2A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 2015 State Senate committee considers transportation plan By PETER WONG Capital Bureau environmental groups and some +RXVH 'HPRFUDWV ² DOWHUQDWLYHV include a gradual reduction in 6$/(0²$OWKRXJKGHVFULEHG carbon content of fuels as they as the equivalent to a Hail Mary become available commercially, pass in football, a state Senate plus conversion of more cars and committee Wednesday heard voic- buses to electric or natural gas, es for and against an 11th-hour and improvements in bus systems effort to couple a transportation and traffic flows. funding plan with alternatives for Both sides heard greenhouse gas reductions. Motorists and local govern- Oregon lawmakers must ad- journ their 2015 session no later ment and business groups, some with reservations, backed the 73- than July 11. “I believe all of us wish this page proposal that would amend could have happened earlier in the House Bill 2281. “We felt the odds of getting session,” said Sen. Betsy Johnson, a transportation package were D-Scappoose, one of the Senate very difficult,” said John Carter, negotiators who came up with president of the Oregon Busi- what the committee considered. Their proposal, thrashed out ness Plan, a coalition of busi- behind closed doors in the past ness groups that listed it as one few weeks, has something for al- of its three top priorities for the session. most everybody to dislike. “It’s an important thing for Among other things, the plan Oregon and its citizens to main- calls for an increase of 4 cents per tain its competitive position in gallon in the current 30-cent state the global economy” by quick- WD[ ² SOXV LQFUHDVHV LQ YHKLFOH UHJLVWUDWLRQ IHHV ² WR UDLVH PRQ er movement of people and ey for road and bridge repairs and goods. But environmental groups specified state highway projects. questioned the extent of the green- A separate $10 surcharge on driver’s license fees would pay for house-gas reductions projected in a computer upgrade already un- the alternatives to a low-carbon derway for the Driver and Motor fuel standard. The director of the Oregon Department of Transpor- Vehicle Services Division. In exchange for a repeal of Or- tation said later that one of them egon’s recently enacted low-car- was overstated. “The replacement package just ERQ IXHO VWDQGDUG ² DQ HIIRUW does not add up,” said Christy that has drawn opposition from Splitt, external affairs director for the Oregon League of Conserva- tion Voters. Johnson defended the alterna- tives. “We have produced a product that I think will stand up to scruti- ny,” Johnson said before the hear- ing. “If the real goal is a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, I believe we have demonstrated we can achieve more than the previ- ous bill through a different meth- odology.” Johnson was the only Senate 'HPRFUDW²DQGRQHRIDKDQGIXO of Democrats in the Legislature ² WR RSSRVH D ORZFDUERQ IXHO standard in Senate Bill 324 that Democratic majorities passed over Republican opposition earlier this year. Republicans then broke off talks on a transportation funding plan, although a group of eight ² LQFOXGLQJ -RKQVRQ ² UHFRQ vened in Gov. Kate Brown’s of- fice in late May to devise the elements of the plan considered Wednesday. Although Republicans are mi- norities in both chambers, at least one Republican vote in the House is required for the 60 percent su- permajority to pass a revenue-rais- ing measure. and 2 cents in 2017. Vehicle reg- istration fees would go up by $10 annually, from $43 to $53; motor- ists pay them every other year. For owners of electric and hybrid cars, which use little or no fuel, the fee would jump to $188. Under the Oregon Constitution, fuel taxes and license and regis- tration fees must be spent on road and bridge work. The plan would fund $202 mil- lion annually for state and local URDGV²SHUFHQWIRUVWDWHKLJK ways, 30 percent for counties and SHUFHQW IRU FLWLHV ² DQG million in bonds for highway proj- ects specified in the bill. Repay- ment would come from ODOT’s $103 million share. The rest of ODOT’s share would go toward bridge work, including seismic re- inforcement, and highway maintenance. It also would authorize mass transit districts that already levy D SD\UROO WD[ RQ HPSOR\HUV ² TriMet, Lane, Wilsonville, Canby DQG 6DQG\ ² WR FKDUJH D OHVV er tax on employees to generate more money for transit operations. TriMet would get about $70 mil- lion of the estimated $80 million annually. Plan details Alternatives to the low-carbon fuel standard would reduce green- house gas emissions generated by Under the plan, the gas tax would go up by 2 cents on Jan. 1 ACCUWEATHER ® FORECAST FOR ASTORIA Astoria 5-Day Forecast Tonight Oregon Weather Shown is tomorrow’s weather. Temperatures are tonight’s lows and tomorrow’s highs Mainly clear 58° Friday Corvallis 60/102 Eugene 58/99 The Dalles 66/106 Pendleton 62/102 Salem 63/100 Albany 62/99 Ontario 62/101 Bend 56/97 Saturday Burns 53/99 Medford 65/107 Mostly sunny; breezy in the afternoon 75° Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015 80° Sunday 59° Monday Clouds breaking at times for some sunshine 71° Klamath Falls 55/99 Mostly cloudy and very warm 58° Delightful with clouds and sun 57° 72° 56° Almanac Sun and Moon Astoria through Wednesday. Temperatures High ........................................... 75° Low ............................................ 52° Normal high ............................... 65° Normal low ................................. 51° Precipitation Yesterday ................................ 0.00" Month to date .......................... 0.71" Normal month to date ............. 2.20" Year to date ........................... 27.37" Normal year to date .............. 35.56" Sunset tonight ................... 9:11 p.m. Sunrise Friday .................. 5:25 a.m. Moonrise today ................ 2:44 p.m. Moonset today ................. 1:33 a.m. Regional Cities City Baker City Bend Brookings Eugene Ilwaco Klamath Falls Medford Newport North Bend Full Last New First July 1 July 8 July 15 July 23 Under the Sky Today Hi Lo W 88 48 s 90 56 s 75 58 s 93 58 s 67 57 pc 96 55 s 99 65 s 65 53 pc 69 56 pc Fri. Hi Lo 95 53 97 64 73 57 99 63 69 57 99 60 107 71 64 53 68 56 W s s s s s t s s s National Cities City Olympia Pendleton Portland Roseburg Salem Seaside Spokane Vancouver Yakima Today Hi Lo W 89 58 s 95 62 s 92 65 s 95 65 s 93 63 s 69 57 pc 90 62 s 91 64 s 99 63 s Fri. Hi Lo 92 58 102 67 98 69 102 70 100 67 70 55 97 68 98 69 104 67 W s s s s s s s s s Tonight's Sky: High above the southern horizon is planet Saturn before midnight. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI Tomorrow’s Tides Astoria / Port Docks Time High 9:57 a.m. 5.8 ft. 9:52 p.m. 7.9 ft. Time 3:55 a.m. 3:29 p.m. Low 1.6 ft. 2.3 ft. Tomorrow’s National Weather Today City Hi Lo W Atlanta 94 76 t Boston 79 61 s Chicago 75 60 t Denver 87 58 t Des Moines 83 66 pc Detroit 73 59 t El Paso 95 74 t Fairbanks 82 60 pc Honolulu 89 75 pc Indianapolis 79 66 t Kansas City 91 70 t Las Vegas 110 84 s Los Angeles 81 61 pc Memphis 98 78 s Miami 92 79 pc Nashville 95 74 c New Orleans 89 77 t New York 83 65 pc Oklahoma City 94 73 s Philadelphia 86 68 t St. Louis 95 73 t Salt Lake City 96 68 s San Francisco 76 56 s Seattle 86 61 s Washington, DC 87 71 t Fri. Hi Lo 90 71 67 57 70 57 77 58 76 61 76 60 96 73 74 56 89 75 75 60 77 61 112 86 79 62 93 72 90 78 91 69 90 77 75 65 91 65 78 64 80 64 97 69 73 57 88 63 83 67 W t pc c t t pc t c pc t sh pc pc t t t t r t r t s pc s t Fire training exercise scheduled wildland fire situation using the incident command sys- :$55(1721 ² 7KH tem, according to organizers. Clatsop County Firefight- This training fosters the ers Association along cooperative working rela- with Oregon Depart- tionships between Clatsop ment of Forestry, Oregon County Emergency Ser- $UP\ 1DWLRQDO *XDUG DQG vices, local structural fire Camp Rilea Armed Forc- departments and the state es Training Center will be D epartment of F orestry. conducting a prescribed The skills and lessons fire training exercise this learned at this event can weekend carry over easily to any The annual training event, emergency situation such as ³1RUWKZHVW2UHJRQ:LOGILUH severe winter storms or tsu- School 2015,” is scheduled namis, organizers said. The for Saturday through Sunday prescribed fire reduces the at Camp Rilea in Warrenton. threat of range fires. The purpose of the event Smoke and aircraft will is to further firefighting be visible Sunday west of skills in a prescribed live Highway 101 in the Camp The Daily Astorian Astoria 58/75 Portland 65/98 Low-carbon repeal? the transportation sector by 9 to 10 million metric tons, according to estimates released by Senate Pres- ident Peter Courtney, D-Salem, and developed by state experts. The target under Senate Bill 324, which lawmakers passed and Gov. Brown signed, was 7.7 mil- lion metric tons after 10 years. While lobbyists for oil compa- nies and distributors said that an alternative scenario for graduated reductions in the carbon content of fuels was more realistic, envi- ronmental lobbyists assailed it and the overall estimated reductions in greenhouse gases. Whatever those numbers, the plan still faces a long political road ahead. Last week, 19 of the 35 House 'HPRFUDWV ² EXW QRW WKH OHDG ership or the House negotiators RI WKH SODQ ² VLJQHG D OHWWHU in opposition to any repeal of the low-carbon fuel standard. If the Senate passes the proposed amendments to House Bill 2281, it would return to the House, where it would require 36 votes for passage. “The House is somebody else’s neighborhood,” Johnson said. “I don’t know (whether it will pass) because I haven’t counted votes there.” The Capital Bureau is a col- laboration between EO Me- dia Group and Pamplin Media Group. Fronts Cold Warm Stationary Rain Flurries Snow Ice -10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Forecast high/low temperatures are given for selected cities. Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow fl urries, sn-snow, i-ice. CLATSOP POWER EQUIPMENT, INC. SALES • SERVICE • RENTALS OSU grad to intern for local paper time I go on a story,” Smith said. Astorian Managing Editor Lau- Oregon State University graduate ra Sellers said, “We are eager to put McKinley Smith has joined the staff McKinley’s science and storytelling tal- at The Daily Astorian as a summer in- ents to great use over the summer. We tern. also plan to make sure she gets a wide Smith comes to the Astorian through variety of experiences, from council the Snowden Internship Program, run by meetings to events, from breaking news to feature stories.” the University of Oregon School of Jour- After more than a decade living in nalism and Communication. McKinley the Willamette Valley, Smith said she is While at OSU, Smith spent four years Smith excited to get to know Clatsop County. working for the student paper, The Daily ³ , UHFHLYHG D À\¿VKLQJ URG IRU Barometer, where she specialized in sci- HQFHZULWLQJDQGZRUNHGDVDQHGLWRUKHU¿QDO\HDU Christmas, and I’m looking forward to embarrass- Her dream is to be a full-time science LQJP\VHOIWU\LQJWR¿VKZLWKLW´VKHVDLG 6PLWKKDVOLYHGLQWKH3DFL¿F1RUWKZHVWDOOKHU or environmental reporter. “As a science writer, I get to learn something new every life, but still carries an umbrella, she said. The Daily Astorian Memorial Showers T-Storms Friday, June 26 to 7 p.m., Ocean View Funeral & Cremation 5$6086621 &OHJJ ²9LHZLQJ IURP Service, 1213 Franklin Ave. Lotteries OREGON Wednesday’s Pick 4: 1 p.m.: 9-8-5-2 4 p.m.: 5-4-2-1 7 p.m.: 4-1-7-7 10 p.m.: 2-7-7-1 Wednesday’s Mega- bucks: 03-05-08-10-13- 46 Estimated jackpot: $2.2 million. Wednesday’s Powerball: 03-05-10-22-32, Powerball: 7, Power Play: 4 Estimated jackpot: $40 million. WASHINGTON Wednesday’s Daily Game: 4-0-1 Wednesday’s Hit 5: 11- 24-28-33-34 Estimated jackpot: $100,000 Wednesday’s Keno: 01- 04-06-10-12-15-18-20-36-38- 42-50-53-59-63-66-68-70-74- 76 Wednesday’s Lotto: 02- 22-36-37-40-45 Estimated jackpot: $3.2 million Wednesday’s Match 4: 04- 09-18-24 Cannon Beach Plan- ning Commission, 6 p.m., City Hall, 163 E. Gower St., Cannon Beach. FRIDAY Cannon Beach Emergen- cy Preparedness Commit- tee, 10 a.m., City Hall, 163 E. Gower St., Cannon Beach. Public meetings THURSDAY Recreational Lands Plan- ning and Advisory Commit- tee, WR SP IRXUWK ÀRRU 800 Exchange St. For online updates: www.dailyastorian.com The Daily Astorian Established July 1, 1873 (USPS 035-000) Published daily, except Saturday and Sunday, by EO Media Group, 949 Exchange St., PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103 Telephone 503- 325-3211, 800-781-3211 or Fax 503-325-6573. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Daily Astorian, PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103- 0210 www.dailyastorian.com MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republication of all the local news printed in this newspaper. 34912 HWY 101 BUS • ASTORIA 503-325-0792 • 1-800-220-0792 Rilea and Sunset Beach ar- eas. About 100 firefighters will be training over the weekend. Astoria, Cannon Beach, Gearhart, John Day-Fern- hill, Knappa, Lewis & Clark, Olney-Walluski, Sea- side and Warrenton f ire d e- partments will partner with the state D epartment of F orestry, state M ilitary D e- partment and the state fire marshal’s office in a live fire exercise. For questions or con- cerns, contact ODF spokes- woman Ashley Lertora at the local office at 503-325- 5451. 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