WEEKEND EDITION NATION: Supreme Court to make ruling on gay marriage 8A OUT OF THE VAULT: Til Taylor statue the fi rst Pendleton bronze 7C HERMISTON Youth outreach GIRLS WIN a safe place for IN OVERTIME teens to grow up BASKETBALL/1B LIFESTYLES 1C JANUARY 17-18, 2015 139th Year, No. 67 WINNER OF THE 2013 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD $1.50 Sipe to see State of the Union PENDLETON Sen. Merkley invites Umatilla superintendent to be guest for speech By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian Heidi Sipe hasn’t missed a State of the Union address on television since childhood. This year, she will listen in the House Chamber gallery, mere yards away from President Obama. Sipe, the superintendent of the Umatilla School District, will attend as the guest of Oregon Sen. Jeff Merkley. Sipe got the word Tuesday shortly after her cell- phone buzzed during a meeting in Portland and she excused her- Staff photo by E.J. Harris The business occupancy rate for Pendleton’s Main Street did not change over the course of the last year, although the overall downtown occupancy rate has dropped since 2012. Downtown vacancy stays steady Main Street grows by 7.8 percent in 4 years; rest of downtown shrinks by 3.1 percent By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian No two Main Street vacancies are cre- ated equal. That was the message that Keith May, a member of the advisory committee to the Pendleton Development Commission and a former city councilor, gave to the commission at a meeting Tuesday. May presented the results of his an- nual storefront count of Main Street and downtown businesses, which he con- ducted Jan. 1. pied — the same as the year before. May offered the caveat that the num- bers didn’t note some of the larger vacan- May pointed to buildings like the for- mer Bank of American branch, which had been abandoned by its tenant for two years before Old West Credit Union moved in. May’s report also noted that three new See PENDLETON/10A Staff photo by E.J. Harris A “for lease“ sign sits in the window of an emp- ty storefront Friday at the corner of Southwest Court Avenue and First Street in downtown Pendleton. PENDLETON Sheriff: Evidence doesn’t support woman’s version of shooting By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian The woman who reported masked Pendleton may have made up the story, Umatilla County Sheriff Terry Rowan said. “I think from our perspective the story that was reported — we’re not version of events the female told us,” Rowan said Friday. “So it’s possible at the end of the day she may end up being charged with initiating a false report.” If that happens, her identity would be a matter of public record, Rowan said. The case began the evening of Fri- day, Jan. 9, when she told Pendleton police that masked men forced her car to the side of a rural road north of the male also gave information that helped law enforcement arrest members of the local United Aryan Empire gang. But Rowan said the story she told detectives “was all over the board,” and she changed details, from two men to three to four. And the crime scene that Pendleton police Chief Stuart Roberts reported was on Snyder Road between Highway 37 and Hagen Road See SHOOTING/10A call. Sipe had Sipe recognized the number on the “The oppor- display as one of her contacts tunity to go in from Merkley’s person — I’m Merkley staffer overwhelmed Jessica Stephens, by it.” quickly dropped the bomb. How — Heidi Sipe, would Sipe feel Umatilla SD about being the superintendent senator’s guest at the State of the Union address? Dumbfounded, Sipe thanked Stephens and hung up, but called back two hours later just to make sure she had heard correctly. “I’m having a hard time believing it,” Sipe admitted. Those who know of Sipe’s past relationship with Merkley are hav- ing less trouble believing the senator would choose the superintendent. The two have something of a mutual admi- ration. Sipe credits Merkley for nudging the district’s robotics program into ex- istence a couple of years back and he periodically calls or drops in to check on the program’s progress. In Novem- ber, the senator stopped to eat tacos with students and drive the team’s award-winning robot. The team quali- championships in 2013 and 2014. a No Child Left Behind discussion in 2011. After hearing the teenage mem- ber of a Portland-area robotics team speak, Sipe got Merkley’s ear. Chief See SIPE/10A Rowan PENDLETON Kindergarten could clash with early start day of school for the 2015- 2016 calendar to Aug. 31, but not before Superintendent Jon Peterson revealed that kinder- garten will be affected as a re- sult. of Hawthorne School, now known as the Pendleton Early Learning Center, complete by the beginning of the school year. But that was before the school district considered starting the school year be- fore Round-Up. Under the old schedule, school would have started Sept. 21. Peterson’s statement was prompted by comments from board member Dave Krumbe- in about his opposition to the calendar change. aimed to have the renovation See KINDERGARTEN/10A By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian The two biggest changes to the Pendleton School District each other. The Pendleton School Board approved a motion Staff photo by E.J. Harris A boom crane is used to place the front façade of the new Pendleton Early Learn- ing Center on Friday in Pendleton.