2A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2015 Supporters can’t agree on low-carbon measures posed rules last month that would follow California’s lead to include the impact of new demand for biofuels crops such as corn and soybeans. This factor is known as the indirect land-use change and as recent- ly as January, Department of Environmental Quality staff said existing methodologies were inadequate to calculate it. However, Cory-Ann Wind, an air quality manager for the Department of Environmental Quality who works on imple- mentation of the low-carbon fuels program, said Wednesday that California recently updated the models it uses to calculate the carbon impact of land-use changes, based on extensive peer-reviewed research. “I feel very comfortable with the work they’ve done to develop the most recent of their numbers, and that’s why we recommended including the California (carbon intensi- ty) values into the Oregon pro- gram,” Wind said. The deadline to submit comments on the latest pro- posed fuel standard rules is 4 p.m. Wednesday . As of Thurs- By HILLARY BORRUD Capital Bureau On its face, Oregon’s low-carbon fuel standard has a simple promise: it will reduce carbon emissions from trans- portation fuel used in the state by 10 percent over a decade, starting next year . As it turns out, even sup- porters of the underlying law disagree over how the state should calculate that reduction. The standard is supposed to account for the total amount of carbon generated by gas, etha- nol, electricity and other fuels across their life cycles, from the ¿ eld or power plant to the tailpipe. Fuel importers and produc- ers will likely meet the stan- dards through a combination of cleaner biofuels blended into gas and diesel, as well as car- bon reduction credits the state will issue to owners of electric charging stations and other al- ternative fuel infrastructure. California models The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality pro- day afternoon, no one had sub- mitted comments on the rules. California used two models to estimate land-use impacts: one is an economic model that calculates the impact of fuel policy on agricultural and other real estate prices, and the other quanti¿ es the amount of carbon emissions that occurs when land is converted to grow biofu- el feedstock. The carbon impact occurs when land where carbon was sequestered, such as a for- est, is converted to farmland. Geoff Cooper is senior vice president at the Renewable Fuels Association, a national ethanol industry group with of- ¿ ces in Washington, D.C. and St. Louis. Last month, Cooper told The Oregonian that if Or- egon adopts the indirect land- use change model to calculate carbon emissions, the ethanol group will work with the pe- troleum industry to repeal the low-carbon fuel standard. “They’re saying, ‘Well, land we use for soybeans and pasture here is now being used to grow corn for ethanol so a farmer somewhere else in the world now has to convert some land to make up for that lost soybean pasture here,” Cooper said . “The real world data is showing that isn’t happening.” Wind disagreed and said “satellite data for land use con- version now is great.” The Department of Environ- mental Quality proposal would attribute a greater carbon im- pact to corn ethanol compared with existing rules, and Coo- per said corn ethanol re¿ neries such as 3aci¿ c Ethanol, Inc. in Boardman would face reduced demand from companies that import gas into the state. “If you look at the ethanol that’s used in the state of Ore- gon today, it’s primarily corn- based ethanol produced at a facility there in Boardman, as well as facilities elsewhere in the United States,” Cooper said. Some prefer federal research Cooper said if Oregon is go- ing to include the indirect land- use impact, it should rely on modeling by researchers at the Columbia Memorial Hos- pital is hosting a community Pink Out tonight to honor breast cancer survivors and to remember those who have been lost to the disease. The event is at 5:30 p.m. at the Astoria Column, which is turning pink for the month of October. Organizers hope to raise awareness about the im- portance of early detection in the ¿ ght against breast cancer. A short program is planned, including remarks from CMH cancer care pro- viders and breast cancer sur- vivors. CMH offers ¿ nancial assistance to provide mam- mograms for women who qualify. To donate, or for assistance, call the Breast Health Program at 503-338- 4520. ACCUWEATHER ® FORECAST FOR ASTORIA Astoria 5-Day Forecast Tonight A shower early; otherwise, mostly cloudy 49° Tuesday Oregon Weather Shown is tomorrow’s weather. Temperatures are tonight’s lows and tomorrow’s highs The Dalles 49/71 Astoria 49/66 Portland 55/67 Corvallis 47/69 Eugene 46/67 Pendleton 49/64 Salem 50/67 Albany 48/66 Ontario 46/69 Bend 35/59 Wednesday Burns 34/64 Medford 45/73 Mostly cloudy Klamath Falls 31/64 Juanita Belle McCoy 46° Thursday 47° Friday Turning cloudy 63° 62° 44° Clouds and breaks of sun 63° 46° Almanac Sun and Moon Astoria through Sunday. Temperatures High ........................................... 62° Low ............................................ 56° Normal high ............................... 60° Normal low ................................. 44° Precipitation Yesterday ................................ 0.15" Month to date .......................... 1.48" Normal month to date ............. 2.80" Year to date ........................... 32.72" Normal year to date .............. 43.04" Sunset tonight .................. 6:23 p.m. Sunrise Tuesday .............. 7:39 a.m. Moonrise today ................ 1:39 p.m. Moonset today ................ 11:26 p.m. Regional Cities City Baker City Bend Brookings Eugene Ilwaco Klamath Falls Medford Newport North Bend Today Hi Lo W 60 38 pc 59 35 c 61 50 sh 65 46 sh 61 52 sh 59 31 sh 66 45 sh 61 49 sh 62 51 sh National Cities Today City Hi Lo W Atlanta 64 43 s Boston 48 42 s Chicago 70 53 s Denver 74 46 c Des Moines 79 58 pc Detroit 64 50 s El Paso 84 60 pc Fairbanks 37 24 c Honolulu 89 77 s Indianapolis 67 47 s Kansas City 76 58 pc Las Vegas 75 60 pc Los Angeles 76 59 pc Memphis 74 50 s Miami 81 75 t Nashville 70 43 s New Orleans 75 65 s New York 52 47 s Oklahoma City 80 58 s Philadelphia 54 44 s St. Louis 75 54 s Salt Lake City 66 49 t San Francisco 70 58 s Seattle 60 52 sh Washington, DC 56 43 s First Full Last New Oct 20 Oct 27 Nov 3 Nov 11 Under the Sky Tues. Hi Lo W 63 27 s 59 34 pc 67 51 pc 67 42 pc 61 50 c 64 28 s 73 41 s 60 46 c 65 48 pc City Olympia Pendleton Portland Roseburg Salem Seaside Spokane Vancouver Yakima Today Hi Lo W 62 48 sh 66 49 pc 64 55 sh 66 48 sh 64 50 sh 63 52 sh 62 43 c 62 53 sh 71 43 c Tues. Hi Lo W 63 42 c 64 42 pc 67 48 pc 70 46 pc 67 44 s 63 49 pc 63 41 pc 64 45 pc 72 39 pc Tonight's Sky: Antares the Scorpion is quite low in the southwest as twilight fades this evening. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI Tomorrow’s Tides Astoria / Port Docks Time High 7:44 a.m. 6.5 ft. 6:46 p.m. 7.5 ft. Time 12:46 a.m. 1:07 p.m. Low 0.5 ft. 3.2 ft. Juanita Belle McCoy, 75, of Gearhart, Oregon, and became involved in the Seaside American Le- gion. passed away on Friday, Oct. 9, 2015. Juanita is survived by two children, Kenneth She was born on June 15, 1940, in Freewater, McCoy and his wife, Allison, of War- Oregon, to the late Leonard Horrell and renton, Oregon, and Dorinda Daniel Opal Case Haskins. Juanita grew up and her husband, Rick, of Longview, and graduated high school in Seaside, Washington. She has ¿ ve grandchil- Oregon. She married Gordon “Shorty” dren, Tonya Robinson and her husband, McCoy on Oct. 18, 1959. Her husband, Stuart, of Warrenton, Oregon; Daniel Shorty, preceded her in death in 2006. Weaver of Eugene, Oregon; David Juanita and her family traveled of- Weaver of Newport, Oregon; Matthew ten while her husband was enlisted in McCoy and his wife, Stacy, of Gear- the Navy, until his retirement in 1977. hart, Oregon; and Devin Nicole Brown, She was mostly a homemaker, but oc- who proceeded her in death. She also casionally worked at Cornet’s Store in Seaside when her husband was at war, Juanita McCoy has ¿ ve great-grand children, Garrett McCoy, Tanner Robinson, Hannah and after he retired. She enjoyed cro- Robinson and Kaitlynn Robinson. cheting, and would often give her crafts The funeral will take place at 11 a.m. Wednes- as gifts or donations. In 1996, Juanita and her husband of¿ cially re- day, Oct. 28, 2015 at the Ocean View Cemetery tired, purchased a ¿ fth wheel, and headed for the Chapel in Warrenton, Oregon. Family and friends open road settling mostly in Arizona, Nevada and are invited to the residence of Kenneth and Allison California. One of her fondest locations was in McCoy following the service for hors d’oeuvres. Hughes-Ransom Mortuary is in charge of Sauvie Island, Oregon, where she and her husband volunteered for the state. After Juanita’s husband the arrangements. An online guest book may be passed away, she relocated to Gearhart, Oregon, signed at www.hughes-ransom.com Oct. 13, 2015 SINGH-ANAND, Jeva Eli, 49, of Astoria, died in As- toria. Caldwell’s Luce-Lay- Fronts Cold Warm ton Mortuary in Astoria is in charge of the arrangements. Oct. 17, 2015 SCHROTT, Frank Joseph, 85, of Seaside, died in Seaside. Ocean View Funeral & Cre- mation Service in Astoria is in charge of the arrangements. B, 725 S. Wahanna Road, Seaside. Clatsop County Human Services Advisory Council, 4 to 5:30 p.m., 800 Exchange St., Room 430. Northwest Regional Ed- ucation Service District Board, 5:30 p.m. dinner, 6 p.m. regular meeting fol- lowed by executive session, NWRESD, Tillamook Ser- vice Center, 2515 Third St., Tillamook. Shoreline Sanitary Dis- trict Board, 7 p.m., Gearhart Hertig Station, 33496 West Lake Lane, Warrenton. Seaside School District, 6 p.m., 1801 S. Franklin St. Port of Astoria Commis- sion, 6 p.m., old Port of¿ ces, 422 Gateway Ave. Seaside Planning Com- mission Work Session, 7 p.m., Seaside City Hall, 989 Broadway. Public meetings MONDAY Clatsop County Wet- lands Advisory Committee, 3 p.m., Judge Guy Boyington Building, 857 Commercial St., Astoria. Knappa School Board, 5:30 p.m., Knappa High School library, 41535 Old U.S. Highway 30. Astoria City Council, 6 p.m., strategic plan work ses- sion, 7 p.m., regular meeting, City Hall, 1095 Duane St. TUESDAY Union Health District, 8 a.m., Providence Seaside Hospital, Education Room Tomorrow’s National Weather Tues. Hi Lo W 69 50 s 64 49 c 73 54 pc 72 40 c 78 61 sh 70 51 c 81 59 c 38 21 c 89 77 pc 71 52 pc 79 61 pc 75 61 pc 80 63 pc 77 56 s 84 76 pc 72 47 pc 81 67 pc 68 55 pc 83 61 s 68 50 pc 77 57 pc 63 46 sh 75 58 s 63 48 c 69 49 s Gearhart June 15, 1940 — Oct. 9, 2015 Deaths Intervals of clouds and sunshine Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015 66° gion.” Climate Solutions is a nonpro¿ t with of¿ ces in Ore- gon and Washington state that promotes renewable energy and other policies to address global warming. “The Clean Fuels Program is an important part of Ore- gon’s plan to meet its legislated greenhouse gas reduction tar- gets,” Sheeran wrote. “The pro- gram is designed to reward the cleanest fuels. For this reason, it is important to consider the full life cycle of carbon impacts of fuels in the program.” Wind said the inclusion of the indirect land-use impact is not the only change in the latest proposed rules to implement the fuel standard. The Depart- ment of Environmental Quality also wants to update the carbon value for natural gas, because of new research that shows more “fugitive methane” es- caping from fracked wells. The Capital Bureau is a collaboration between EO Me- dia Group and Pamplin Media Group. OBITUARIES Pink Out to honor breast cancer survivors The Daily Astorian U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois, rather than models from California. Two other groups that pushed for lawmakers to make the low-carbon fuel standard permanent are supportive of the state’s proposal to include land- use impacts in carbon values. “These measures of overall carbon pollution are the result of years of input from numer- ous businesses, organizations and scienti¿ c experts,” Oregon Environmental Council com- munications director Jessica Moskovitz wrote in an email. Moskovitz said the models the environmental agency plans to use are “the most accurate and honest way to assess the carbon pollution of transporta- tion fuels.” Kristen Sheeran, Oregon director for Climate Solutions, wrote in an email that one reason the group supports the low-carbon fuel standard is the “incentives it provides to grow clean fuels markets in our re- WEDNESDAY Seaside Tourist Adviso- ry Committee, 3 p.m., Sea- side City Hall, 989 Broad- way. Sunset Empire Park & Recreation District Board Meeting, 5:15 p.m., Bob Chisholm Community Cen- ter, 1225 Ave. A, Seaside. Stationary Lotteries Showers T-Storms -10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Rain Flurries Snow Ice 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. Pau l Joh n H ayn er, M .D . Board -C ertified In tern al M ed icin e 1406 M D RIVE 97103 (503) 325-0505 A RIN E A STO RIA , O R drhayner.com I N NETWORK WITH THE FOLLOWING INSURANCE PLANS : OREGON Sunday’s Pick 4: 1 p.m.: 7-1-2-9 4 p.m.: 2-3-4-6 7 p.m.: 8-7-1-6 10 p.m.: 1-8-9-9 Saturday’s Megabucks: 11-17-18-20-26-28 Estimated jackpot: $5.4 million. Saturday’s Powerball: 48-49-57-62-69, Powerball: 19 Estimated jackpot: $80 million. Saturday’s Pick 4: 1 p.m.: 4-9-0-4 4 p.m.: 7-5-8-1 7 p.m.: 7-0-5-4 10 p.m.: 2-6-0-3 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. Friday’s Pick 4: 1 p.m.: 4-8-6-2 4 p.m.: 8-2-3-3 7 p.m.: 8-0-8-6 10 p.m.: 8-0-3-7 WASHINGTON Sunday’s Daily Game: 8-9-2 Sunday’s Keno: 06-07- 16-19-21-22-29-30-32-35-36- 41-42-50-54-55-62-63-70-75 Sunday’s Match 4: 08-11- 21-22 Saturday’s Daily Game: 2-7-2 Saturday’s Hit 5: 01-16- 25-29-33 Estimated jackpot: $400,000 Saturday’s Keno: 11-20- 21-23-25-29-32-41-42-43-46- 48-51-59-62-66-67-72-73-75 Saturday’s Lotto: 03-10- 18-28-30-46 Estimated jackpot: $5.5 million. Saturday’s Match 4: 02- 14-15-18 Friday’s Daily Game: 6-6-8 Friday’s Keno: 02-10-13- 16-27-35-36-39-43-44-47-48- 49-53-56-64-65-66-72-78 Friday’s Match 4: 09-16- 17-20 Friday’s Mega Millions: 02-38-48-61-68, Mega Ball: 4 Estimated jackpot: $84 million. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Effective July 1, 2015 HOME DELIVERY MAIL EZpay (per month) ................................ $11.25 EZpay (per month) ................................ $16.60 13 weeks in advance ............................ $36.79 13 weeks in advance ............................ $51.98 26 weeks in advance ............................ $70.82 26 weeks in advance .......................... $102.63 52 weeks in advance .......................... $135.05 52 weeks in advance .......................... $199.90 Circulation phone number: 503-325-3211 Periodicals postage paid at Astoria, OR ADVERTISING OWNERSHIP All advertising copy and illustrations prepared by The Daily Astorian become the property of The Daily Astorian and may not be reproduced for any use without explicit prior approval. COPYRIGHT © Entire contents © Copyright, 2015 by The Daily Astorian. SUBSCRIBER TO THE NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE MEMBER CERTIFIED AUDIT OF CIRCULATIONS, INC. Printed on recycled paper