2A — THE OBSERVER D AILY P LANNER MONDAY, JANUARY 6, 2020 LOCAL Baker County Moving rock Rape suspect in Idaho jail TODAY Today is Monday, Jan. 6, the sixth day of 2020. There are 360 days left in the year. EO Media Group TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT On Jan. 6, 1941, Presi- dent Franklin D. Roosevelt, in his State of the Union address, outlined a goal of “Four Freedoms”: Freedom of speech and expression; the freedom of people to worship God in their own way; freedom from want; freedom from fear. ON THIS DATE In 1412, tradition holds that Joan of Arc was born this day in Domremy. In 1759, George Washing- ton and Martha Dandridge Custis were married in New Kent County, Virginia. In 1912, New Mexico became the 47th state. In 1919, the 26th presi- dent of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt, died in Oyster Bay, New York, at age 60. In 1968, a surgical team at Stanford University School of Medicine in Palo Alto, California, led by Dr. Nor- man Shumway, performed the fi rst U.S. adult heart transplant, placing the heart of a 43-year-old man in a 54-year-old patient (the re- cipient died 15 days later). In 1998, In a new bid to expand health insurance, President Clinton unveiled a proposal to offer Medicare coverage to hundreds of thousands of uninsured Americans from ages 55 to 64. LOTTERY Megabucks: $8.3 million 11-14-15-26-33-43 Mega Millions: $69 million 37-41-42-53-63-16-x2 Powerball: $258 million 1-11-21-25-54-7-x2 Win for Life: Jan. 4 18-32-50-55 Pick 4: Jan. 5 •฀1฀p.m.:฀6-8-5-5 •฀4฀p.m.:฀4-7-7-7 •฀7฀p.m.:฀1-8-3-8 •฀10฀p.m.:฀2-8-1-9 Pick 4: Jan. 4 •฀1฀p.m.:฀3-1-6-5 •฀4฀p.m.:฀3-0-3-4 •฀7฀p.m.:฀9-0-0-7 •฀10฀p.m.:฀4-5-3-3 Pick 4: Jan. 3 •฀1฀p.m.:฀0-0-5-4 •฀4฀p.m.:฀7-8-7-9 •฀7฀p.m.:฀1-3-6-6 •฀10฀p.m.:฀1-0-4-2 Staff photo by Phil Wright Ryan Caldwell of La Grande afternoon dumps a load of rock, gravel and dirt into a truck Sunday near the Inter- state 84 exit 259 to La Grande. Caldwell works for the Oregon Department of Transportation and explained the agency is building up this area near the exit to make it easier for rigs to get on and off the freeway. Oregon laws Slow roll a go in Oregon ■ New law allows cyclists to roll with caution through intersections By Dick Mason The Observer LA GRANDE — Oregon bicyclists enter the new year with a new option — the Idaho stop. Bicyclists in Oregon can roll through stop signs and fl ashing red lights at intersections without braking if they yield to vehicle traffi c and slow to a safe speed. The Oregon Legislature in 2019 passed Senate Bill 998 that in essence allows cyclists to treat stops as yields. The law took effect on New Year’s Day. The rolling stops earned the moni- ker “Idaho stop” because Idaho was the fi rst state to allow rolling bicycle stops in 1982. Lt. Gary Bell of the La Grande Police Department said the new law will ben- efi t bicyclists because it allows them to travel more easily through com- munities. There is a trade-off, though, because bicyclists passing through intersections without stopping will be more vulnerable if they are not careful. He also warned bike riders to re- member that obeying traffi c rules does not guarantee their safety because when a bike and vehicle collide, the cyclist has far less protection and is more likely to be injured. “Even when bicycles are following the law they are more exposed,” Bell said. Mavis Hartz of La Grande, a member of the Oregon Department of Every effort is made to de- liver your Observer in a timely manner. Occasionally condi- tions exist that make delivery more diffi cult. If you are not on a motor route, delivery should be before 5:30 p.m. If you do not receive your paper by 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, please call 541-963-3161 by 6 p.m. If your delivery is by motor carrier, delivery should be by 6 p.m. For calls after 6, please call 541-975- 1690, leave your name, address and phone number. Your paper will be delivered the next business day. QUOTE OF THE DAY “A little learning is not a dangerous thing to one who does not mistake it for a great deal.” — William Allen White, American newspaper editor Transportation’s Oregon Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee, said cyclists should always ride defensively. “If a car and bike collide, the bicyclist will almost always lose,” Hartz said. Bell also urged vehicle drivers to have a heightened awareness of cy- clists now that the new law is in place. “Don’t expect cyclists to come to a complete stop,” he said. Hartz, co-owner of La Grande’s The Mountain Works, said the new law could improve the traffi c fl ow at inter- sections for bicycles and for vehicles. When bicyclists were required to come to complete stops at stop signs and fl ashing red lights, she explained, they needed extra time to get going again when the intersection was clear, which meant the drivers of vehicles behind were delayed. “Bicycles will now not be blocking traffi c (in those situations),” she said. Oregon is the fi fth state to allow some version of the Idaho law. Dela- ware was second in 2017, Colorado third in 2018 and Arkansas fourth in 2019. Cell tower appeal claims By Jayson Jacoby EO Media Group NEWSPAPER LATE? Observer fi le photo New rules went into effect for Oregon bicyclists in 2020. Bicycle riders won’t be required to come to a complete stop at stop signs under certain conditions. BAKER CITY — An at- torney representing Verizon Wireless argues that the Baker City Planning Com- mission violated a federal law on Dec. 4 when it denied the company’s application for a conditional use permit to build a 70-foot cell tower in north Baker City. Verizon has appealed the Planning Commission’s 5-2 vote to the Baker City Council. The City Council will consider the appeal dur- ing a public hearing 7 p.m. Tuesady at City Hall. Verizon’s appeal was fi led by E. Michael Connors, an attorney with the Portland fi rm Hathaway Larson. He claims, among other things, that the Planning Commission’s denial “violates the Federal Telecommunica- tions Act because it prohibits or would have the effect of prohibiting the provision of wireless services in the City.” Connors also writes that if the city denies Verizon’s application, “it would be virtually impossible for Verizon to site a tower to resolve the signifi cant gap in coverage and capacity in the City. That would be a clear-cut violation of the Federal Telecommunica- tions Act.” The majority of the Plan- ning Commission concluded that concerns about how the proposed 70-foot tower would affect views — a complaint several residents expressed to the Commission — could not be mitigated except by requiring Verizon to limit the tower’s height to 50 feet. La GRANDE AUTO REPAIR 975-2000 www.lagrandeautorepair.com MOST ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY AVAILABLE Joe Horst ACDelcoTSS BAKER CITY — A Baker County man is in jail in Idaho, awaiting extradition to Oregon on charges that he raped and sexually abused a minor girl. Bill David Gonyer, 73, was arrested Dec. 28 in Ada County, Idaho, on a Baker County warrant that includes fi rst-, second- and third-degree rape, sex abuse and sodomy, using a child in display of sexually explicit conduct and other charges. The incidents, which are alleged to have happened in Baker County between May 1, 2019, and Dec. 20, 2019, in- volve a girl known to Gonyer, according to court documents. He is being held in lieu of $1.128 million bail as he awaits extradition, the docu- ments state. Baker County Sheriff’s Offi ce deputies searched Go- nyers’ property at 35002 Stices Gulch Road, about 12 miles south of Baker City, on Dec. 24, according to a press release from the sheriff’s offi ce. The sheriff’s offi ce applied for the search warrant after receiving a report on Dec. 12 regarding the sexual abuse of a minor. After conducting the search, deputies learned that Gonyer was in Boise, and they worked with Idaho police to arrange for Gonyer to be arrested. The case will next go to a Baker County grand jury. Gonyer is currently charged with 20 separate counts related to the sexual assault of a child. Eleven of the charges carry mandatory minimum prison sentences upon conviction. They are each count of fi rst- degree sodomy, sexual abuse and rape, Class A felonies, eight years and four months in prison; using a child in display of sexually explicit conduct, also a Class A felony, fi ve years and 10 months; and second-degree sodomy, sexual abuse and rape, Class B felo- nies, which carry mandatory minimum prison terms of six years and three months. Mon-Fri Blue Plate $12: Bean Burrito with Pork Green Chili Sauce with green salad and green goddess dressing. 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