A6 Oregon forest health and wildfi re prevention eff orts stand to gain Money included in infrastructure bill facebook.com/dailyastorian Consult a By MONICA SAMAYOA Oregon Public Broadcasting Oregon is set to receive millions from the recently signed infrastructure package to improve forest health and reduce wildfi re risks. On Monday, U.S. Agricul- ture Secretary Tom Vilsack, U.S. Rep. Kurt Schrader, and Gov. Kate Brown held a vir- tual roundtable event to dis- cuss the eff ects of climate change in Oregon. Over the past 20 months, Oregon has experienced wildfi res that have collectively burned more than 1.8 million acres and more than 4,000 homes. The state also experienced record-breaking heat waves that killed 116 people, includ- ing at least three people on the job — all while also deal- ing with a historic drought. The Infrastructure Invest- ment and Jobs Act, signed into law last month by Pres- ident Joe Biden, will steer roughly $5 billion into the state over the next fi ve years. At least $39 million is to support wildfi re risk reduc- THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 2021 PROFESSIONAL LEO FINZI Cookies? Cookies save information about your visit to a web site, such as your username and password, enabling COUPON easier log in, and personalized YEAR-END browsing by remembering your CLEARANCE past searches. Some cyberattacks 50% OFF can hijack cookies and enable access ALL REFURBISHED to your browsing sessions and login DESKTOP information. Visit CCleaner.com and COMPUTERS Glarysoft.com to download free Mon-Fri 10-6 Sat/Sun Closed versions of their utilities to help 77 11th Street, Suite H remove unwanted cookies, then run Astoria, OR 503-325-2300 them once a month to increase your AstoriasBest.com computer’s performance and security. Astoria’s Best Kristyna Wentz-Graff /Oregon Public Broadcasting Fire damage in Elkhorn after the Beachie Creek fi re devastated the area in 2020. tion eff orts that will include money for prescribed burn- ing and forest thinning. Debate continues to play out among forest scientists and the timber industry about whether prescribed burning or tree cutting are the most eff ective ways to restore forest health. But there is a growing consensus that for- ests have become tinder- boxes of overgrown brush and dense-growing trees after decades of aggressive fi re suppression. Overall, the package directs $3.4 billion for nation- wide wildfi re risk reduction. Vilsack said the spending refl ects a growing awareness of the risks of climate change. From 2010 to 2020, Ore- gon has experienced 12 extreme weather events, cost- ing the state up to $5 billion in damages, according to a White House fact sheet. Schrader, who was part of an eff ort to keep the infra- structure bill on track when its fate was uncertain, said he expects the increased fed- eral spending to be accom- panied by closer coordina- tion between the U.S. Forest Service and Oregon’s state foresters, private landown- ers and the conservation community. “We’re actually going to be able to give Oregonians confi dence that there’s a plan to address fi refi ghting,” the Oregon Democrat said. Q: What is love? A: Now that is a difficult Lawsuit critical of anti-terrorism center Allegations of unlawful spying By MAXINE BERNSTEIN The Oregonian Several environmental, Indigenous and social justice advocates fi led suit Tuesday against the Oregon Depart- ment of Justice, alleging the state’s TITAN Fusion Center for intelligence gathering has unlawfully spied on peace- ful demonstrators fi ghting the $10 billion Jordan Cove pipeline. It argues that the fusion center – one of about 80 across the country that were started in the wake of the Sept. 11, 200 1, terrorist attacks – is operating with- out any state legislative authority. Attorneys from the Polic- ing Project at New York Uni- versity School of Law fi led the suit in Marion County Circuit Court on behalf of four plaintiff s using the novel legal argument in the fi rst lit- igation initiated by the pub- lic safety research nonprofi t. The state has no law that recognizes or regulates the center, the suit says. “Until the Oregon L eg- islature decides to autho- rize and set up appropriate guardrails, they shouldn’t be allowed to operate at all,” said Farhang Heydari, the Policing Project’s executive director. “The lawsuit tells a story of a fusion center that operates largely in the dark with little oversight. Our focus is restoring checks and balances on this rogue spy- ing agency.’’ Kristina Edmunson, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Justice and Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum, said the depart- ment is reviewing the lawsuit and will respond in court. She said when the depart- ment learned of the con- cerns about improper sur- veillance of Jordan Cove protesters, “We followed up immediately and shortly thereafter placed the Fusion Center employee on admin- istrative leave. After an inter- nal investigation, we issued the employee a pre dis- missal notice and he chose to resign.” She said the center works with federal, state and local law enforcement agencies to produce threat assess- ments, offi cer safety bul- letins, reports of missing persons and general crime bulletins. It also provides training to law enforcement agencies, businesses and fi rst responders about various public safety topics, includ- ing active shooters, cyberse- curity and crime trends. It’s supported by both federal grants and funding from the state L egislature, she said. The suit contends the Fusion Center has over- stepped its initial focus. The U.S. Department of Home- land Security created the centers for federal, state and local law enforcement agen- cies to share information on threats to help anticipate ter- rorist attacks. While the centers were funded at fi rst through fed- eral grants, the cost of keep- ing them running has largely fallen to states. Oregon’s center is run through the state Department of Jus- tice’s Criminal Intelligence Division. The suit alleges the cen- ter has coordinated intelli- gence operations on Jordan Cove with fi rms hired by the private company funding the project with the aim of sup- pressing public dissent. Cal- gary-based Pembina Pipeline Corp. proposed a liquefi ed natural gas export terminal in Coos Bay with a feeder pipeline, the Pacifi c Connec- tor, stretching halfway across Oregon. Emails obtained by the plaintiff s that were fi rst reported by The Guardian show that law enforcement agencies, including the FBI, have monitored opponents of Jordan Cove and shared information on an email list that included a public rela- tions company supporting the pipeline project. In one Jan. 7, 2019, email shared by the plaintiff s with The Oregonian , a local Coos County deputy sheriff wrote to the FBI, Oregon State Police and a state employee with the Fusion Center that he was monitoring atten- dance for an upcoming pro- test against Jordon Cove but was “hesitant to push any information out to the task force due to the lack of a criminal nexus. This is for your information only.” He noted that 384 peo- ple showed an interest in attending and 98 people sent RSVPs for the protest, adding “most of the names are recognized as residents spread across the other three pipeline counties.” In the spring of 2019, the Teneo public relations fi rm hired by Pembina sent an email to local law enforce- ment agencies in Coos County instructing them to label all information shared with the Fusion Center on Jordan Cove and other gas pipeline projects as “Criti- cal Infrastructure informa- tion,” so it could remain confi dential. On Dec. 1, the develop- ers that had hoped to build the Pacifi c Connector Pipe- line and Jordan Cove Energy Project told the Federal Energy Regulatory Com- mission they did not intend to move forward with the project. Among the plaintiff s in the suit are Ka’ila Far- rell-Smith, a member of the Klamath Tribes and a res- ident of Modoc Point who serves as a board member for environmental justice nonprofi t Rogue Climate; Rowena Jackson, a mem- ber of the Klamath Tribes who lives in Klamath Falls; Sarah Westover, a commu- nity organizer and social jus- tice advocate who lives in Phoenix ; and Francis Eath- erington, an environmen- tal activist and president of the Oregon Women’s Land Trust, a nonprofi t based in southern Oregon. They’ve each helped organize opposi- tion to Jordan Cove. The plaintiff s want a judge to declare Oregon’s TITAN Fusion Center unlawful, halt its operations and order the center to destroy or expunge all records on them and their organizations. ASTORIA CHIROPRACTIC Alicia M. Smith, DC Owner 503-325-3311 2935 Marine Drive Astoria, Oregon question, but we can promise to get you back to doing THINGS that you love! Small adjustments make a world of difference. 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