REGION TUESDAY, AUGUST 23, 2022 Former L.A. fi re commissioner seeks ouster of Pilot Rock fi re district captain THE OBSERVER — A3 Drazan rolls governor campaign into Heppner size-fi ts-all” approach in Oregon government. Some rules and expectations that HEPPNER — Chris- might be workable and tine Drazan rolled her culturally aligned in the more metro and suburban campaign to become Ore- gon’s fi rst Republican gov- parts of our state instead ernor in 40 years into Hep- aff ect the ability of rural Oregonians to support pner on Wednesday, Aug. 17, for an ice cream social. their families and lives. To get to Mahonia Hall, The event at the Chris- Drazan has to defeat Dem- tian Life Center drew sev- ocrat Tina Kotek, who eral dozen people and served as the speaker of some public offi cials, including Morrow County the Oregon House 2013- 22, and Betsy Johnson, Sheriff Ken Matlack and a longtime Democratic fellow Republicans state Oregon legislator now Reps. Greg Smith, Hep- running an unaffi liated pner, and Bobby Levy, campaign. Echo. As part of her cam- “Getting involved in paign’s “Roadmap for Ore- public service in the fi rst gon’s Future,” a six-page place for me was about list of issues and service,” Drazan proposed solutions told the East Orego- she would imple- nian. “It was really ment as governor, about the oppor- Drazan described tunity to make a a series of “polit- diff erence and be ical agendas and eff ective. What I Drazan bureaucratic hur- learned as a leg- dles” that interfere islator was that with Oregon’s agricultural my opportunity to really change outcomes, which is community. “Sometimes we’re really what defi nes eff ec- tiveness for me, was really talking about banning the equipment that they use limited.” in the fi elds, like diesel Drazan, 50, served in the Oregon House of Rep- bans,” she said. Drazan has also been resentatives 2019-22 for District 39, which includes vocal about her sup- port for changing Ore- parts of Clackamas gon’s education system, County. She also was minority leader until 2021, citing a low overall high school graduation rate when she left the state House to run for governor. (80.6%) as a mandate for change. According to Dra- “As Republican leader, zan’s “Roadmap,” this my caucus members pro- includes focusing on aca- posed a hundred amend- demic accountability and ments to various pieces of legislation, and repeatedly “keeping politics out of the classroom.” She said grad- it was on party line vote, uation requirements that rejected,” she said. were rolled back during With Democrats the pandemic should be holding a supermajority reinstated. in the Legislature, she “I believe that those said, Republicans have few tools to stop proposals were positive, not negative for our kiddos, and that they opposed. It became our expectations should clear, she explained, there be higher, not lower,” she was not going to be an said. opportunity for her as a And students who are Republican legislator in members of minorities Oregon to work on big already face numerous issues. But the governor’s cultural and social chal- offi ce off ers just that. lenges, she said, and while “The governor’s there have been leaders role is so critical and so focused on addressing important to provide bal- some of the social and ance and accountability,” emotional dynamics Drazan said. “In single within schools, they failed party control, if you’re in a state with only one party to actually help those stu- dents obtain an education. everywhere you look, you Drazan campaigned all really don’t have the kind week in Eastern Oregon, of accountability that I including stops at Burns, think Oregonians want Ontario, Baker City, John right now.” She criticized the “one- Day and Fossil. By DAKOTA CASTETS-DIDIER East Oregonian By JOHN TILLMAN East Oregonian PILOT ROCK — A former Los Angeles Fire Board commissioner is calling out the Pilot Rock Rural Fire Protection Dis- trict for allowing a man with criminal convictions to stay in its ranks. Rebecca Ninburg also stated Herschel Rostov, the district’s new fi re chief, is on administrative leave due to an ongoing sexual harass- ment investigation. Ninburg sent an email Wednesday, Aug. 17, to local fi re offi cials and news outlets that addressed Jim Critchley, chief of Pend- leton Fire and Ambu- lance Department, and Tim Weinke, president of the Pilot Rock Rural Fire Pro- tection District Board of Directors. “I’m writing because I’m deeply concerned that Fire Capt. Brian Hemphill is continuing to work for Pilot Rock Fire Protec- tion District,” she stated. “You are both aware that Capt. Hemphill has felony and misdemeanor charges, including assault and stran- gulation, DUI, and stealing medication from Pendleton Fire Department.” State court records show Hemphill pleaded guilty to 2013 charges of stran- gulation and fourth-de- gree assault, pleaded guilty in September 2015 to fourth-degree assault and in January 2016 pleaded guilty to driving under the infl u- ence of intoxicants. All the charges were misdemeanors East Oregonian, File Pilot Rock Fire Chief Herschel Rostov discusses the station’s air tank refi ll procedure Nov. 18, 2021, during a training at the fi re station in Pilot Rock. Rostov has been on administrative leave since at lease July 2, 2022. and the cases were in Uma- tilla County. Records also show Hemphill completed probation in each case. Nothing in the state court records verifi ed Ninburg’s theft assertion. Critchley said Pendleton Fire has had an agreement with Pilot Rock Fire to pro- vide administrative support since July 1, while Rostov went on administrative leave. “The agreement is open-ended,” Critchley said. “We’re good neigh- bors. We’ve been part of the investigation and want to help them until their per- sonnel issues have settled down.” Ninburg provided no information to back up the sexual harassment claim. Critchley said he could not provide informa- tion about Hemphill’s ser- vice and record because the matter is under investigation. Weinke did not reply to a phone message and an email requesting his com- ments on the situation. Pilot Rock Fire Capt. Craig Beers also did not respond to a message left on the station phone. Ninburg also noted Hemphill is listed as inac- tive with the Oregon Department of Public Safety Standards and Training. “It is not only irrespon- sible, but it’s gross negli- gence on your part to over- look these violations and egregious acts and allow him to continue to work for the (Pilot Rock Rural Fire Protection District),” she asserted, and keeping him on violates the district’s pol- icies and procedures. Ninburg charged that members of the community have been denied the oppor- tunity to work as a volun- teer for Pilot Rock Fire for lesser charges than those on Hemphill’s legal record. Besides her service on the Los Angeles fi re commission, Ninburg co-founded the LA Derby Dolls, a volunteer-run Roller Derby league team, and the Good Deed Corps, a nonpartisan, nonprofi t “committed to building a strong, engaged civil society that embodies a diversity of voice and perspective.” Convoy of military vehicles to stop in Baker City going up over hills. These McCluskey said people old military vehicles are usually show their support defi nitely not doing 60 when they see the convoy. privately owned by the miles per hour going over “Along the way, we’ll people participating in the the grades.” have people out at the end convoy, who are all MVPA Three units make up of their driveways, waving members. the convoy during travel: fl ags, waiting for the Founded in 1976, The “heavies,” 1.5- through convoy to go by,” he said. MVPA is a nonprofi t with 5-ton vehicles, lead the The convoy will leave more than 100 affi liates charge, followed by 3/4-ton the Baker County Fair- worldwide “dedicated to Dodge cargo trucks, fol- grounds at 7 a.m. Aug. 25 providing an international lowed by the jeep unit. and stop in Oxbow, at the organization for military McCluskey said they Oregon/Idaho border, for vehicle enthusiasts, his- travel anywhere from 85 to lunch. It will then head torians, preservationists 170 miles per day. north for an afternoon dis- and collectors interested This 1,600-mile trip play in Joseph and spend in the acquisition, resto- isn’t the longest McClusky the night at the Eagle Cap ration, preservation, safe and the MVPA have com- Shooters Association in operation and public edu- pleted. They traveled the Enterprise. cation of historic military Lincoln military highway, transport,” according to its which spans from Wash- mission. ington, D.C., to San Fran- McCluskey estimated cisco, in 2009, and com- that about 30%, and maybe pleted the Bankhead Route more, of the participants in from D.C. to Seattle in this year’s convoy are mili- 2015. They also drove from 10304 A 1st St. tary veterans. Seattle to Plymouth Rock When the convoy last year. Island City, OR 1x1EOMediaFiller - Page 1 - Composite reaches Baker City it will be the 11th day of a 15-day, cstewartpc@gmail.com 1,600-mile historical loop taking the convoy through Idaho, Washington and Pay cash or The most valuable and respected source of Oregon. local news, advertising and information for our communities. Parts of the loop overlap Rent to own eomediagroup.com Authorized Dealer with a longer, 6,350-mile highway the National Parks Service established in 1924 — the National Park-to-Park Highway — that encompasses all the national parks in the 11 western states. Occasionally, McClusky said, members from MVPA affi liations along the route Before earning her medical degree, Dr. Epperson devoted join in for segments of the more than 20 years to working as a sign language interpreter. journey. MVPA has affi liate clubs in Woodland, Wash- Working with the deaf community to help address their unique ington, and in Wilsonville. mental health needs is a professional passion of hers. McClusky said the vehi- cles — from World War Another professional focus is nutritional psychiatry, II, Korea, Vietnam, Desert Storm and current eras — and teaching people how strongly diet and lifestyle can’t travel faster than 35 miles per hour. influence mental health. “That’s our max speed,” he said. “A lot of times it’s Dr. Epperson’s broad list of personal interests include hiking, a lot less because we are Trip will continue on to Wallowa County By CLAYTON FRANKE Baker City Herald BAKER CITY — Dan McCluskey is heading for Baker City in his three-quarter-ton Viet- nam-era M37 cargo truck. But his rig — along with the 32 other military vehi- cles he’s traveling with — won’t be delivering any cargo. Instead, McCluskey describes the convoy as a moving museum. “Our goal is to show everybody how the military used their vehicles. They see military vehicles in museums on static display, but we’re out there to show them how they used them in motion,” McCluskey said. “We’re putting hun- dreds of miles on them, day in, day out. This is how they moved them in convoy order.” McCluskey, a member of the Military Vehicle Pres- ervation Association, is the convoy commander for the 2022 MVPA Northwest Parks Motor Convoy, which is scheduled to arrive in Baker City on Wednesday, Aug. 24, and spend the night at the Baker County Fairgrounds north of Camp- bell Street between Grove and East streets. McCluskey said the convoy is “fully on track for all of the scheduled stops.” “We encourage the public to come out and visit,” McCluskey said. “We’ll be camping right there on the fairgrounds, so we’re gonna have about 33 military vehicles there for them to walk around, talk to our people, look at the vehicles.” All the vehicles are Charles & Eileen Stewart 541.910.5435 Grande Ronde Hospital & Clinics proudly welcomes Tracy Epperson, MD—Psychiatrist kayaking, reading, photography, crocheting, and gardening. La GRANDE AUTO REPAIR 975-2000 Joe Horst Please help us welcome Dr. Epperson and her family to our Community!! www.lagrandeautorepair.com GRH Behavioral Clinic MOST ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY AVAILABLE GRH.org — 506 4th Street — 541.962.1101 ACDelcoTSS