PENDLETON GIRLS BEAT UMATILLA Kentucky clerk released from jail NATION/8A SOCCER/1B 85/53 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2015 139th Year, No. 234 WINNER OF THE 2015 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD One dollar PENDLETON Schools push trades, tech training Bond projects coming in under budget By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian Having already hired a full- time administrator and dedicated a building for it, the Pendleton School District is going full speed ahead in bolstering its career and technical education program. Curt Thompson, who was named CTE coordinator after serving as Washington Elemen- tary School’s principal for six years, presented the district’s early ideas for the program to the Pendleton School Board at a meeting Tuesday. Pendleton High School already offers 23 CTE classes — courses that specialize in a vocational track — including food service, graphic design and marketing, but the district wants to expand the program further. As a part of the school district’s $57 million bond, West Hills Intermediate School will be turned into the Pendleton Tech and Trades Center, its working title. While not every CTE class, like metalworking, will be housed at the center, the building will focus on CTE classes in addition to hosting the district’s alternative school. District staff will try to grow their CTE offerings by applying for money from the CTE Revitalization Grant Program, a $2 million fund created by the Oregon Legislature in 2011 expressly for that purpose. Although the district already boasts a couple dozen CTE classes, Thompson sees room for improvement. In addition to their current career tracks, Thompson said See SCHOOL/8A AP Photo/Bilal Hussein Syrian refugees sit outside their tents as they cover their face with masks Tuesday during a sandstorm in a ref- ugee camp in the town of Bar Elias in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley. U.S. vows to help migrants Associated Press WASHINGTON — The Obama admin- istration wants to help its allies across the Atlantic with an escalating migrant crisis, but is unlikely to open America’s doors to vast numbers of Syrian and other refugees arriving each day by the thousands in Europe. While Germany braces for some 800,000 asylum seekers this year, many of whom are À eeing Syria’s civil war, the U.S. isn’t saying if it will increase its worldwide quota for resettling refugees from 70,000. Only a fraction of those would be Syrians, who must ¿ rst navigate a multiyear appli- cation process before learning if they can start a new life in the United States. Secretary of State John Kerry plans See MIGRANTS/8A PENDLETON Staff photo by E.J. Harris Al-packed up A pair of bushy-haired alpaca stand in a fi eld off Highway 395 on Tuesday south of Pendleton. Alpaca are a domesticated type of camelid from the Andes Mountains in Peru. Alpaca, which are smaller than their cousins the llama, were not bred as a beast of burden but rather for their soft fi ber that can be used for knitted or woven items of clothing. Man dies three days after rollover HERMISTON City compromises on landscaping rules By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian The city of Hermiston has revised its proposed land- scapinJ ordinance after ¿ eldinJ complaints from business owners who would be affected by the rules. A public hearing on the revised ordinance will take place on at the city council’s Monday meeting at 7 p.m. at city hall. The city held ¿ rm on reTuiring speci¿ c percentages of new developments to be landscaped but did respond to other concerns, like resident Don Skeen’s point that the ordinance’s provision about “preserving natural vegetation” wherever possible didn’t always translate well in real life. “In our area natural vegeta- tion is goatheads,” he said at the Aug. 24 public hearing. In response the city added new language to the ordinance specifying that natural vegeta- tion does not include noxious weeds or prohibited tree species. It also added language allowing for drought-friendly xeriscaping, clari¿ ed how enforcement will take place, put a cap on commercial zone land- scaping at 20,000 square feet if the property is more than 10 acres and changed the amount of non-plant ground cover allowed from 35 percent to 50 percent. Under the new language failure to follow the landscaping requirements would result in the same process of notice and abatement as violations of the city’s nuisance codes. At a previous public hearing Hermiston Chamber of Commerce director Debbie Pedro said the chamber had sent out a survey with a copy of the original ordinance and 71 percent of the 69 respondents agreed with implementing some sort of landscaping ordinance, although many of them had worries about the wording of the ordinance. According to a news release from the city, staff sat down with Hermiston Chamber of See HERMISTON/8A By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian Oregon State Police have identi¿ ed ¿ ve people involved in a single-vehicle rollover crash Sept. 3 on Interstate 84 in Pendleton, including one man who was ejected from the vehicle and later died from his injuries. Gary Elkins, 42, of Stayton, died Sunday while being treated at Oregon Health & Science University, Portland. Four others were also identi¿ ed by OSP on Tuesday — including three local residents — while authorities continue to search for two men who reportedly À ed the scene. State police Lt. Mike Turner of the Pendleton command said, “We have one tentatively identi¿ ed,” but that is not 100 percent certain. He also said it is unlikely the public could help in this case. The man See WRECK/8A Salting the Earth Drilling boom means more harmful spills By JOHN FLESHER AP Environmental Writer AP Photo/Charlie Riedel In this April 22 photo, Wesley Graves looks over a crater left after a saltwater disposal pipeline ruptured on his ranch near Snyder, Texas. Equipment failure is a major cause of oilfi eld wastewater spills. CROSSROADS, N.M. — Carl Johnson and son Justin, who have complained for years about spills of oil¿ eld wastewater where they raise cattle in the high plains of New Mexico, stroll across a 1 1/2-acre patch of sandy soil — lifeless, save for a scattering of stunted weeds. Five years ago, a broken pipe soaked the land with as much as 420,000 gallons of wastewater, a salty drilling byproduct that killed the shrubs and grass. It was among dozens of spills that have damaged the Johnsons’ grazing lands and made them worry about their ground- water. “If we lose our water,” Justin Johnson said, “that ruins our ranch.” Their plight illustrates a side effect of oil and gas production that has worsened with the past decade’s drilling boom: spills of wastewater that foul the land, kill wild- life and threaten freshwater supplies. An Associated Press See SPILLS/8A