Page 8A OFF PAGE ONE East Oregonian PGG: Co-op lost $7.9 million in 2014 the long term, not just the short term,” he said. “We Meanwhile, soft white could either be a marginal wheat prices have fallen to company, or merge some of $5.69 per bushel in Portland, these assets and be a good, compared to $7 last year. strong company.” With such lean margins, Jim Williams, a third-gen- farmers have started hedging eration Helix farmer, said his their bets with other grain family has worked through handlers in Umatilla County, PGG since the co-op’s incep- including Gavilon, owned tion. He said the grain division by the multi-billion dollar is the hub of the company, Marubeni Corporation. and he’s disappointed to see “They can be pretty where the co-op stands today. price-competitive,” Jacobson Williams said he has tried said. “Some growers had that to stay away from the rumor EO fi le photo additional option.” mill, and refuses to place Jeff Newtson, who farms This 2014 fi le photo shows the PGG farm supply store blame for what’s gone wrong. 7,500 acres around Helix, in Athena. The property, along with numerous build- He said he’s always felt safe said he started using both ings in Pendleton, are headed to auction. marketing his wheat through PGG and Northwest Grain manage PGG following the as well as the automotive PGG, and will miss the local Growers, based in Walla resignation of former CEO service center in Pendleton. It hands-on experience. Walla, to market and sell Allen Waggoner in May DOVR VROG WKH DJURQRP\ ÀHHW “This year especially, I felt his club wheat. As rumors 2012. Waggoner’s resig- to Crop Production Services it was important to support a swirled around PGG over nation came three months based in Colorado. company I had generations summer, he said some after the U.S. Department All together, the co-op of equity in,” Williams said. growers began forging rela- of Agriculture suspended lost $7.9 million in 2014. “I hope something comes of tionships with other compa- PGG’s warehousing license However, Jacobson remains this that’s positive for all the nies just in case something based on discrepancies found optimistic, pointing out growers.” like this should happen. There is no timetable for during a routine audit of PGG’s total earnings at the “You see them selling off grain transactions. end of June were $4 million a decision about the grain different parts of the busi- division. The PGG board Waggoner, who now better than last year. ness. We saw Gavilon and works for CHS Inc. in Pilot PGG has consolidated its will evaluate offers before Northwest Grain Growers 5RFNDQGVHUYHVDVSUHVLGHQW debt through CoBank and bringing any proposal to a coming in and taking parts of of the Agricultural Coopera- secured a $20 million line of full vote of the members. the wheat harvest,” Newtson tive Council of Oregon, did credit in June. Jacobson said Until then, PGG will continue said. “The writing was on the not return messages seeking other aspects of the business, to buy grain and operate as wall there a little bit.” including seed, energy and normal until a transaction is comment. Umatilla County farmers In an article published irrigation subsidiary Preci- completed. grow the most wheat in Aug. 27 in the Capital Press, VLRQ 5DLQ FRQWLQXH WR GR Williams said PGG has Oregon by a wide margin. Jacobson said PGG “didn’t well. always done a great job of PGG was incorporated in attend to business as they PGG signed an agreement making money for local 1930 after the stock market should have” in the past. The in June with McCoy Grain wheat farmers. It scares him crash a year earlier, as local co-op recently overhauled Terminal LLC, of Colfax, to think that service could be growers united to protect its business model, slashing Washington, to market its lost. themselves against falling retail and agronomy divi- grain handle for potentially “I hope it’s not the end of wheat prices. sions while laying off 158 higher bids. Selling the grain the co-op,” he said. But the co-op has suffered employees. ——— division is not a catastrophe, WKURXJK GLI¿FXOW WLPHV LQ Contact George Plaven at Since last year, PGG Jacobson said, but rather a recent years. Jacobson was closed all six of their retail prudent decision. gplaven@eastoregonian.com brought out of retirement to stores across Eastern Oregon “You have to look at or 541-966-0825. Continued from 1A WHITE CASTLE: 10 other inductees also honored at dinner Continued from 1A not like to eat anything but White Castle, so my mom and dad would take me there to make sure I ate,” he said. “That’s what started it.” When the family moved to the north side of the city, picking up a bag of White Castle sliders meant an hour-long drive, but that didn’t stop them. Neither did an eventual move to Seattle, where the nearest White Castle was thousands of miles away. “We would get freshly cooked White Castles and put them in our luggage and take them back to Seattle,” Snyder said. “The smell would permeate the whole cabin.” His wife Karen said the tradition of bringing White “We would get freshly cooked White Castles and put them in our luggage and take them back to Seattle. The smell would permeate the whole cabin.” — Gene Snyder, White Castle Cravers Hall of Fame Castle sliders back from vacation continued after the couple married. “We used to bring them home by the hundreds,” she said. He said out of all the foods that he missed after moving away from the Midwest, the reason he missed White Castle sliders the most was the restaurant’s unique way of cooking the mini-burgers in a steamer surrounded by juicy onions. “It’s a whole different taste,” he said. Today the sliders are available in the frozen food section of some grocery VWRUHV LQ WKH 3DFL¿F 1RUWK west, but it’s not quite the same. “I’m working on how to reconstitute these to make them taste like the new ones,” Snyder said, holding up a box. “I’m really close.” When he saw a notice on one of the boxes calling for people to submit their stories of White Castle cravings he sent something in and then forgot about it, ¿JXULQJ DW PRVW KH ZRXOG get a few coupons for free sliders. Instead, the company contacted him with free round-trip tickets to the restaurant’s headquarters in Columbus, Ohio, where Snyder and his wife were put up in a Hyatt hotel and treated to everything from a VIP museum tour to a buffet lunch of everything from White Castle’s menu. The trip culminated in a formal dinner where Snyder and 10 other inductees were honored by the restaurant and given a stack of gifts, including a book of recipes for White Castle menu items. ——— Contact Jade McDowell at jmcdowell@eastorego- nian.com or 541-564-4536. WORLD BRIEFLY Army blimp breaks loose, À oaWs oYer PeQQsylYaQia MUNCY, Pa. (AP) — An unmanned Army surveillance blimp broke loose from its mooring LQ0DU\ODQGDQGÀRDWHGRYHU Pennsylvania for hours Wednesday ZLWKWZR¿JKWHUMHWVRQLWVWDLO triggering blackouts across the countryside as it dragged its tether across power lines. 7KHEXOERXVIRRWKHOLXP¿OOHG blimp eventually came down in at least two pieces near Muncy, a small town about 80 miles north of Harrisburg, as people gawked in wonder and disbelief at the big, white, slow-moving craft. No injuries were reported. Fitted with sensitive defense technology, the radar-equipped blimp escaped from the military’s Aberdeen Proving Ground around 12:20 p.m. and drifted northward, climbing to about 16,000 feet, authorities said. It covered approximately 150 miles over about 3½ hours. $VLWÀRDWHGDZD\DYLDWLRQRI¿FLDOV IHDUHGLWZRXOGHQGDQJHUDLUWUDI¿F and two F-16s were scrambled from a National Guard base in New Jersey to track it. But there was never any intention of shooting it down, said Navy Capt. Scott Miller, a spokesman for the nation’s air defense command. The blimp — which cannot be VWHHUHGUHPRWHO\²HYHQWXDOO\GHÀDWHG and settled back to Earth on its own, according to Miller. He said there was DQDXWRGHÀDWHGHYLFHDERDUGEXWLW was not deliberately activated, and it is unclear why the craft went limp. Jimmy May/Bloomsburg Press Enterprise via AP An unmanned Army surveillance blimp fl oats through the air while dragging a tether line south of Millville, Pa., Wednesday. The 240-foot helium-fi lled blimp came down near Muncy, about 80 miles north of Harrisburg. President Bashar Assad, Tehran has been shunned from all previous talks on Syria. Its inclusion now marks recognition by the United States that no discussion on Syria’s future can succeed without Iran at the table. News of Iran’s attendance outraged Syrian rebels, who said its participation will only prolong the FRQÀLFW The gathering, which takes place Thursday and Friday in Vienna, will also put Iran in the same room with its most bitter regional rival, Saudi Arabia, raising the potential for tensions. The kingdom, along with other Gulf countries, has been funneling weapons to rebel factions, ZKLOH,UDQKDVVHQW¿QDQFLQJZHDSRQV and military advisers to ensure Assad’s survival. ,UDQ¶VSDUWLFLSDWLRQUHÀHFWVLWV IraQ Wo Wake parW iQ Syria newfound place in the international Walks Ior ¿ rsW Wime community following the nuclear deal %(,587$3²,UDQZLOOWDNHSDUW reached with world powers earlier this year. It also shows the seismic in international talks on Syria for the VKLIWEURXJKWDERXWE\5XVVLD¶VGLUHFW ¿UVWWLPHWKLVZHHNJLYLQJLWDYRLFH military involvement in Syria since LQWKHHIIRUWWR¿QGDUHVROXWLRQWRWKH more than 4-year-old civil war that has launching a campaign of airstrikes VRIDUGH¿HGHYHQWKHVOLJKWHVWSURJUHVV on behalf of Assad last month. That intervention has emboldened Assad’s toward peace. supporters. A crucial backer of Syrian AXsWria Wo bXilG IeQFe aloQg parWs oI borGer VIENNA (AP) — Austria, a strong critic of fences built to cope ZLWK(XURSH¶VPLJUDQWLQÀX[RQ Wednesday announced it is joining other nations that have either already erected border barriers or are planning to do so. Austrian Interior Minister Johanna Mikl-Leitner insisted the move was aimed solely at bringing order to the XQUHOHQWLQJLQÀX[RISHRSOHHQWHULQJ the country, telling parliament there were no plans “to build a fence around Austria.” Still the project is a major shift for the country, which has preached the sanctity of unimpeded internal EU borders since the migrant crisis LQWHQVL¿HGHDUOLHUWKLV\HDUDQG0LNO Leitner herself used the world “fence” in earlier comments announcing construction plans at the border. Slovenia, the main entry point into Austria, also said it was ready to build a fence, while Hungary has been championing the success of its razor-wire border fences with Serbia and Croatia and plans another one with 5RPDQLD Thursday, October 29, 2015 TAX: Umatilla County’s largest taxpayer was Hermiston Power LLC previously belonged to a disabled veteran who fell to $496,630. Chalmers had a tax exemption. She, said that value is based on however, did not qualify what is happening in the for that exemption. real estate market, and it Still, Avocette said, ÀXFWXDWHV FRQVLGHUDEO\ $2,400 a year in taxes for The county, again, taxes a manufactured home with the smaller of those values, a yard that has erosion thus the decrease in the tax problems seemed high. bill. Chalmers said the tax rate Then this year, the real is the same across the board market value for the home no matter the zone, from increased to $572,690 residential to commercial and the assessed value to industrial. carried over from last year. Farmland, though, is the Murdock’s tax bill, then, exception. Chalmers said shot up to $9,828, about a under Oregon law farm- 6 percent increase. land is taxed on production “There’s lots of things I values not on real market could do with that money or assessed values. besides paying taxes,” And as usual, the largest Murdock said. “But taxes taxpayers in the county are are the price of living in a corporations, according to civilized society.” the assessment and taxation New bonds also added RI¿FH 7KLV \HDU¶V WRS to the bill. Voters last and their tax amounts are: year passed a bond for 1) Hermiston Power Blue Mountain Commu- LLC — $3,276,314 nity College at a rate of 2) Hermiston Gener- 23 cents per $1,000 in ating Co. — $2,187,866 assessed value. So a home 3DFL¿&RUS ² with an assessed value of $1,957,142 $150,000, for example, 8QLRQ 3DFL¿F 5DLO would generate $34.50 for road Co. — $1,744,407,27 the bond. In Murdock’s 5) Wal-Mart Stores East case, the bond accounted LP — $617,639 for about $123 of the bill. 6) ConAgra Foods Exemptions also play a Lamb Weston Inc. — role in property taxes, as $504,815 Wynn Avocette of Pend- 7) Snack Alliance Inc. leton found out. She saw — $490,149 her property taxes jump 8) Charter Communica- $640 for a 1,300-sqaure- tions — $464,153 foot manufactured home at 9) Century-Link — Overlook Terrace. She said $424,152 she bought the home in a 10) Northwest Pipeline private sale last year and Corp. — $401,472 found the $1,788 property And if you think there tax bill to be fair. is a problem with your This year she was property value, Chalmers stunned to receive a bill for said the back of your tax $2,426. statement explains appeal After a lot of fretting, rights. hand wringing and hair ——— pulling, she said she Contact Phil Wright at talked to Chalmers, who pwright@eastoregonian. explained the home had com or 541-966-0833. Continued from 1A SCHOOL: Teachers and staff received 3,318 stars Continued from 1A In addition to submitting comments, survey takers were also allowed to rate the comments of other participants using a star system. The district received a strong sample size, with 730 people participating in the survey, three-quarters of which were parents and the rest mostly school staff. Survey takers deemed class sizes the biggest issue facing the district, with parents and teachers of primary school students expressing the most displeasure. “I started the school year with 30 second graders,” a Sherwood Heights Elementary School teacher wrote. “Last year I had 24 students. It is surprising what a differ- ence 6 students can make. I believe we accomplished more last year and students had a better understanding of material.” Student behavior and discipline was also a large area of concern for partic- ipants, many of whom felt behaviorally challenged children were disrupting class to the detriment of other students and not enough was being done to address bullying. “We are getting increasingly large amount of students with severe behavior issues,” one commenter wrote. “These issues make it very hard to teach that student along with the other students. I feel there is very little support from parents and administration and teachers are left to handle it on their own.” The Smarter Balanced test and Common Core took a particular beating from parents, who felt teachers were dedicating far too much class time to testing and test preparation rather than teaching other academic subjects like social studies and science. The comments directed toward the school district weren’t all critical. The top subject of praise by an overwhelming margin was the quality of teacher and staff, which received 3,318 stars. Almost every school in the district received strong praise from parents, with Sherwood Heights Principal Theresa Owens, former McKay Creek Elementary School Prin- cipal Aimee VanNice and WKH IURQW RI¿FH VWDII DW Sunridge Middle School singled out especially. VanNice has since become the principal of Wash- ington Elementary School. To a lesser degree, parents were also grateful for the variety of ways staff and administration communicate with them, which now includes email, text message and online access to report cards. Superintendent Jon Peterson said in a state- ment that the survey gave the district some valuable input. “These results help us identify those areas that people appreciate about our schools and what is working well and give us insight into areas for improvement,” he said. ——— Contact Antonio Sierra at asierra@eastoregonian. com or 541-966-0836. Halloween Costume Contest Oct. 31 st 10:00 pm Sundownbar&grill 233 SE 4th St., Pendleton, OR 97801 541-276-8500