East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, July 22, 2015, Image 2

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    Page 2A
NORTHWEST
East Oregonian
Wednesday, July 22, 2015
Oregon beefs up cybersecurity after breaches
for $16.9 million to improve
management of major IT
projects and state cyberse-
Oregon’s administrative curity, in the wake of several
agency is preparing to hire KLJKSUR¿OH SURMHFW IDLOXUHV
24 new IT employees and and data breaches. The
upgrade computer systems, agency could still receive
after lawmakers included the full amount it originally
approximately
$15.7 requested. Matt Shelby, a
million for the initiatives spokesman for the Depart-
in the new two-year state ment of Administrative
Services, said lawmakers
budget.
It was a victory for DVNHG DJHQF\ RI¿FLDOV WR
RI¿FLDOV DW WKH 'HSDUWPHQW provide an update on their
of Administrative Services, progress during the short
who asked the Legislature legislative session in 2016.
By HILLARY BORRUD
Capital Bureau
Gov.
Kate
Brown
announced earlier this year
that hackers accessed meta
data about the movement
of information across the
state computer network,
and attackers also broke
into databases at the Secre-
WDU\ RI 6WDWH¶V 2I¿FH DQG
the Oregon Employment
Department in 2014.
Twelve new employees
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LGHQWL¿HG LQ DXGLWV RI VWDWH
cybersecurity and IT oper-
ations, which the state has
been slow to address. For
example, the state has yet
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ELOLWLHVDXGLWRUVLGHQWL¿HGDW
the state data center in 2012.
The data center is housed at
the Department of Admin-
istrative Services, which
is the central technology
provider for state govern-
ment and some municipal
governments in Oregon.
“That work is going
to start soon, as early as
August,” Shelby said.
After Brown revealed the
BRIEFLY
Oregon woman
gets 7 years for
trying to hire killer
latest data breach in March,
she asked the state to hire
the independent expert to
review management and
vulnerabilities at the data
center. Chris Pair said that
review is underway, but the
contractor is still working
on it. The contractor has
¿QLVKHG JDWKHULQJ LQIRU-
mation on the state’s past
and current technology
management practices, and
is now working on recom-
mendations for the future,
Pair said.
BAKER CITY (AP) —
A Baker City woman who
tried to hire someone to kill
her ex-boyfriend has been
sentenced to seven years in
prison.
The Baker City Herald
reports that 24-year-old
Emily Munsell pleaded
guilty last week to criminal
conspiracy and solicitation
to commit murder.
Munsell was arrested
in December after a police
detective pretended to
be a hit man. Police said
Munsell offered to pay
the detective to kill her
ex-boyfriend, against whom
Munsell had a restraining
order.
A report from the
detective says Munsell
offered $80 as a down
payment, and $1,000 after
she got her income tax
refund.
Police became involved
after Munsell’s cousin
reported that Munsell had
approached him about
making her ex-boyfriend
“disappear.”
Forestry Board weighs
bigger logging buffers
to cool streams
GRANTS PASS (AP) —
A state board is considering
how much to increase the
numbers of trees that must
be left standing along small
and medium streams on
private timberlands to shade
the water and keep it cool for
salmon.
A study known as
RipStream has shown
logging buffers on small and
medium-sized streams under
the Oregon Forest Practices
Act don’t do enough to
maintain shade, allowing
water temperatures to rise
more than twice the stan-
dard of 0.54 degrees set by
the Oregon Environmental
Quality Commission.
The choice for the Oregon
Board of Forestry, which is
scheduled to vote Thursday
in Salem, is that the more
trees left standing, the better
the chance of meeting the
temperature standard, but
WKH ORZHU WKH SUR¿WV IRU
timberland owners. The
board has the latitude to
weigh the economic costs
against the ecological costs.
Current rules set buffers
of 20 feet, with logging
allowed
within
them.
Buffers up to 100 feet are
being considered. If they
were imposed throughout
western Oregon streams
with salmon, steelhead and
bull trout, private timber-
land owners could lose up
to $227 million in land and
timber values, according to
the Department of Forestry.
The action is part of a
larger battle over the Oregon
Forest Practices Act. When
LWZDV¿UVWHQDFWHGLQ
it made Oregon a leader in
SURWHFWLQJ ¿VK ZLOGOLIH DQG
water on private timberlands,
but it has since fallen behind
logging rules in Washington,
Idaho and California.
While federally owned
forests account for 60
percent of forest lands in
Oregon, they contribute only
14 percent of the statewide
harvest of 4.13 billion board
feet because of restrictions
RQ KDUYHVWV WR SURWHFW ¿VK
wildlife and water. Privately
owned forests account for 34
percent of the land, but with
larger clear-cuts and smaller
stream buffers allowed, they
account for 64 percent of the
timber harvest.
Federal regulators ruled
in January that Oregon
ORJJLQJ UXOHV GR QRW VXI¿-
FLHQWO\ SURWHFW ¿VK DQG
water in western Oregon
from pollution caused by
clear-cutting too close to
streams, runoff from old
logging roads, landslides
and sites sprayed with
pesticides.
NOAA Fisheries Service
and the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency have
been in a long-running nego-
tiation with Oregon over
meeting the standards of the
federal Coastal Nonpoint
Pollution Program. At stake
are millions of dollars in
federal grants.
AP Photo, File
In this 1980 file photo, Howard Hughes’ wooden flying boat the “Spruce Goose,”
is towed by a tugboat from its hangar in Long Beach, Calif.
PORTLAND (AP) —
Legendary mogul Howard
Hughes’ Spruce Goose, a
gigantic historic wooden
airplane whose fate was
PLUHGLQD¿QDQFLDOGLVSXWH
will permanently stay in
Oregon.
The Evergreen Aviation
and Space Museum has
reached an agreement with
the Aero Club of Southern
California to take full
ownership of the plane in
the coming weeks, said
California attorney Robert
E. Lyon, who represents the
Aero Club. Lyon said the
agreement was reached in
early July.
The
McMinnville,
2UHJRQEDVHGQRQSUR¿WKDV
been home to the Spruce
Goose for more than two
decades, but it still owed a
payment to the California
club from which it bought
the plane.
The details of the agree-
ment were not disclosed.
But the dispute centered
on the original purchase
terms, which in addition
to the $500,000 price tag
also included a percentage
of the museum’s earnings
from displaying the Spruce
Goose.
“It’s comforting to know
LWZLOO¿QDOO\EHLQLWVUHVWLQJ
place where it will be prop-
erly taken care of,” Lyon
said.
'XEEHGDÀ\LQJERDWWKH
Spruce Goose has a 320-foot
wing span — larger than a
(DVW2UHJRQLDQ(USPS 164-980)LVSXEOLVKHGGDLO\H[FHSW6XQGD\0RQGD\
DQG'HFE\WKH(20HGLD*URXS6(%\HUV$YH3HQGOHWRQ25
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(DVW2UHJRQLDQ6(%\HUV$YH3HQGOHWRQ25
Single copy price:
7XHVGD\WKURXJK)ULGD\6DWXUGD\
Copyright © 2015, EO Media Group
TODAY
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
Mostly sunny
Partly sunny and
nice
Mostly sunny and
pleasant
83° 56°
84° 60°
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
Partly sunny and
pleasant
An afternoon
t-storm possible
PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST
87° 64°
87° 62°
81° 56°
HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST
86° 56°
88° 59°
PENDLETON
through 3 p.m. yesterday
TEMPERATURE
HIGH
LOW
88°
90°
114° (1905)
64°
60°
42° (1934)
PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 3 p.m.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Last year to date
Normal year to date
0.00"
Trace
0.21"
5.00"
7.52"
7.79"
HERMISTON
through 3 p.m. yesterday
TEMPERATURE
Yesterday
Normals
Records
HIGH
LOW
93°
90°
108° (1946)
59°
59°
43° (1929)
PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 3 p.m.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Last year to date
Normal year to date
0.00"
0.09"
0.15"
3.25"
4.21"
5.85"
SUN AND MOON
Sunrise today
Sunset tonight
Moonrise today
Moonset today
First
Full
July 23
July 31
5:27 a.m.
8:36 p.m.
12:10 p.m.
11:42 p.m.
Last
New
Aug 6
89° 60°
84° 55°
Seattle
74/58
ALMANAC
Yesterday
Normals
Records
90° 62°
Aug 14
Spokane
Wenatchee
80/56
85/62
Tacoma
Moses
73/54
Lake
Pullman
Aberdeen Olympia
Yakima 85/57
78/45
68/54
73/52
87/54
Longview
Kennewick Walla Walla
71/52
85/62 Lewiston
87/58
Astoria
87/59
69/56
Portland
Enterprise
Hermiston
77/57
Pendleton 79/50
The Dalles 86/56
83/56
81/60
La Grande
Salem
80/48
79/55
Albany
Corvallis 79/52
80/53
John Day
81/49
Ontario
Eugene
Bend
89/61
81/53
76/44
Caldwell
Burns
87/61
82/46
Medford
87/58
REGIONAL FORECAST
Eastern Washington: Partly sunny today,
but sunnier across the south. Mainly clear
tonight.
Cascades: Partly sunny today; pleasant in
central parts. Clear to partly cloudy tonight.
Western Washington: Mostly cloudy today;
a shower in spots at the coast. Mostly cloudy
tonight.
Northern California: A thunderstorm in the
interior mountains today; clouds, then sun
at the coast. Partly sunny in central parts.
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Hi
69
81
76
70
82
79
81
81
86
81
82
80
74
87
65
67
89
87
83
77
81
79
80
78
76
85
87
Lo
56
46
44
54
46
50
53
51
56
49
46
48
38
58
53
56
61
55
56
57
42
55
56
46
55
62
54
W
c
t
s
pc
t
pc
pc
s
s
t
t
s
s
pc
c
pc
pc
s
s
pc
s
pc
pc
s
pc
s
pc
Today
Beijing
Hong Kong
Jerusalem
London
Mexico City
Moscow
Paris
Rome
Seoul
Sydney
Tokyo
Hi
69
82
76
69
82
78
83
83
88
81
81
81
75
88
65
67
89
89
84
81
81
83
81
79
80
86
88
NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY
Thu.
Lo
56
43
46
54
44
48
51
52
59
51
45
46
40
58
54
54
58
58
60
56
43
54
58
47
55
64
55
W
c
t
pc
pc
t
t
pc
pc
s
t
s
t
pc
s
pc
s
t
s
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
Hi
87
89
90
72
72
71
80
92
87
64
89
Lo
72
80
69
54
55
55
60
73
75
49
78
W
t
r
s
sh
pc
pc
pc
s
t
pc
pc
Hi
88
88
93
70
73
69
75
93
86
63
86
Thu.
Lo
71
81
70
53
55
57
59
73
76
48
78
W
pc
t
s
pc
t
pc
pc
s
t
pc
t
WINDS
Boardman
Pendleton
Today
Thursday
WSW 7-14
W 8-16
WSW 8-16
WSW 8-16
UV INDEX TODAY
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Coastal Oregon: Times of clouds and sun
today, but low clouds followed by sunshine
in the south.
Eastern and Central Oregon: Partly sunny
today; a thunderstorm in spots.
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WORLD CITIES
(in mph)
Klamath Falls
82/46
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Today
Astoria
Baker City
Bend
Brookings
Burns
Enterprise
Eugene
Heppner
Hermiston
John Day
Klamath Falls
La Grande
Meacham
Medford
Newport
North Bend
Ontario
Pasco
Pendleton
Portland
Redmond
Salem
Spokane
Ukiah
Vancouver
Walla Walla
Yakima
2
5
7
The East Oregonian
works hard to be accurate
and sincerely regrets any
errors. If you notice a
mistake in the paper, please
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REGIONAL CITIES
Forecast
Corrections
NEWS
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Multimedia consultants
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ZHHNV

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To subscribe, call 1-800-522-0255
or go online to www.eastoregonian.com
and click on ‘Subscribe’
IRRWEDOO ¿HOG ² DQG ÀRDWV
that allow it to land on water.
Originally envisioned as
SDUWRIDÀHHWRIÀ\LQJERDWV
that would deliver cargo
and troops over the heads of
U-boats during World War
II, the Spruce Goose was
built in 1947 by Hughes
with $18 million in federal
funds. Hughes, an oil and
¿OP LQGXVWU\ W\FRRQ DOVR
spent $7 million of his own
money on the project.
The plane was made
almost entirely of birch
wood — a material that was
not crucial to the war effort.
Hughes, a passionate
DYLDWRUÀHZLWRQO\RQFHRQ
Nov. 2, 1947, in a mile-long
WHVWÀLJKWDERYH&DOLIRUQLD¶V
Long Beach Harbor.
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for same-day redelivery
— Founded Oct. 16, 1875 —
www.eastoregonian.com
MEDFORD (AP) — A
Medford man is facing
charges after he attempted
to rob a convenience store
with an unlikely weapon:
his hands.
KDRV-TV reports that
the 60-year-old man held
his hand in the shape of
a gun and asked the store
clerk for $50 and a pack of
cigarettes.
Medford police say
the store clerk was not
convinced and that the man
left without anything for his
efforts. He was arrested on
suspicious of third-degree
robbery.
Museum to take ownership of
historic Howard Hughes plane
Subscriber services:
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211 S.E. Byers Ave., Pendleton 541-276-2211
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Man accused of
trying to rob 7-11
with ¿nger gun
7
5
2
8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m.
0-2, Low
3-5, Moderate 6-7, High;
8-10, Very High;
11+, Extreme
The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ num-
ber, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
-10s
-0s
showers t-storms
0s
10s
rain
20s
flurries
30s
40s
snow
ice
50s
60s
cold front
70s
80s
90s
100s
warm front stationary front
110s
high
low
National Summary: Less humid air will expand from the Midwest to the Northeast today,
as the South remains hot and humid. Storms will stretch from the Southeast states to the
Plains and will dot the interior West.
Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states)
High 104° in Augusta, Ga.
Low 34° in Pinedale, Wyo.
NATIONAL CITIES
Today
Albuquerque
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Birmingham
Boise
Boston
Charleston, SC
Charleston, WV
Chicago
Cleveland
Dallas
Denver
Detroit
El Paso
Fairbanks
Fargo
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Jacksonville
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Hi
90
88
83
86
91
90
87
82
96
81
81
76
99
88
79
96
75
85
90
97
80
95
82
99
92
80
Lo
66
72
68
63
62
74
64
65
76
61
64
61
81
59
62
74
55
67
77
78
62
75
67
76
77
66
W
t
t
s
s
t
t
pc
s
t
s
s
s
s
t
s
t
r
t
sh
s
s
t
t
s
t
pc
Hi
90
86
81
84
81
90
87
79
95
83
83
80
100
93
82
98
74
87
89
99
82
92
85
99
96
79
Thur.
Lo
65
73
67
65
59
75
59
64
75
61
64
62
81
60
63
75
54
69
77
78
63
75
72
75
78
65
W
c
t
s
s
t
t
pc
s
t
pc
s
s
s
s
pc
t
pc
s
pc
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pc
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pc
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Today
Hi
Louisville
85
Memphis
91
Miami
91
Milwaukee
80
Minneapolis
83
Nashville
86
New Orleans
91
New York City
85
Oklahoma City
93
Omaha
83
Philadelphia
86
Phoenix
104
Portland, ME
81
Providence
84
Raleigh
88
Rapid City
89
Reno
84
Sacramento
87
St. Louis
83
Salt Lake City
87
San Diego
77
San Francisco
71
Seattle
74
Tucson
99
Washington, DC 89
Wichita
86
Lo
67
78
78
64
66
73
78
68
75
65
68
83
58
64
70
62
59
60
69
69
69
60
58
76
70
72
W
pc
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t
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pc
pc
s
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s
pc
s
t
s
pc
pc
pc
pc
c
pc
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Hi
84
93
92
80
85
84
93
83
97
87
85
104
77
82
81
95
84
86
85
88
76
70
77
96
87
94
Thur.
Lo
66
77
78
64
69
71
78
69
75
72
69
84
58
63
68
63
55
58
70
67
67
59
57
76
71
77
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain,
sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
W
pc
t
t
s
s
t
t
s
s
pc
s
pc
s
s
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s
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