USA TODAY
BURNS,
Ore. — Monday evening at the empty Elkhorn Cafe, owner Terry Williams
was washing dishes silently. He paused to brew a cup of coffee and talk
about a group of armed men occupying federal buildings at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge.
The
occupiers, who are mainly from Nevada and Arizona, are outsiders, he
said. Williams, 73, and a lifelong resident of Burns, said the
militiamen don't represent the locals.
Underneath a seemingly
infinite expanse of rolling, rocky hills dusted in snow, about a dozen
or so men led by Nevada rancher Ammon Bundy have mounted a would-be
insurrection against the federal government. Bundy and other men with
him say they're not leaving until Dwight and Steven Hammond are freed
from federal prison, their case is examined by an independent
investigative board and federally owned land in Harney County, Ore., is relinquished by the government to the people.
It's about defending rights within the Constitution, Bundy said Monday.
The group broke in to a Bureau of Land Management
bunk house during the weekend to begin their takeover. Now, the militia
patrols the area on ATVs and takes shifts in a watch tower, waiting to
see if authorities arrive. So far nothing much has happened.
The
police have said little except "Go home." Harney County Sheriff David
Ward said during a press conference Monday that the "armed occupation"
of the federal building isn't what Burns residents want, and the militia
should disband.
The militia has said repeatedly that they plan to stay for years.
Locals
have said group's claim to defend the plight of the Hammonds, a father
and son pair who recently returned to federal prison after an arson
conviction, and to be acting with their interests in mind, is tenuous.
Some see the situation only as a distraction.
Burns schools are closed and employees who would normally be at the wildlife refuge haven't been able to return.
"The local kids have a week off school. They have to play basketball games in John Day and practice in Drewsey," Williams said.
The
true cause is mandatory minimum sentencing laws, he said. The Hammonds
were subject to minimum sentences for their arson convictions. Part of
the controversy is that the Hammonds were given a lenient sentence,
which they served. In a rare move, the federal government appealed the
sentence, and the Hammonds were sentenced again for the mandatory five
years. That double sentencing, many residents say, is unjust, but taking
up arms against the government is another thing altogether.
The Hammonds turned themelves in to federal authorities in California on Monday.
"We
might agree with the Hammonds, but we don't need that out there,"
Williams said of the occupiers at the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge.
He
said that although Portland and Salem may have their differences with
eastern Oregon, the Bundys at the refuge don't represent all of Burns or
Harney County.
Burns is a small town of less than 3,000. There
are only a couple of stoplights, and locals say the place to be for town
gossip is the Safeway
market. It's an oasis of sorts, nestled within a vast rural landscape.
This is a different Oregon than Portland, or Eugene, or even Bend. This
is the Oregon where men often wear cowboy hats and carry sidearms just
out of habit.
Downtown, several feet of snow piles are a makeshift
meridian. Heavy-duty trucks are the primary means of transportation. A
used tobacco pouch can be seen spit onto the ground, frozen into fresh
ice. It's rugged Oregon, and ranching Oregon. Yet, it's still the Pacific Northwest, and politeness is customary.
Barbara
Ormond, a co-owner of Country Lane Quilts, said Burns has been
unsettled by the thought of violence. Normally the town is a nice, quiet
place.
"Come and visit," Ormond said. "It's a great place."
Ladonna
Baron, also a co-owner of the quilt store, said things in the town
haven't been too bad since the occupation of the refuge, although it's
pulled the community into different corners of the ring: some agree with
the militia's tactics, or even want to join. Others think it's a fool's
errand or a farce.
"We support our community," Baron said. "We
support our ranchers. Personally, I feel what happened to the Hammonds
was an injustice. But the militia is here on their own agenda."
She added if there was something to tell the militia, it's "Go away."
"Let us get back to normal here," Ormond said.
Williams
said he thinks that will happen sooner rather than later. If the police
aren't going to go in guns blazing, the Nevada ranchers cooped up in
the refuge may be driven out by other means.
"It shouldn't be all that long," he said. "Especially if you get mother nature to drop temperatures to 15 below."
Gordon Friedman reports for the (Salem, Ore.) Statesman Journal; Follow Gordon Friedman on Twitter: @gordonrfriedman
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