurisdictions. The legislation was wel- comed by Meskee Yatsayte, an advocate in New Mexico for families with missing loved ones on the Navajo Nation. She said she hoped lawmakers and offi cials would include victims’ fam- NIGHTTIME FRIENDS BAND Saturday, February 16 th Music starts at 7:30 pm ilies and advocates in their discussions. “It’s a good step for- ward,” Yatsayte said. “But it can’t be something where they meet and then nothing is done about it.” Bills in South Dakota and North Dakota include man- dates for law enforcement training programs on con- ducting investigations. Rep. Tamara St. John, a South Dakota Republican and member of the Sisseton Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 SWEETHEART DINNER 5 TO 8pm Public Welcome • Fundraiser • Call 503-738-5111 ue “Q en o Chef Brad Dodson offers a Special 5 Course Prix Fixe Menu Seaside’s Only Oceanfront Restaurant    Elegant Atmosphere Beautiful Views, Cozy Fireplace Full Bar & Wine Menu 580 Beach Drive, Seaside 2 blocks South of the Turn-around www.MaggiesOnTheProm.com Hear Valentine’s Dinner Prime Rib Dinner with all the trimmings SEASIDE AMERICAN LEGION 1315 Broadway St., Seaside Iron Chef Goes Coastal Winner th e ts” Kim’s Surf & Turf (N.Y Strip Steak & Prawns) plus all the trimmings! Just $17.50 Wahpeton Oyate, said she’s co-sponsoring the measure to put a spotlight on the cases. Rep. Gina Mosbrucker, a Washington state Republi- can, introduced a bill signed into law last year that requires the Washington State Patrol to provide an estimate by June of how many Native women are missing in the state. That measure paved the way for similar legislation in other states. WANTED f ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Lawmakers in at least seven states have intro- duced legislation to address the unsolved deaths and dis- appearances of numerous Native American women and girls. The legislation calls for state-funded task forces and other actions amid deep- ening concerns that law enforcement agencies lack the data and resources to understand the scope of the crisis. On some reservations, federal studies have shown Native American women are killed at more than 10 times the national average. “This is not about a trend that is popular this year,” said state Rep. Derrick Lente, a Democrat who is co-sponsoring a measure in New Mexico. “It’s really to bring to light the number of indigenous people who are going missing.” An Associated Press review of the bills found that mostly Native Amer- ican lawmakers in Minne- sota, the Dakotas, Montana, Washington, New Mexico and Arizona have sponsored measures on the issue. In AP interviews last year, families described feeling dismissed after ini- tially reporting cases of missing female relatives to police. An examination of records found there was no single government database tracking all known cases of missing Native American women. In Montana, a bill named for Hanna Harris — a 21-year-old found slain on the Northern Cheyenne Reservation in July 2013 — proposes that state authori- ties hire a specialist respon- sible for entering cases into databases. Under Hanna’s Act, the state Department of Jus- tice employee would also serve as a liaison for tribal, federal and state author- ities and families after a Native American is reported missing. “To us we’ve seen study bill after study bill,” said Rep. Rae Peppers, a Demo- crat. “Why waste money on a study bill when the issue was right in front of us?” Peppers, whose district spans the Northern Chey- enne and Crow reservations, lives in Lame Deer, a small community where Har- ris’ body was found days after she was fi rst reported missing. Peppers said she and other lawmakers decided to name the measure for Harris in part because her mother had led an early push for more awareness of the cases. Other cases in Peppers’ Saturday February 16 th 5 PM All proceeds to Clatsop Post 12 Building Fund Our Valentine Basfet Raffle Ticfets $ 1 ea. or 6 for $ 5 “Queen of Hearts” will receive Flowers and a Box of Chocolates Live Music by Pre-purchase tickets at the Post 12 Lounge $10.00 per person “Greg Parke” 6 TO 10 PM ASTORIA AMERICAN LEGION Clatsop Post 12 1132 Exchange Street • 503-325-5771