A4 BAKER CITY HERALD • TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 2022 BAKER CITY Opinion WRITE A LETTER news@bakercityherald.com Baker City, Oregon EDITORIAL Ambulance proposal likely was doomed E ven if the Baker City Council had decided to send a proposal to Baker County, out- lining how the city fi re department could continue operating ambulances, it likely would have been a fool’s errand, doomed to failure. Th is was probably to be expected, considering City Manager Jonathan Cannon’s dogged insis- tence that the city can’t aff ord to continue oper- ating ambulances for even one more fi scal year without a major cash infusion from the county. Th is despite a lack of compelling evidence that running ambulances, as the city has done since the 1930s, has been siphoning great amounts of dollars from other departments in the city’s general fund over the past several years. Th e City Council voted 7-0 on May 10 to have Cannon prepare a proposal to meet the coun- ty’s June 3 deadline. Two weeks later councilors voted 4-2 to reverse that decision. Th e deadline came and went, and on June 8, county com- missioners voted to contract with Metro West Ambulance of Hillsboro to replace the Baker City Fire Department. Th us ended one of the more disappointing, and inexplicable, City Council actions in the past few decades. Th e city initially refused to release the draft proposal Cannon was working on. Th e Baker City Herald appealed that decision to District Attorney Greg Baxter under Oregon’s Public Re- cords Law. Baxter concluded that the draft was not exempt from public disclosure. It’s available on the city’s website, bakercity.com. Although county commissioners Bruce Nich- ols and Mark Bennett have said publicly that they had hoped the city would submit a propos- al, it’s diffi cult to imagine how commissioners could have picked the city over Metro West, based on the document Cannon was working on. Most notably, the city’s draft proposal, which actually includes two scenarios, states that “Bak- er City will require the following non-negotiable amounts from Baker County for each year of the contract.” Th ose amounts range from $850,000 to $1,600,000 per year. Baker County contributed $100,000 to the city for ambulance service in the current fi scal year. It defi es belief that county commissioners would — or, indeed, could — have agreed to the city’s “non-negotiable” request for such larger sums. Metro West, which has the advantage of being able to collect a larger percentage of its costs, compared with the city, from the Medicare and Medicaid patients who make up a majority of local ambulance patients, did not request any fi nancial subsidy for the duration of the fi ve- year contract. Th e other private company that sent a pro- posal, Capstone Transportation, which operates as Victory EMS in the Boise area, proposed a county subsidy of $1,280,000 the fi rst year, with expected 3% annual increases thereaft er. Th e vast diff erence in the monetary terms be- tween the Metro West and Victory EMS propos- als is one reason that choosing the former fi rm was “basically an easy pick,” Nichols said. Given that Baker City’s draft proposal called for a county contribution similar to Victory EMS’, it seems likely that the city would have been as distant a runner-up to Metro West. Ultimately, it looks as though the city’s ambu- lance service — and the larger fi refi ghting work- force it made possible but which the city is now losing — was all but doomed from the council’s March 22 vote to send the ultimatum to the county. Th e city’s budget for the fi scal year that starts July 1 includes 10.5 full-time equivalent positions, compared with 16.25 in the current budget. Whether or not the city submitted the propos- al, with its outlandish dollar demands, probably was a moot point. — Jayson Jacoby, Baker City Herald editor OTHER VIEWS The tragedy in Uvalde, and why police body camera footage should be released EDITORIAL FROM THE FORT WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM: O ne really disturbing crime is some- times all it takes to enact change at any level. The Uvalde shooting has done that, encouraging new federal gun legislation and school safety provisions. It has also revealed the limitations po- lice hope to place on public release of body camera footage. The Texas Department of Public Safety has asked Attorney General Ken Paxton to prevent the public release of footage from cameras that law enforce- ment officers wore during the shooting at Robb Elementary School, citing one of the many legal loopholes available to them. In this case, DPS officials argue, the footage could be used by other criminals to find “weaknesses” in how police respond to crimes. No offense to the Uvalde ISD police and others on the scene for more than an hour while the attack was active, but that ship has sailed. Motherboard, a tech publication, filed public records requests with DPS, Uvalde city police, the school district, the U.S. De- partment of Homeland Security and the Customs and Border Protection agency. It seeks body camera footage, audio record- ings, and other relevant information from that day in order to understand what went wrong. It does not take the eye of a criminal in- vestigator to see that Uvalde police failed to follow protocol and lacked the tools and courage necessary to confront an active shooter and usher dying children to nearby hospitals so that their lives may have been saved, even as they prevented parents from going inside the school themselves. Over the two weeks following the shoot- ing, the story law enforcement shared to the media changed several times. From whether there was a security guard at the school to whether a door was propped open and whether the first responding of- ficer carried a radio, law enforcement in- volved in the response have shown they’re good at one thing: obfuscation. Body camera footage of active law en- forcement officers that day wouldn’t tell the whole story, of course. And it wouldn’t have to include awful footage of dead or dying victims. But it would provide an- swers that law enforcement can’t quite get straight. There are legal provisions to prevent release of the footage, but they should be sparsely applied on a case-by-case basis. The loopholes are vast and expansive and completely thwart the reason for body cameras in the first place: to promote transparency and accountability. Body camera footage often clarifies for law enforcement and perpetrator what might seem hazy in the heat of an intense moment. According to the Texas Public Informa- tion Act, “A video of a use of deadly force by an officer or the investigation of an of- ficer can not be released to the public until all criminal and administrative processes have been completed. A law enforcement agency may release a video if the agency determines that release of the video ad- vances a law enforcement purpose.” Under these two vague circumstances, both left up to the powers that be, it’s a miracle any- one wondering about the fate of their loved ones in the hands of police officers has seen body cam footage. Texas law has provisions about what footage and other police documents police departments can withhold. Each city has its own policies, too. Together, they form a laundry list of subjective reasons. Here are some in Fort Worth: in cases in which no one is charged or convicted, in cases where footage shows the inside of a residence, when an inves- tigation is ongoing or the release could compromise the investigation, when the footage might violate someone’s privacy, if the subject is a juvenile, if the footage identifies officers’ names or adversely affects future operations, or when there is a “dead suspect.” These, particularly that last reason, al- lows police the option to withhold video or documents in far too many cases. Too many departments are quick to release it when it proves an officer’s use of force was justified, but they fight it when it can hold police accountable. In light of Uvalde — and future, horrific crimes — it’s time for the Legislature to in- crease police transparency when it comes to body camera footage. Close some of the loopholes that obfuscate tragedies like this one. COLUMN How we’re betraying many Afghans BY TRUDY RUBIN I t has been almost one year since the ugly U.S. departure from Kabul. Yet tens of thousands of Afghans who were promised special immigrant visas (SIVs) — meant for those who worked for U.S. soldiers and civilians — remain trapped under terrifying Taliban rule. Even for those eligible for SIVs, it could take years — if ever — to be issued one, given the glacial pace of the process. Hunted by name by the Taliban, many ap- plicants may be dead or imprisoned long before their number comes up. As the United States (rightly) rolls back bureaucratic red tape to welcome Ukraini- ans as temporary refugees, it is shameful to abandon those Afghans to whom we made promises. “We left far too many behind,” I was told by Rep. Seth Moulton, D-Mass., a veteran of the Iraq War, who has been at the fore- front of pushing for legislation to speed up the process. “It is taking far too long to save people who are depending on us.” Contrary to popular belief, many of the roughly 120,000 Afghans evacuated from Kabul Airport during the chaotic U.S. exit were not those who were promised SIVs. Large numbers of them were people who managed to push their way into the airport or had connections with the U.S. or Af- ghan military inside the airport. Other lucky Afghans were rescued by impromptu operations organized by net- works of U.S. humanitarian organizations, journalists and U.S. military veterans, working to get staff or translators through Taliban and U.S. military checkpoints and into the airport. To recall those desperate days in Au- gust, I highly recommend the forthcoming book “The Fifth Act: America’s End in Af- ghanistan,” due out Aug. 9. Its author, El- liot Ackerman, a decorated veteran of five tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, was drawn into one of those rescue networks. He bril- liantly describes the harrowing rescue ef- forts, which he ties into the larger tragedy of the Afghan War. “Everyone scrambled to get out people they knew,” Ackerman told me last week, referring to operations by U.S. veterans. “The people who got out had the right contact list on their cellphone,” he added. “U.S. military veterans were being asked to play a Schindler’s List game, deciding who gets help and who gets left behind.” Betraying the SIV applicants, says Ack- erman, is a “betrayal of our values. We could expedite the visa process. But the administration just wants the SIVs to go away, allowing infinitesimal numbers in.” The numbers certainly support that conclusion. The State Department estimates as many as 160,000 Afghan allies along with immediate family members are eligible for SIVs, according to a Politico report. The eligible group — including military trans- lators, left-behind embassy staff, staff for USAID projects and techies who helped U.S. contractors — doesn’t even include the many thousands more judges, prosecu- tors, women’s rights activists, and journal- ists who worked on U.S.-funded projects but aren’t eligible for SIVs. Yet State Department flights — which the Taliban still allow to depart from Kabul Air- port — evacuate only around 350 Afghans weekly; all evacuees must have SIV applica- tions that are in the final stages of process- ing. They are flown to Doha in Qatar for fi- nal processing before admission to the U.S. That leaves untold thousands of Afghans under severe Taliban threat because they were closely associated with Americans; their names are often on electronic em- ployment lists that the Taliban retrieved. One example: a family I’ve been trying to help who is headed by a leading Afghan judge with stellar credentials and a recom- mendation by a U.S. general he worked with. The general’s support has not acceler- ated his case. The Taliban is searching for the jurist, so he and his family are living in hiding, the children unable to go to school, and the family fearful even to go outside to shop for food. Their money is running out. Three family members are SIV-eligi- ble, including a women’s rights activist, yet they are all only at the beginning of the visa process. The family is in such danger that I cannot use their names. Another option that should be available to the jurist’s family — which is now being used to expedite the arrival of Ukrainian refugees — is humanitarian parole status, which waives normal visa requirements and allows a temporary stay in the United States. Under this option, Ukrainians flee- ing the Russian invasion can remain in the U.S. for two years if sponsored by relatives or other U.S. citizens. “In the Ukrainian case,” I was told by Adam Bates, a lawyer with the International Refugees Assistance Program, “the admin- istration did workarounds to let previously unknown Ukrainians enter in weeks. Why not let known Afghans in?” If sponsors were needed, many U.S. veterans could be found to host their former Afghan transla- tors while they waited for SIV approvals. Yet according to Moulton, of around 45,000 Afghan applications for humanitar- ian parole, 2,500 have been considered and denied, and only around 270 conditionally approved. The different treatment of Ukrainians and Afghans can’t be attributed simply to red tape in processing the latter. True, there is a pressing need to simplify the overly complex SIV process, and to in- crease the number of processing person- nel, but nothing will truly change without specific direction from the White House. “When you look at how fast the Ukrainian situation was put in operation,” said Bates, “I don’t know how you can jus- tify the Afghan situation. There is a lack of will to get this done coming from the White House.” “The Ukrainian situation shows what happens when the administration is truly committed to processing admissions,” Bates said. “Where there is a will, there is a way.” █ Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial-board member for the The Philadelphia Inquirer. Readers may write to her at: Philadelphia Inquirer, P.O. Box 8263, Philadelphia, Pa. 19101, or by email at trubin@phillynews.com.