✷☛ ➋☞✞ ❖✌✄ ✆❱ ✆ ❞❢❣✐ ❣❞❥❥❧♠ ❲ ✁✂ ✄✁❆❨✱ ☎❆✆✝✞ ✟✱ ✠✡✶✾ LOCAL US wildlife officials announce Annual sale took plans to lift gray wolf protections place Monday ↔↕➙➛➜ ➝➞➟➠➡ ➢➤ ➥➦➟➧➦➤➟➠➡➨ ➩➠➫➭➯ ➲➨ ➳➯➦ ➲➵➳➯ ➟➠➡ ➞➸ ➺➻➼➽➾➝➯➦➫➦ ➠➫➦ ➚➻➻ ➟➠➡➤ ➪➦➸➳ ➝➞ ➾➠➚➚➪➢➦ ➝➤➥➦➶ ➠➶➹ ➘➥➪➶ ➴➧➢➡➪➢➤ ➷➬➩ ➮➫➫➯➽➼➱✃➩❐ ❒➺➩➫➫ ❮➣❰➣ ➄➍➒➓➒➍Ï❽ ➐Ð➏➍➆➒➁ Ñ➒➆➊ ➢➧ ➳➯➦ ➡➦➠➫➾ to lift protections for gray wolves across the Lower 48 states, a move certain to re- ignite the legal battle over a predator that’s rebounding in some regions and running ➍➊➂➐ ➏➐➊Ò➍➏➂➁ ➄➍➂➅ Ï➆❾Ó❽❾➁ ➆➊➓ ❾➆➊➏➅❽❾➁➃ ➆➊ ➐Ð➏➍➆➒ ➂➐➒➓ ↔↕➙➛➜➶➹ ➘➴➷➘➬➴➷➘↔ ➮➧ ➩➠➫➭➯ ➲➨ ➼➱➵✃➨ ➳➯➦ ❐➾❒➾ ❒❮❰➫➦Ï➦ Ð➞❮➫➳➨ ➢➧ Ñ➫➦➟ ❒➭➞➳➳ Ò➾ ❒➠➧➟➸➞➫➟➨ ➫❮➪➦➟ ✃Ó➺ ➳➯➠➳ ❒➭➞➳➳➨ ➠ ➤➪➠Ò➦➨ Ô➠➤ ➧➞➳ ➠➧ ÕÏ➦➫➢➭➠➧ ➭➢➳➢Ö➦➧ ➠➧➟ ➳➯➦➫➦➸➞➫➦ ➭➞❮➪➟ ➧➞➳ ➤❮➦ ➸➞➫ ➯➢➤ ➸➫➦➦➟➞Ï ➢➧ ➸➦➟➦➫➠➪ ➭➞❮➫➳➾ ↕× ↔➘➴➹ ➙➛↔Ø Ù➧ ➼Ú✃➵➨ Ù➳➠➪➢➠➧ ➠➫➳➢➤➳ ➠➧➟ ❰➞➦➳ ➩➢➭➯➦➪➠➧Û➦➪➞ Ô➠➤ Ü➞➫➧ ➢➧ Ð➠❰➫➦➤➦ ➢➧ ➳➯➦ Ý➦❰❮Ü➪➢➭ ➞➸ Þ➪➞➫➦➧➭➦➾ Ù➧ ➼➱➚➲➨ ➳➯➦ Õ➪➠Ï➞ ➢➧ ❒➠➧ Õ➧➳➞➧➢➞➨➝➦ß➠➤➨ ➸➦➪➪ ➠➤ ➩➦ß➢➭➠➧ ➸➞➫➭➦➤ ➪➦➟ Ü➡ à➦➧➦➫➠➪ Õ➧➳➞➧➢➞ á➞❰➦Ö ➟➦ ❒➠➧➳➠ Õ➧➧➠ ➤➳➞➫Ï➦➟ ➳➯➦ ➸➞➫➳➫➦➤➤ ➠➸➳➦➫ ➠ ➼➚Ó➟➠➡ ➤➢➦Û➦â ➳➯➦ Ü➠➳➳➪➦ ➭➪➠➢Ï➦➟ ➳➯➦ ➪➢Ò➦➤ ➞➸ ➠➪➪ ➳➯➦ ➝➦ß➠➧ ➟➦➸➦➧➟➦➫➤➨ ➧➦➠➫➪➡ ➺➻➻ ➤➳➫➞➧Û➨ ➢➧➭➪❮➟Ó ➢➧Û ➥➢➪➪➢➠Ï➝➫➠Ò➢➤➨ ã➠Ï➦➤ ä➞Ô➢➦ ➠➧➟ Ñ➠Ò➡ Ð➫➞➭å➦➳➳➾ Ù➧ ➼➽➼➺➨ ➮➫➦➞ ➤➠➧➟Ô➢➭➯ The Associated Press. Acting Interior Secretary David Bernhardt was ex- pected to announce the pro- posal today during a speech before a wildlife conference in Denver, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Spokesman Gavin Shire said in an interview with the AP. The decision to lift protec- tions is based on gray wolves successfully recovering from widespread extermination last century, Shire said. He said further details would be made public during a formal announcement planned in coming days. Long despised by farmers and ranchers, wolves were shot, trapped and poisoned out of existence in most of the U.S. by the mid-20th century. They received endan- gered species protections in 1975, when there were about 1,000 left, only in northern Minnesota. Now more than 5,000 of the animals live in the contiguous U.S. Most are in the Western Great Lakes and North- ern Rockies regions. Pro- tections for the Northern Rockies population were lifted in 2011 and hundreds are now killed annually by hunters. ❰➂➆➂❽ ➐Ð➏➍➆➒➁ ➁➆❿ ➄➐➒❼❽➁ have continued to thrive despite pressure from hunt- ➍➊➎➣ Ô➅❽ ➆➊➍Ó➆➒➁ ➆❾❽ Ñ❾➐➒➍➀➏ breeders and can adapt to a variety of habitats. Wildlife advocates want federal protections kept in place until wolves repopu- late more of their historic range that once stretched across most of North America. Since being reintroduced in Yellowstone National park and central Idaho in the mid-1990s, the North- ern Rockies population has expanded to parts of Or- egon, Washington and Cali- fornia. The Fish and Wildlife Ser- vice has argued for years the gray wolf has recovered in the Lower 48 states, despite occupying only a small frac- tion of the territory it once ❾➐➆Ó❽➓➣ Õ➎❽➊➏❿ ➐Ð➏➍➆➒➁ ➍➊Ö sist that recovery of wolves everywhere is not required for the species to no longer be in danger of extinction. Ô➅❽ ➎➐❼❽❾➊Ó❽➊➂ ➀❾➁➂ Ñ❾➐Ö posed revoking the wolf’s protected status across the Lower 48 states in 2013, ➉➔➂ ➉➆➏↕❽➓ ➐→ ➆Ï➂❽❾ Ï❽➓❽❾➆➒ courts struck down its plan for “delisting” the species in the western Great Lakes region states of Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin. Fish and Wildlife Service ➐Ð➏➍➆➒➁ ➓➍➁➏➒➐➁❽➓ ➂➐ ➂➅❽ Õ↔ last year that another scien- ➂➍➀➏ ❾❽❼➍❽➄ ➐Ï ➂➅❽ ➆➊➍Ó➆➒×➁ status had been launched. Shire declined to disclose the agency’s rationale for its decision the species had re- covered, but said members of the public would have a chance to comment before ➆ ➀➊➆➒ ➓❽➏➍➁➍➐➊ ➍➊ ➏➐Ó➍➊➎ months. Lawmakers in Congress frustrated with court rulings maintaining protections for wolves have backed legisla- tion to forcibly strip protec- tions for wolves in the Great Lakes region and beyond. A ➁➍Ó➍➒➆❾ ❽→➐❾➂ ➉❿ ➒➆➄Ó➆↕❽❾➁ succeeded in 2011 for North- ern Rockies wolves. ➝➞ ➟➠➡➢➞ ➟➤➥➦➧➢➞ ➨➩➫➭➯➲ ➳➩➵➫ ➸➩➺➻➼➽➩ Cattle ranchers from across the Northwest de- scended on Baker Valley Monday for the 40th- annual Harrell Hereford Ranch Spring Bull Roundup sale at the ranch along Salmon Creek west of Baker City. But those who walked through the snow on a chilly late winter day weren’t the only ones bid- ding on the cattle. Ranchers across the nation were also able to submit bids via the phone or the internet. There were more remote bidders this year, something Bob Harrell attributes to the recent wintry weather across much of the West. “We’ve got a good customer base that has been with us for a long time and so we are trying to do everything we can to accommodate them,” Har- rell said.”What makes a good sale is when you have more buyers than you have bulls.” Up for auction this year were 140 bulls, about 100 heifers and 11 quarter horses. “If our crowd is good then we should get along all right — we have a really good set of bulls this year, good set of heifers, so it’s just kind of up to how bad they are needing them,” Harrell said before the sale. Buyers were able to see live video of every bull when it went on the auction block. The Harrells’ website also had pre-recorded video of every bull for sale. Although the ranch added this technolo- gy to the spring sale a few years ago, Harrell said he still tries to attract as many potential buyers in person. He said those bidders are more willing to pay more for a bull than those who participate online. “Our objective is to try to get them to come to the sale and most people do. It’s just that weather sometimes is tough,” Harrell said. ➭➞➞å➢➦➤ Ô➦➫➦ æ➫➤➳ ➢➧➳➫➞➟❮➭➦➟ Ü➡ ➳➯➦ ç➠➳➢➞➧➠➪ ä➢➤➭❮➢➳ Ð➞➾ Ù➧ ➼➽➚➚➨ ➠ ➧➠➳➢➞➧➠➪ Ü➠➧å lectured about the coun- cil’s charters calling it “demeaning.” She called Little’s opening statement a “slap in the face.” The council members and the mayor argued for a few minutes but ultimately decided to move on to the next agenda item. A vote to pass the Pro- posed Sidewalk Ordi- nance over to the League of Oregon Cities for legal review passed with four votes, while Councilman Shawn Parker abstained. The ordinance, if passed, would create stricter rules on sidewalk main- tenance. A vote to pass part of the Snow and Ice Removal Plan passed unanimously. The plan entails if there is ➙❶➛➜ ➯➞➪➢➟➠➡ ➟➦➭➪➠➫➦➟ Ü➡ è➫➦➤➢Ó ➟➦➧➳ Þ➫➠➧å➪➢➧ Ñ➾ Ý➞➞➤➦Ò➦➪➳ ➠➢Ï➦➟ ➠➳ ➭➠➪Ï➢➧Û ❰➠➧➢➭å➦➟ ➟➦❰➞➤➢➳➞➫➤ Ô➦➧➳ ➢➧➳➞ ➦➸➸➦➭➳➾ Ð➯➢➭➠Û➞ ➩➠➡➞➫ Õ➧➳➞➧ Ð➦➫Ï➠å➨ Ô➞❮➧➟➦➟ ➢➧ ➠➧ ➠➳Ó ➳➦Ï❰➳ ➞➧ Ý➞➞➤➦Ò➦➪➳é➤ ➪➢➸➦ ➳➯➦ ❰➫➦Ò➢➞❮➤ Ï➞➧➳➯➨ ➟➢➦➟ ➠➳ ➠ ➩➢➠Ï➢ ➯➞➤❰➢➳➠➪ ➠➳ ➠Û➦ ➵➽➾ Ù➧ ➼➽ÚÚ➨ ❐➾❒➾ ➯➦➠Ò➡ Ü➞ÏÜ➦➫➤ ➤➳➠Û➦➟ ➳➯➦ æ➫➤➳ ➸❮➪➪Ó➤➭➠➪➦ ÕÏ➦➫➢➭➠➧ ➫➠➢➟ ➞➧ ä➦➫➪➢➧ ➟❮➫➢➧Û ➥➞➫➪➟ ➥➠➫ ÙÙ➾ Ù➧ ➼➽➵➚➨ à➦➞➫Û➡ ➩➠➪➦➧Ó å➞Ò Ô➠➤ ➧➠Ï➦➟ ❰➫➦Ï➢➦➫ ➞➸ ➳➯➦ ❒➞Ò➢➦➳ ❐➧➢➞➧ ➠ ➟➠➡ ➠➸➳➦➫ ➳➯➦ ➟➦➠➳➯ ➞➸ ã➞➤➦➸ ❒➳➠➪➢➧➾ ➬↕↔↔Øê➜ ëìíîïðñòóô õö ÷øùùøúû ➚Ó➵Ó➺➚Ó➚➚Ó➚➵Ó➚➲ ✩ ëìíî ëüýýüþÿóô õ ÷øùùøúû ➼➵Ó➺➻Ó➚➺Ó➚✃Ó➵➺Ó➲Óß➚ P þ ✇ ì ❡ ïîýýô õ ✁✂✄ ÷øùùøúû ➼Ó➼➽Ó➺➵Ó➺✃Ó➲➱Óèä ➺➼Óß➺ ❲ üÿ ☎ þ ❡ ♦ ü ☎ ìô ▼✆✝✳ ✩ ➲Ó➺➼ÓÚ➺Ó➲➽ P üñò ❦ ô ▼✆✝✳ ✞ ✟ ✠✡☛✡☞ ✌✍✎✍✏✍✑ ✞ ✎ ✠✡☛✡☞ ✌✍✎✍✌✍✒ ✞ ✓ ✠✡☛✡☞ ✔✍✟✍✟✍✔ ✞ ✟✏ ✠✡☛✡☞ ✎✍✟✍✕✍✖ P üñò ❦ ô ▼✆✝✳ ✩ ✞ ✟ ✠✡☛✡☞ ✒✍✕✍✒✍✌ ✞ ✎ ✠✡☛✡☞ ✖✍✎✍✌✍✌ ✞ ✓ ✠✡☛✡☞ ✕✍✑✍✒✍✎ ✞ ✟✏ ✠✡☛✡☞ ✖✍✏✍✖✍✔ ê↕➛➙ êØ ❆ ↕ê↔ ✗✘☛✙✚✛✜ ✢✣ ✤✥✦✦☞ ✞ ✧★✜✪✫✚ ✬✛✚✭✣★☞ ✒✏✏✍✑✓✓✍✌✖✌✒✡ ✞ ✬✘✢✜✪✫✚ ✬✛✚✭✣★☞ ✔✏✖✍✔✒✒✍✕✑✎✟✡ ◆ ➹ ❆ ➛ ❆ Øê ➬➛↔Ø ❚ ❊✮✯✝✰ ✯✱✱ ú ✝t ø ✲ ÷ ✆✴✯ t ú ✴✯ ùø ✮✯✝ ✰ ú ✈✝ ✵✶✲✯✝✮✯✝ øû ✆ t ø÷ ✯ ù ✰ ÷ ✆ ûû ✯✝✳ ✵✷✷✆✲ øúû ✆ ùù ✰ ✷ úû ✴ ø t øúû ✲ ✯❝ ø ✲t t✸✆t ÷ ✆✹✯ ✴✯ ùø ✮✯✝✰ ÷ú ✝✯ ✴ ø ✱✺✷✈ ù t✳ ■☎ ✻ þð î ❡ ì ÿþ ✼ þÿ î ✽ þ ✼ þ ❡ ❡ þð ✼ ì ✾ ✴✯ ùø ✮✯✝✰ ✲✸ ú ✈ ù ✴ ✶✯ ✙✚✿✣✛✚ ✔☞✖✏ ✠✡☛✡ ✧✿ ❀✣✘ ✫✣ ★✣✢ ✝✯✷✯ ø ✮✯ ✰ ú ✈✝ ❁✆❁✯✝ ❁ ù ✯✆✲✯ ✷✆ ùù ✩✄❂ ö ❃✁❂✁✄❃✄✳ ×Ø ◗❄ ↕↔Ø ↕ ❅ ↔➘Ø ➙➛➜ ➇ á➦ ➤➦➧➤ ➭➞ÏÏ❮➧ ➧é➦➤➳ ❰➠➤ ➤➢ ➭➞ÏÏ❮➧➾ ➈ ❇ Ð➞ÏÏ➞➧ ➤➦➧➤➦ ➢➤ ➧➞➳ ➤➞ ➭➞ÏÏ➞➧➾ s ➋ ❱❈❉❋●❍❏❑▲ ❖❏❑r❘❤ ●❙❋❤❈❏ ●r❛ ❯❤❍❉❈❳❈❯❤❑❏ ❨❩❬❭❪❫❩❴❴❵❜ Continued from Page 1A the council and left. Councilwoman Nate Conrad said she had to side with Mayor Little. “Maybe he is trying to move a little fast for you,” she said to the remaining members of the council, “but I don’t think you are giving him the respect that his position asks for.” Councilman Alan Cadinha voiced support for McCowan and said he believes Little was elected because he made promises to citizens even though there was no funding in the budget to accomplish his promises. He said the hostile environment has made city council meetings an unpleasant experience. Councilwoman Lana Shira spoke next, saying to the mayor, “Since the ➆ ➌➁➍➎➊➍➀➏➆➊➂ ➁➊➐➄ ❽❼❽➊➂➃➑ ➄➅➍➏➅ ➍➁ ➏➒➆➁➁➍➀❽➓ ➆➁ ➁➊➐➄ accumulation of 20 inches or more, the city would take action to clear the streets. The council selected a candidate to be chosen for the soon-to-be-vacant Public Works Director po- sition, although the candi- ❼❽❾❿ ➀❾➁➂➃ ➄❽ ➅➆❼❽ ➉❽❽➊ treated like we know nothing.” She said she ob- jected to being asked not to comment and being ⑩❶⑩❷❸❶❹❺❻ Continued from Page 1A December. Liz Meyer is originally from England, while Grant is from Elgin. Grant is the warehouse manager at Carpet one, and Liz will be working for Community Kindness full time. “I plan to give it 150 percent,” she said. “This community is so amazing, they’ve accepted this Brit- ish woman and I just think it’s time to pay it back.” Community Kind- ness accepts all kinds of items like books, games date will not be named to the public until he or she ➍➁ ➊➐➂➍➀❽➓➃ ➆➊➓ ➂➅❽ ➏➐➔➊➏➍➒ also approved a two-year plan. Tensions rose again during the public com- ment portion of the meet- ing when Cove resident Alexis Cannon voiced her concern that Little was responsible for creating a hostile environment in previous meetings. She said she did not appre- ciate the shortening of the time for public com- ments in the last council meeting. Little ended the meeting with a formal apology to the council for his open- ing statement, saying he did not mean to belittle anyone on the council. This led to a conversa- tion between the council members about how they could work together more ❽→❽➏➂➍❼❽➒❿➣ ➁➆➍➓ ♦♣qrs t✉✇ ①✇②③ts④ ⑤r⑥⑦r⑧t ②♣⑨ ⑤r♣⑩✇♣❶✇♣⑤✇ r⑦ ❷⑧✇⑥❶③⑥ ⑩❶♣s❸ ⑧✇❷❸②⑤✇⑥✇♣t ❹❶♣⑨r❹❺ t✉②t ❷⑧②⑤t❶⑤②❸❸s ❷②s ⑦r⑧ t✉✇⑥❺✇❸⑩✇❺ ❶♣ ⑥r♣t✉❸s ✇♣✇⑧❻s ❺②⑩❶♣❻❺❼ ➏➀➍➍ ➋➂➐ ➑➂➅ ➒➓➔➔ ➔❾➄➊→➀➄➣➎ ❽❾❿ ➀➁➂➃➄ ➂➃➅ ➆➇➈ ➉➂➊➋➉ ➂➋ ➊➋ ❳❨❩ ❬❭❪❫❴ ❬✈❵❛❜ ❝❪ ❞❡❪❢❭❵ ❚✍✎✏✑✍✒✓✔✕ ✫ ✘✎ ✙✓✎✚❞✒ ➔➑→→➑➣ ↔→ ↕➣↔➙➛➑ ➜➝➙➛➑ ➩➨➫➥➨➭➧➤➥➯ ➲➤➳➧➵➳➸➵➥ ÖÚÛÜ ÕÙÝÖÞÕ ➺➻➼➼ ➽➾ ➽➾➚➪ ➻➶➹ ➘➶➹ ➾➚➽ ➴➾➪➷ ➽➾➹➻➬➮ ➱✃❐❒❮❰Ï❒✃ÐÑÑ ßßßàáâãäâåæçâèéêäçëâìäàíêî ïðñò óôõóö÷øô òø÷ùöðúðûü óõóýúóþúø ó÷ôÿ ✁✂ òññ ✄☎✆ ✝☎✞✟✠ ◆❑✇ ▲▼P❑◗❘▼ ❙❯P❳▼ ❤❩❬▲ ✛✛✜✜ ✢✣✤✥✦✧ ★✧✩ ✪✬✭✣✦ ✮✯✧✰ ✲ ✳✴✵✸✳✛✹✸✹✹✺✵ ✛✛✵✛ ✻✤✼✬✽✿ ❀❁✣✩ ❂✬ ❃✦✬✽✿✣ ✲ ✳✴✵✸❄✜✳✸✜✵✳✛ ❅✥✽✿✬✰✸❇✦✯✿✬✰ ✺✸❄ ✲ ★✬✧❈✦✿✬✰ ❉✸❄ ✲ ★❈✽✿✬✰ ❊✸✳ ♣❋♦t♦s ●♦❍ ■❧❧✉st❍❛t■♦❏ ♦❏❧② ✎✏✍ ✑ ✒✑✓ ☞✔✕✖✍✗✘ ✘✎✏✏✙ ✚✛✔☞ ✜☛✛✚ ✓✑✜✢ ✣☛✤✏ ✔☞ ✑☞✓ ✥✖✏✥✦ ☛✛✍ ☛✛✚ ✘✏✎✏✥✍✔☛☞ ☛✧ ✍☛✙ ★✛✑✎✔✍✜ ✤✑✍✍✚✏✘✘✏✘ ✘✛✚✏ ✍☛ ✖✑✩✏ ✜☛✛ ✥✑✍✥✖✔☞✕ ✤☛✚✏✪✪✪ ✫ ✫ ✫ ✴✵✶ ✷✸✹ ✺✻✼✽✽✻ ✾✿ ❀✼✿❁❂✽ ❃ ❄❅❆❇❈ ❉❊❋●❅❆❆❍ ✫ ✫ ✖✎✓❞✗✎✓✒ ❭❡❪❫❴❵ ❜❝❡❫❢ ❣❣✐❣❥❦ ♠♥q r✈✈①③④⑤⑥ ⑦⑧⑨①③✈⑩ ❶❷❸❹❺❻❼❽ ❶❷❸❹❺❹❶❽ ❶❷❸❹❺❺❺❽ ❶❷❸❹❺❾❻ ➞➟➠ ➡➢➤➥➦➧➨ ÒÓ ÔÕÖ×ØÙ ✫ ✖✎✓❞✗✎✓✒ ➎➏➐➑ ➎➏➒➑➓ ♥♣q ✉①✉②③①④⑤ ⑥⑦ ⑧⑨⑦① ✫ ❽➌➅➊➍➎ ❣❤❩✐❥❳❦✐❧❳♠❩ ✡☛☞✌✍ ✫ note, with Shira speak- ing up to accept Little’s apology. ❿❪➀❫❡❡➁ ❜♠➂➃➄➅➆➇ ➈➉❡➂➇ ➊➅➉➇ ➌♠♠➇ ❣❦ ➉➄ ❶➍❼❾❶ and clothing. A full list of acceptable items can be found on Community Kindness’s Facebook page. hosting a Krispy Kreme fundraiser. To contact Liz, call 541-805-1410. ↔➆❾↕❽❾ the council should en- courage discussion while Conrad suggested taking one another’s feelings into consideration. The meeting adjourned on a much more positive ✫ ✫ ✬ ✭✮ ✮✯ ✰✭✱✲✳ ♥■❏❑▲ ▼◆❖❑P◗❏♥❘❑◗❏ ◆❙♥ ❚❯ ❙❑❑❏ ◆❖❖ ❱❲■ ❯