3A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2017 Lawmakers push Washington tourism Walden seeks to amend law used in Hammond case Money would fund promotion By ALEXIS MYERS Associated Press OLYMPIA, Wash — Law- makers are trying to put Wash- ington state back on the map when it comes to tourism. After eliminating the state tourism office in 2011, the Legislature is considering creating a Washington Tour- ism Marketing Authority to fund and manage resources throughout the state. The authority, made up of tourism industry officials and legislators, is expected to deposit $5 million into its account every two-year state budget cycle by diverting 0.1 percent of retail taxes from lodging, rental cars and restau- rants. The plan could offer a maximum of $15 million per biennium to be spent on tour- ism across the entire state. Washington is the only state without a state-funded tourism office, according to the Washington Tourism Alli- ance, a nonprofit agency that By SCOTT HAMMERS The Bulletin AP Photo/Elaine Thompson A Washington state ferry passes through a channel in the San Juan Islands and in view of Mount Baker near Friday Harbor, Wash. Lawmakers are trying to put Washington state back on the map when it comes to tourism. has picked up from where the original program left off. “We’ve simply kept the lights on over the past five years,” said David Blandford of the marketing authority. Blandford said the agency has been maintaining the web- site and taking calls but doesn’t have the funds other states do to advertise and promote tour- ism across the entire state. Nearby efforts Nearby states such as Ore- gon, Montana and Califor- nia, are spending $5 million to upward of $120 million a year to attract visitors, Blandford said. He said other states like Idaho are out-spending Wash- ington by several millions of dollars. State Rep. Cary Condotta, the sponsor of House Bill 1123, says “it’s time for the state to keep up.” Beached loggerhead turtle dies after rescue Turtles suffer in colder water By R.J. MARX The Daily Astorian The best efforts of Seaside Aquarium and the Oregon Coast Aquarium staff were not enough to revive a cold- stunned loggerhead turtle res- cued late Saturday in Cannon Beach. The loggerhead was reported dead by the Oregon Coast Aquarium a day after arrival for treatment. Seaside’s Tiffany Boothe responded to a report of tur- tles washed ashore at Cres- cent Beach in Ecola State Park on Saturday. After walk- ing a mile and a half along the beach, she discovered the tur- ing the reduced sentences imposed by Hogan. The Hammonds were resentenced to five years each with credit for time served and returned to prison in January 2016. The perceived mistreat- ment of the Hammonds was at the root of the demonstra- tions in and around Burns that led to the takeover of the Mal- heur National Wildlife Ref- uge at the same time the Ham- monds were headed back to prison. Demonstrators held the refuge headquarters for more than three weeks, at which point demonstration leader Robert “Lavoy” Finicum was shot and killed by Oregon State Police during a traffic stop between Burns and John Day. Most of the remaining occupiers fled, and the final holdouts surrendered to law enforcement last February. Walden’s bill defines the circumstances under which the law would not apply, carving out exemptions that would likely have spared the Hammonds had they been in place at the time. Provided a fire was set on an individual’s private land for the purpose of protecting that property or as part of farming-, ranch- ing- or timber-related vegeta- tion management — and does not pose a serious threat of injury or damage to any indi- vidual or federal property — that individual would not be prosecuted. Andrew Malcolm, a spokesman for the Republican congressman, said because a law cannot be adopted ret- roactively, the passage of Walden’s bill would have no effect on the Hammonds’ con- viction or imprisonment. Walden proposed an iden- tical measure last year, accord- ing to Malcolm. Malcolm said the measure attracted five co-sponsors from Western states, but Congress ran out of time before the proposal could be considered. Convictions prompted standoff near Burns last year Oregon Coast Aquarium/ For The Daily Astorian Front view of the logger- head rescued in Cannon Beach Saturday. The turtle failed to survive after spe- cialized treatment. tle near Chapman Point. Boothe and Seaside Aquar- ium staff member Molly Schmidt recovered the animal and assisted in transferring it to Newport Sunday morning. A threatened species, log- gerhead sea turtles are con- sidered a “rarer species” to strand on Oregon beaches, according to Jim Burke, the Oregon Coast Aquarium’s director of animal husbandry. The Oregon Coast Aquar- ium and Seattle Aquarium are the only rehabilitation facil- ities in the northwest United States authorized by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to provide the specialized care sea turtles require. Most stranded turtles in recent years have been olive ridley and green sea turtles, Burke said. Two olive ridleys, named Thunder and Lightning, were transported from the North Coast to SeaWorld in San Diego last winter. Thunder died, but Lightning continues rehabilitation, SeaWorld offi- cials said in January. Loggerheads are known for their large heads and heavy, strong jaws and can weigh up to 375 pounds. They are listed as a threat- ened species due to coastal development. The last loggerhead to arrive alive at the aquarium was on Christmas Eve 2007, and it also survived only one day, Burke said. During the winter, cold- shocked sea turtles can become stranded on beaches, Boothe said Sunday. Water temperatures in Newport are at least 20 degrees lower than those needed for survival. Reports of stranded tur- tles can begin as early as mid-October and can con- tinue through January, Boothe said. This was the third turtle to wash ashore this year, but the only one to be recovered alive. BEND — U.S. Rep. Greg Walden is sponsoring a bill that would soften the fed- eral statute used to convict the Harney County ranch- ers whose imprisonment was central to last year’s Malheur National Wildlife Refuge standoff. The bill would exempt from prosecution people who violate the law under circum- stances similar to Dwight and Steven Hammond. In 2012, the Hammonds were convicted of setting fires on their ranch in 2001 and 2006 that spread to federal land. The Hammonds main- tain the earlier fire was set to control invasive plants, while prosecutors maintained it was to cover up illegal hunting. In 2006, Bureau of Land Management firefighters were battling nearby blazes sparked by lightning, and the Hammonds lit a backburn in an attempt to prevent the already-burning fires from encroaching on the winter feed for their cattle. The Hammonds were tried under a federal statute that establishes a minimum of five and a maximum of 20 years in prison for any person who uses fire or explosives to damage or destroy or attempt to damage or destroy federal property. However, U.S. District Judge Michael Robert Hogan declined to impose the mini- mum sentence on the Ham- monds and said at the time doing so would “shock the conscience.” The federal government appealed and won, negat- Four seek vacant Seaside council seat By R.J. MARX The Daily Astorian SEASIDE — Four candi- dates stepped forward to fill a City Council vacancy. Nor- man Brown, John Chapman, George Stacey and Steve Wright each provided a min- imum of 10 signatures from Ward 1 residents and filed forms with the city indicating interest in filling the remaining two years of Jay Barber’s four- year term. The opening comes after Barber was appointed mayor to finish the remainder of for- mer Mayor Don Larson’s four-year term. Larson died in December after serving 14 years as mayor. “We have a very difficult task before us,” Barber said. “We have four applicants, all of whom are very highly qualified.” Brown, a three-year Sea- side resi- dent, is retired after a career as a human resources man- ager and direc- tor. He is a member of the Jay Barber city’s parks advisory committee. Chapman, a 23-year resi- dent, is a business owner and property manager of Seaside Factory Outlets. He has served on city advertising and budget committees. Stacey, a former high school teacher and broker with John L. Scott Real Estate, is a member of the Sunset Empire Park and Recreation Depart- ment. He is a 50-year Seaside resident. Wright, a Seaside home- owner for nearly five years, is a current member of the Bud- get Committee and Planning Commission. He is the for- mer chief financial officer of Columbia Grain Inc. “The process that will now happen, the council will inter- view each of these applicants and in an open meeting we will vote to appoint,” Barber said. City Council members will interview the candidates Mon- day from noon to 4 p.m. Each interview is expected to take about an hour, Barber said. The council aims to decide at the last meeting in February. $ off 500 1 ALL X300 AND X500 SELECT SERIES™ TRACTORS X394 SELECT SERIES • 22 hp* (16.4 kW) • 48-in. Accel Deep™ Deck • 4-wheel steering • 4-year/300-hour bumper-to- bumper warranty** SAVE NOW. MOW LATER. 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