Page 8A NATION East Oregonian BRIEFLY Biologists say there’s enough data to decide wolf protection GRANTS PASS (AP) — State biologists are telling the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission there is enough information to consider taking the gray wolf off the state endangered species list. A draft status review was posted Tuesday on the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife website with materials for the commission’s next meeting. The meeting’s agenda includes a formal staff recommendation that the commission determine there LVVLJQL¿FDQWLQIRUPDWLRQWR start the rulemaking process. $¿QDOGHFLVLRQLVQRW scheduled until August in Salem, but the commission LVWRPDNHWKH¿UVWVWHSLQWKH process — deciding whether it has enough information to consider the issue — when it meets April 24 in Bend. At last count, Oregon had 77 wolves descended from animals introduced in Idaho in the 1990s. The 76-page status report says they are projected to increase at a rate of 7 percent a year, and the probability of a major drop in population is very low. There is plenty of habitat available on public lands, and wolves continue to expand their range, establishing at least one new pack in the western third of the state. The rate of wolf attacks on livestock has been low, the review notes. Hoping to gain greater freedom to kill wolves attacking livestock, the Oregon Cattlemen’s Association has been pressing for the commission to delist wolves since a statewide census last winter showed they had exceeded their restoration goal of four breeding pairs producing pups that survive a year for three years running. At last count, there were at least seven breeding pairs, six in northeastern Oregon and one, led by the famous wanderer OR-7, in the southern Cascades. University of Oregon names Michael Schill next president EUGENE (AP) — Michael Schill, dean of the law school at University of Chicago, was named president of the University of Oregon on Tuesday, EHFRPLQJWKHVFKRRO¶V¿IWK leader in six years. The new president takes WKHKHOPDPLGVLJQL¿FDQW transition at the institution, which was freed last year from the statewide university system and is now led by an independent governing board with ambitions for a big endowment and a QDWLRQDOSUR¿OH Schill will have to contend with diminished state funding for higher education and a need to raise money from private donors. Lillis said a reputation for prodigious fundraising was a big factor in the decision to hire him. $¿UVWJHQHUDWLRQFROOHJH student when he enrolled at Princeton in the 1970s, Schill said he believes public universities are the key to opportunity for young people. “I won’t rest until every family that has a child says to that child, ‘You should go to the University of Oregon, because you will get the best possible education,’ “ Schill told reporters in a news conference on the Eugene campus. Before starting at Chicago in 2010, Schill was the law dean at the University of California, /RV$QJHOHVIRU¿YH\HDUV He was previously on the law school faculty at New York University and the University of Pennsylvania, where his research was focused on property and real estate law. He earned a law degree from Yale Universit. Schill’s appointment was approved unanimously. He begins July 1, replacing Interim President Scott Coltrane, who took over when Michael Gottfredson resigned abruptly last summer. Wednesday, April 15, 2015 Congress will get say on nuke deal Associated Press WASHINGTON — Bowing to pressure from Republicans and his own party, President Barack Obama on Tuesday relented to a compromise empowering Congress to reject his emerging nuclear pact with Iran. The rare and reluctant agreement between the president and the Re- publican-led Congress came after the White House maintained for weeks that congressional interference could jeopardize sensitive negotiations with Tehran. But lawmakers refused to back down from their insistence that Con- gress have a formal role in what could be a historic deal to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee unanimously approved the compromise bill shortly after White House spokesman Josh Earnest conveyed the president’s decision to sign it. “Maybe they saw the handwriting on the wall,” House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said after the White House dropped its opposition. Both houses of Congress are now likely to pass the bill, which cleared the committee 19-0. It’s expected to come before the full Senate as soon as next week. A vote on an actual agreement to lift economic sanctions in exchange for Iranian nuclear concessions would come later, if negotiations between the Obama administration, Iran and ¿YHRWKHUQDWLRQVFRPHWRIUXLWLRQ Obama retains his right to veto any attempt by Congress to scuttle such a pact if the time comes. To override a veto would require a two-thirds ma- jority of both the House and Senate, meaning some Democrats would have to oppose their president to sink a deal. The White House’s announcement By PETER WONG Capital Bureau AP Photo/Andrew Harnik A Capitol Hill police officer asks members of the protest group Code- Pink to sit down during a Senate Foreign Relations Committee busi- ness meeting on Capitol Hill Tuesday to debate and vote on the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act of 2015. came after an intensive administra- tion effort to prevent Democrats from signing on to legislation requiring Obama to submit any pact with Iran to Congress. International negotiators are trying to reach a deal blocking Iran’s path toward nuclear weapons in exchange for relief from economic sanctions that are crippling its economy. “We believe it is our role to ensure that any deal with Iran makes them accountable, is transparent and is enforceable,” said Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., chairman of Foreign Rela- tions Committee. Corker said Secretary of State John Kerry was lobbying against the legislation on Capitol Hill a few hours before the vote. The Republican said the White House’s sudden support was dictated by the number of sena- tors — Republicans and Democrats — backing the measure. “I supported today’s compromise after the administration assured me that the reworked bill would pre- serve our negotiators’ ability to do their jobs,” said Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn. Obama, whose foreign policy leg- acy would be burnished by a deal with Iran, has been in a standoff for months with lawmakers who said Congress should have a chance to weigh in and remain skeptical that Iran will honor an agreement. The United States, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and Chi- na reached a preliminary agreement with Iran on April 2 to curb its nu- FOHDUSURJUDPDQGKRSHWR¿QDOL]HD pact by June 30. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., who opposed the original bill as “harmful to the negoti- ations,” sent a letter to colleagues late Tuesday expressing support for the compromise worked out by Corker and Sen. Ben Cardin, D-Md. Tale of worker asleep in hold is a warning SEATTLE (AP) — The misadventure of a baggage handler who fell asleep in the cargo hold of a jetlin- er should be a warning for airlines to improve security procedures, safety experts said Tuesday. The worker banged on the plane for help shortly af- ter takeoff on Monday from Seattle. Pilots heard the noise and quickly returned to the airport. The worker was not injured. The Federal Aviation Administration was investi- gating, but few new details emerged Tuesday about the bizarre incident at Se- attle-Tacoma International Airport. Alaska Airlines has said the leader of a baggage-load- ing crew noticed the worker was missing and tried to call and text him before conclud- ing he had gone home at the end of his 9 1/2-hour shift. Safety experts say the crew should not have closed the cargo doors of Flight 448 to Los Angeles until they had accounted for the miss- ing worker. “This is a ‘huh?’ mo- ment,” said Thomas Antho- ny, director of the aviation security program at the University of Southern Cal- ifornia and a former FAA RI¿FLDO “That supervisor said, ‘Huh, I wonder where Louie is?’ The ‘huh’ is a yellow light that you need to pay attention to,” he said. “The worst thing you can do is just say, ‘It’s KIRO 7 via AP In this frame from video, workers walk with a Men- zies Aviation cargo worker after the worker was removed from the cargo hold of an Alaska Airlines airplane Monday at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. probably nothing.”’ Anthony said airports are responsible for screen- ing workers with access to planes while airlines are re- sponsible for the security of an aircraft. $ 86 DYLDWLRQ RI¿FLDO said there is no legal re- quirement that airline crews check a cargo hold before HYHU\ ÀLJKW 7KH SHUVRQ spoke on condition of ano- nymity because airline secu- rity programs contain sensi- tive information and are not public documents. Investigators are likely to examine how the worker got left on the plane with lug- gage that had been screened. “How do you have some- thing in the cargo bin that you don’t know is there?” asked John Cox, a safety consultant and airline pilot. Alaska contracts for ramp work with Menzies Aviation, an English compa- ny that performs that work at numerous airports. “Our policies and pro- cedures ... were knowingly violated by an experienced employee who hid in the hold of an aircraft and elect- ed to go to sleep,” Menzies said in a press release. “This matter remains under inter- nal investigation.” 0HQ]LHV RI¿FLDOV GH- clined to release the work- er’s name and said no de- cision had been made on whether anyone would be disciplined. The employee had worked at Menzies for 18 months and was fortunate he was trapped in a part of the plane that was pressurized and temperature-controlled IRU WKH HQWLUH ÀLJKW 7KH worker had been off work the previous two days, the company said. 7KH ÀLJKW FDUULHG passengers and six crew members. It was more than an hour behind schedule when it eventually arrived in Los Angeles, the airline said. There was no immedi- ate word on how much the delay cost the airline. Such incidents are rare but have occurred. — In 2011, a US Air- ways bag handler was ac- cidentally locked inside the cargo hold of a plane at Reagan National Airport. A passenger heard the man banging on the underside of WKHÀRRUDQGDOHUWHGDÀLJKW attendant. — In 2009, a bag han- GOHU IRU -HW%OXH ÀHZ IURP New York to Boston in the cargo hold. The 21-year-old said he fell asleep and pan- icked when he realized the SODQHZDVLQÀLJKW+HXVHG his cellphone to call the air- OLQHGXULQJWKHÀLJKW Emily Ann Smith Take Home Bleach Kits just $40 in April! D r. H ibbert D ental 1100 Southgate, Suite 3 Pendleton, OR 97801 P ILOT R OCK H IGH S CHOOL Congratulations! We are so very proud of you. Love Mom & Dad www.drhibbertdental.com • 541-612-3707 00 $ Kevin Andrews, MD, L.L.C. 25 . Private Party Only Internal Medicine (General Medical Care for Adults) We Really Care Your Name: Phone Number: Graduate's Name: Graduate's School: Message to Graduate: 27 SW Frazer, Pendleton, OR 97801 Monday - Wednesday 7:30 AM - 5 PM Open Late Thursday - Appointents Until 6:30 Closed Fridays 541-276-6244 -RKQVRQ Amtrak schedule must change SALEM — One key legislator says Oregon will continue state-supported pas- senger rail service between Portland and Eugene, despite press reports suggesting oth- erwise. Sen. Betsy Johnson, D-Scappoose, says lawmak- ers will come up with enough money to continue twice-dai- ly runs in the Willamette Val- ley. “There is no story here,” says Johnson, who’s the Sen- ate co-chairwoman of the Legislature’s joint budget subcommittee on transporta- tion and economic develop- ment. On Dec. 1, former Gov. John Kitzhaber’s budget package proposed $10.4 mil- lion in subsidies from the general fund to Amtrak to operate the service. That’s in addition to around $18 mil- lion the state kicks in from non-general fund sources. So far, the Legislature’s budget framework proposes just $5 million in state gener- al funds. But without the full $10.4 million, “we will likely have to end passenger service,” says Shelley Snow, a spokes- woman for the Oregon De- partment of Transportation. Johnson said that’s not go- ing to happen. The elimination of the service would prove embar- UDVVLQJWRVWDWHRI¿FLDOVZKR in 2009 used $38.4 million to buy two locomotives and passenger cars for two trains to service the Oregon corri- dor. They began service in 2013. Oregon contracts with Amtrak to provide the ser- vice, and has relied on feder- al subsidies to pay for part of the cost. But those subsidies have now ended. In the next two-year bud- get cycle starting July 1, the state will have to pick up the full cost of the service af- ter ticket sales, which cover about two-thirds of the bill. But before that happens, Johnson says Amtrak has to do something about the schedule to make the service more appealing to riders. 7KH¿UVWWUDLQOHDYHV3RUW- land at 6 a.m. on weekdays, too early for potential com- muters bound for work in Salem. Prior Jan. 1, 2014, the ¿UVWWUDLQOHIWDWDP² too late for commuters. “It’s all messed up,” John- son says. Tell your favorite graduate how proud you are in our Graduation 2015 special section in the East Oregonian and Hermiston Herald & share their "Then" & "Now" Photos! Publishes: May 30 th Send in your text and photos to psmootz@eastoregonian.com or bring to Paula at the East Oregonian office by May 18 th . Mailing address: Attn: Paula Smootz 211 SE Byers Ave., Pendleton, OR 97801