Tag Archive | "tony green"

Kroger puts Oregon on the list to support carbon emission regulation

July 23, 2010

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BY RACHEL CHEESEMAN

SALEM- Attorney General John Kroger joined with 12 other states Wednesday in an attempt to intervene to support the Environmental Protection Agency’s regulation of industrial greenhouse gas emissions.

“The science is clear. Global climate change harms public health, and the EPA is taking the right approach by focusing on the big sources of pollution,” Kroger said in a press release.

Kroger’s spokesman, Tony Green, said that Kroger felt it important to support the new administration’s approach to environmental policy.

“One of the significant frustrations of the previous administrations was their refusal to recognize the health threats of carbon emissions,” Green said.

The “big sources” to which Kroger refers are large industries like chemical, steel and coal plants that produce large amounts of pollutants like carbon dioxide because of their operations.

Several of these industries filed suit against the EPA, arguing that the Clean Air Act did not give the EPA the authority to regulate carbon emissions.

Other states joining Oregon include neighbors like California and New Mexico, as well as other states across the country like Illinois, Iowa, Maine and New York.

Green said that if the states that have joined in filing the motion to intervene – essentially asking to be a participant in the litigation – are granted their motion, then the states involved will be able to provide their own arguments and evidence in addition to those of the federal government.

“It’s a way of making sure that other views are brought to the court in a formal way rather than filing a friend of the court brief,” Green said.

The states joining together, Green explained, allows them to pool their resources and divide up the responsibilities involved in being a party to a case whether it be writing depositions or doing legal research.

“It makes things a lot more efficient and less expensive,” he said.

Anonymous reporting form to increase awareness, policing of hate crime in Oregon

June 14, 2010

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Oregon's Attorney General, John Kroger. Image from claytonman84 via Flickr

BY RACHEL CHEESEMAN

SALEM - In a meeting at the Q Center Wednesday, June 9, Attorney General John Kroger announced a new confidential means to report hate crimes in Oregon.

Kroger’s spokesman Tony Green said there always had been concerns that many hate crimes weren’t being reported. Members of the community spoke out at a meeting last week, saying many people were uncomfortable or afraid to report hate crimes to local law enforcement. A confidential form has been created that can be submitted to the Oregon Department of Justice.

Randy Blazak, chair of the Coalition Against Hate Crime, said that there are a number of reasons hate crimes go unreported. Some fear that the police won’t take the reports seriously. Others fear that the police might share those beliefs.

Blazak said that immigrants might not report hate crime because of language barriers or fear of deportation. Others in the LGBQT community do not want the attention such incidents might bring.

“The process of identifying yourself as a victim of a gaybashing can be a very public event,” he said.

Blazak said that the effects of hate crime go beyond the incident and the victim.

“Hate crimes are a form of terrorism. They’re meant to terrorize an entire community,” he said. “They create psychological ripples that can last years and years.”

Dianne Sykes of the Civil Rights Unit and Sean Riddell, Chief Counsel of the Criminal Justice Division, worked alongside the staff in information services to have the form ready by Wednesday.

We’re thrilled that the Attorney General’s office has taken such an immediate action and offered such a tangible response to the requests made by the LGBTQ community at last week’s important forum,” said Kendall Clawson, Q Center Director, in a press release.

Once the form is submitted, department staff will review information and decide whether or not to pass on the case to local law enforcement.

“The crucial thing is that we need to make sure that these people are comfortable to move the case forward,” Green said, adding that some reports are filed for informational purposes, with no intent to seek prosecution. If a person did want to pursue prosecution after filing a report, then the investigation would move forward with local law enforcement.

“We don’t want this to be seen as a substitute for local law enforcement,” Green said. “We’re trying to make it really easy for them to do it online.”

Green said the form would also be a useful tool in helping to gather data about the frequency and nature of hate crime in Oregon.

“There’s all kinds of problems with trying to assess what the actual problem is because the data is so lacking,” Blazak said. “We just don’t know.”Green explained that hate crimes are prosecuted for the action, whether intimidation, assault, etc., with the motivation playing a role in the sentencing of the crime.

While the form’s creation was announced at the Q Center, a LBGQT community resource, Green said the form is meant to be inclusive, serving all those who might be targeted.

Blazak said the fact that Kroger made creating this form a priority sends a message to both victims and perpetrators of hate crime that it’s something that will be taken seriously.

“It’s a very powerful message,” Blazak said.