The BulleTin • Wednesday, June 30, 2021 A3 TODAY Today is Wednesday, June 30, the 181st day of 2021. There are 184 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: In 1971, the Supreme Court ruled, 6-3, that the government could not prevent The New York Times or The Washington Post from publishing the Pentagon Papers. In 1865, eight people, including Mary Surratt and Dr. Samuel Mudd, were convicted by a mil- itary commission of conspiring with John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Abraham Lincoln. In 1908, the Tunguska Event took place in Russia as an as- teroid exploded above Siberia, leaving 800 square miles of scorched or blown-down trees. In 1917, singer, actor and activist Lena Horne was born in Brook- lyn, New York. In 1934, Adolf Hitler launched his “blood purge” of political and military rivals in Germany in what came to be known as “The Night of the Long Knives.” In 1958, the U.S. Senate passed the Alaska statehood bill by a vote of 64-20. In 1982, the proposed Equal Rights Amendment to the U.S. Constitution expired, having failed to receive the required number of ratifications for its adoption, despite having its seven-year deadline extended by three years. In 1986, the Supreme Court, in Bowers v. Hardwick, ruled 5-4 that states could outlaw homo- sexual acts between consenting adults. In 2009, American soldier Pfc. Bowe R. Bergdahl went missing from his base in eastern Afghan- istan, and was later confirmed to have been captured by insur- gents. Ten years ago: Conservative TV commentator Glenn Beck said goodbye to Fox News Channel, airing his final show before go- ing into business for himself. Five years ago: Saying it was the right thing to do, Defense Secretary Ash Carter announced that transgender people would be allowed to serve openly in the U.S. military, ending one of the last bans on service in the armed forces. One year ago: President Don- ald Trump came under growing pressure to respond to allega- tions that Russia had offered bounties for killing U.S. troops in Afghanistan; the White House said the allegations hadn’t been confirmed. Today’s Birthdays: Actor Lea Massari is 88. ASongwriter Tony Hatch is 82. Singer Glenn Shor- rock is 77. Jazz musician Stanley Clarke is 70. Actor David Garrison is 69. Rock musician Hal Lindes (Dire Straits) is 68. Actor-come- dian David Alan Grier is 65. Actor Vincent D’Onofrio is 62. Actor Rupert Graves is 58. Former box- er Mike Tyson is 55. Actor Peter Outerbridge is 55. Rock musician Tom Drummond (Better Than Ezra) is 52. Actor Brian Bloom is 51. Actor Monica Potter is 50. Actor Molly Parker is 49. Actor Rick Gonzalez is 42. Actor Susan- nah Flood is 39. Rock musician James Adam Shelley (American Authors) is 38. R&B singer Fan- tasia is 37. Olympic gold medal swimmer Michael Phelps is 36. Actor Sean Marquette (TV: “The Goldbergs”) is 33. — Associated Press LOCAL, STATE & REGION THE NATIONAL WILD AND SCENIC RIVERS SYSTEM Submitted photos by Nick Smith via Capital Press Andy Geissler, federal timber program director for the American Forest Resource Council, straddles a dry creek in Southern Oregon that has been nominated as a Wild and Scenic River under the federal River Democracy Act. Southern Oregon’s Bear Gulch was nominated as a Wild and Scenic River. It was dry and virtually indistinguishable from the surrounding landscape during a recent visit by mem- bers of the American Forest Resource Council. New submissions draw criticism for including creeks and gulches BY GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press A U.S. Senate bill that would designate nearly 4,700 miles of wild and scenic rivers in Oregon is being criticized for including hundreds of small creeks, streams and gulches that, in some cases, were found to completely dry upon in- spection. The American Forest Re- sources Council, a trade group representing the timber in- dustry, recently conducted an analysis of the proposal, arguing that certain nonriver segments under consideration “do not meet the intent or defi- nition of the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act.” Oregon Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, both Dem- ocrats, introduced the River Democracy Act on Feb. 3. The legislation was developed based on more than 15,000 nominations submitted by the public for Wild and Scenic River Act protections. But according to the forest resources council, just 15% of the waterways are actually la- beled as “rivers.” The National Wild and Sce- nic Rivers System includes des- ignated waterways that are not called rivers, such as Wychus Creek in Deschutes County. Wyden said the act allows ephemeral and intermittent streams to be included in The National Wild and Scenic Riv- ers System, and some of them contribute to public drinking water supplies. Andy Geissler, American Forest Resources Council fed- eral timber program director, said he used forest maps to cross-reference and locate the proposed sites listed for inclu- sion in the bill. Out of 886 segments, 752 are identified as “streams,” rather than rivers. Another 33 are identified as “gulches,” one as a “draw” and 17 were “unnamed tributaries.” Geissler said he visited sev- eral of the streams earlier this year along the Nestucca, North Umpqua and Applegate rivers, spanning the northern Ore- gon coast south to the Rogue Valley. Photos taken at Southern Oregon’s Bear Gulch in May show Geissler straddling a dry channel, virtually indistin- guishable from the surround- ing landscape. “It was pretty shocking to see what was proposed down 2-year-old found dead identified after 58 years with DNA match A man fishing in Southern Oregon near Ashland on July 11, 1963, came upon the body of a 2-year-old boy, con- cealed under blankets, tied with wire and weighed down by heavy pieces of iron. The toddler went unidentified un- til Monday, when the Jackson County “These are some of the most important tributaries of larger, more iconic systems like the Columbia, Willamette and Rogue rivers.” — Oregon Sens. Ron Wyden there,” Geissler said. “Part of it is a lack of analysis.” Geissler’s research and ob- servations were the basis for comments submitted by the council on the River Democ- racy Act, which received a public hearing on June 23 in the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee. The bill would roughly triple the number of wild and scenic rivers across Oregon to protect fish and wildlife, water quality and outdoor recreation values. It also increases wild and sce- nic river corridors from a quar- ter-mile to a half-mile on both sides, which adds up to approx- imately 3 million acres of pro- tected land — an area approxi- mately the size of Connecticut. The concern, Geissler said, is whether the designation will make it harder for land manag- Sheriff’s Office announced his identity on Facebook, The Oregonian reported. A DNA match and some genealog- ical sleuthing revealed he was Stevie Crawford, born in New Mexico on Oct. 2, 1960. The Rogue River man who found the body was fishing in the Keene Creek Reservoir along state Highway 66, the sheriff’s office said. In 2007 a sheriff’s ers to do forest thinning proj- ects designed to reduce the size and severity of wildfires. “My assumption is these half-mile corridors will be no- touch buffers,” he said. American Forest Resources Council President Travis Joseph said the group does not oppose the Wild and Scenic River Act, created in 1968 to preserve rivers with “outstand- ing natural, cultural and rec- reational values.” However, he said the River Democracy Act violates the spirit of the law. Catastrophic wildfires, ero- sion and sedimentation pose the greatest threats to water- sheds and rivers, Joseph said. “Arbitrary restrictive land designations only tend to im- pede public lands access and the most important work needed to reduce wildfire risks and impacts,” he said. “Unfor- tunately, this bill only serves to make management of federal lands more restrictive at a time we are experiencing larger and more severe wildfires.” Wyden, who is spearheading work on the bill, pushed back against that notion. The bill requires the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management to establish detective found the case among old file boxes, and the toddler’s body was ex- humed in 2008. A DNA sample was taken, but no leads were found. In December, the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office received a tip, which they didn’t describe, but an investiga- tor ran the genetic sample through an open-source DNA repository and lo- cated two possible siblings. wildfire plans and cooperative agreements with states and lo- cal governments to allow forest thinning within riparian areas that haven’t been prioritized until now, Wyden said. In addition, Wyden said the River Democracy Act al- lows ephemeral and intermit- tent streams to be included in The National Wild and Scenic River System. “These are some of the most important tributaries of larger, more iconic systems like the Columbia, Willamette and Rogue rivers,” Wyden said in a statement, adding that 1.7 mil- lion Oregonians receive drink- ing water from public systems that rely at least in part on in- termittent, ephemeral or head- water streams. Steve Pedery, conservation director for the environmental group Oregon Wild, said there is nothing in law that prevents an intermittent stream from qualifying for protection. “To people who manage riv- ers, and are working on things like restoring salmon or pro- tecting drinking water, they recognize that you have to start with the headwaters,” Pedery said. “You can’t just focus on the big river downstream.” In an interview with investigators, one of the siblings, a DNA-confirmed maternal half-brother in Ohio, said that he had a young sibling with Down syn- drome — a genetic disorder that aided in the identification — who was born in New Mexico and went missing. How he died and came to be placed in that location remains unclear. — Associated Press Splash Into A New Pad This Summer! CALL NOW! 541-317-3544 127 SE Wilson, Bend