Kaleidoscope Crag Rat Hut Page B1 MIDWEEK EDITION $1.00 Vol. 114, No. 13 2 Sections, 20 Pages HOOD RIVER, OREGON • Wednesday, February 12, 2020 Official Newspaper, City of Hood River and Hood River County www.hoodrivernews.com Photo by Emily Fitzgerald THE PORTS of Hood River and Cascade Locks held a joint meeting Jan. 30. From left, Cascade Locks Commissioner Joeinne Caldwell and Cascade Locks Commission President Jess Groves with Hood River Commissioners Hoby Streich, Kristi Chapman and Ben Sheppard. Photo by Kirby Neumann-Rea TRUCK driver Juan Castro, in orange, talks with authorities after the truck and train collision Monday at Herman Creek Lane and Forest Lane in Cascade Locks. Train and truck collide in CL unhurt in the collision. He was haul- ing about two tons of wood chips southbound out of the Bear Mountain A Union Pacific train collided with supply yard at 8:47 a.m., heading to and bisected a loaded tractor trailer the pellet plant’s main plant, when Monday morning at the rail crossing the truck got stuck on the tracks, ac- with Herman Creek Lane at Forest cording to Sgt. Pete Hughes of Hood Lane in east Cascade Locks. River County Sheriff’s Office, who Driver Juan Castro of Carson was responded to the scene along with By KIRBY NEUMANN-REA News editor Cascade Locks Fire Department. A Union Pacific train did not have time to stop, according to Hughes. “It was scary. It’s not something you see every day,” said Kipsy Mathews of the adjacent hillside Shalala neighborhood, who saw the See TRAIN, page A8 Lunch and Learn series ends with with gender identity discussion Library Series to continue in May rent practice to let people choose for themselves whether they are comfort- able with that practice. She also noted that while the topic is new “for our society,” gender iden- tity and multiple genders “have been represented in our world for a long time,” she said. “We’re acknowledging that this isn’t new and isn’t some- thing that’s been created in the last 20 years.” Gender identity corresponds with who you feel yourself to be on the inside. Gender expression is how you might show your gender on the outside — clothes, hair, makeup, how you walk or talk. This can be different from sex assigned at birth, when babies are born and identified as male or female based on genitalia. That can be com- plicated if a baby is intersex, meaning the person is born without being “en- tirely aligned male or female,” Winn said. In the past, doctors and parents would decide on the gender. “The medical community is mov- ing further and further away from surgeries and letting young people experience and determine their own identity,” she said. Transgender refers to someone who does not identify with the gender they were assigned at birth; cisgender refers to someone who does identify with the gender assigned at birth. And See GENDER, page A8 See FLOODING, page A8 Corps of Engineers photo HIGH WATERS in Mill Creek in Umatilla County, where Corps of Engineers are working to relieve flooding. BRIEFS B6 A3 A2 B3 B1 B5 A6 Opinion Sports Yesteryears A4 A7 B2 “Education — no one can ever take that away from you, the knowledge you learn.” — Veronica Sandoval, Cascade Observations, B2 3 INSIDE nonbinary refers to someone who does not identity exclusively as male or female. A person may also identity as gen- der queer — identity that falls on the spectrum between male and female — or gender fluid — identity that changes over time, from one end of the spectrum to another. “I’ve met trans-kids at age 3, living life with parental support, no big deal,” Winn said. “For some, it’s a big decision, but for others, our gender identities solidify at 2 or 3, and for parents and grandparents and those supporting their own young people, the power of believing, of choice and power and love, is huge … At 2 and 3, little kids start knowing who they are, and that can be difficult for some people to digest. Sexual orien- tation comes into play at puberty; gender identity starts very young and is completely different than sex- ual orientation that happens around puberty. “They might biologically be fe- male, but gender expression or gen- der identity is gender queer and they might be attracted to women,” Winn said. “Gender identity and assigned sex does not dictate who a person will love or be physically attracted to … We can never assume or know who were canvassing the area with neighbors. Umatilla County and Walla Walla District Corps of Engineers have issued the following details: Since flooding started, the Oregon Army National Guard used helicop- ters to rescue 54 people, 10 dogs, one cat and one rabbit stranded by the flood. High water and road damage closed Interstate 84 in both directions Friday, Feb. 7 between Exits 182 and 188. Crews worked through the night and opened one lane in each direction late Sunday night, Feb. 9. On Monday, weather was expected be cool and dry with no new flood threats. A website has been set up for homeowners, renters and business- es to report damage to their prop- Waterfront closures Alzheimer’s support HR Council meets The Hook Road is closed to all access Feb. 10-14 while the Port of Hood River grades roads and applies herbicides. The Spit Ac- cess Road will be closed Feb. 18-21; Marina Park Feb. 24-28. Hood River Valley Adult Center, 2010 Sterling Place, hosts its monthly Alzheimer’s Support Group on Feb. 12 from 2:30- 3:30 p.m. All are welcome. More at 541-386-2060. The Feb. 10 agenda, too late for presstime, included Hood River Reads proclamation, HR Bridge project update, and Transpor- tation System Plan update. See Feb. 15 paper for details. 05105 97630 Photo by Trisha Walker PARTICIPANTS in the Feb. 6 Lunch and Learn presentation on gender identi- ty come together at the conculsion of the event in a show of support. Interstate 84 is open after a one- day closre near Pendleton, but oth- erwise, the counties neighboring the Gorge in eastern Oregon are emerging from ome of the worst flooding in memory, and one per- son has died in the disaster. On Feb. 6, a combination of heavy rain and snowmelt caused by warm temperatures brought flooding to many areas of Uma- tilla County; Gov. Kate Brown has declared a State of Emergency (de- tails on A8). One woman was killed when high water swept through her property near the Bar M Ranch, the only reported fatality in the flooding. The body of Janet Conley of northern Umatilla County was recovered on Sunday morning by search and rescue volunteers 7 News staff writer Classifieds Entertainment Greater Gorge Happenings Kaleidoscope Legal Notices Obituaries successful so far. “It’s always an anxious time to implement a system but knock on wood … this has been a very good implementation,” said Fred Kowell, chief financial officer for the Port of Hood River, at a joint meeting of the Port of Hood River and Port of Cas- cade Locks commissions on Jan. 30. By EMILY FITZGERALD “We’re focused on (fixing) little News staff writer things right now, not big things,” said Bridge of the Gods Manager A month into electronic tolling Ryan Vollans, referencing cases on the Bridge of the Gods, roughly of drivers incorrectly registering 30 percent of bridge traffic is now their vehicle, and incidents where using the Port of Hood River’s the BreezeBy sensor was tripped BreezeBy system, and the Port of by Cascade Locks’ heavy morning Cascade Locks reports that both fog. “These are small things that we the system and the partnership between the two ports have been See BREEZEBY, page A8 About 30 percent of bridge traffic used electronic tolling during first month E. Oregon flooding causes major damage, claims woman’s life By TRISHA WALKER The last in a series of five Lunch and Learn presentations at the Hood River Library came Feb. 6, with more than 30 people coming together in the Hood River Library’s downstairs meeting room to learn more about gender identity, the featured topic. Megan Winn, Columbia Gorge Pride Alliance board member, led the talk, encouraging participants to ask questions or speak to their own experiences. “I know there are people in this room who could teach this way better than me,” Winn said. “And I know there are people here who are just learning about this.” She asked those gathered to adhere to four agreements to aid in the con- versation: To speak your truth, to stay engaged, to experience and lean into any discomfort and except and accept non-closure. In short, she explained, sometimes a new idea or topic that pushes us in a direction we’ve yet to think about or experience can lead us to tune out and not be engaged — one of the body’s natural impulses — and that, because gender identity is a big topic, not everything could reasonably be covered in an hour. Winn had participants introduce themselves and say a few words about why they were in attendance. “I’m surprised, I thought there’d be like 10 people,” she said to the crowd. “Some of you are at expert level, some are at infant level, and I want to make sure I hit the middle.” Several said they wanted to learn more about the topic to support friends and family; others expressed a desire to help build a more inclusive community or learn to use the correct pronouns. “It’s important to show up and nor- malize the conversation,” said one. “There’s always more to learn,” said another. Winn noted that while some peo- ple shared their preferred pronouns during their introduction, it is a cur- ‘Good implementation’ of BreezeBy on CL’s Bridge of the Gods