A8 NEWS Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, June 22, 2022 Public defense crisis lingers in state courts By GARRETT ANDREWS The Bulletin BEND — Around this time last year, the head of the Offi ce of Pub- lic Defense Services, the state agency responsible for paying public defend- ers in Oregon, announced on a con- ference call that, after years of scrap- ing by fi nancially, his offi ce was out of money. Twelve months and three direc- tors later, the offi ce has found ways to balance its budget with the help of emergency funds, and is off ering pub- lic defenders a new one-year contract featuring modest pay increases. But earlier this month a majority of Ore- gon public defense groups, an esti- mated two-thirds, balked at the con- tract and refused to sign, citing issues including a provision that would have required attorneys to travel to represent clients outside their home counties. In response to the outcry, a legisla- tive stakeholder group met Thursday, June 16, to discuss altering the con- tract, and by the end of the workday, a new contract was sent out to lawyers around the state. Key changes include allowing lawyers to perform work on the side, and the so-called neighbor- ing county provision is now a sugges- tion, not required. Representatives of public defense Bulletin, File January Neatherlin, a day care operator who left her children unattended to go tanning, appears via video in Deschutes County Circuit Judge Beth Bagley’s courtroom during a hearing on March 23, 2017, in Deschutes County Circuit Court in Bend. groups in Central Oregon told The Bulletin they’ll take the weekend to read and discuss the new contract. They intend to give feedback to the board that oversees the Offi ce of Pub- lic Defense Services budget, the Pub- lic Defense Services Commission, before it meets Thursday to consider approving the revised contract. Peter Deuel, co-administrator of the public-defense provider Bend Attorney Group, said one issue that remains is a serious workload dis- crepancy between public defend- ers who work the adult and juvenile systems. The juvenile justice system is much diff erent than the adult system, a key diff erence being that cases in the juvenile system take longer than adult criminal cases, often years longer. Attorneys in the juvenile system say the new contract, which requires them to assume 69 cases in addition to their current caseload, will unfairly burden them. “We still have some serious con- cerns with how the latest contract accounts for existing caseloads,” Deuel said. For Bend defense attorney Jamie Gerlitz, who works exclusively in the juvenile system, cases are coming in faster than they’re being cleared. She said the new juvenile contracts will further entrench a system of haves and have-nots in Oregon. “If a youth is lucky enough to reside in a county with the Parent Child Representation Project, the out- look for that county’s youth is actu- ally rosy,” she said. “For most of Ore- gon, however, the outlook is grim.” The Parent Child Representa- tion Project is a hot topic in public defense. In 2014, the Offi ce of Pub- lic Defense Services began a pilot program to reform juvenile pub- lic defense. The Parent Child Repre- sentation Project was a pet project of newly elected Gov. Kate Brown, her- self a former juvenile public defender. The project favors a “workload” model over “caseload” model. Attor- neys work a maximum caseload of 80 cases and have access to a full-time legal assistant and a social worker. The pilot program led to posi- tive outcomes in the pilot counties of Yamhill and Linn, including a 20% reduction in foster care placement and faster rates of family reunifi cation. The project was expanded to fi ve counties, with a plan to reach every county in Oregon by 2022. Deschutes was scheduled to get a Parent Child Representation Project in 2018, for a cost of $1 million per year. But after fi ve counties, the proj- ect ran out of money and other jus- tice issues drew widespread focus. The project’s standards never came to Deschutes County and most of the state. In 2019, a bombshell study was released by the 6th Amendment Cen- ter, fi nding that the Offi ce of Public Defense Services’ complex bureau- cracy hindered justice for defen- dants. The study reported the case- load model had incentivized public defenders to take on more cases than they could handle. The study recom- mended a workload model instead. With the new contract period beginning July 1, and little money to go around, it’s not expected the con- tract will contain major reforms. The head of the Offi ce of Public Defense Services, Stephen Singer, emailed public defense contractors Thursday explaining the diffi cult situation. “We hear you,” Singer wrote. “We agree that an open workload model, as what exists in the Parent Child Repre- sentation Program, is the most accu- rate, sustainable, and responsible way to contract. Your concerns are com- pletely valid. The unfortunate reality is that obtaining the resources, build- ing the infrastructure, and implement- ing that kind of fundamental change will take some time.” Critics fear new fi re safety regulations Drought By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press SALEM — Oregon for- estry offi cials are bracing for controversy after approving statewide hazard ratings that encompass up to 300,000 properties with elevated risk of wildfi res. Many of those tracts are expected to face new defen- sible space and building code requirements under “wild- land-urban interface” criteria recently enacted by the Ore- gon Board of Forestry. Critics anticipate the two regulatory actions will result in sweeping and unworkable restrictions for rural commu- nities when a map of aff ected areas is released later this month. Blowback from rural resi- dents against the new require- ments is expected by the state forestry offi cials due to objections they’ve encoun- tered during the rule-making process. “We have to recognize there will be people and orga- nizations that will continue to Stayton Fire District/Contributed Photo, File The Oregon Department of Forestry has approved mapping rules that critics fear will cause over-regulation of rural prop- erties. push against this and attempt to embarrass the department and related agencies,” said Jim Kelly, the board’s chair, during a recent meeting. “It will enter into the governor’s race and all that. I think we all need to be prepared.” The Oregon Depart- ment of Forestry received roughly twice as many com- ments opposed to the map- ping regime than in favor of it, mostly because people thought the wildland-urban interface was too expansive, said Tim Holschbach, the agency’s fi re prevention and policy manager. The agency will send out written notices to 250,000- 300,000 landowners aff ected by the rules. They can appeal their classifi cations if they’re subject to regulation, he said. Periodic audits will review the eff ectiveness of the rules, which can continue to be modifi ed. As the rollout of the wild- fi re map gets underway, ODF realizes it will be in a “fi sh bowl” of public scru- tiny and it expects that revi- sions will be necessary, said Mike Shaw, the agency’s fi re chief. “The agency’s work is not Grant County Committee Volunteers Needed done. The work will continue through this year. We know we’re not going to be per- fect,” Shaw said. “There will be adjustments in the future. This is a great fi rst step.” The Oregon Farm Bureau has worried about adverse impacts to agriculture since lawmakers began negotiating comprehensive wildfi re legis- lation last year. The Legislature ended up passing Senate Bill 762, which the Farm Bureau crit- icized for its “top-down” approach to wildfi re miti- gation. The group favored a “bottom-up” strategy of con- sulting with rural communi- ties proposed in another bill. To get the bill over the fi n- ish line, lawmakers elimi- nated SB 762’s defi nition of wildland-urban interface, or WUI, and instead directed the Board of Forestry to set the parameters based on “national best practices.” However, the Farm Bureau and other critics believe the board’s WUI cri- teria are nonetheless overly broad. The vast acreage likely included in the designation will leave people “shocked,” said Lauren Smith, the group’s director of govern- persists despite rains ment and national aff airs. “Our legislators will be very surprised when they start getting constituent calls,” she said. “When you get a WUI that is nearly the size of the State of Oregon, it sort of defeats the purpose.” Properties will be subject to regulation only if they’re both within the WUI and have a hazard rating of “high” or “extreme” wildfi re risk. Roughly 250,000-300,000 properties fall into the “high” and “extreme” risk categories, but ODF doesn’t yet have an estimate of how many are also in the WUI. The Farm Bureau expects a great deal of overlap, which will have a drastic eff ect on rural areas, Smith said. “You’ll see large swaths of entire communities pulled into high or extreme risk WUI,” she said. “There’s a lot of regulation going on focused on this map and all these rural communities, and not a lot of representation by them.” The defensible space reg- ulations require fi re-prone fuels to be cleared from 50-100 feet around certain structures, depending on the hazard rating. By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Applications are Due by WEDNESDAY, July 6th, 2022 Monday - Thursday 7am- 6pm Monday - Thursday 7am- 6pm Friday 8am - 5pm Friday Sharpe 8am - 5pm Mendy FNP Mendy Sharpe FNP Apppointments available S283676-1 139101 Obtain a volunteer application from the County Court, 201 S. Humbolt, No. 280, Canyon City, OR 97820, online at Committee Volunteer Application or contact (541-575-0059) GCCourtAdmin@grantcounty-or.gov. Committees are formal public bodies required to comply with Oregon Public Meetings Law ORS 192.610. Airport Commission (ORS 836.616) Five commissioners plus a County Court representative serve two year terms, meeting monthly. The commission acts as governing body for the Grant County Regional Airport. Applicants must be full time, bona fide residents of the county and be aircraft owners or pilots, or individuals with demonstrated interest in and knowledge of aviation matters. College Advisory Board Seven members plus three ex-officio members serve three year terms and meet month- ly to promote local educational opportunities and identify educational needs within the community. Extension & 4-H Service District Advisory Council Eleven members serve three year terms, meeting semi-annually to provide guidance and assistance to local OSU Extension staff in planning, developing, and evaluating balanced educational programs directed to high priority needs of county residents. Library Advisory Board (ORS 357.465) Seven members serve four year terms, meeting monthly to promote public awareness and support of library services, receive public input, review and update library materials, and coordinate activities with the Grant County Library Foundation. Natural Resources Advisory Committee Nine members serve one and two year terms. Members must live in Grant County and constitute a representation of agriculture and livestock production, timber and wood products production, recreation, hunting and fishing, water resources, mining, cultural resources and advocates for natural resources stewardship through continuation of the customs, culture, health, safety and economic stability of Grant County. Planning Commission (ORS 192.610) Nine members serve four year terms; two alternates serve two year terms. Meetings are held as needed to review land use and zoning applications, discuss city and county growth issues and site new facilities. Members must reside in various geographic areas within the county with no more than two voting members engaged in the same kind of business, occupation, trade or profession with agriculture designations of livestock/for- age or horticulture/specialty crop production. Senior Citizens Advisory Council (ORS 410.210) Five members serve three year terms and meet semi-annually to define the needs of older adults, promote special interests and local community involvement, and represent senior citizens as an advocate to the local, state and federal government and other or- ganizations. Southeast Area Commission on Transportation Five members, plus one alternate, serve three year terms as Grant County representa- tives. The alliance provides a forum for local government agencies and the private sec- tor to discuss, understand and coordinate long range transportation issues affecting the south east Oregon region including Grant, Harney and Malheur counties. The alliance acts as the Area Commission on Transportation. Daytime meetings are held monthly or as needed, rotating among the three counties. Wolf Depredation Advisory Committee (OAR 603-019-0015) Five members include one County Commissioner, two who own or manage livestock and two who support wolf conservation or coexistence. These members agree upon two business representatives to serve as additional members. The committee oversees the procedure established by Grant County for its Wolf Depredation Compensation Program. The current vacancy is for a business representative. JOIN THE WHEELER FAMILY IN THE FIGHT AGAINST COLON CANCER! Friday, July 8 th , 2022 Grant County Fairgrounds LIVE MUSIC PULLED PORK DINNER OPEN BAR Doors open at 5:00 PM Live and Silent Auction Dinner at 6:00 by donation All proceeds go to the Wheeler family Donations are being accepted through June 25th Please contact Winnie at 541-620-0748 if you are interested in making a donation for the Silent or Live Auction Teri Bowden at 541-575-2112 for a dessert donation Cash donation can be made at Old West Federal Credit Union in John Day SALEM — With rain- storms relentlessly soaking the state throughout spring, Ore- gonians can be forgiven for assuming that drought fears have dissipated. Many are surprised to learn that worries about water short- ages have persisted despite the stubbornly soggy weather, said Ryan Andrews, a hydrol- ogist at the Oregon Water Resources Department. Though the season’s high rainfall and low temperatures have mitigated what could have been a much worse situ- ation, much of Oregon is still enduring a prolonged “mega- drought” that’s affl icting the entire West, Andrews said. “Though the spring pre- cipitation was nice, it was not enough to overcome the long- term defi cit,” he said at the June 16 meeting of the state’s Water Resources Commission, which oversees the agency. Conditions associated with summer, such as reduced stream fl ows and soil mois- ture levels, have been delayed, Andrews said. Irrigators and other water users must still “proceed with caution,” though — particu- larly in areas where drought has remained severe, such as Central Oregon, Andrews said. According to a recent study, the past 22 years repre- sent the West’s worst “mega- drought” in about 1,200 years, he said. A mega-drought is an abnormally dry period that lasts more than two decades. The multi-year drought has lingered through the sea- sonal intervals of wetness while being aggravated by lower-than-normal snowpacks and earlier “melt-out” in the summer, Andrews said. Last year, OWRD got 600 reports of domestic wells going dry or yielding less water and has received 300 such complaints so far in 2022, he said. Funding is available for households with low and moderate incomes to repair or replace aging wells. Of course, the extent and intensity of the drought would be exacerbated without this spring’s ample rainfall, he said. Stream fl ows unfortu- nately remain below-average in some areas, but statewide the outlook is more optimistic headed into summer, Andrews said. Some irrigation reservoirs were at record-low levels at the end of last summer, but the prolonged rains have helped replenish them while reduc- ing water demand from farm- ers, he said.