WEEKEND EDITION Students BUCKAROOS invest in DEMOLISH doughnuts THE DALLES LIFESTYLES 1C FOOTBALL/1B NATION: Inside a poaching warehouse 9A OCTOBER 24-25, 2015 140 Year, No. 7 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2015 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Want to believe? Local UFO sightings ¿WQDWLRQDOLQFUHDVH By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian It was 4:30 in the morning, but Ivan Dame swears he was wide awake when he saw an XQLGHQWL¿HGÀ\LQJREMHFW He knows what drones look like, he said. This was no drone. “This was way bigger than drones,” he said, noting that he does see unmanned aerial vehicles hovering above his property from time to time. ³,W¶V WKH ¿UVW WLPH ,¶YH VHHQ that particular one.” The lights, shaped like an upside-down “U” with square corners, appeared Oct. ÀRDWLQJDERXWIHHWLQ the air over Townsend Road in Hermiston, according to Dame. He said the formation didn’t correspond to any man-made aircraft he had ever seen. The lights were — tech- QLFDOO\ ² XQLGHQWL¿HG E\ 'DPHÀ\LQJDQGDQREMHFW “I read all I can about UFOs and stuff, I just never thought I’d get a chance to see one,” he said. ,W¶V QRW WKH ¿UVW WLPH D Umatilla County resident has reported seeing a UFO, and it probably won’t be the last. Peter Davenport, director of the National UFO Reporting Center, said there has been a “marked increase” in reported UFO sightings across the country in recent years. He didn’t think that the trend was based on the rise of unmanned aerial vehicles, or even necessarily an increase in alien visitors to Earth. He said it could just as easily be based on an increased interest in presentations and articles on the Internet about UFOs, or a “host of other factors.” “I doubt that drones have D VLJQL¿FDQW HIIHFW RQ RXU work,” he wrote in an email. ³,I WKH\ DUH ÀRZQ DW QLJKW they have to have standard lighting, as required by the Federal Aviation Regula- tions, so they probably would be recognized as an aircraft.” On the National UFO Reporting Center’s website are several local sightings. One anonymous reporter, describing himself as a truck driver, said he saw a diamond- shaped light hovering in the See UFO/12A MAKAD & MORROW Staff photo by E.J. Harris The Makad Corp. built a 31 megawatt electrical generation facility at the Port of Morrow in 2001 but only produced power for a short time before it was shuttered. Lawsuit, unbuilt projects checker corporation’s past By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian Before the Pendleton City Council unanimously approved a 30-year ground lease on Airport Road for a $45 million data center, Mayor Phillip Houk touted Makad Corp.’s history of developing proj- ects in Eastern Oregon. But a series of failed projects and a lawsuit in a neighboring commu- nity casts doubt on that assertion. In an earlier version of the Makad Corp. website, the corporation touted three collaborative projects at the Port of Morrow. The business partner was Monsanto Enviro-Chem Systems Inc., a subsidiary of the agrochemical giant. Two out of those three projects — a fertilizer plant and ethanol plant — never came to fruition. The project that did see comple- tion was a 31-megawatt power SODQW EXW GHVSLWH EHLQJ ¿QLVKHG LQ 2001, it hasn’t run in years and was the subject of a lawsuit between MECS and Morrow Power LLC, the subsidiary created by Makad Corp. to manage the plant. On April 4, 2007, Portland DWWRUQH\ 'RXJODV 3DKO ¿OHG D motion on behalf of Monsanto Envi- ro-Chem Systems — which had since changed its name to MECS Inc. when it split off from Monsanto Co. in 2005 — in Morrow County Circuit Court to appoint a receiver for the power plant property. A receiver is a neutral party appointed by a judge to take charge of property DQG EXVLQHVVHV DQG KROG SUR¿WV while the rightful owner of the SUR¿WVLVGHFLGHGE\DFRXUW In a declaration supporting the motion, former MECS vice presi- dent of administration John Merz detailed the deal: in exchange for covering the costs of building the multi-million dollar power plant, Makad Corp. would operate the plant and pay back MECS. The agreement got off to an inauspicious start. On Dec. 5, 2002, MECS agreed to extend the date when Morrow Power would have to pay back the full cost of the plant from March 15, 2002 to Feb. 28, 2003. Morrow Power took out a $650,000 loan from Columbia See MAKAD/10A DOC looks Building hundreds of homes to open to keep up with job growth prison 70 percent of port workers commute in Madras BOARDMAN By GEORGE PLAVEN East Oregonian Just shy of a year after breaking ground, Boardman’s new Tuscany subdivision celebrated the FRPSOHWLRQRILWV¿UVWWZRKRXVHV Friday on South Main Street and Wilson Lane. The development marks a major step forward for a city in dire need of housing to accommo- date a rapidly growing workforce. Employees of businesses at the nearby Port of Morrow now outrank the city’s overall popu- lation, and estimates show 68 percent of those workers commute from other areas. Riverwood Homes, of Meridian, Idaho, began devel- oping the Tuscany and Chaparral Park subdivisions late last year to capitalize on the market in Boardman. Two homes are ¿QLVKHG LQ 7XVFDQ\ DQG IRXQGD tions laid for two more. Fourteen ORWVDUHVODWHGIRUWKHSURMHFW¶V¿UVW building phase. Greg Johnson, president of Riverwood Homes, said one of the ¿QLVKHG KRXVHV KDV DOUHDG\ VROG Residents were invited Friday By PARIS ACHEN Capital Bureau Staff photo by E.J. Harris Two homes have been completed so far in the fi rst phase of building at the Tuscany subdivision in Boardman. The completed subdivision could add as many as 160 homes to the city. “The ball is rolling, but it’s not an avalanche.” — Barry Beyeler, community development director afternoon for an open house to tour the two-story, 2,406-square- foot model. Meanwhile, Johnson said two PRUHKRPHVZLOOEH¿QLVKHGLQWKH next 60 days at Chaparral Park, located west of city hall at the end of Kinkade Road. Another four homes will begin construction there before the end of the year. The neighborhood will include units for rent. Their goal, Johnson said, is to provide higher quality housing at Tuscany and more moderately priced townhouses at Chaparral Park. With more options available, Johnson said some port workers might decide to live locally instead of driving from Hermiston or the See HOUSING/12A State lawmakers say they may have to take more than $9 million from a state fund designed to keep offenders out of prison to pay for expanding prison space. $ ODZ LQWHQGHG WR ÀDWOLQH growth in the state prison population has been less successful than antici- pated. The state is projected to have 150 more prisoners in March than previously forecast, according to the 2I¿FHRI(FRQRPLF$QDO\VLV The Department of Corrections plans to accommodate the extra prisoners by opening a vacant medi- um-security facility at Deer Creek Correctional Institution in Madras, said Colette Peters, department director. Executing the plan by March would cost about $9.5 million, she said. The department plans had called for opening that facility in 2019. House Majority Leader Rep. Jennifer Williamson, D-Portland, said the only option for covering that cost is to siphon the money from the Justice Reinvestment Fund. The Justice Reinvestment Fund was See PRISON/12A