Page 8A East Oregonian WHITE: Promised to never again cause harm to anyone Continued from 1A And when it was his turn to speak, Jacob White choked up and was almost inaudible as he apologized. Alexander VDLG :KLWH LV ¿OOHG ZLWK UH- gret. He also read a letter of apology from White: “I wish I could take it all back and be man enough to make the right choice ... I am ashamed of myself.” White in the letter also promised to never again cause harm to anyone. The Key family declined to make statements to the court. Brauer said in spite of what anyone said, he was sticking to the deal White and the state made months ago. White received seven- and-half years on the robbery and 34 months for the bur- glary. Four of those months run concurrent with the other sentence, the rest are consec- utive to make for 10 years even. White also will be under supervision for three years after he is free. The judge also said he hoped White lives up to his promise. ——— Contact Phil Wright at pwright@eastoregonian.com or 541-966-0833. PENDLETON: Current business license doesn’t allow businesses that are in violation of federal law Continued from 1A Chief among the council’s changes to the law was re- moving language that would have created regulations for medical marijuana retailers. Councilman Chuck Wood said he wanted to wait for recreational marijuana reg- ulations from the Oregon Liquor Control Commission before the council made a decision. The council also restored language in the ordinance banning medical marijua- na dispensaries from within 1,000 feet of a public park. Because the park radius would effectively cover the downtown area, the coun- cil also removed the com- mission’s ban on marijuana dispensaries in Pendleton’s downtown. The city’s new draft or- dinance also disallows grow operations in exclusive farm use zones. Wood said the council would need to adopt a com- panion ordinance to amend the city’s business license rules to account for dispensa- ries’ time of operation, signs and other factors. Because the city’s cur- rent business license doesn’t allow businesses that are in violation of federal law, in- terim city attorney Nancy Kerns said a prohibition of dispensaries would stay in effect despite the moratorium expiring May 1. After the meeting, City Manager Robb Corbett said the absence of marijuana reg- ulations after the moratorium expiration shouldn’t have any legal repercussions. While most of the meet- ing’s audience left after an earlier discussion of the Don Requa statue (see Thursday’s East Oregonian), a few resi- dents stayed behind to offer their opinions. Resident Mike Johnston said he supported restoring the park’s 1,000 yard perim- eter, adding that any marijua- na facility near a place where youth congregated offered a tacit endorsement of using the drug. Jed Hummel gave a dif- ferent perspective. The Pendleton business owner and youth pastor said his daughter’s neurological disorder necessitated the use of medical marijuana and was supportive of a law that would allow dispensaries in town. Hummel reminded the council that there have been no recorded incidences of deaths caused by marijuana overdoses over the past few years and marijuana dispensa- ries have multiple safeguards in place before customers can purchase marijuana. “You can’t walk into it like you would a Rite Aid,” he said. On another matter, the council also deferred making a decision on an ordinance that would prohibit peo- ple from obstructing public walkways. The council unanimously voted to table the issue until the next meeting, allowing Councilwoman Jane Hill, Police Chief Stuart Roberts DQG RI¿FLDOV DQG VWXGHQWV from Pendleton High School to meet on the subject. The proposal was born from the trend of high school students congregating in the middle of Bedford Bridge, obstructing the pathway. Roberts said the students not only block the path for pe- GHVWULDQVEXWDOVRDWWUDFW¿JKWV and other illicit activities. The police chief said he was inspired to extend the proposed law to other walk- ways because he imagined the students would migrate to other public places if the city focused solely on the bridge. Roberts also wanted to use the ordinance to address transients and protesters that might obstruct sidewalks, walking paths or bridges. Resident Mike Navratil said he didn’t see why the FLW\RI¿FLDOVQHHGHGWRFUHDWH a new law when they could just increase police presence by the bridge. Wednesday, April 22, 2015 OFF PAGE ONE Teacher confronted by drill gunman sues district PORTLAND (AP) — A former grade school teach- er in eastern Oregon says she was so scared when a man burst into her class- room and pulled the trigger on the pistol he pointed at her face that she suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder and has sued the GLVWULFW¶V VDIHW\ RI¿FHU DQG others responsible for a sur- prise “active shooter” drill. The episode in April 2013 at Pine Eagle School District No. 61, a charter school in Halfway, fol- lowed the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown, Con- necticut, which left 20 chil- dren and six adults dead. At the time, Pine Eagle RI¿FLDOVVDLGWKH\FRQGXFW- ed the drill to see how many of the school’s staff would survive an onslaught. Two men conducted it on a Fri- for homeowners. The city also aims to reduce commer- of waste a week, adding up to millions cial waste by 90 percent by 2030 by adopt- upon millions of tons a year,” de Blasio ing a program similar to what is being used said in a statement to The Associated with residential buildings. That could also Press. “To be a truly sustainable city, we mean tax incentives for businesses who need to tackle this challenge head on.” SDUWLFLSDWHDQG¿QHVIRUWKRVHZKRGRQ¶W For decades, the city’s trash has been And while the de Blasio administration exported by rail or barge and sent to fa- stopped short of endorsing a City Council cilities in South Carolina, Virginia, New bill that proposes a 10-cent fee for use of Jersey, Pennsylvania or upstate New York. SODVWLF EDJV RI¿FLDOV VDLG WKDW UHGXFLQJ The new plan would eliminate almost all their use is a priority and that they would of the garbage exports, which currently coordinate efforts with the council. cost more than $350 million a year. A spokeswoman for de Blasio said The amount of waste produced by the some of the funding for the Zero Waste city has fallen 14 percent since 2005 due program would be revealed in next to an increase in recycling, and a key com- month’s budget proposal but noted there ponent of the Zero Waste plan is to bolster would also be cost savings due to the dra- that output by simplifying the process. matic reduction of garbage being shipped Currently, residential buildings have out of state. two types of recycling bins. The city’s new The OneNYC presentation, which also single-stream plan, already used by other is going to include other capital expendi- cities, would consolidate all of the recy- tures meant to improve the city’s aging cling into one type of bin by 2020. infrastructure, is meant to build on de Organics — food scraps, yard waste Blasio’s environmental record, which in- and other things that cannot be recy- cludes a ban on Styrofoam boxes and the cled — make up 31 percent of the city’s goal to reduce carbon emissions from city residential waste stream. A program to buildings by 80 percent by 2050. collect that material directly from resi- Environmental groups briefed on the dents’ homes is being expanded to near- plan Tuesday applauded its wide-ranging ly 200,000 residents by year’s end, and scope. RI¿FLDOVZDQWWRVHUYHHYHU\KRPHLQWKH “We see cities all over the world strug- city by the end of 2018. The city, which gling with waste,” said Michael Berkow- has about 8.5 million residents, also will itz, president of 100 Resilient Cities. “A offer economic incentives to participate, PRUHHI¿FLHQWFLW\LVDPRUHUHVLOLHQWFLW\ including potentially a property tax rebate and that means it’s a stronger city.” Continued from 1A MARIJUANA: Council voted unanimously Continued from 1A tify at the public hearing was Steve Rodarte, who said he wasn’t necessarily against the extension of the morato- rium but urged the city coun- cil to use the time wisely to study the law and the facts of medical marijuana. “Really look into this and understand there is some medical value there,” he said. He said he understood that sometimes people abused the system, but other dispensary owners follow the rules. The city should be careful not to squash free enterprise, he said. “There are state guide- lines there and as long as they are being met I don’t see it as being an issue,” he said. After Rodarte’s testimo- ny the council voted unani- mously to pass an ordinance extending its moratorium on medical marijuana dispensa- ries within the city limits for another 120 days. ——— Contact Jade McDowell at jmcdowell@eastorego- nian.com or 541-564-4536. we’re making a difference. 15 years – 100,000 strong! Many thanks to our community of more than 100,000 customers, including the business partners listed below, for stimulating renewable energy development and paving the way for a more sustainable future. We’re celebrating 15 years of Blue Sky SM customers who have supported billions of kilowatt-hours of renewable energy to-date, which is equivalent to taking 621,000 cars off the road. Join them today! Learn more at pacifi cpower.net/bluesky or call 1-800-769-3717. incident in the Mediterranean that we have ever recorded,” the U.N. refugee agency said. Just 28 migrants, all men and boys in their teens, survived. And despite the enormous toll, only 24 bodies were recovered — frequently the case when ships sink on the high seas, especially when most passengers are locked below deck, as was the case Saturday night. Barhyte Specialty Foods, Inc. Blue Mountain Community College City of Pendleton Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation Dr. Gary F. Zimmerman East Oregonian Fishtrap, Inc. Fox Harvesting Of Oregon Great Pacifi c Wine & Coffee Co. High Lostine Maint. Comm. Hill Meat Company Idaho Power Kelly Lumber Supply, Inc. Saudi-led coalition says ‘Decisive Storm’ campaign against rebels over NAJRAN, Saudi Arabia (AP) — Saudi Arabia declared an end on Tuesday to its nearly monthlong “Decisive Storm” air campaign against Houthi rebels in Yemen, and announced the start of a more limited military campaign aimed at preventing the rebels from operating. Speaking at a news conference in Riyadh, spokesman for the Saudi-led coalition Brig. Gen. Ahmed Asiri said the campaign of heavy airstrikes would be scaled down, but did not FRQ¿UPZKHWKHUWKH\ZRXOG stop altogether. ¿UH EDFN DW 7KDWFKHU DQG school board member John Minarich, the second man with weapon and similar attire. Minarich was described in court papers as the prin- cipal and president of Al- pine Alarm. The lawsuit said McLean was so shaken she “contin- ued to relive it and try to make sense of it, but could not. Ms. McLean could not sleep, and remained anx- ious and vigilant. When she drifted off to sleep, she ex- perienced nightmares and sweating.” She tried to return to work but was unable to, and doctors and a psychologist have diagnosed her with PTSD, the lawsuit said. ——— Information from: The Oregonian, http://www.or- egonlive.com Together © 2015 Pacific Power CATANIA, Sicily (AP) — Rescue seemed so close at hand. A ship with experience plucking migrants from unseaworthy smuggler’s boats had arrived soon after the distress call went out. %XWWKHQWKH¿VKLQJWUDZOHU¶V navigator made a maneuver that would seal the fate of the 850 people crammed inside: Instead of easing up alongside the merchant ship, he rammed it. Relief gave way to panic. 7HUUL¿HGPLJUDQWVUXVKHGWR one side, the trawler seized and capsized. What might have been another rescue in a period of unprecedented migrant crossings instead turned into a horrifying statistic: The deadliest shipwreck ever in the Mediterranean Sea. The accounts of survivors who arrived early Tuesday in this Sicilian port 48 hours after the disaster offered new details of the tragedy. The traumatized witnesses corroborated a death toll of at least 800, making the capsizing “the deadliest board members, and Alpine Alarm Communications and Construction, which put in the school’s security system. Among its allega- tions are civil assault and emotional distress. It seeks economic and punitive damages. Representatives of the school declined to com- ment. The company de- clined to comment to The Oregonian and couldn’t be reached by The Associated Press on Tuesday. Halfway is a town of about 300 people south of the Wallowa Mountains. Members of the dis- trict’s Safety Committee QRWL¿HG %DNHU &RXQW\ DX- thorities in advance so they wouldn’t respond to a call from the school, and the VKHULII¶V RI¿FH UHYLHZHG concealed-carry permits to ensure no teachers would EARTH: New York garbage exports cost more than $350 million a year WORLD BRIEFLY Smuggler’s faulty maneuver turned would-be rescue into terrible shipwreck day when students were home for a teacher in-ser- YLFH GD\ 2I¿FLDOV MXGJHG that a real attack would have left most of the 15 teachers dead. The federal court lawsuit says Linda McLean was sitting at her desk when she heard a clatter and run- ning feet, and then a man in black hoodie and goggles burst through the door, The Oregonian reported. He leveled a pistol at McLean’s face and pulled the trigger. The teach- HU KHDUG JXQ¿UH VPHOOHG smoke and felt her heart racing, the lawsuit says. “You’re dead,” the gun- man said, and stalked out, according to the lawsuit. McLean’s lawsuit names as defendants the safety RI¿FHU 6KDZQ 7KDWFKHU as well as two school ad- ministrators, seven school Lindell Auto Salvage Lindell Property Oregon Military Department Pendleton Chamber of Commerce Pendleton Flour Mills Pendleton School District Smith Frozen Foods, Inc. The Boat Yard Threemile Canyon Farms Top Hatt Travel Umpqua Dairy Wallowa Lake Camp Wallowa Resources