Albuquerque Journal

Residents anxious about countercul­ture gathering

- BY ANDREW SELSKY

SALEM, Ore. — Concern is growing in a conservati­ve, remote corner of Oregon as people start arriving in a national forest for a Rainbow Family of Living Light annual gathering, a countercul­ture gettogethe­r expected to draw thousands.

Officials with the Malheur National Forest said this week that around 600 Rainbow Family members are already camped at a gathering site near Flagtail Meadow and that between 10,000 and 30,000 are likely arriving by July 4, when the multi-day event peaks with a prayer for world peace.

People with small children, those with disabiliti­es and senior citizens were among those who wrote to the event’s Facebook page, discussing the site near the town of John Day in eastern Oregon, accessibil­ity and bus routes.

Some commentato­rs expressed concern about keeping the place hygienic.

The U.S. Forest Service said that as of Tuesday, it had made two arrests, and handed out 31 warnings and three violation notices.

The Forest Service said its resource specialist­s are making sure that kitchens, peace circles, and latrines are located appropriat­ely.

The Forest Service said the group refused to sign a special use permit, required for groups of more than 75. The group has noted that it claims no leader, and consequent­ly there is no one to sign such permits. The Forest Service said it will require operating conditions that users must abide by.

Rancher Loren Stout, who has a federal grazing permit on land adjacent to the event site, was upset, saying the Forest Service would punish ranchers if they ignored permit requiremen­ts and tapped a spring for drinking water like the Rainbow Family has done.

“People are furious over this,” Stout told the Blue Mountain Eagle, a weekly newspaper in John Day. “Not because it’s a friggin’ bunch of hippies. It’s the different standards.”

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