2A Wednesday, April 12, 2017 Appeal Tribune State lawmakers push for dam safety TRACY LOEW STATESMAN JOURNAL Oregon’s “high hazard potential” dams would get stepped up inspections and would be required to develop emergency ac- tion plans under a bill in- troduced Monday in the Oregon House. House Bill 3427, spon- sored by Silverton Rep. Rick Lewis, would require emergency exercises to be conducted at high-haz- ard dams at regular inter- vals. And it would require the Oregon Water Re- sources Department to conduct periodic exami- nations of those dams. Under current law, high-hazard dams are en- couraged to have an emer- gency action plan, Lewis said. House Bill 3427 would require one. “Having an emergency action plan and consisten- cy in safety inspections is crucial to emergency pre- paredness for dams that are high hazard,” Lewis said in a statement. “Ore- gonians who live below or within proximity of one of the numerous high-haz- ard dams in our state should have confidence in their level of safety.” The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers maintains the public National Inven- tory of Dams (NID) data- base. It classifies some dams as “high hazard poten- tial,” meaning dam failure could result in the loss of at least one human life, and likely would result in property or environmen- tal destruction. Other dams are classified as “significant hazard poten- tial,” “low hazard poten- tial,” or “undetermined.” In February, following the crisis at Oroville Dam in California, the States- man Journal reported that of the 869 Oregon dams in the NID database, 150 are rated “high hazard potential.” Twenty-four of those high-hazard dams are op- erating without emergen- cy action plans, docu- ments that lay out every- thing from inundation Oregon’s troubled dams Oregon considers seven Oregon dams to be in unsatisfactory condition: » Big Creek Reservoir #1 (Lower) Dam, in Lincoln County (21 feet high). » Big Creek Reservoir #2 (Upper) Dam in Lincoln County (56 feet high). » Crowley Dam in Malheur County (90 feet high) » Willow Creek 3 in Malheur County (110 feet high) » Ferry Creek Dam in Curry County (65 feet high). » McMullen Dam in Josephine County (33 feet high). ANNA REED / STATESMAN JOURNAL The upper Big Creek Reservoir near Newport is one of seven dams in Oregon that have been deemed “unsatisfactory” by the Oregon Water Resources Department. maps to notification flow- charts to emergency re- sponse duties. Oregon considers sev- en high-hazard dams to be in “unsatisfactory” condi- tion, meaning they could be declared unsafe if re- pairs aren’t made. In Marion and Polk counties, high hazard dams include Franzen Reservoir, Silver Creek Dam, Croft Reservoir and Mercer Reservoir. Detroit Lake in Linn County, which supplies Salem’s drinking water, is a high-hazard dam. It does have an emergency action plan. The House Committee on Veterans and Emer- gency Preparedness has » Johnson Creek Dam in Crook County (44 feet high). scheduled a public hear- ing on the bill at 3 p.m. Tuesday in Hearing Room E at the Capitol. tloew@statesmanjour- nal.com, 503-399-6779 or follow at Twitter.com/Tra- cy_Loew Aurora man sentenced for hiding dad’s body WHITNEY M. WOODWORTH STATESMAN JOURNAL After he admitted to stuffing his father’s corpse in a vacuum- sealed bag, hiding his body in the freezer and pocketing his father’s so- cial security checks and PERS payments for months, an Aurora man was sentenced to 7 years prison April 4. Edward Conley Fitch- ett, 59, pleaded guilty to second-degree abuse of a corpse and six counts of first-degree theft. He was arrested in February after Mar- ion County Sheriff’s Office dep- uties dis- cover the Fitchett body of Henry Conley Fitchett Jr., 87, stashed in a freezer next to Edward’s trailer. Another family mem- ber reported Henry miss- ing on Jan. 29. Neighbors reported last seeing Hen- ry between August 2015 and early 2016, but Ed- ward insisted he lived with his father until Au- gust 2016. He told deputies his fa- ther had moved in with his girlfriend. Four months earlier, however, he told his landlord his father went to live with his brother in eastern Ore- gon. A local doctor’s office last treated Henry in De- cember 2015. In August, a person claiming to be Henry called the office, said they were fine and no longer needed treatment. Investigators discov- ered Henry was still re- ceiving about $2,000 a month in retirement funds from PERS and so- cial security payments. Edward admitted to spending the money on personal purchases through Amazon, rent, electricity bills and stor- age payments. The conflicting stories and Edward’s admission of theft led deputies to serve a search warrant at Edward’s home on the 21300 block of Hubbard Cutoff Road NE. They found Henry, naked and sealed in a bag inside the freezer. An Oregon State Medi- cal Examiners Office au- topsy determined Fitch- ett died of natural causes in December 2015. Edward told investiga- tors he put his father’s body in the fridge but de- clined to give further de- tails. He was arrested and charged with second-de- gree abuse of a corpse and 13 counts of first-degree theft. In each theft count, he was accused of stealing more than $1,000 on at least 13 occasions from January 2016 to January 2017. In a notice filed in Mar- ion County, prosecutor Keir Boettcher stated Ed- ward has demonstrated a violation of trust, was part of an organized criminal operation and showed a lack of remorse. He also identified Henry as a vul- nerable victim and his son’s action cause great harm. As part of his sentence, Edward was also ordered to pay for his father’s fu- neral and to pay further restitution. The remain- ing charges were dis- missed. For questions, com- ments and news tips, email reporter Whitney Woodworth at wmwood- wort@statesmanjour- nal.com, call 503-399-6884 or follow on Twitter @wmwoodworth Senate chooses osprey over meadowlark as state bird DIANE DIETZ STATESMAN JOURNAL A proposal to dump the western meadowlark in favor of the osprey for the Oregon state bird flew through the Senate this week, drawing lofty rhet- oric from lawmakers. “The osprey is like Oregon,” Sen. Elizabeth Steiner Hayward said. “We are fierce. We are in- dependent. We are ubiqui- tous across our state. You can find an osprey nesting along any body of water in this entire state whether it’s urban or rural. “You can see osprey. They’re big. They’re obvi- ous. They have a unique flight patterns. They’re fascinating to watch, and they can engage people in a way that a small bird — that’s tough to see — can- not engage people.” Now the state bird bill, Senate Concurrent Reso- lution 18, awaits action in the House, likely in May. Sen. Fred Girod, a fish- erman and Republican senator from Stayton, in- troduced the bill. He said meadowlarks are too small — scarcely bigger than a robin — and not much to see, if they’re even around, which is sel- dom. The osprey, a fish-eat- ing bird of prey, on the other hand, has a 5-foot wingspan, and they are clever fishers, diving headfirst into the water and cleverly calculating their target despite the water’s misleading lens, he said. Defenders of the meadowlark and its song, which the Cornell Orni- thology Lab calls a “buoy- ant, flute-like melody,” Knowing our clients personally is what we do. P.O. Box 13009 Salem, OR 97309 Address P.O. 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USPS 469-860, Postmaster: Send address changes to Appeal Tribune, P.O. Box 35, Silverton OR 97381. PERIODICALS POSTAGE PAID: Salem, OR and additional offices. Send letters to the editor and news releases to say if the state dumps the meadowlark Oregon will be turning its back on a vulnerable species, which is losing its habitat and dwindling in numbers. Audubon members point to Oregon’s cultural history involving the meadowlark. In 1927, the bird-watching organiza- tion asked Oregon school kids to vote on a bird to represent the state. In ad- dition to the meadowlark, they had the western blue- bird, varied thrush, Ore- gon junco, white-crowned sparrow to chose from, according to the testimo- ny of a Eugene bird watcher. The children “rallied around a delicate little songbird as our state bird,” Sen. Betsy Johnson, D-Scappoose, said in an impassioned defense of the meadowlark. But Girod said the meadowlark was never officially made the Ore- gon state bird. By fiat, governor Isaac Patterson made it so by proclamation. The Legis- lature never weighed in, he said. “The major problem with the meadowlark is that it’s the state bird for five other states. (Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota and Wyo- ming) That’s just not the Oregon way,” Girod said. But Chris Thomas of Eugene testified that sim- ply swapping out the meadowlark for the os- prey “ignores and disre- spects the rich history” of the meadowlark’s rise in Oregon. “The ‘Oregon’ thing to do would respect the past and embrace the future, let Meadowlark be voted down, ratified or given the chance to stand for re- election as incumbent against osprey, duck or whatever, in a new poll of Oregon schoolchildren,” he said. Audubon chapters across Oregon volun- teered to sponsor a new poll of schoolchildren to settle the matter. Much of the debate in the Senate was on the sur- face about the birds but other issues lurked just beneath the surface. Eng- lish majors will be able to spot the subtext. “Maybe this bill is in- dicative of the spirit of this session when we move to replace an iconic herbivore with a domi- nant carnivore,” she said. “We offer up this gen- tle avian friend into the talons of a raptor with precious little public process,” Johnson said on the Senate floor. “(We) drive a dagger through the soft downy breast of this feathered harbinger of spring. We should be ashamed. ... “We should consult the public. Don’t validate the caprice of possibly well- intended individuals who wish to replace this gentle presence with a fierce predator and an instinctu- al killer who visits death on fish from above. I beg you to maintain the melo- dic song of the meadow- lark.” Sen. Brian Boquist, R- Dallas, said he hadn’t in- tended to speak on the subject but “was moved by the rapturous speech by my fellow colleague about the dark-of-the- night (legislation).” But it’s too early, he said. “We’re not halfway through session. We’ll be doing the dark- of-night things in rules committee around the seventh or eighth of July.” The decision about the bird included public no- tice and testimony and followed the appropriate process. As a Republican in a state where Demo- crats hold the governor- ship, the Senate and the House, Boquist said he pays attention to due process. “We know what the railroad looks like, at least when it runs over us.” Just before the vote, Republican Girod tried to turn his outsider status into an asset, at least for the sake of elevating the osprey. “Most of you for a long time have had strong feel- ings about me,” Girod told his colleagues. “Give me what you’ve always want- ed to give me: Give me the bird.” ddietz@statesmanjour- nal.com, 503-399-6615 or follow at twitter.com/ diane_dietz