A6 The BulleTin • Friday, January 29, 2021 Republicans Continued from A1 But with the Republicans fac- ing a Democratic supermajority in both chambers of the Legis- lature just as the 2021 session began, many GOP lawmakers complained the state party was trying to score national politi- cal points instead of working to win Oregon elections. “It’s none of our business what US House Representatives from other states do” Rep. Bill Post, R-Keizer, wrote in a blog post demanding an agenda re- set. “Focus, please.” The Senate did not make a group statement, but some also were angry with the timing, topic and tone of the attack. “I have not seen any credi- ble evidence to suggest that the riot at the United States Capi- tol was a ‘false flag,’” said Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend. “I do not support the Oregon Republi- can Party’s resolution. I find it disheartening that while Orego- nians are struggling, these po- litical distractions get in the way of helping them recover.” The uproar intensified when the Anti-Defamation League harshly criticized Republicans for misappropriating the Reich- stag fire, a prelude to the Holo- caust, to buttress an argument that those who were the target of the attacks were the perpe- trators. “The violence at the US Capitol on January 6th was a large-scale physical assault on our nation’s democratic values and institutions perpetrated by right-wing conspiracy theo- rists, extremists, and support- ers of former President Trump. That is a fact,” the ADL said in a statement. The Republican lawmakers said they were blindsided by the Oregon Republican Party pro- nouncement. They were never consulted or even told in ad- vance what was coming from the party’s 22-member execu- tive committee of GOP activists. The Oregon State Commit- tee has provided fuel for a feud with GOP lawmakers before. The party hosted conservative political firebrand Roger Stone at its 2018 conference in Sa- lem. A squad of Proud Boys, the right-wing group with a reputation for violence, served as Stone’s bodyguards, flashing “white power” hand signs at a party after his speech. Despite the sharply conserva- tive tone of the statement, state GOP chairman Bill Currier has been criticized by some activ- ists as not being conservative enough by requiring a litmus test on issues important to the party’s increasingly Trump-ori- ented base. Redirected Continued from A1 “That’s currently about 60% of the 53,000 first doses to be sent around the state next week, reflecting the large number of health care workers and indi- viduals from vulnerable popula- tions in the region,” Brown said Brown did not say where the doses would come from, but her office provided a list of 15 coun- ties that are ahead of schedule on inoculating priority groups. Some of the doses are from a new shipment authorized by the U.S. Centers for Disease Con- trol and Prevention. The diversion was an- nounced soon after news re- ports that Deschutes County and others were inoculating se- nior citizens 75 year old and up. Under the current guidelines, those groups were to receive shots as late as Feb. 14. The reason that the 15 coun- ties are ahead of schedule was not mentioned in Brown’s statement or information from the Oregon Health Authority. Grant County has moved down the list because of an unexpect- edly high rate of eligible people declining to be vaccinated Brown has made inoculat- ing teachers and school staff a higher priority than vacci- nations for those aged 65 and above who are most likely to get seriously ill and die from the virus. Oregon is the only state giving priority to teachers over seniors. Brown praised counties that had moved more swiftly than expected through the early pri- ority groups. “Other counties have done a fantastic job and have finished their first round of vaccines for Phase 1a populations,” Brown Currier said he believes the party needed to be a “big tent” that can create winning coali- tions with unaffiliated voters and disenchanted Democrats. “We need to be more focused on issues rather than trying to decide whether some given can- didate meets some litmus test,” he said. “The party doesn’t pick the candidates, the voters do.” Critics within the party say the hard right turn on the cur- rent version of the Republi- can Party would reject Oregon icons like Gov. Tom McCall and Sen. Mark Hatfield, who spear- headed environmental reforms and equal rights issues. No Republican has won the governorship since Vic Atiyeh in 1982. The state has supported the Democratic candidate for president, win or lose, back to Mike Dukakis in 1984. Republican lawmakers run- ning in 2020 found themselves sharing a ballot and sometimes a stage with Jo Rae Perkins, a QAnon conspiracy believer, who was easily defeated by Democrat Sen. Jeff Merkley. Without strong statewide can- didates, Currier and the party committee have been called out by some in the GOP for a “fixa- tion” on launching recall efforts against Gov. Kate Brown that never got enough signatures to even trigger a vote. Julie Parrish, a former GOP House member who is now a political consultant, said in 2019 that a recall was a sign of a party leadership low on good ideas. “We need a strategy, and a re- call isn’t it,” she said. The ultimate fallout on the controversy won’t be known for a while. Voters don’t go to the polls again for major partisan offices until the May 2022 primaries. Jim Moore, a professor at Pa- cific University, studies public reactions to politics as outreach director from a base named after one of those long-ago Re- publicans: The Tom McCall Center for Civic Engagement. “The biggest impact of the “false flag” assertion will be it driving more moderate Repub- licans out of the party — those that are still left after five years of Trump and decades of a party moving to the right on all issues,” he said. Winning elections is tough for Republicans in Oregon to- day. But the party’s scant pres- ence in Salem and Washington was given a jolt by the claims. “That all being said, the Ore- gon Republican Party is getting international notice with its incendiary public pronounce- ments,” Moore said. “The mea- sure of how that is working out will be simple — does it bring in money to the ORP coffers.” e e gwarner@eomediagroup.com Phase 1a completions Counties that have completed vacci- nating the 1a group, which includes medical staff, health care workers, elderly in nursing homes and staff working at the facilities: • Jackson • Deschutes • Klamath • Crook • Yamhill • Jefferson • Grant • Marion • Coos • Wallowa • Malheur • Morrow • Lake • Baker • Polk CICELY TYSON • 1924-2021 Groundbreaking, award-winning actor dead at 96 BY MARK KENNEDY The Associated Press NEW YORK — Cicely Ty- son, the pioneering Black actor who gained an Oscar nomina- tion for her role as the share- cropper’s wife in “Sounder,” won a Tony Award in 2013 at age 88 and touched TV view- ers’ hearts in “The Autobiogra- phy of Miss Jane Pittman,” died Thursday at age 96. Tyson’s death was an- nounced by her family, via her manager Larry Thompson, who did not immediately pro- vide additional details. A onetime model, Tyson be- gan her screen career with bit parts but gained fame in the early 1970s when Black women were finally starting to get star- ring roles. Tyson refused to take parts simply for the pay- check, remaining choosey. “I’m very selective as I’ve been my whole career about e e gwarner@eomediagroup.com Andrew Harnik/AP file Actress Cicely Tyson blows a kiss after receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Presi- dent Barack Obama at the White House in 2016. dom in 1972. Tyson was cast as the Depression-era loving wife of a sharecropper (Paul Win- field) who is confined in jail for stealing a piece of meat for his family. She is forced to care for their children and attend to the crops. Her performance evoked rave reviews, and Tyson won an Academy Award nomina- tion as best actress of 1972. In the 1974 television drama “The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman,” based on a novel by Ernest J. Gaines, Tyson is seen aging from a young woman in slavery to a 110-year-old who campaigned for the civil rights movement of the 1960s. In the touching climax, she laboriously walks up to a “whites only” water fountain and takes a drink as white offi- cers look on. “It’s important that they see and hear history from Miss Jane’s point of view,” Tyson told The New York Times. “And I think they will be more ready to accept it from her than from someone younger”. Biden opens ‘Obamacare’ window for uninsured BY RICARDO ALONSO- ZALDIVAR The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Presi- dent Joe Biden on Thursday ordered government health insurance markets to reopen for a special sign-up window, offering uninsured Ameri- cans a haven as the spread of COVID-19 remains danger- ously high and vaccines aren’t yet widely available. Biden signed an exec- utive order directing the HealthCare.gov insurance Mug shots Continued from A1 It would prohibit the release of booking photos before con- viction, except in certain, lim- ited circumstances, including to aid in the identification of a fugitive or suspect in a crimi- nal case. The bill also targets online platforms that scrape local jail websites and automatically post mug shots on their pages, charging upward of hundreds of dollars to take them down. The industry was addressed with legislation in 2013 re- quiring them to remove mug shots in cases of expunge- ment. Under the new proposal, these websites would be re- quired to take down mug shots within 30 days of a re- quest and charge no more than $50. Bend defense attorney Shawn Kollie said he’s seen defendants spend as much as $1,000 to remove a mug shot from the many websites where it had been posted. Kollie said he supports the bill’s two main purposes: to re- inforce the U.S. justice system’s Jail death Continued from A1 said. “We will push to give first doses to all Phase 1a individuals statewide before February 8.” The state will send second doses to the counties ahead of schedule so they can keep on a timeline for those who have al- ready received their first shots. In a related development, OHA said it would stop issu- ing specific information about COVID-19 deaths in Oregon. Since March, OHA has in- cluded the age, home county, place of death, the date of in- fection, the date of death and the existence of any underlying conditions. Statistics on overall deaths will be maintained, but specific case information will not. OHA said the compilation of the daily death toll information was stretching staff too thin. Critics and the media ques- tioned the timing, coming amid a debate over Brown’s decision to prioritize teachers over the el- derly. The daily reports showed that the deaths are overwhelm- ingly in the 70 and above age range. It also comes the day before the Oregon COVID-19 vacci- nation committee is expected to issue ongoing prioritization for vaccines. what I do. Unfortunately, I’m not the kind of person who works only for money. It has to have some real substance for me to do it,” she told The Asso- ciated Press in 2013. Besides her Oscar nomina- tion, she won two Emmys for playing the 110-year-old for- mer slave in the 1974 television drama “The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman.” A new generation of moviegoers saw her in the 2011 hit “The Help.” In 2018, she was given an honorary Oscar statuette at the annual Governors Awards. “I come from lowly status. I grew up in an area that was called the slums at the time,” Tyson said at the time. “I still cannot imagine that I have met with presidents, kings, queens. How did I get here? I marvel at it.” “Sounder,” based on the Wil- liam H. Hunter novel, was the film that confirmed her star- Had Baksis indicated he had experiencing thoughts of suicide, he would have been referred to a mental health professional and placed on suicide watch, Hummel wrote. Baksis, however, an- swered no, and was booked into general population. COVID-19 protocols at the jail require inmates to serve an initial 5-day isolation pe- riod with no interaction with markets to take new applica- tions for subsidized benefits, something Donald Trump’s administration had refused to do. He also instructed his administration to consider re- versing other Trump health care policies, including curbs on abortion counseling and the imposition of work re- quirements for low-income people getting Medicaid. “There’s nothing new that we’re doing here other than restoring the Affordable Care Act and restoring Medicaid to the way it was before Trump became president,” Biden said as he signed the directives in the Oval Office. He declared he was reversing “my prede- cessor’s attack on women’s health.” The actions were only the first steps by Biden, who has promised to build out former President Barack Obama’s health care law to achieve a goal of coverage for all. While Biden rejects the idea of a gov- ernment-run system that Sen. Bernie Sanders has pushed for in his “Medicare for All” proposal, his more centrist approach will require congres- sional buy-in. But opposition to “Obamacare” runs deep among Republicans. The most concrete short- term impact of Biden’s orders will come from reopening HealthCare.gov insurance markets as coverage has shrunk in the economic tur- moil of the coronavirus pan- demic. That’s an executive action and no legislation is required. presumption of innocence, and to set limits on pay-to-re- move sites. “If we truly presume folks are innocent unless and until the government proves their case beyond a reasonable doubt, it seems appropriate to not blast an innocent face around the internet/media,” Kollie said. In Deschutes County, ar- rest subjects are required to be “booked and printed” in every case, felony or misdemeanor. Bend defense attorney Er- ick Ward said that rather than a punishment handed down by a court, the costs associated with having a mug shot in the public eye are often a client’s No. 1 concern. “The mug shot lives for- ever, even if your case is later dismissed, you’re acquitted at trial, or the conviction gets expunged,” Ward said. “The mug shot is often the first thing you see when you Goo- gle someone’s name, so it of- ten has catastrophic effects on a person’s employment, repu- tation, love life and ability to rent.” Mug shots are also part of the arrest data that the media uses to present the facts of a crime story, such as the name of the person arrested, charges filed and the basic facts of the case being made. They have generally been available to the media as public records since the passage of the Public Re- cords Act in 1973. Journalism groups have tra- ditionally opposed efforts to curtail this information. Two groups in Oregon, the Society of Professional Journalists and the Oregon Newspaper Pub- lishers Association, opposed a similar 2013 law but represen- tatives of both said they have yet to take formal positions on the new proposal. The 2013 legislation fo- cused on abuses of the pay-to- remove industry. Tim Glea- son, journalism professor at the University of Oregon, said the draft legislation goes too far broadening the earlier law. “While I understand the in- tent of the draft proposed bill, it essentially denies the public access to information when access to that information is in the public interest,” Gleason wrote to The Bulletin. “Rather than craft a bill that would appropriately balance the pri- vacy interests of the accused and the public interest in dis- closure, this draft would take the public’s interest out of the equation.” Fellow Oregon journalism professor Scott Maier said text and photo records should be treated the same by officials and released to the public when lawful to do so. Both are public documents, of pub- lic interest and central to the story, he said. Journalists should exercise care on their end, as well, ac- cording to Maier. Some pub- lications have a practice of withholding mug shots until criminal charges are brought, to guard against frivolous ar- rests. “This doesn’t mean the me- dia shouldn’t withhold publi- cation. For example, respon- sible media often withhold or at least minimize visual portrayal of mass-murder suspects — no need to glorify or invite copy-cat incidents,” Maier wrote to The Bulletin. “Just because media can pub- lish mug shots doesn’t mean they should.” other inmates. On Dec. 3, deputy Chad Bach was conducting hourly rounds of inmate cells when he found Baksis hanging by a towel tied to a bunk bed. Ac- cording to the official inves- tigation, Bach called for help from other deputies and en- tered the cell and lifted Baksis to relieve the pressure on his neck. Jail and medical staff cut down Baksis and began life-saving measures, includ- ing use of an automated ex- ternal defibrillator, CPR and administering oxygen, Hum- mel wrote. Paramedics ar- rived and transported Baksis to St. Charles Bend, where he died three days later. Hummel said Baksis was also detoxing from prescrip- tion pain medication for a back injury and was “anxious about losing his liberty.” “Scott Baksis was loved and deserved to live,” Hum- mel wrote. “Our lives are worse off without him. Today, I spoke with Scott’s mother, explained my decision, and extended my sympathies for her loss.” The Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office has a policy regulating the administration of prescription medication to inmates. An office spokes- man said Thursday the office needed more time to review whether it could disclose if Baksis had been provided his prescribed pain or anxiety medication. e e e e Reporter: 541-383-0325, gandrews@bendbulletin.com Reporter: 541-383-0325, gandrews@bendbulletin.com The Perfect Valentine... 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