NATION/WORLD Tuesday, June 27, 2017 East Oregonian Page 7A ASSOCIATED PRESS Q&A Murkiness follows Supreme Court’s action on travel ban By GENE JOHNSON Associated Press SEATTLE — On again, off again, off again, off again and now, partly back on: That’s the peculiar route of President Donald Trump’s travel ban after a Supreme Court decision Monday allowing a limited version to take effect. The high court said the president’s 90-day ban on visitors from Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen can be enforced pending arguments sched- uled for October as long as those visitors lack a “credible claim of a bona fide relation- ship with a person or entity in the United States.” But much remains murky: What exactly is a bona fide relationship? Who gets to decide? Will the travel ban even still be an issue by the time the justices hear argu- ments? Here’s a look at some key issues surrounding Trump’s executive order: Who’s the winner? After the lower courts found the travel ban uncon- stitutionally biased against Muslims and contrary to federal immigration law, Trump hailed the Supreme Court’s decision as a “clear victory for our national security.” It was a legal win for the administration — to an extent. Three justices — Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Trump appointee Neil Gorsuch — said they would have allowed the travel ban to take effect as written. But the other six kept blocking it as it applies to those traveling to the U.S. on employment, student or family immigrant visas as well as other cases where the traveler can show a “bona fide” connection to the U.S. That’s no minor excep- tion, according to immigrant groups, who say relatively few people come to the U.S. from the affected countries without such close ties. Likewise, the justices said, refugees can travel to the U.S. if they demonstrate those AP Photo/Ted S. Warren Travelers wait in line near an Emirates ticket counter at the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport Monday in Se- attle. The U.S. Supreme Court said Monday that President Donald Trump’s travel ban on visitors from Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen can be enforced if those visitors lack a “credible claim of a bona fide relation- ship with a person or entity in the United States,” and that justices will hear full arguments in October 2017. connections — contrary to the part of Trump’s executive order suspending the nation’s refugee program. “This decision is a true compromise,” said Kari Hong, an immigration law expert at Boston College Law School. “It is true that the travel ban is allowed to go into effect, but the Supreme Court substantially narrowed who could be denied entry.” Immigrant rights advo- cates welcomed the ruling for showing that the president’s authority on immigration is not absolute and ensuring people with connections in the U.S. will be allowed to enter. But they said they are worried about other immi- grants, including refugees who may be desperate for help but lack U.S. relations. But what’s bona fide? The court’s majority laid out the “bona fide” relation- ships it had in mind. For indi- viduals, a close family rela- tionship is required: A spouse or a mother-in-law would be permitted. So would a worker who accepted a job from an American company, AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite People leave the Supreme Court in Washington, Mon- day as justices issued their final rulings for the term. a student enrolled at a U.S. university or a lecturer invited to address a U.S. audience. What’s not bona fide? A relationship created for purposes of avoiding the travel ban, the justices said. “For example, a nonprofit group devoted to immigra- tion issues may not contact foreign nationals from the designated countries, add them to client lists, and then secure their entry by claiming injury from their exclusion,” the court wrote. Still, Thomas, Alito and Gorsuch found that guidance confusing and unworkable. “Today’s compromise will burden executive offi- cials with the task of deciding — on peril of contempt — whether individuals from the six affected nations who wish to enter the United States have a sufficient connection to a person or entity in this country,” Thomas wrote. London’s fire symptomatic of larger issues LONDON (AP) — The deaths of 79 people in a London apartment tower have triggered emergency inspections, evacuations and soul searching among British officials who failed to prevent the tragedy. But fire-safety experts say governments and builders around the world should take notice, because the fire at Grenfell Tower is just the latest in a string of deadly blazes that demonstrate how building regulations have failed to keep up with changing materials and cuts in inspections and oversight mean problems aren’t spotted until it is too late. The Ghost Ship fire in Oakland, California, made headlines in December, when 36 people were killed in a warehouse that had been illegally converted into living spaces and a music venue. In September, 33 people died in a fire at a packaging plant in Bangladesh. “They are a collective example of how, either inten- tionally or accidentally, the fire prevention and protection system has been broken,” said Jim Pauley, president of the National Fire Protection Association, which develops fire codes used in the U.S. and around the world. “A system that the public believes exists and counts on for their safety — through complacency, bad policy and placing the economics of construction over safety — has let them down.” The aftermath of the Gren- fell Tower fire shows that the faults that led to the disaster are not isolated. The government is scram- bling to test panels similar to those used at Grenfell Tower, and has found at least 75 buildings covered in similarly flammable material. Thousands of people have been evacuated from four high-rises in north London after inspectors found fire- safety problems, including faulty fire doors. The city Peter Byrne/PA via AP Workers remove cladding from Whitebeam Court, in Pendleton, Manchester on Monday. of Birmingham has decided to install sprinklers in all its public housing towers — four years after coroners investi- gating deadly fires suggested this be done throughout the country. John Bonney, a former chief officer for the Hamp- shire Fire and Rescue Service, regrets that it took a disaster to trigger action. Seven years ago, Bonney vowed to improve conditions after two of his firefighters died in a blaze in a high-rise apartment building in Southampton. “I call it tombstone legislation — it appears after significant losses of life,” Bonney said. The residents of Grenfell Tower didn’t realize the danger they faced when they went to bed June 13. A fire that started in a refrigerator just after midnight quickly spread throughout the 24-story tower. As firefighters arrived, flames were shooting up the outside of the building, trapping residents inside. “How is that even possible?!” one incredulous firefighter asked in a cell- phone video captured as his engine approached the tower. While the investigation is still underway, fire experts believe part of the answer may be the aluminum composite material recently attached to the outside of the building. The material, essentially two thin sheets of aluminum around a layer of insulation, has been used for decades, but its popularity has grown in recent years because it offers a relatively inexpensive way to save energy and beautify buildings. Experts have warned about risks posed by the panels for years because some varieties use highly flammable plastic foam insulation, which can rapidly spread fires once it ignites, as previously seen in Australia, China and Dubai. It also could lead to legal challenges amid the “struggle to determine what exactly constitutes a ‘bona fide relationship,’ who precisely has a ‘credible claim’ to that relationship, and whether the claimed relationship was formed ‘simply to avoid’” the travel ban,” he wrote. More airport chaos? Trump’s initial travel ban, issued without warning on a Friday in January, brought chaos and protests to airports nationwide as travelers from seven targeted countries were barred even if they had prior permission to come to the U.S. The State Depart- ment canceled up to 60,000 visas but later reversed that decision. A federal judge in Seattle blocked the order a week later, and Trump eventually revised it, dropping Iraq from the list and including reasons people might be exempted, such as a need for medical treatment. The limited ban will take effect Thursday morning, the State Department said Monday. Airports may be less likely to see the same sorts of demonstrations given the advance warning, that those with prior permission to enter are not affected and the months people have had to reach the U.S. since the first ban was blocked. Matt Adams, legal director of the Seattle-based Northwest Immigrant Rights Project, which filed one of many lawsuits against the policy, said he still expects some confusion at airports, at least initially. Eventually, people likely will be barred from boarding planes to the U.S., he said. “With many groups, it’s clear-cut from the type of visa: Anyone coming in on family visa or employment visa, by their terms it’s clear they have a bona fide rela- tionship,” he said. “What’s more difficult is if you’re coming in on a tourist visa. I think you’re going to be going through a lengthy inquiry, and we’ll have to see how that plays out.” Next legal steps The Supreme Court would not hear arguments on the legality of the ban until October. But by then, a key provision may have expired, possibly making the review unnecessary. That’s because Trump’s order only sought to halt travelers from the six coun- tries for 90 days, to give the administration time to review the screening procedures for those visa applicants. The administration has argued that the ban would not go into effect until court orders blocking each provision were lifted. The Supreme Court has asked for more arguments about whether the challenges to the travel restriction became moot in June. David Levine, a professor at the University of Califor- nia’s Hastings College of Law, said the justices likely will not sidestep a ruling on the executive order on those grounds. “The underlying issue of presidential power is too important and too likely to occur in the future,” he said. Support for gay marriage surges, even among groups once wary NEW YORK (AP) — In the two years since same-sex marriage was legalized nationwide, support for it has surged even among groups that recently were broadly opposed, according to a new national survey. The Pew Research Center survey found that for the first time, a majority of blacks and baby boomers support allowing gays and lesbians to wed. It said Republicans are now split almost evenly, a marked shift from 2013, when 61 percent opposed gay marriage. Pew’s survey was conducted by telephone among 2,504 adults across the U.S. from June 8 to 18. It was released Monday, the second anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s historic ruling on same-sex marriage. In the aftermath of that ruling, there were some flare-ups of defiance. A county clerk in Kentucky, Kim Davis, refused to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples. Alabama’s chief justice, Roy Moore, ordered probate judges to stop issuing such licenses. But such acts of resistance have largely faded way, and same-sex marriage is now treated as a routine occurrence across the U.S. According to the Williams Institute at UCLA School of Law, there are now more than 547,000 same-sex married couples in the U.S., including at least 157,000 couples who married in the past two years. Some staunch opponents of gay marriage are now focusing their efforts on trying to provide legal protections to civil servants, merchants and other business people who do not want to provide services to same-sex couples. HAPPY 4TH OF JULY! Verna Taylor, HAS • Ric Jones, BC-HIS Forrest Cahill, HAS 541-567-4063 • 405 N. 1st St., Suite #107, Hermiston 541-215-1888 • 246 SW Dorion, Pendleton Patriotic Gift Items! Stop by today! Join us today! Put a smile on the heart with the power of flowers. HWY 395, HERMISTON 541-567-4305 Mon-Sat 8am-6pm • Sun 12pm-5am www.cottagefl owersonline.com Apply Online: Text for more info: