A10 STATE Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, May 5, 2021 House OKs gun storage combined with partial ban on public places from rural areas. Exceptions were from Clackamas County, where both Democratic Rep. Meek and Republican Leader Christine Drazan of Canby spoke against it. No Republi- cans voted for it. Two Republicans were excused. The vote took place after close to three hours of debate. The bill does not have an emergency clause, which means that, if it becomes law, opponents have 90 days from the close of the 2021 session to obtain 74,680 voter signa- tures to force a statewide elec- tion on the law. The number is set by the Oregon Constitution, which specifi es 4% of the votes cast for governor in the most recent election in 2018. Part of the revamped bill proposes requirements for fi re- arm locks and storage already written into a separate House bill, which the House sent back to committee. Under the revamped bill, Revamped bill heading back to state Senate By Peter Wong Oregon Capital Bureau The Oregon House, on a largely party-line vote, approved a bill that combines storage requirements for fi re- arms with a narrower ban on guns in some public places. The 34-24 vote on Thurs- day sends the revamped Sen- ate Bill 554 back to the Sen- ate, which can vote to accept the changes — and send it to Gov. Kate Brown — or reject it and force a joint panel to negotiate the diff erences. Support came exclusively from Democrats. Three of the 37 Democrats voted no: Paul Evans of Monmouth, David Gomberg of Otis and Mark Meek of Oregon City. Opposition came largely from Republicans, mostly Contributed photo/Dreamstime Legislation to require guns be locked is still moving through committee. Other legislation has been sidetracked. guns must have trigger or cable locks, be stored in a locked container or in a gun room. An off ense is a Class C viola- tion, which carries a maximum fi ne of $500, unless someone under age 18 obtains access, in which case it is a Class A vio- lation with a maximum fi ne of $2,000. No jail time is imposed for violations. The bill also requires prompt reporting of stolen fi rearms. House passes bills to change policing to report misconduct by offi cers or viola- tions of standards. “This bill by itself won’t do anything,” Noble said. “This bill, combined with the others that are coming before you, will create the ability and the safety for police offi cers to speak out when others act inap- propriately, use excessive force, or just generally are unfi t for the job.” Bynum spoke about the experience of Elijah Warren, who emerged from his home in East Portland to talk to police about the eff ects on his family of tear gas they used to disperse a demonstration on Sept. 5. While he did so, an offi cer struck him on the ear with a baton. The offi cer was found later to have been identifi ed in other incidents of excessive force. “Had offi cers not intervened, Mr. Warren could have been hurt much worse,” Bynum said. “Had other offi - cers reported the other offi cer’s miscon- duct earlier, Mr. Warren may never have been struck.” Bynum said the city of Portland, as far as she knows, has not responded as to whether the offi cer was disciplined. “What we do know from report- ing is that when offi cers do not inter- vene to stop their colleagues’ miscon- duct, it allows law enforcement to act with impunity,” she said. “Whether it is before, during or after an incident, that is wrong.” House Bill 2929 passed, 58-0. It specifi es who should receive reports of misconduct or violations (supervi- sors), when they should start inves- tigations (72 hours) and when they should be completed (three months). If there is substantial evidence to sup- port them, reports must be fi led with the state Department of Public Safety Standards and Training. By Peter Wong Oregon Capital Bureau Five bills aimed at changing polic- ing practices, plus four related mea- sures, have cleared the Oregon House by near-unanimous votes. All the bills go to the Senate. Five other policing bills, which are likely to aff ect state agencies, are pending in the Legislature’s joint budget committee. All emerged from the Judiciary Com- mittee and a subcommittee focused on policing. It follows up the work of a 2020 special session called by Gov. Kate Brown after the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis last year. A former offi - cer was convicted last week on charges of murder and manslaughter; three other offi cers are awaiting trial. Floyd’s death touched off nationwide protests for racial justice, among them more than 100 nights in Portland. Rep. Janelle Bynum, a Democrat from Clackamas who leads the full com- mittee and the subcommittee, said law- makers heard from local governments and associations of police executives and rank-and-fi le offi cers, not just groups advocating sweeping change. “I want to make it clear this was not an opportunity to dig in and bash,” Bynum, who is Black, said. “It was an opportunity to create a community table, where people around the state had a chance to have some input on who pro- tects them and their communities.” Rep. Ron Noble, a Republican from McMinnville, a former police chief of that city and a former offi cer in Corval- lis, said all the bills should be considered in context — not individually. He made his comments while speaking about House Bill 2929, which requires police Its fi rst sections are named in honor of Cindy Yuille and Steve Forsyth, who died on Dec. 11, 2012, in the Clackamas Town Center shootings. The assault- style weapon used to kill them was found to have been stolen. The other part of the revamped bill narrows the scope of a fi rearms ban included in the original SB 554, which passed the Senate on March 25. The changes would still bar the estimated 300,000 holders of Oregon concealed handgun licenses from bringing fi re- arms into some public places. State courts, which often are in buildings maintained by coun- ties, already are off -limits to fi rearms. But the scope of the ban would be narrower under the House version. Licensees would be barred from bringing fi rearms into the Capitol, though not from other state buildings as originally proposed in the Senate. They would be barred from bringing fi rearms into the pas- senger terminal at the Port- land airport, defi ned as one with annual passenger traf- fi c of more than one million. (Eugene and Medford airports had counts around one mil- lion passengers annually prior to the onset of the coronavirus pandemic.) Passenger board- ing areas and fi rearms ship- ments in luggage are controlled by federal law. Firearms bans would be optional at Oregon Health & Science University, seven state universities, 17 com- munity college districts and 197 school districts if their governing boards impose them on buildings and grounds under their con- trol. Notices of bans must be clearly displayed on build- ings and grounds and posted online. (Bans would not apply to public sidewalks and streets.) The revamped version of the bill drops the option for cities, counties and special districts to bar firearms from their buildings and grounds. Offenses would be con- sidered Class A misdemean- ors with maximum punish- ments of one year in jail and a fine of $6,250. The bill also would raise initial filing fees for con- cealed handgun licenses from $50 to $100, and for renewals, from $50 to $75. Brown defends powers in virus crisis as Oregon tops nation in COVID-19 rate restrictions, Oregon has one of the lowest case rates and deaths since the pandemic began spreading in the fi rst months of 2020. Brown said deci- sions often had to be made pitting “lives and livelihoods.” “As your governor, I chose to save lives,” she said. Brown said more than half of state residents have been at least par- tially vaccinated. The fi rst to receive the vaccine were elderly people in nursing homes, who made up more than half the deaths from COVID-19 in the state. While the daily death toll has fallen since its peak last winter, Brown said the current infection rate was rising too quickly and new vari- ants that are more contagious and, in some cases, lethal meant the recent spike had to be taken as seriously as earlier outbreaks. Brown’s latest actions included extending her authority over public health by extending the emergency declaration she issued in March 2020 until at least June 28. The orders to instigate the extreme risk and extend the emergency set off protests from some political and business leaders. A Republican-led eff ort was started in the Legislature to initiate bills to curb Brown’s powers or bar another extension. “Literally everything in Orego- nians’ lives are being dictated by one person,” Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend, said on the fl oor of the Senate on Thursday. A group of commissioners By Gary A. Warner Oregon Capital Bureau Gov. Kate Brown said Friday that she has no intention of rolling back orders issued this week to fi ght the nation’s worst rate of COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations now hitting Oregon. “Cases are widespread, driven by new, more contagious variants,” Brown said during a virtual press conference Friday morning. The Centers for Disease Control reported Friday that Oregon has the highest rate of new infections and hospitalizations of any state in the nation. Cases of COVID-19 have risen 38% in the past two weeks, while hospitalizations are up 43%. Nationwide, both are in decline. Fifteen counties already exceeded the extreme risk numbers at the very top of the state’s four-tier COVID- 19 risk chart. But Brown had ordered that the counties would not need to resort to the most severe restrictions as long as the state’s hospital sys- tem was not overly taxed. She set 300 COVID-19 hospitalizations as the “tripwire” for restoring the ban on indoor dining and strict limits on activities and gatherings. When cases topped 300 on April 26, Brown lifted the moratorium on extreme risk limits, putting 15 counties into extreme risk restric- tions April 30. On Friday, the state reported 339 COVID-19 patients in hospitals around the state. With early and sometimes heavy from 27 counties, along with the Oregon Restaurant and Lodging Association, sent a letter Tuesday to Brown asking her to reconsider her order and instead give local govern- ments more control to make deci- sions appropriate to their counties and cities. “The time has come to allow our communities the opportunity to move forward while embracing continued health and safety precau- tions,” the letter said. Brown said she knew the pan- demic had hammered small busi- nesses, especially restaurants and bars, who have been whipsawed by closings, openings and restrictions for more than a year. A special $20 million fund was being created by the Legislature to go to businesses that take a fi nancial hit under the lat- est restrictions. Oregon health offi cials have also struggled with “vaccine hesitancy” across the state from people unsure of whether they should get inocu- lated. 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