The BulleTin • Thursday, June 24, 2021 A3 TODAY Today is Thursday, June 24, the 175th day of 2021. There are 190 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: In 1948, Communist forces cut off all land and water routes between West Germany and West Berlin, prompting the western allies to organize the Berlin Airlift. In 1497, the first recorded sighting of North America by a European took place as explorer John Cabot spotted land, proba- bly in present-day Canada. In 1807, a grand jury in Rich- mond, Virginia, indicted former Vice President Aaron Burr on charges of treason and high misdemeanor. In 1947, what’s regarded as the first modern UFO sighting took place as private pilot Kenneth Arnold, an Idaho businessman, reported seeing nine silvery objects flying in a “weaving for- mation” near Mount Rainier in Washington. In 1957, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Roth v. United States, ruled 6-3 that obscene materials were not protected by the First Amendment. In 1973, President Richard Nixon concluded his summit with the visiting leader of the Soviet Union, Leonid Brezhnev, who hailed the talks in an address on American television. In 1983, the space shuttle Chal- lenger — carrying America’s first woman in space, Sally K. Ride — coasted to a safe land- ing at Edwards Air Force Base in California. In 2015, a federal judge in Bos- ton formally sentenced Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev to death for the 2013 terror attacks. (A federal appeals court later threw out the sen- tence; the Supreme Court this fall will consider reinstating it.) In 2018, women in Saudi Arabia were able to drive for the first time, as the world’s last remain- ing ban on female drivers was lifted. Ten years ago: A defiant U.S. House voted overwhelmingly to deny President Barack Obama the authority to wage war against Libya, but Republicans fell short in an effort to actually cut off funds for the operation. Five years ago: President Barack Obama created the first national monument to gay rights, designating the site of the 1969 Stonewall riots in Man- hattan. One year ago: Three white men were indicted on murder charges in the killing of Ahmaud Arbery, a Black man who was shot while running in a neigh- borhood near Georgia’s coast. Today’s Birthdays: Rock singer Arthur Brown is 79. Actor Mi- chele Lee is 79. Actor-director Georg Stanford Brown is 78. Rock musician Jeff Beck is 77. Musician Mick Fleetwood is 74. Actor Peter Weller is 74. Rock musician John Illsley (Dire Straits) is 72. Actor Joe Penny is 65. R&B/pop singer-songwriter Siedah Garrett is 61. Actor Iain Glen is 60. Rock singer Curt Smith is 60. Actor Danielle Spencer is 56. Actor Sherry Stringfield is 54. Singer Glenn Medeiros is 51. Actor Carla Gallo is 46. Actor Amir Talai (TV: “LA to Vegas”) is 44. Actor-pro- ducer Mindy Kaling is 42. Actor Minka Kelly is 41. Actor Vanessa Ray is 40. Actor Justin Hires is 36. Actor Candice Patton is 36. Sing- er Solange Knowles is 35. Actor Max Ehrich is 30. Actor Beanie Feldstein is 28. — Associated Press LOCAL, STATE & REGION $195M wildfire bill advances, with some reservations BY TED SICKINGER • The Oregonian A $195 million wildfire bill passed out of the Ways and Means committee Tuesday on a party-line vote and now heads to floor votes in the House and Senate amid criticism by some lawmakers that it will hurt rural Oregonians. Backers of Senate Bill 762 are calling it one of the most important pieces of legislation being considered this session as the state seeks to ramp up its fire suppression, prevention and community preparedness in the face of longer and more severe wildfire seasons. They expressed willing- ness to consider a last-minute amendment if it would bring bipartisan support for the bill and guarantee its passage. But it was unclear whether there is time for that process to play out before the session’s end — expected Friday or Saturday — and the committee moved the existing version in a 14 to 9 vote. The legislation is something of a Swiss Army knife, a multi- pronged approach proposed by the Wildfire Response Coun- cil empaneled by the governor to develop a holistic model for wildfire prevention, prepared- ness and response. The council delivered a report in Novem- ber 2019 with 37 recommen- dations. Among other things, SB 762 directs utilities to develop wild- fire mitigation plans, which must be approved by state regu- lators. It provides money to bol- ster state firefighting capacity; establishes programs for clean air shelters and smoke filtration systems; adopts fire resistant building codes; requires prop- erty owners in high-risk zones to establish buffers around their homes and structures; creates a permanent wildfire advisory council and a state wildfire pro- grams director, funds a youth corps to work on commu- nity preparedness; and makes a down payment on the vast backlog of forest restoration work that many believe will be critical to restoring forest health and reducing wildfire severity. On Monday, the bill took a rhetorical beating from a small group of lawmakers in the Cap- ital Construction Subcommit- tee of Ways and Means, and the full committee heard the same message Tuesday. Among the criticism: the bill is overly prescriptive; it was developed without enough input from the public; it puts so much money into the troubled state Depart- ment of Forestry; and that too many important details and definitions are being left to agencies to hash out in subse- quent rulemaking processes. The sharpest feedback cen- ters on the bill’s provisions re- quiring the Oregon State Fire Marshal to establish enforce- able requirements for property owners to manage combustible vegetation around homes and other structures in areas where wildfire risk is classified as high and extreme. Underlying that debate is how the bill defines the so- called wildland urban interface — the area where most of those restrictions would apply and property owners would bear the potential cost and aesthetic impacts. A number of Republican lawmakers as well as Sen. Betsy Johnson, D-Scappoose, ex- pressed concerns about how those rules would apply to ranchers, wheat farmers and rural property owners, and whether it would require their constituents to denude their properties and bulldoze crops to comply. Others questioned whether wildfire risk desig- nations at the property level would affect insurance costs or property values. Senate Republican Leader Fred Girod, R-Stayton, reiter- ated many of the criticisms he offered in Monday’s hearing when he said he would “proba- bly rate this as the worst bill of the session” and suggested that most of the support is coming from lawmakers from urban centers. He said that fire resis- tant building codes could add $50,000 to $100,000 to the price of a home. “This is a terrible bill, and I really resent the fact that we’re passing it in the midst of all these people trying to rebuild,” said Girod, who lost his own home in last year’s Santiam Canyon fires. Fire science experts and fire- fighters say that a statewide, mandatory approach to defen- sible space and building codes are critical and cost-effective el- Andy Nelson/Register-Guard file A statue of a girl reading sits in September near where the library in Blue River stood before it was destroyed in the Holiday Farm Fire. ements of a unified plan. Roger Johnson, chief of the Sisters Camp Sherman Fire District, said more people are building homes in high risk areas, and that a voluntary program won’t work. Rep. Pam Marsh, D-South- ern Jackson County, said in an interview Tuesday that the costs Girod cited are wildly out of step with those estimated when the state’s Building Codes Di- vision was developing wildfire mitigation code standards in 2018. At the time, the Building Codes Division estimated the provisions in the code would add approximately $2,500 to $3,000 to the existing cost of a typical 1,200-square-foot, sin- gle-family home. Marsh said there are a variety of exceptional costs that come with building in those envi- ronments, including wells and septic fields, and when wildfire arrives, homeowners would be happy they’d spent the money. Likewise, Sen. Jeff Golden, D-Ashland, told Ways and Means members Tuesday that the dystopian vision of rural Oregonians being required to clear-cut old trees on their properties, rip out ornamental vegetation and raze crops was not going to happen. Golden said that extensive public input in the rulemak- ing process had been purpose- fully built into the bill. It also includes an appeals process for property owners if their prop- erty is designated as high or ex- treme risk for wildfire. That was a mantra for Dem- ocratic lawmakers in support of the bill. They acknowledged that it may not be perfect, but that public accountability was built in and would be extensive as rules are drafted. Republican members urged sponsors to consider a last-minute amendment drafted by Rep. Mark Owens, R-Crane, that addresses the definition of the wildland ur- ban interface. They said adopt- ing it might attract bipartisan support when the bill reaches the floor of the Senate and the House. Johnson said she sup- ported that effort, but it would probably take expedited ac- tion by one of the Legislature’s presiding officers to make that happen. Rep. Dacia Grayber, D-Ti- gard and a firefighter for Tuala- tin Valley Fire & Rescue, said she was disappointed that the bill, the product of extensive negotiations and input from many stakeholder groups over a two-year period, had be- come so partisan in the last few weeks. “Campaign season is com- ing up and nothing plays better than the urban-rural divide,” she said. “As a firefighter, what I need is for people to come to- gether on this. This is personal to me, it’s not just politics. … If we don’t start somewhere we’re going to be doomed to repeat this cycle. Not to be alarmist, but the building is on fire. LAST CALL FOR PHOTOS! We want your historic photos for our upcoming Hello Bend! pictorial history book. We’re looking for group photos from the 1950s to 2000s such as class reunions or work crews in Central Oregon. We will scan your photos and hand them back to you at the event. For details, email: gobrien@bendbulletin.com Bring in your photos for a chance to win a FREE copy of the Hello Bend! pictorial history book! SCANNING SESSIONS June 24-25 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., or by appointment until July 16. email: gobrien@bendbulletin.com or call 541-383-0341