Rainbows, locals bemoan Forest Service presence

                                seattlepi.com | Jun 21st 2011                   
                                                                                
                                                         

GIFFORD PINCHOT NATIONAL FOREST, Wash. (AP) — Lights flash in the dusk as 
police cars surround a blue school bus painted with colorful hearts and 
flowers. Several youthful hippies watch while officers search their bags and a 
police dog sniffs for drugs.

They were pulled over for failing to use a turn signal on a remote forest road. 
Minutes later, two pose for mug shots after the search turns up marijuana.

It's a scene likely to be played out again in the next week as thousands 
descend on the Gifford Pinchot National Forest in southwest Washington for the 
40th annual gathering of the Rainbow Family of Living Light, a group of peace 
activists borne out of the '60s counterculture movement.

Brought in to keep their own peace: 30 U.S. Forest service law enforcement 
personnel from around the country, working 24-7 on three rotating shifts.

The Forest Service says the sheer number of people warrants the heavy police 
presence. Critics call it overkill in a remote forest that could be easily 
policed — or at least managed — by local law enforcement.

"There's no accountability," said Paul Pearce, local Skamania County 
commissioner.

Said Gary Stubbs, a decades-long Rainbow gatherer from Marysville, Calif., 
"They treat us like terrorists."

As many as 20,000 people have turned out for annual gatherings of the Rainbow 
Family, which has no formal structure or leaders. An informal council decides 
each year where the gathering will be held. For years, the decisions have 
sparked court battles with the Forest Service over the group's right to gather 
without a permit.

Those battles culminated in 2008, when Forest Service officers fired pepper 
balls at gatherers in the Bridger-Teton National Forest in western Wyoming.

This year, for the first time, the Rainbow Family advertised public meetings 
with local residents to ease concerns about increased traffic, drug use and 
crime. Local law enforcement and fire officials, state lands officials and 
local shopkeepers attended.

At the first meeting, in Stevenson, Wash., no one from the Forest Service 
showed.

The absence highlights fears that the federal government doesn't share the 
concerns of local residents, Pearce said.

Pearce is a member of the National Association of Counties, which has sponsored 
a resolution urging Congress to restore law enforcement management to local 
forest supervisors. Currently, the Forest Service's law enforcement "incident 
management" teams report to Washington D.C. headquarters.

Surrounded by hippies with assorted piercings, tattoos and dreadlocks, Pearce 
seems an odd pairing with the Rainbow Family. A retired police officer of 30 
years, he stands a burly 6-feet in shiny black cowboy boots. But a glance at 
his hip — where one anticipates a gun — reveals a cell phone.

"If you're law enforcement in my community, you have to take your kids to the 
same school as those people you arrest," Pearce said. "You're forced to police 
people with respect, and if you police people with respect, you will have fewer 
problems."

Corey Rhyne, 32, of Hickory, N.C., echoed that sentiment after getting pulled 
over in the blue school bus for failing to use a turn signal. He and a friend 
were scheduled court appearances after a subsequent search of their belongings 
turned up marijuana.

"It was ridiculous fascism," he said. "I just feel like my constitutional 
rights were violated."

Last year in the Santa Fe National Forest in New Mexico, authorities recorded 
more than 370 incidents due to the Rainbow Family gathering.

Christy Covington, a Forest Service spokeswoman brought in with the incident 
management team, said the agency manages Rainbow Family gatherings similar to 
how it manages natural disasters, such as hurricanes or wildfires. National law 
enforcement teams often are called in for those situations.

"It's an incident command system. It's a very organized, tried-and-true system 
that works," she said, adding that the local forest supervisor and local law 
enforcement have unified with the national team to manage the gathering.

As family members began assembling, depending on where they started, they were 
hiking in as many as four miles, carrying sleeping bags, tents, tarps and 
musical instruments to a meadow tucked in the woods not far from Mount St. 
Helens

In the woods, it wasn't all disagreements.

Nineteen-year-old Michael Kesinger of Elk Grove, Calif. bummed a cigarette from 
a Forest Service law enforcement officer — who confirmed his age first — after 
hitching rides to his first gathering.

"I just have heard people talk about this, and I wanted to see what it's all 
about," he said. "I like the idea behind it."

The idea behind the gatherings is peace, said Stubbs, who's hoping for just 
that in dealing with the Forest Service this time around.

"We come here for the principal reason of holding hands on the 4th of July and 
praying for world peace," he said. "If you look at the state of the world, it 
can't hurt."

                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                        

Original Page: 
http://www.seattlepi.com/news/article/Rainbows-locals-bemoan-Forest-Service-presence-1450261.php

Shared from Read It Later

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Sixties-L" group.
To post to this group, send email to sixties-l@googlegroups.com.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
sixties-l+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/sixties-l?hl=en.

Reply via email to