3A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2018 Fred Meyer to stop selling guns, ammunition Associated Press PORTLAND — Superstore company Fred Meyer will stop selling guns and ammunition. The Portland-based chain in a statement Friday said it made the decision after eval- uating customer preferences. The company sells guns at nearly 45 of its 132 stores in Oregon, Washington state, Idaho and Alaska, including the store in Warrenton. “Fred Meyer has made a business decision to exit the firearms category,” the com- pany said. “We are currently working on plans to respon- sibly phase out sales of fire- arms and ammunition.” The company, a subsid- iary of Cincinnati, Ohio,- based Kroger Co., didn’t give a timeline in the state- ment. Fred Meyer spokes- man Jeffery Temple in an email to The Associated Press on Saturday said the company wasn’t offering interviews. Fred Meyer stores sell a range of goods that include groceries, clothing, electron- ics, outdoor equipment, fur- niture and jewelry. Stores also include pharmacies. The company said the Luke Whittaker/EO Media Group The Warrenton store is among several that sells guns. firearms category represents about $7 million annually of its revenue and sales have been declining. Engineer resigns from transportation commission By PARIS ACHEN Capital Bureau SALEM — State Trans- portation Commissioner Paula Brown, the only engineer on the Oregon Transportation Commission, has resigned her position less than halfway through her first term. Brown, who was appointed by Gov. Kate Brown in November 2016, said she is leaving the commission because of work and family obligations. The volunteer transporta- tion commissioner recently accepted a paid full-time posi- tion as public works director for Ashland, where she lives, and her elderly father recently moved in with her from Hawaii, she said in a phone interview Friday. “It was not an easy deci- sion for me,” Brown said. “I take my responsibilities very seriously, and I take my com- mitment to my city and my family just as seriously, so it was a tough decision.” She notified the gover- nor’s office in a resignation letter sent Friday morning. Her resignation was effective immediately. “I sincerely appreciate the honor and privilege of serv- ing Oregon,” she wrote. “I am gratified with the abil- ity to have (helped) to shape ODOT’s policies and strate- gic direction over the past 15 months.” The governor is seeking applications for Brown’s posi- tion, but the next time the state Senate can confirm a succes- sor isn’t until May during the interim legislative days, said Bryan Hockaday, a governor’s spokesman. “Gov. Brown thanks Com- Paris Achen/Capital Bureau Oregon Transportation Commissioner Paula Brown has resigned. missioner Brown for her lead- ership on OTC and service to the state of Oregon,” Hocka- day said. Paula Brown had to travel from Ashland to Salem — a more than four-hour drive — the night before to make the meetings. Her engineering back- ground added an extra level of scrutiny to the transportation commission’s oversight of the transportation department. She said she appreci- ated Transportation Depart- ment Director Matt Garrett’s willingness to be more open and accountable for agency actions, when the commis- sion decided to take a more hands-on role in oversight in the past year. Part of the scrutiny of the department stemmed from legislation last year to fund $5.3 billion in transportation projects over the next several years. “I have a high level of trust and confidence in Matt Gar- rett and his management team, and I think they will fulfill the legislative requirements of House Bill 2017,” said Brown, referring to the trans- portation-funding package. Brown succeeded for- mer Douglas County Com- missioner Susan Morgan on the transportation commis- sion after Morgan resigned to take a position as a lobbyist for the Association of Oregon Counties. Brown and her husband, Patrick Flannery, own the Dana Campbell vineyards in Ashland. Brown has worked extensively on federal and local infrastructure projects and government contracting. She served as deputy chief of civil engineering at Naval Facilities Engineering Com- mand in Washington, D.C., from October 2013 to Septem- ber 2016. Before that, she worked at the Navy First Naval Con- struction Division in Nor- folk, Virginia, from October 2010 to September 2013, and served previously as the pub- lic works director for Ashland from June 1997 to December 2008. She also worked at the Rogue Valley Council of Gov- ernments from fall 1993 until June 1997. The Capital Bureau is a collaboration between EO Media Group and Pamplin Media Group. WANTED “We made the decision early last week after eval- uating changing customer preferences and the fact that we’ve been steadily reduc- ing this category in our Fred Meyer stores over the last several years due to softening consumer demand,” the com- pany said. “More recently we have been transitioning away from gun departments as a result of our ongoing work to optimize space in our Fred Meyer stores.” Following last month’s high school shooting in Park- land, Florida that left 17 peo- ple dead, Fred Meyer said it would stop selling firearms to anyone under 21. The com- pany had already stopped selling assault-style guns several years ago, except in Alaska. Fred Meyer did not men- tion the school shooting in its statement Friday. Other stores announced in the wake of that shoot- ing that they would stop sell- ing guns to anyone under 21, including Walmart Inc. and L.L. Bean. Dick’s Sporting Goods recently banned sales of assault rifles. Several outdoor chains, including Bass Pro Shops, Cabela’s, Gander Outdoors and Academy Sports, con- tinue to sell assault-style rifles. Washington state moves to protect endangered killer whales By PHUONG LE Associated Press SEATTLE — With the number of endangered orcas that frequent the inland waters of Washington state at a 30-year low, Gov. Jay Ins- lee has directed state agencies to take immediate and lon- ger-term steps to protect the struggling killer whales. The fish-eating mam- mals that spend time in Puget Sound have struggled for years with a lack of food, pol- lution, noise and disturbances from boat traffic. There are now just 76 of the orcas, down from 98 in 1995. Inslee said the orcas are in trouble and called on every- one in the state to do their part. His executive order aims to make more salmon available to the whales, give them more space and quieter waters, ensure they have clean water to swim in and protect them from potential oil spills. “The destiny of salmon and orca and we humans are intertwined,” the gover- nor said at a news confer- ence Wednesday at the Day- break Star Cultural Center in Seattle. “As the orca go, so go we.” An orca task force form- ing now will meet for the first time next month and will come up with final recom- mendations by November. “This is a wake-up call,” Suquamish Tribal Chairman Leonard Forsman said, add- ing, “It’s going to take some pain. We’re going to have to make some sacrifices.” Many have been sounding the alarm for years about the plight of the closely tracked population of southern resi- dent killer whales. The federal government listed the orcas as endangered in 2005, and more recently identified them as among the most at risk of extinction in the near future. A baby orca has not been born in the past few years. Half of the calves born during a celebrated baby boom sev- eral years ago have died. Female orcas also are having pregnancy problems linked to nutritional stress brought on by a low supply of Chinook salmon, the whales’ preferred food, a recent study said. “We are not too late,” said Barry Thom, West Coast regional administrator for NOAA Fisheries. “From a biology perspective, there are still enough breeding animals, but we need to act soon.” Whale advocates wel- comed the statewide initia- tive, saying it creates urgency and calls attention to the issue. But some also said it was long overdue. “I think that everybody would have loved to have seen this five years ago,” said Joe Gaydos, science director for the SeaDoc Society. “It is a crisis. The fact that we’re responding is good.” Under the order, state agencies will find ways to quiet state ferries around the whales, train more commer- cial whale-watching boats to help respond to oil spills and adjust fishing regulations to protect key areas and fish runs for orcas. The whales use clicks, calls and other sounds to navi- gate, communicate and forage mainly for salmon, and noise from vessels can interfere. Lawmakers also passed a supplemental budget this month that includes $1.5 mil- lion for efforts such as a boost in marine patrols to ensure that boats keep their distance from orcas and an increase in hatchery production of salmon by an additional 5 million. We Deliver All Day! Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 M ARCH 29 TH Acclaimed Nature Writer Dr. Robert Pyle A Columbia Forum Presentation One of the Pacifi c Northwest’s most acclaimed nature writers, Dr. Robert Michael Pyle of Grays River, Washington, is a lighthearted, insightful and amusing speaker on topics ranging from Bigfoot to butterfl ies. He literally wrote the book on both topics, and is the author of “The Butterfl ies of Cascadia,” the comprehensive fi eld guide to all the species of Oregon and Washington. A graduate of the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies, Pyle’s 1987 book, “Wintergreen” won the John Burroughs Medal for its insights about how industrial forestry damaged the land, waters and people of the Willapa Hills of Southwest Washington. He and his Wahkiakum County neighbor Krist Novoselic, co-founder of the legendary rock group Nirvana, are currently collaborating on a mélange of acoustic guitar music and poetry. TO ATTEND: LIMI SEA TED TING RESE For Members: Dinner & Lecture: $25 each; Lecture only: no charge SPAC R E VE YOUR TODA Y! For Non-Members: Dinner & Lecture: $35 each; Lecture only: $15 ea. Appetizers will be available at 6 p.m. • Dinner will be served at 6:30 p.m. The speaker will begin after the dinner service is complete and non-dinner members and guests of the audience take their seats. Forum to be held at the CMH Community Center at 2021 Exchange St., Astoria. 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