A6 Rainbow Gathering Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, June 28, 2017 DA dispensing swift sentences to visitors Crime not as high as anticipated By Rylan Boggs Blue Mountain Eagle Rainbow Gathering attend- ees convicted of crimes out- side the forest will face swifter sentences in the Grant County court system. Grant County District At- torney Jim Carpenter said tem- porary visitors to the county will receive executed sentenc- es instead of probationary sen- tences. Instead of being issued probation for a crime, they will receive jail time. Carpenter said he is not in- terested in keeping transients in the area on probation and would prefer to have them serve their sentence and con- tinue on. Jayson Thompson, 30, Ohio was found guilty of third-degree theft after he at- tempted to steal beer from Chester’s Thriftway. Carpenter described Thompson as “essentially a transient.” Under normal circumstanc- es, Thompson would have been issued a sentence with a period of probation. Instead, he received seven days in jail and a $100 fi ne. Noah De Stefano, who was arrested after a stabbing at a Rainbow Gathering Spring Council meeting earlier this as many as I thought there would have been,” Carpenter said. “People there seem to do a pretty good job of self-polic- ing.” Forest Service and local law enforcement offi cials have arrested a number of people re- lated to the gathering who are making their way through the court system. month, was convicted of fourth-degree assault Tuesday. He was sentenced to 180 days in jail and ordered to pay about $4,000 in restitution, a $2,000 fi ne and $500 in attorney fees. However, crime related to the Rainbow Gathering hasn’t been as high as Carpenter an- ticipated. “There really hasn’t been Heated exchange erupts at meeting Ranchers fume as the ‘Rainbow Family’ to camp on federal land Concerns about local economy, environment discussed EO Media Group By Rylan Boggs Blue Mountain Eagle The Eagle/Rylan Boggs Ken Mayhead, left, demands to know how the Rainbow Gathering will benefit Grant County while Rainbow Gathering attendee Kathleen Todd, right, waits to respond. bringing drugs and problems related to substance abuse into the area and said she no longer felt safe walking at night. Stubbs said some of the people gathering were drug users, but the gathering was dedicated to helping people. He described Serenity Ridge, a drug- and alcohol-free camp at the gathering, which holds 12-step meetings. One major concern voiced by people was attendees from the gathering staying until the eclipse in August. The attendees at the meeting said they could not speak for the group, but the general sentiment was that many at the gathering would be going to the Oregon Country Fair near Veneta in early July. Residents also asked why the group chose a forest near a community that had re- cently been ravaged by wild- fi re. Rainbow participants acknowledged the Canyon Creek Complex fi re and said, because they mostly cooked with fi res and wood stoves, they actually helped elimi- nate fi re danger by removing downed wood. Multiple attendees assert- ed it was their constitutional right to assemble on public land. Resident Susan Church said a great part of the fear was due to xenophobia. She said the local community had problems with crime and substance abuse just like the Rainbow Gathering. Gathering participant El- oisa Lewis said attendees rented the hall to communi- cate with locals and to try to get them involved. She said the meeting had been “luke- warm” and that both sides seemed afraid of each other. Lewis extended an in- vitation to all unsure about the gathering to come see for themselves at the site off Forest Road 24 in the Mal- heur National Forest west of Seneca. Rainbow gathering The annual Rainbow Family gathering, which could attract 10,000-30,000 people, is taking place in Flagtail Meadow on the Malheur National Forest off of Forest Road 24 west of Seneca. Mt. Vernon Area in detail S T R AW tendees. • Redband trout offspring are emerging from eggs in the gravel of Flagtail Creek, and increased sediment in the water churned up by an abun- dance of people in the stream could diminish their ability to take oxygen from the water — or blanket the eggs in the gravel, causing death. Waste and biological hazards buried at the site could also infi ltrate the water over time. The Forest Service recom- mends one latrine for every 100 people, or 100 latrines for 10,000 attendees. Halemei- er and Fertig said that could cause problems long after the attendees leave. “The site will never be back to normal,” they said of the latrines. “That amount of waste would have never been on the site. Bacteria and potential leached effects will be long-term due to our soil types in the area.” This type of event would typically require an environ- mental assessment or impact statement, as required for BERR Y 395 Fores t Road 2 d t Roa 24 res Fo UN TA I NS 49 For e Ize -P MALHEUR NATIONAL FOREST ina aul R oad 15 395 63 Approximate site of Rainbow Family gathering Source: U.S. Forest Service A hose brings water in from a creek at the Rainbow Gathering on Monday, June 26. Photos by The Eagle/Rylan Boggs 26 MO MALHEUR NATIONAL FOREST Continued from Page A1 A Forest Service vehicle heads toward the entrance of the Rainbow Gathering on Monday, June 26. John Day Canyon City GATHERING “The unauthorized users admit that they cannot con- trol each other and that once the masses show up all they can do is try to educate,” they said. “With the area they chose folks are going to be drawn to the sensitive areas and damage will occur.” Halemeier and Fertig said a wide variety of problems could occur: • Heritage resources are at risk from digging for latrines and compost pits. • Birds may abandon nests with young. Big game animals are at risk from increased traf- fi c and are being displaced to less populated areas. Small mammals’ habitat is being disturbed. • The introduction and spread of invasive weeds may impact plants. Foot traffi c on sensitive meadows also re- tards the ability of plants to occupy the site. • Range resources are im- pacted by the reduction of the pasture’s forage component, and livestock will disperse on trails created by gathering at- y River John Da t es Resident Kay Steele said gathering in the forest would put stress on local wildlife and disperse them into sur- rounding areas. Stubbs agreed the wild- life would be stressed and dispersed but said the eco- system was likely to bounce back. To attempt to assuage fears about what would be left in the wake of the gath- ering, Rainbow attendee Adam Finch Buxbaum read a letter from the Forest Ser- vice about the 1997 Rainbow Gathering near Prineville. The letter, from Big Sum- mit District Ranger Susan V. Skalski, praised the Rainbow Family for their cleanup job of the forest. Residents urged the gath- erers to keep attendees re- spectful and stop them from being a public nuisance, cit- ing incidents of public inde- cency and petty theft. A resident brought up concerns the gathering was The U.S. Forest Service ac- knowledged there isn’t much it can do about a “Rainbow Family” gathering expected to bring thousands of count- er-culture types to the Malheur National Forest in Eastern Or- egon over the next two weeks. The organizers don’t have a permit, and the Forest Ser- vice’s response to that has angered area residents such as rancher Loren Stout, who lives near the gathering spot and has a federal grazing permit on land adjacent to it. He said the Forest Service would punish ranchers if they ignored permit requirements and tapped a spring for drink- ing water like the Rainbow Family has done. Stout said it took him two years to get a Na- tional Environmental Policy Act permit to drill an explor- atory mining hole. “People are furious over 1 A meeting hosted by members of the Rainbow Gathering and attended by Grant County residents got heated Wednesday night. Within minutes, the meet- ing at the Canyon City Com- munity Hall briefl y dissolved into a yelling match between residents and several of the roughly 2,000 attendees al- ready at the site south of John Day preparing for the July 1-7 Rainbow Gathering. John Day resident Ken Mayhead demanded to know how the gathering would benefi t residents and the community. He complained about the large numbers of law enforcement offi cers brought to town and the bur- den placed on taxpayers by the event. “Taxpayers are cleaning up your mess,” Mayhead said. Rainbow attendee Gary Stubbs said the gathering purchased large quantities of food, fuel and camping equipment locally and esti- mated the gathering could bring as much as $300,000 into the local economy. He also said the number of law enforcement and government employees who were in town to monitor the event would also rent rooms and eat lo- cally. Other residents raised fears about the gathering con- suming all the food and fuel in the area. Rainbow attend- ees said they were working with wholesalers in the Bend area to get large quantities of food and advised local busi- nesses to anticipate height- ened demand for food and fuel in the coming weeks. this,” Stout said. “Not because it’s a friggin’ bunch of hippies, it’s the different standards.” But Forest Service Agency Administrator Ryan Nehl said the agency will not attempt to stop the gathering. “It’s a risk-based decision,” he said. “To try and kick them off the land would present a danger to employees and the public.” The gatherings have been held since the 1970s. Stout said the Forest Ser- vice is “trying to put grazers out of business” but lets the Rainbow bunch do what they want. He said the gathering spot is a major Native American ar- chaeological site and the area has eight springs that could be damaged. He said the “takeover of federal ground” is no different than the Bundy group’s occu- pation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge headquarters. “I hate to say that,” Stout said. By Eric Mortenson any ground disturbing activi- ty on a national forest, which would take one to three years to complete due to the “scale of potential impacts and re- source values in the area,” they said. Because the gather- ing is not following the legal process, the Forest Service is responding outside of the nor- mal process on short notice to protect the resources, more like a natural disaster. Gathering attendees re- fused to sign a special use per- F or e Seneca st Ro ad 16 N 2 miles Alan Kenaga/EO Media Group mit, required for groups of 75 or more to address resource and other concerns. The For- est Service issued a design criteria document listing rules to mitigate damage to the re- sources, which attendees also refused to sign. Nehl, the agency adminis- trator, said although the event is unauthorized the Forest Service must weigh public safety and the safety of its offi cers when determining whether to take action on a noncompliant group. He said 20,000 attendees versus a small number of offi cers were “not good odds.” Nationally, the Forest Ser- vice budgets $500,000 each year to respond to the Rain- bow Gathering, which has been held annually on nation- al forest land since 1972. The group has claimed its gather- ings are protected by the First Amendment. “It’s frustrating for us too that these folks are not com- plying,” Nehl said. “We un- derstand we expect other for- est users to comply with our rules. We want to be able to look them in the eye and say you were held to the same standards.”