BULLDOGS BEAT BUCKS VOLLEYBALL/1B 69/54 Nuclear smugglers sought terrorist buyers WORLD/8A WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2015 139th Year, No. 254 WINNER OF THE 2015 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD PENDLETON One dollar AP Q&A Council agrees to lease Who has land to $45M data center the right By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian The Pendleton City Council unanimously approved a ground lease for a proposed $45 million data center on Airport Road, but it will be a while before the city ZLOOVHHWKHEHQH¿WV The 30-year lease gives Makad Corp. of Vancouver, Wash. access to nearly 12 acres on Airport Road halfway between Northwest 56th Street and Stage Gulch Road. In a report, Pendleton Economic Development Director Steve Chrisman wrote that the city could receive $295,970 in tax revenue per year for the next 25-27 years, plus rental fees of at least $826,612 spread out over 28 years. The lease also includes several incentives, including no UHQWIRUWKH¿UVWWZR\HDUV,WDOVR includes a 5 percent reduction in permitting fees per job, with a 50 percent reduction ceiling and temporary tax abatement through the city’s enterprise zone program if Makad Corp. TXDOL¿HV ZKLFK &KULVPDQ VDLG will most likely happen. See DATA/10A Staff photo by E.J. Harris Sen. Bill Hansell talks about “the good, the bad, and the ugly” as he describes the legislative session Tuesday during a town hall meeting with Rep. Greg Barreto at BMCC in Pendleton. Let’s talk taxes Rep. Barreto, Sen. Hansell conclude trio of town halls in Pendleton By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian Staff photo by E.J. Harris Rep. Greg Barreto talks about freshman year in the Oregon House of Representatives as Sen. Bill Hansell looks on Tuesday during a town hall meeting at BMCC. Eastern Oregon residents concerned about higher state fees, corporate taxes and a minimum wage found a little solace Tuesday night from Sen. Bill Hansell of Athena and Rep. Greg Barreto of Cove. The pair of Republican lawmakers looked back at the 2015 Oregon Legislature and what is ahead in the 2016 short session and beyond. The event at the Bob Clapp Theatre at Blue Mountain Community College concluded a trio of town halls in Pendleton. About 30 people attended. Hansell and Barreto recounted how they viewed the session that ended July 11. But a majority of the time was spent answering audience questions. Paula Hall said she worked with a local community action program and asked Barreto how to make “Oregon a state of hope” for lower income workers. See TAXES/10A HERMISTON Lighting up downtown Festival lights to get second life as musical Main Street show By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian Decorations from the defunct Festival of Lights are getting a new life as a musical show planned for downtown Hermiston. Parks and Recreation director Larry Fetter said he has obtained permission to drape the old Roemarks building on the corner of Northeast Second and Main streets in lights and choreo- graph them to music, creating a “high-energy” show that he hopes will draw Christmas shoppers downtown. “I hope people say, ‘We have 25 minutes to kill before the next show, let’s look around,’” he said. Fetter said he wants to block off the section of Second Street next to the currently empty Roemarks building during December to add bleachers for viewing and a tent where Santa can visit. The idea would be a trial run of sorts for the city’s plans to eventually turn that block into a “festival street” with landscaping, brickwork and decorative gates to close See LIGHTS/10A Staff photo by Jade McDowell It’s early October, but city of Hermis- ton employees began decorating Main Street for the holidays. to die? SAN DIEGO (AP) — California’s governor has signed a bill that will give the terminally ill in the nation’s most populous state the right to end their lives with drugs prescribed by a doctor. Right-to-die advocates have been pushing for decades to get such legislation passed in the state and say Monday’s signing is a major victory that could spur other states to follow suit. Opponents disagree and point to the fact that similar bills in at least a half dozen state have stalled in the past year. The Catholic Church and advocates for people with disabilities say it legalizes premature suicide and puts terminally ill patients at risk for coerced death. &DOLIRUQLDLVWKH¿IWKVWDWHWRDOORZ doctors to assist such deaths. Here is a look at the states where the practice is legal. Which state has the longest history with such a law? After a ballot initia- tive went into effect in 1998, Oregon EHFDPHWKH¿UVWVWDWHWRPDNHLWOHJDOIRU a doctor to prescribe a life-ending drug to a terminally ill patient of sound mind who makes the request. Another ballot initiative in neighboring Washington made it legal in that state in 2008. In Montana, a 2009 state Supreme Court ruling found that nothing in state law expressly prohibits physician-assisted suicide, and that doctors could use a patient’s request for life-ending medication as a defense against criminal charges. Since then, the state Legislature has rejected bills each session that would either prohibit physician-assisted suicide or explicitly legitimize it in state law. In 2013, Vermont’s legislature EHFDPHWKH¿UVWLQWKHQDWLRQWRDGRSW it through legislation and not voter referendum. How many people have opted for physician-assisted deaths? Since it was enacted, more than 850 people in Oregon have used the law to die as of Dec. 31, 2014. In Vermont, six people had requested life-ending drugs and See DEATH/10A ACLU LAWSUIT Benton County jails people who FDQ¶WSD\¿QHV By NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS and GENE JOHNSON Associated Press KENNEWICK, Wash. — The Wash- ington state chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union sued a local county Tuesday, accusing it of sending people to jail or forcing them to toil on work FUHZVLIWKH\IDLOWRSD\WKHLUFRXUW¿QHV — a practice that makes the poor poorer and amounts to a “modern-day debtors’ prison,” the organization said. The group has long alleged that Benton County District Court penalizes defendants without investigating whether they can DFWXDOO\DIIRUGWRSD\WKHLU¿QHV,WGHWDLOHG the practice in a report last year that drew objections from the court’s judges, one of whom argued that defendants have an opportunity to speak up at sentencing if WKH\FDQ¶WDIIRUGWKH¿QHV “The misnomer is that we’re imposing jail time without any due process rights,” Judge Joseph M. Burrowes told The Asso- ciated Press at the time. “We are following the law. We are doing what is just and fair.” The court did not immediately return a message seeking comment Tuesday, but Benton County Prosecutor Andy Miller said he told judges and county commis- sioners two years ago that he does not agree with the practice. “The judges do it, and there’s not even a See JAIL/10A