FARM CITY PRO RODEO KICKS OFF SPORTS/1B Whistleblower settles with Hanford for $4.1M NORTHWEST/2A Staff photo by E.J. Harris THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2015 139th Year, No. 215 WINNER OF THE 2015 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD PENDLETON City could split street funding One dollar ROCK & ROLL CAMP X By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian Following months of debate, the Pendleton City Council may have coalesced around a way to spend the potential $1 million the city could get annually from a 5-cent gas tax and a $5 per month street utility fee. The council came to a consensus regarding a ratio for street spending at a work session Tuesday: The two new revenue sources would go toward residential streets, with 70 percent reserved for streets in good condition and 30 percent earmarked for poorly rated roads. The $300,000 the city currently receives from the state and federal governments would continue to pay for repairs of Pendleton’s most traveled streets. The city council seemed much more receptive to the ratio than city staff’s initial proposal, which designated the utility fee for well-maintained streets and the gas tax for roads in bad condition, roughly a 50/50 split. See PENDLETON/8A Staff photo by E.J. Harris Max Verdin, 18, of Pendleton warms up on the bass guitar before a recording session in the old Christian Science building during Rock & Roll Camp X on Wednesday in Pendleton. Idaho, Oregon push new way to SD\IRUZLOG¿UHV Ten years old and rockin’ a new venue By JONATHAN BACH East Oregonian By KIMBERLEE KRUESI Associated Press BOISE, Idaho — A bipartisan effort seeking to change the way the country pays to ¿ ght disastrous wild¿ res has been renewed after stalling repeatedly from lawmakers hesitant to approve letting ¿ re¿ ghting agencies use dollars meant for natural disaster rather than money set aside for ¿ re prevention. Over the years, ¿ re¿ ghting agencies have been forced to borrow money set aside for forest thinning and other ¿ re prevention proMects as wild¿ re seasons have ballooned in activity and costs. Republican Sens. Mike Crapo and Jim Risch of Idaho and Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon announced Wednesday that they are getting ready to pitch bipartisan legislation to Congress this fall. ³This is not a partisan issue,´ Risch said at a news conference at the National Interagency Fire Center in Boise. “Our eastern and southern Staff photo by E.J. Harris Joseph Olson, 12, of Pendleton plays the drums with councilor Sarah Fennell of Portland during a rhythm class Wednesday at Rock & Roll Camp X in Pendleton. See WILDFIRES/8A Pendleton Center for the Arts Rock and Roll campers take over our podcast this week. Have a listen at www.eastoregonian.com/ eo/podcasts Sophie Arnold gently lifts up her voice in what used to be a church. The guitar chords are warm, the lyrics somber. The 15-year-old’s music, born of what she calls a ³personal conÀ ict,´ rises over maroon carpets with crumbling paint chips, up to a dilapidated stained “It’s all about glass window and into a microphone set up in front creating your of her. Just feet away, own stuff, camp counselor Levi Cecil of Portland, works which I think the soundboard while is fun.” others listen. This week marks the — Malcom Luis, tenth anniversary of the Rock & Roll Camper Pendleton Center for the from Portland Arts Rock & Roll Camp. With that birthday came an addition to the yearly program’s operation: space at the old Christian Science church, 13 S.W. Byers Ave., where counselors teach budding teenage musicians about studio recording. Earlier this week, camp organizers transformed the space into a studio replete with guitars, See CAMP/8A Hermiston couple wins fair barbecue contest By SEAN HART East Oregonian Cooking for the entire Hermiston High School football team paid off for a local grilling team. Mike and Deannie Simon, from team Smokin’ Hot & Saucy, placed in all four divisions at the Umatilla County Fair Backyard BBQ Contest Wednesday and took home the top prize of a new grill. Competing against more than 10 other teams, the couple won the beef division with a tri-tip recipe Mike Simon has had many opportunities to perfect. He said he cooked meals of roughly 100 tri-tips multiple times last year: for several Hermiston football games in the regular season and all of the postseason games. “I use Spade L seasoning. You can get it basically at any grocery store,´ he said. “I Must a tenderizer and then I smoke it BBQ contest winners Overall and beef division winner: Smokin’ Hot & Saucy (Mike and Deannie Simon) Lamb division winner: Cones- toga (Jeff and Denise Marks) Potato division and onion divi- sion winner: Die Hard BBQ (Tim Watts, Bob Crow and Corey Ashbeck) really heavy for about two hours at 225 degrees, and it Must comes out perfect every time.´ Simon said the key to grilling is simplicity. The type of grill used isn’t particularly important either, he said. Although he now has several grills, including a four-rack trailer that can cook See BBQ/8A Staff photo by Sean Hart Mike Simon cuts up the tri-tip that won the beef division and helped propel team Smokin’ Hot & Saucy to the overall victory in the Umatilla County Fair Backyard BBQ Contest Wednesday.