6A — THE OBSERVER SATURDAY, DECEMBER 12, 2020 STATE/NORTHWEST Brown trying to resurrect state lott ery bond projects COVID-19 financial fallout killed more than 30 projects throughout the state By Gary A. Warner Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — Gov. Kate Brown wants to resur- rect more than 30 proj- ects costing more than $200 million that died last summer when the state bond market collapsed during business shutdowns ordered to combat the COVID-19 pandemic. Brown’s 2021-23 budget proposal includes Oregon Lottery bonds set aside for projects in nearly every corner of the state. There’s dam work at Wallowa Lake and New- port, water system fi xes in the Deschutes Basin and Hood River and health facilities in Umatilla and Jefferson counties. The Oregon Coast Aquarium in Newport and arts facilities in Lin- coln City and Beaverton are marked to receive mil- lions for expansion and renovation. Statewide programs would bolster affordable housing, historic preserva- tion, redevelopment, levees and public works programs. It’s essentially a repeat of the lottery bond allocations approved by the Legislature and signed by Brown at the end of the 2019 session. The bonds were set to go on sale this past summer. The steady fl ow of money into the state-run games of chance make the bonds attractive as a con- servative long-term invest- ment with relatively small return but a rock-solid record of paying off at the end of the bond’s term. The bonds have performed well during economic booms and recessions. But COVID-19 was what investors call a “black swan” — a rare unfore- seen catastrophic event that upends economies, blowing away the usual rules and strategies of the boom-and- bust market cycles. When the pandemic ramped up in Oregon at the beginning of March, Gov. Kate Brown issued an exec- utive order telling residents to stay at home and shutting most businesses, including bars and restaurants. The Lottery’s points of sale are inside businesses and the shutdown cratered reve- nues as never before. At one point, Lottery sales were off OREGON LOTTERY BONDS PROJECTS Cathy Cheney/Associated Press, File Oregon Gov. Kate Brown attends a news conference Nov. 10, 2020, in Portland. Brown’s 2021-23 budget proposal in- cludes Oregon Lottery bonds for projects in nearly every corner of the state, including $14 million for the Wallowa Lake Dam rehabilitation. by more than 90 percent. The state’s May revenue forecast indicated a crippled economy with massive rev- enue defi cits. Oregon Treasurer Tobias Read announced in July that the lottery bonds approved in 2019 would not go on sale. The bond market required a 4-to-1 revenue to debt ratio on the sale and the hit on the lottery sales had sent its balance to just above 3-to-1. Without the sale, the projects were dead. “There’s not enough money — there is no repair,” said Sen. Betsy Johnson, D-Scappoose, a NEWS BRIEFS 25 more women sign on to sex abuse lawsuit against former doctor PORTLAND — Twen- ty-fi ve more women have joined four former patients in an amended civil lawsuit alleging sexual abuse by former suburban Portland physician David B. Farley and negligence by his health clinic. The plaintiffs who recently joined the lawsuit now live around the world, from Taiwan to Colorado, The Oregonian/OregonLive reported. Together, the women seek $290 million in dam- ages — $181 million for non-economic and $109 million for economic costs, saying while in his care, Farley performed unnec- essary pelvic exams and engaged in sexual battery. In October, the Oregon Medical Board stripped Farley of his state medical license for dishonorable and unprofessional con- duct and gross or repeated negligence. He remains under crim- inal investigation by the West Linn police. Most of the plaintiffs have made statements to police, their lawyers said. Farley moved to Idaho after leaving the West Linn Family Health Center and sending a retirement letter to patients in August. He did not mention he was under board investigation at the time. Karen O’Kasey, Farley’s lawyer, has not responded to phone and email mes- sages from the newspaper, but in court last week urged a judge to put the civil suit on hold as Farley faces the criminal investigation. O’Kasey argued that postponing the civil suit would protect Farley’s Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination in the police investigation. One of the patients’ law- yers, Thomas D’Amore, said Farley is trying to halt discovery evidence in the civil case “to conceal his wrongdoing.” Multnomah County Circuit Judge Melvin Oden-Orr said he was leaning against delaying the civil case, but wanted to review the matter fur- ther before issuing a formal decision. The new 74-page civil complaint describes alleged abuse involving patients as young as 5, addi- tional accounts of patient exams that Farley con- ducted in a bedroom at his home and repeated alle- gations that he insisted on breaking women’s hymens before marriage, claiming it would make sex “more pleasurable. EPA: Oregon wildfi re hazardous waste cleanup complete PORTLAND — The Environmental Protection Agency said Wednesday it has completed the cleanup of household hazardous waste from properties burned in Oregon wildfi res. The September fi res led to an initial EPA response in Jackson County, which quickly expanded to Clack- amas, Douglas, Klamath, Lane, Lincoln, Linn and Marion counties, the fed- eral agency said in a news release. The agency said it iden- tifi ed and removed about 300,000 pounds of haz- ardous waste from 2,285 properties. Among the items rendered safe or removed were propane tanks, ammunition, oil, gasoline, solvents, paints, pesticides, and bulk asbestos. The EPA said removing those items helps ensure the safety of workers who will begin removing ash and fi re debris as part of the second step in cleanup. To protect water quality and sensitive fi sh and wild- life habitat, the EPA also completed bank stabiliza- tion, erosion control and fi re debris removal work on more than 225 river- front properties along seven rivers described as vulnerable. “Over 250 EPA staff and contractors from around the country contributed to this effort to help Oregonians begin the rebuilding pro- cess,” Randy Nattis, EPA’s Incident Commander said in a news release. The state of Oregon is now starting the larger task of clearing ash and debris, and will also remove haz- ardous waste from assis- tance-eligible properties not cleared by EPA. 2 men linked to death of woman found on rural road PORTLAND — Police have identifi ed two men in connection with the death of a Silverton woman, whose body was found along a rural Multnomah County road last month. Joel Foran, 50, and Brandon Rossow, 37, were indicted in the death inves- tigation of Aubriel Has- kett, 24, The Oregonian/ OregonLive reported Wednesday, Dec. 9. Foran was charged with abuse of a corpse, 20 counts of identity theft, computer crime, tampering with physical evidence, criminal impersonation and unlawful possession of methamphetamine. Rossow was charged with abuse of a corpse. Neither man has been directly charged in Has- kett’s death, and police have not said how she died. Police said they believe she died somewhere else, and the two men dumped her body on the rural road afterward. Haskett’s body was found Nov. 2 down an embankment next to Mer- shon Road, between Trout- dale and Corbett. Police have released no other details about the investigation. — Associated Press Chiropractic Specialist Dr. Paulette Hugulet, Owner-Proprietor is a veteran of the US Armed Forces. Certified in COX® Technic, a non-surgical chiropractic protocol treating disc herniation, stenosis & related neck, upper back, shoulder, arm, lower back & leg pain. Dr. Hugulet also specializes in treatment of BPPV. FMCSA certified for DOT Physicals. Serving those 2 weeks to 101+years old!! “Remember: I’ve Got Your Back” Clinic Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 9am-5pm (by appointment) Drug Testing Hrs: Mon.-Thurs. 10am-4pm/Fri. 10am-1pm (no appt. needed) chair on the budget-writing Joint Ways and Means Committee that had approved the 2019 project list. Sen. Bill Hansell, R-Athena, a committee member, said the state needed to prioritize the debt service on bonds sold in previous years, ensuring confi dence in the state’s annual offerings wasn’t permanently undermined. The 2019 projects were being sold as a package that couldn’t be broken up into smaller chunks to sell. “If we don’t sell one, we don’t sell any,” he said. LOCATION SPECIFIC PROJECTS: • Salem — drinking water improvements, $20 million • Eugene — Eugene Family YMCA facility, $15 million • Joseph — Wallowa Lake Dam rehabilitation, $14 million • Enterprise — Wallowa Valley Center for Wellness, $2.5 million • Deschutes Basin Board of Control — piping project, $10 million • Roseburg — Southern Oregon Medical Workforce Center, $10 million • Sweet Home — wastewater treatment plant, $7 million • Newport — Oregon Coast Aquarium, $5 million • YMCA of Columbia-Willamette — Beaverton Hoop YMCA, $5 million • Jefferson County — Jefferson County Health and Wellness Center, $4.1 million • Newport — Big Creek dams, $4.1 million • YMCA of Marion and Polk Counties — veterans’ affordable housing, $4 million • Oregon City — Parrott Creek Child and Family Services building renovation, $3.5 million • Salem — Center for Hope and Safety, $2.5 million • Port of Cascade Locks — business park expansion, $2.4 million • Multnomah County School District — Reynolds High School Health Center, $2.33 million • Sherwood — Pedestrian Connectors, $2 million • Gresham — Gradin Sports Park, $2 million • Curry Health District — Brookings emergency department, $2 million • Portland — Hacienda CDC Las Adelitas Housing, $2 million • Hood River — waterfront stormwater line, $1.7 million • Pendleton — Umatilla County Jail expansion for mental health services, $1.6 million • Beaverton — Patricia Reser Center for the Arts, $1.5 million • Lincoln City — Lincoln City Cultural Center plaza and grounds, $1.5 million • Port of Morrow — Early Learning Center expansion, $1.4 million STATEWIDE PROJECTS: • Special Public Works Fund, $30 million • Affordable Housing Preservation, $25 million • Affordable Market Rate Housing Acquisition Loan Program, $15 million • Water Supply Development Account, $15 million • Levee Grant Program, $15 million • Brownfi elds Redevelopment Fund, $5 million • Oregon Main Street Revitalization Grant Program, $5 million • Storm Drainage Improvements, $1.88 million Study recommends forming a group to build high-speed train Associated Press OLYMPIA, Wash. — A new government report on high speed rail in the Pacifi c Northwest rec- ommends that Oregon, Washington and British Columbia formalize their interest in a Cascadia bullet train by creating an independent body to plan and eventually build it. But a critic with a con- servative think tank said the region should take heed of California’s high speed rail woes and end the Cascadia bullet train ambitions, the Northwest News Network reported. The new study built on previous state—spon- sored studies that asserted there is suffi cient demand for trains running at up to 250 miles per hour between Portland, Seattle and Vancouver, BC. “Creating a coordi- nating entity does take it to the next level in terms of the possibility of making it a reality,” said Janet Matkin, communi- cations manager for the rail division of the Wash- ington State Department of Transportation. “It really is beyond just the study phase and looking at more of an implemen- tation focus.” The report said one of the fi rst jobs of the coor- dinating entity should be to select a technology for the “ultra—high speed ground transportation” corridor. Options include traditional high speed rail, magnetic levitation trains or a hyperloop, where passengers move in capsules that are pro- pelled electrically down sealed low air pressure tubes. Target travel times are about one hour between Portland and Seattle and another hour from Seattle to Vancouver, BC. The top speed of 250 mph for the project is faster than other rail services on the horizon in North America. The $895,000 study released Tuesday was led by the engineering consultancy WSP USA. It was funded by about equal contributions from Washington, Oregon, British Columbia and Microsoft. Oregon Gov. Kate Brown, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee, British Columbia Premier John Horgan and Microsoft President Brad Smith on Tuesday , Dec. 9, renewed their endorsements of a Cascadia bullet train. “Transformative infra- structure projects like this one could help us rebuild our economy in the short term and provide us with a strong competitive advantage in the future,” Inslee said in a news release. Problems facing Cal- ifornia’s high speed rail project led an analyst associated with the con- servative—leaning Wash- ington Policy Center to recommend against moving ahead with a Cas- cadia bullet train. Rubin said the chances of securing signifi cant federal funding for a high speed rail infrastruc- ture project of this scale depend on Democrats controlling both chambers of Congress alongside a Democratic president. “That’s the only pos- sibility to get major U.S. federal government dol- lars anytime in the near future,” Rubin said.