Thursday, May 02, 2024
63.0°F

Justice Department reaches agreement with Mattawa

| March 21, 2008 9:00 PM

Town creates list of interpreters

MATTAWA (AP) - Mattawa established a list of interpreters and guidelines for their use in assisting police under an agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice.

The agreement is the first of its kind in the state of Washington, according to a statement by the federal agency.

It resolves two complaints accusing the town and police of failing to provide access to interpreters for Spanish-speaking residents who were victims of domestic violence.

The 2000 census showed Mattawa's population at 2,609, nearly 90 percent Hispanic. The same tally also indicated that 83 percent of the Hispanic residents over the age of 18 speak English less than "very well."

Mattawa is about 140 miles southwest of Spokane in Grant County.

The complaints were filed in 2005 and a resolution satisfactory to the feds took until recently to achieve, said Ed Allan, a lawyer who represents the town.

The town has established a list of interpreters that meet the demands of both sides, as well as parameters for when the interpreters will be summoned, Allan said.

"Sometimes you go to a domestic violence situation and sometimes those are very volatile, and you have to consider the safety of the interpreter, too," he said, "so there are conditions written in to protect everybody."

The plan also requires that vital municipal documents be translated into Spanish and establishment of an outreach program to ensure that people with limited English are covered by services and programs.

Under the agreement, the federal agency may monitor the town's progress for two years.

In separate complaints, some 30 Hispanic day care providers have filed civil rights complaints and lawsuits against state and local officials following a long-running federal investigation into childcare providers.

That investigation resulted in indictments against five past and present Mattawa day care workers on theft and witness tampering charges late last summer.