A10 OREGON East Oregonian Saturday, September 14, 2019 Trump administration finalizes plan to repeal Obama-era water protections Trump’s first EPA administrator. “This is not the end of this unfortunate and disastrous jour- ney, this is just a midway point,” Center for Biological Diversity’s government affairs director Brett Hartl said. “So even if the conse- quences to the Northwest are not severe right now, in six months we’re looking at massive losses of wetland protections.” Environmental advocates plan to file lawsuits to fight back against the repeal. But not all are against the changes, as the Oregon Farm Bureau applauded the repeal and replacements of the Water of the United States rule. The Oregon Farm Bureau issued a statement saying the state already has strong water quality and fill-and-removal regulations. The rule proposed by the previ- ous administration would not add anything and it would only give litigious environmental groups the ability to bring citizen suits against farmers who are already working to improve and protect water quality. With this final repeal, the agencies will implement the pre- 2015 regulations, which are cur- rently in place in more than half of the states, informed by appli- cable agency guidance documents and consistent with Supreme Court decisions and longstanding agency practice. The final rule takes effect 60 days after publication in the Fed- eral Register. By MONICA SAMAYOA Oregon Public Broadcasting WASHINGTON — The Trump administration is finalizing plans to repeal an Obama-era water pro- tections rule. The Environmental Protection Agency’s administrator, Andrew Wheeler, signed the repeal Thurs- day of the Waters of the United States rule — the first step in a two-step rule making process. “Today, EPA and the Depart- ment of the Army finalized a rule to repeal the previous admin- istration’s overreach in the fed- eral regulation of U.S. waters and recodify the longstanding and familiar regulatory text that pre- viously existed,” Wheeler said in a statement, referring to his own agency and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The next step allows the Trump administration to finalize a new definition for which bodies of water deserve federal protection by the end of the year. Environmental advocates said removing regulations could potentially increase pollution in certain waters, while the agricul- tural industry praised the move as correcting an earlier overreach in regulation. Columbia Riverkeeper’s exec- utive director Brett VandenHeu- vel said President Donald Trump’s attempt to lessen regulations are heading in the wrong direction. “The Clean Water Act is a core part of our of nation’s laws to pro- United States Fish and Wildlife Service Photo/Teal Waterstrat An Oregon spotted frog. A federal judge has halted cattle grazing in the Fremont-Winema National Forest over concerns of impact to the Oregon spotted frog. tect clean water. It’s been in place since 1972,” VandenHeuvel said. “It’s done a lot of good and it’s extremely popular with the Amer- ican public. We want clean water.” In 2015, President Barack Obama signed the Waters of the United States rule to clarify gov- ernmental authority to regulate smaller tributaries and wetlands, Ex-lawmaker files complaint against Brown’s top lawyer By HILLARY BORRUD The Oregonian SALEM — A former state lawmaker has asked the Oregon State Bar to investigate whether Gov. Kate Brown’s top lawyer, Misha Isaak, violated pro- fessional rules for lawyers during a dispute over the independence of the state’s public records advocate. In a bar complaint filed Wednesday morning, Jeff Kropf asked the Oregon State Bar to investigate whether Isaak committed misconduct by allegedly pressuring Public Records Advocate Ginger McCall to stop pushing for certain public records reforms and instead secretly advance the governor’s policy interests. McCall cited that pres- sure, which she described as an “abuse of authority” by Isaak, in a letter to the governor Monday announc- ing she would resign effec- tive Oct. 12. Isaak is set to take a seat on the Oregon Court of Appeals on Nov. 1, a job to which the governor appointed him at the end of August. Kropf, a former Repub- lican representative who is also the executive direc- tor of the politically con- servative nonprofit Oregon Capitol Watch Foundation, wrote in an email to the state bar that a rule against attorney misconduct “applies to this situation in which Isaak allegedly pressured another lawyer to mislead the public into believing that she is an independent officer while advocating secretly for his client, the governor.” Under the bar’s rules of professional conduct, it is considered professional misconduct for a lawyer to “engage in conduct involv- ing dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation that reflects adversely on the lawyer’s fitness to prac- AP Photo/Andrew Selsky Ginger McCall, Oregon’s first public records advocate, pos- es for photos in her office in Salem. Faced with what she thought was undue interference and disrespect shown by Gov. Kate Brown’s general counsel, McCall, whose job is aimed at making government more transparent, resigned. Her resignation has blown up into a debacle for the Demo- cratic governor’s office. Isaak Brown tice law.” Kropf cited a bar rule that lawyers must not “in the course of representing a client, knowingly intim- idate or harass a person because of that person’s race, color, national origin, religion, age, sex, gender identity, gender expression, sexual orientation, marital status, or disability.” “Ms. McCall claimed she was intimidated into misleading the public by Isaak while nine months pregnant which could be a violation of (this rule),” Kropf wrote. In an interview on the OPB program Think Out Loud on Tuesday, McCall said that she was nine months pregnant when Isaak informed her during a January meeting that he believed he was her super- visor. According to notes VISIT US ON THE WEB AT M c C a l l wrote imme- diately after that meeting and which The Orego- nian/Oregon- Kropf Live obtained through a public records request, Isaak concluded the meet- ing by telling McCall he was concerned she would tell a specific reporter about the discussion. “This conveyed to me that I was expected to keep this meeting, including the fact that the governor’s office interpreted (state law) to mean that I report to them, a secret,” McCall wrote in her contemporane- ous memorandum. McCall told Think Out Loud host Dave Miller on Tuesday that she felt she had to comply with Isaak’s wishes. “I was at the time, nine months pregnant, I will note, and I had moved across the country for this job and I didn’t have any other job in hand and I had bills to pay. So I was put in an impossible position,” she said. but the rule never went into effect — as it was challenged in a multi- state lawsuit led by Scott Pruitt, then the Oklahoma attorney gen- eral before he went on to be BRIEFLY Woman given 6-plus years prison for fraud, theft SALEM — A woman res- cued from an oceanside cliff in 2017 and later arrested on 98 theft, fraud and criminal mistreatment charges has been sentenced to more than six years in prison. The Statesman Journal reported Heather Mounce, formerly of Dallas, was sen- tenced Thursday after plead- ing guilty to two counts of aggravated theft, 12 counts of identity theft and two counts of theft. Defense attorney Tim- othy Park said domes- tic violence and mental ill- ness led her to steal more than $40,000 from her for- mer employers at a trucking company. Prosecutors say Mounce took vacations, got mas- sages, and went to nail and hair appointments with the money. Court documents say Mounce also created a GoFundMe account under another woman’s name say- ing she was a domestic vio- lence victim and tried to gar- ner donations. Mounce was rescued in August 2017 by the U.S. Coast Guard near Sea Lion Caves north of Florence, which made national news. Man found guilty of sex abuse involving 3 girls HILLSBORO — A jury has found a Hillsboro man guilty of 18 counts of child sex abuse involving three girls. KOIN-TV reported the Washington County jury convicted Alvaro Noe Men- doza-Valencia on charges ranging from rape and sodomy to creating child porn and unlawful sexual penetration. One of the girls reported the abuse to a relative in 2016. But an investigation wasn’t launched until the rel- ative later passed the story on to a victim advocate, who notified Hillsboro police. Investigators learned from the girls that the abuse had been happening for sev- eral years. They said Mendoza-Va- lencia threatened to hurt them or their loved ones if they told anyone. Mendoza-Valencia will be sentenced later this month. Cop cleared over friendly texts with group leader PORTLAND — Portland Police Chief Danielle Out- law and Mayor Ted Wheeler have announced that the bureau’s former crowd con- trol liaison was largely doing his job when he exchanged friendly texts with Patriot Prayer leader Joey Gibson to gather protest information. The Oregonian/Oregon- Live reported Portland’s Independent Police Review didn’t find sufficient evi- dence to prove allegations against Lt. Jeff Niiya after reviewing over 11,000 of his cellphone text messages between May 2017 and Feb- ruary 2019. Investigators consid- ered allegations that Niiya Man pleads not guilty to killing for gang status PORTLAND — A man has pleaded not guilty to a federal murder in aid of rack- eteering charge in the fatal shooting of a 21-year-old man in Portland allegedly to increase his status in the Hoover gang. The Oregonian/Oregon- Live reported 23-year-old Javier Fernando Hernandez entered the plea Thursday. He is also is charged with using a firearm in a crime of violence in the death of Kyle Polk. Polk was headed home from his job when he was shot and killed outside a con- venience store Dec. 16, 2015. The U.S. Attorney’s Office says a four-week jury trial was tentatively set for November. The federal indictment describes the Hoovers as a criminal street gang that started in Los Angeles in the 1960s, but established a presence in the 1980s. The indictment alleges the gang has been involved in mur- ders, sex trafficking and drug distribution. — Associated Press We Hear You! You deserve total audiological care. Professional. Experienced. Local. EastOregonian.com Renata Anderson, MA WE ARE A PROUD SPONSOR OF THE PENDLETON ROUND-UP! engaged in unprofessional behavior during his commu- nications with Gibson, didn’t maintain objectivity while communicating with Gib- son and inappropriately dis- closed information to Gib- son to allow individuals to avoid arrest. Chief Danielle Out- law found all allegations “unfounded.” Pam Wagenaar, Administrative Assistant 2237 SW Court, Pendleton 541-276-5053 PETROLEUM 345 N. 1st Place, Hermiston, OR 97838 541-289-5015 • www.mcpcoop.com www.renataanderson.com