REGION/3A Hermiston students get down & dirty SEAHAWKS BACK TO WINNING WAYS FOOTBALL/1B FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2015 140 Year, No. 6 One dollar WINNER OF THE 2015 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Your Weekend PENDLETON Plute’s path out of pot-hole • • • A Very Poplar Run at Boardman Tree Farm Day of Service, Saturday in Milton-Freewater Free health screenings, Saturday in Hermiston For times and places see Coming Events, 5A Weekend Weather Fri Sat Sun Marijuana tax could help pay for roadwork By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian The Pendleton City Council has debated nearly every aspect of medical and recreational marijuana sales, but Councilor Al Plute hopes a new equation will convince his colleagues to consider the positive impact the tax revenue would have. Contesting Councilor Chuck Wood’s previous from Colorado, the estimate that the More inside state tax distribution state pro¿ t share for The OLCC is close to formula and an esti- recreational marijuana approving its rules on mate over how many would only bring marijuana sales. 2A people would live in $5,900, Plute argued towns that allowed that his math showed marijuana sales, Plute the city would generate signi¿ cantly projected the city could generate more money. $89,250 from the state marijuana tax Plute provided a copy of his calcu- and $42,000 from a city-imposed 3 lations to the city council on the back percent tax on Pendleton marijuana of a frequently asked questions sheet retailers. about marijuana regulations from the Plute said he didn’t want to “cast League of Oregon Cities. aspersions” on Wood, but maintained 8sing ¿ rst-year marijuana sales the councilor made a error in how he calculated his estimate. Until July 1, 2017, the state will disperse its marijuana tax to cities and counties based on the population of localities that opted into marijuana. Plute said Wood compared Pendle- ton’s population to the state popula- tion rather than the total population of cities that opted in. Wood is on a month-long vacation and couldn’t be reached for comment. Plute admitted in an interview Thursday that his calculations were See POT/10A COUNTY COUNSEL: 62/37 59/38 Sheriff is overstepping his authority 64/43 Watch a game vs. By KYLE SPURR EO Media Group Hood River vs. Hermiston Friday, 7 p.m., at Kennison Field Dave O’Neill and Randy Bracher are riding high these days. Two years ago, the pair of Pendleton Round-Up directors started selecting the rough stock animals to burst out of the chutes each September at the Pendleton Round-Up. This week, they learned that the Professional Rodeo Cowboy Association has honored their efforts with the Remuda Award for providing “the best, most consis- tent pen of bucking horses.” The Round-Up will collect the award at December’s National Finals Rodeo Awards Banquet in Las Vegas. Grant County’s legal counsel released an opinion Wednesday claiming Sheriff Glenn Palmer is overstepping his authority by creating his own Public Lands Natural Resources Plan. Palmer deputized 11 county residents last month to write and adopt the plan to invoke coordina- tion with the U.S. Palmer Forest Service and inÀ uence the manage- ment of public lands. Authority to create such a plan belongs to the county court, not the sheriff, according to county counsel Ron Yockim. “Bottom line is he is overstepping his authority and reaching into legislative land use matters that are the county court’s role,” Yockim wrote. “He may have authority to develop plans and policies that are within his statutory authority as sheriff (e.g. law enforcement policies) but any coordi- nation of these plans and policies is under a different coordination authority than the one he cited.” The legal opinion was publicly released during a county court work session Wednesday. The work session was scheduled to discuss concerns about the working relationship between the sheriff and the Forest Service. Palmer did not attend the work session. He declined to comment on why he did not attend, but did say he believes the county court should not be getting involved with another elected of¿ cial’s business. “It’s none of the county court’s business to interject themselves into another elected of¿ cial’s affairs like this,” Palmer said. Commissioner Chris Labhart said he called for the work session after reading Palmer’s comments in a Blue Mountain Eagle article earlier this month where he said, “I ask for things from the Forest Service to do my job, and I get the door shut in my face.” Labhart hoped the work session would open dialogue between the two parties and See STOCK/10A See SHERIFF/10A Ryan to run for Speaker WASHINGTON (AP) — Rep. Paul Ryan formally declared his candidacy for speaker of the U.S. House Thursday evening, pledging in a letter to GOP colleagues, “We have an opportunity to turn the page.” “Instead of rising to the occasion, Washington is falling short—including the House of Representatives. We are not solving the country’s problems; we are only adding to them,” he wrote. It is time, he said, “to start with a clean slate, and to rebuild what has been lost.” Ryan will face elections next week in a closed-door House GOP meeting on Wednesday and then on the House À oor Thursday. His success is assured. Awaiting him will be a mess of trouble: a Nov. 3 deadline to raise the federal borrowing limit or face unprecedented default, and a Dec. 11 deadline to act on must-pass spending legisla- tion or court a government shutdown. Despite initial reluctance, Ryan told colleagues he was excited for the opportunity at hand. Staff photo by E.J. Harris Oregon State Police troopers and school administrators gather in front of McKay Elementary School after the school was evacuated after reports of a suspicious powder emanating from a student’s backpack Thursday in Pendleton. Upon further investigations it was determined to be a false alarm and students returned to their classrooms. False alarm becomes evacuation drill McKay students return to school after powdery false alarm East Oregonian McKay Creek Elementary School in Pendleton was evacuated for about an hour Thursday. Initially, there was a report of a possible explosive device inside a military-style backpack. That turned out not to be the case. A 9-year-old third grade student brought his father’s camouÀ age backpack to school for show and tell. The boy’s father served with the National Guard in Iraq and the boy wanted to bring a picture of his father and the pack to show his classmates. Also in the bag, unknown to the boy, was some weightlifting powder. See MCKAY/10A Staff photo by E.J. Harris McKay Creek Elementary School students are loaded onto buses after the school was evacuated Thursday in Pendleton. Pendleton Round-Up snags top stock award Remuda Award given for selecting best bucking horses By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian Staff photo by E.J. Harris Evan Jane of Marseille, France, rides Rapper Margie from the Cal- gary Stampede Ranch during bareback riding last September at the Pendleton Round-Up.