State Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, April 19, 2017 A9 Gun bills evoke strong emotions at Oregon Capitol By Paris Achen Capital Bureau At age 24, Jenna Yuille lost her mother in a mass shooting at the Clackamas Town Center in 2012. Four years later, her father committed suicide using a firearm. “I have now lost not one but both of my parents to gun violence,” Yuille said. “I knew that my dad wasn’t doing too well, but I didn’t know how to help him.” A bill in the Legislature would provide a tool for fami- lies to block loved ones’ access to firearms if they posed a risk to themselves or others. The legislation would cre- ate an extreme risk protection order process. Families could obtain the temporary order — up to a 12 months — by peti- tioning to the court. The sub- ject of the order could contest its issuance in court. Once issued, the protection order could be renewed annu- ally. “What we’re trying to do is provide the best course of action to give family a chance to help themselves to prevent their veterans and other family members from killing them- selves, prevent suicide by cop and worse, killing family members in desperation,” said Sen. Brian Boquist, R-Dallas. Oregon has one of the high- est suicide rates in the nation, including among veterans, Bo- quist said. Boquist’s son, Seth Sprague, a 31-year-old U.S. Navy veteran, used a firearm to commit suicide Feb. 16, 2016. The tragedy spurred Bo- Capital Bureau/Paris Achen House Majority Leader Jennifer Williamson, left, embraces Jenna Yuille, regional manager of Americans for Responsible Solutions, after Yuille’s testimony during a hearing on gun safety bills Monday, April 17, 2017, at the Oregon Capitol. Yuille’s parents were both killed in separate incidents of gun violence. quist to work with Senate Ma- jority Ginny Burdick, D-Port- land, to design legislation that could help families intervene when a loved one threatens to take their own life. The bill is modeled after a measure vot- ers approved last year in Wash- ington. The National Rifle Asso- ciation and local gun rights advocates are opposed to the bill. “This bill allows for a pro- tective order to take away your Second Amendment rights, not because of a criminal convic- tion or mental health adjudica- tion but based on third-party allegations, using an eviden- tiary standard that falls far be- low what is normally required for removing a firearm,” said Keely Hopkins, the NRA’s Or- egon liaison. The bill also does nothing to stop someone from killing themselves in some other way or to provide treatment for the individual, Hopkins said. Yuille knows the exact date her father, Michael Pas- salacqua of Milwaukie, went to a gun shop and bought the firearm he used to kill himself. She found a receipt dated July 18, 2016, after his death. “If I had known that a tool like the extreme risk protec- tion order was available I would have used it, and my dad probably wouldn’t have been able to go buy a gun that day,” Yuille testified Monday, April 17, during a hearing on the bill in the Senate Judiciary Committee. The bill is one of three evoking strong emotions from supporters and opponents. Two other bills, proposed by Gov. Kate Brown, would close several gun purchase loopholes and study reasons for gun purchase denials. One bill closes the so- called “Charleston” loophole that allows applicants to buy a gun within three days regard- less of whether Oregon State Police has completed a manda- tory background check on the buyer. Another bill bans peo- ple who have stalking convic- tions or boyfriends who have domestic violence convictions from having a gun. “It is a common sense, life-saving bill that will protect Oregon’s women and children by closing the boyfriend loop- hole, preventing convicted stalkers from buying and pos- sessing guns and keeping guns out of the wrong hands by closing the Charleston loop- hole,” Brown testified. Opponents and support- ers of the bills filled a meet- ing room and three overflow rooms to testify on the bill. Signs posted around the Cap- itol reminded visitors no guns are permitted in the building without a concealed handgun permit, and Oregon State Po- lice had visibly enhanced se- curity around the building. Due to a scheduling error, the bills will have to be re- named and sent to the Rules Committee, according to a report by the Register Guard. Tuesday is a deadline for leg- islation. Anything that has not been passed out of a legislative committee by the end of the day is considered dead with exceptions for bills out of rules and revenue committees. Contributed photo/Oregon State Police An Oregon State Police trooper with an elk that was killed and left to waste. Wallowa resident Larry Harshfield, 69, was arrested on multiple counts of unlawfully taking and wasting elk April 8. Man charged with allegedly killing, wasting a dozen elk in Wallowa County By Steve Tool EO Media Group A Wallowa County man is suspected of poaching and wasting at least a dozen elk on his property — and per- haps 13 more found dead on adjoining land. Larry Harshfield, 69, was arrested April 8 and charged with 12 counts of taking elk out of season and 12 counts of wasting elk. The charges stem from a Feb. 11 search of the Harsh- field Ranch, located in the city of Wallowa. During the search, Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife troop- ers located 25 dead elk, 12 of which were located on Harshfield’s property and 13 others were nearby. The elk carcasses ap- peared not to have had any attempt to salvage meat from them, according to ODFW. Harshfield was charged with poaching the 12 elk on his property and was lodged at the Wallowa County Jail. Additional charges for the 13 dead elk on the adjoining property will be referred to the Wallowa County Dis- trict Attorney for consider- ation. Mike Hansen, assistant district wildlife biologist for ODFW, said that the depart- ment can issue a kill permit or a hazing permit for elk that cause consistent damage to a farmer’s crops. Hansen said Harshfield had contact- ed ODFW about the permits. The kill permit requires the farmer to field dress and skin the animal and take it to a meat processing facility. “He did not want to do that,” Hansen said. “We gave him a haze permit.” A haze permit does not allow for any killing of elk. L EGISLATIVE B RIEFCASE Bills reversing GMO pre-emption die in Oregon Two bills that would have allowed local governments in Oregon to regulate genetically engineered crops have died in the Legislature. Lawmakers prohibited most local governments from restricting seed in 2013, but Senate Bill 1037 and House Bill 2469 would have exempt- TREAT YOUR FEET ed genetically modified or- ganisms, or GMOs, from that statewide pre-emption law. Sen. Michael Dembrow, D-Portland, said he’s decided to let SB 1037 die during the April 13 meeting of the Senate Environment and Natural Re- sources Committee, which he chairs. A legislative deadline pre- viously killed HB 2469 in the House Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee. There are still too many looming questions about the extent of cross-pollination of conventional and organic crops from GMOs and the ef- ficacy of mediation aimed at promoting coexistence, Dem- brow said. The committee recently heard conflicting testimo- ny about the frequency of cross-pollination among ge- netically engineered, conven- tional and organic crops. Our Services by a registered nurse include: • Pedi-Spa treatment for your feet • Particular attention to Diabetic Foot • Multifunctional massage chair • Skin Inspection • Callus Removal • Nail Cutting We also check your blood pressure, blood sugar level and oxygen saturation. Call 541- 575-1648 for an appointment $35 00 fee Blue Mountain Hospital FOOT CLINIC www.bluemountainhospital.org Services available at the Home Health Office, 422 W. Main, John Day. NAPA Filters’ Spring Sale! April 17 - 22, 2017 Spring forward into NAPA Filters’ Spring Sale. 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