NORTHWEST
East Oregonian
Page 2A
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
Jailed Bundy defends Sheriff Palmer
right to free speech.
Ammon Bundy said in a
recording posted Sunday on
PORTLAND — Ammon the Bundy Ranch Facebook
Bundy, the jailed leader page that Palmer was the only
from the armed takeover of Oregon sheriff who didn’t
Malheur National Wildlife get caught in the “political
Refuge, has come to the deception” that the people of
defense of a sheriff who is Burns were in danger during
being investigated by the the occupation.
“Sheriff Palmer went to
state.
The state agency that the source and found out
OLFHQVHV SROLFH RI¿FHUV LV the truth,” Bundy said. “He
looking into complaints that found out that we at the
Grant County Sheriff Glenn refuge stood for the Consti-
Palmer twice met with tution,” and the protesters
occupiers who traveled to “love this country and would
visit him during the 41-day not hurt another person.”
The
Department
of
standoff that ended Feb. 11.
If Palmer is found to have Public Safety Standards
violated standards, he could and Training received nine
complaints about Palmer,
ORVHKLVSROLFHFHUWL¿FDWLRQ
The occupiers and their sheriff since 2000 of the
conservative
defense attorneys have politically
portrayed the standoff as a county that neighbors the
peaceful protest in which Malheur National Wildlife
the group was exercising its Refuge.
By STEVEN DUBOIS
Associated Press
2QHZDV¿OHGE\9DOHULH
Luttrell, manager of emer-
gency
communications
for the city of John Day.
She said federal and state
authorities viewed Palmer
as a security leak, and there-
IRUH NHSW ORFDO RI¿FLDOV RXW
of the loop during the Jan.
WUDI¿F VWRS WKDW OHG WR
the arrests of the standoff’s
leaders and the shooting
death of occupier Robert
“LaVoy” Finicum.
The group was on its way
to a community meeting with
supporters in Grant County,
which Palmer attended. In a
YLGHR IURP WKH WUDI¿F VWRS
Finicum yells to police:
“Just shoot me. I’m going to
meet the sheriff. The sheriff
is waiting for us.”
Luttrell wrote that the
911 dispatch center received
many calls during the
standoff from people praising
BRIEFLY
Washington wolf
population grows
by 32 percent
Palmer for supporting the
occupiers and their demand
that the government free
two ranchers imprisoned
IRUVWDUWLQJ¿UHV7KHJURXS
also wanted public lands
relinquished to local control.
Palmer belongs to the
Constitutional Sheriffs and
3HDFH 2I¿FHUV $VVRFLDWLRQ
which describes itself as the
“last line of defense standing
between the overreaching
federal government and your
Constitutionally guaranteed
rights.”
He did not immediately
return a phone message
Monday. He has previously
declined to speak about the
investigation.
Bundy was one of 26
people arrested in connec-
tion with the occupation. All
are charged with conspiracy,
and some are accused of
additional crimes.
OLYMPIA, Wash.
(AP) — The number of
wolves in Washington state
grew by about 32 percent
last year.
The Department of
Fish and Wildlife’s annual
survey found at least 90
wolves in the state by the
end of 2015. That was up
from at least 68 wolves
counted in 2014.
The survey released
0RQGD\FRQ¿UPHGDW
least four new wolf packs
in Ferry, Okanogan,
Pend Oreille and Stevens
counties. There are now 18
wolf packs and at least eight
breeding pairs.
Gray wolves were all but
eliminated from Western
states in the last century,
but are now recovering in
several states.
The state says there were
IHZHUFRQÀLFWVEHWZHHQ
wolves and livestock than
in the previous year. Wolves
were responsible for killing
seven cattle and injuring
one guard dog. Seven
wolves died for various
reasons.
Researchers used aerial
surveys, remote cameras,
wolf tracks and signals
from radio-collared wolves
to count the animals.
3ULQHYLOOH5DLOZD\WUDI¿FRQWUDFNIRUUHFRUG\HDU
we’ll heat it using steam,” he
said. “We’ll heat it, maintain
it and transload the product
from the rail cars to trucks.
Think thicker-based products.
Syrup, molasses, that kind
RIWKLQJ,ILW¶VWKLFNLWÀRZV
very slowly, so as you heat it
XSLWÀRZVHDVLHU´
Add that new liquid
product to the various goods
the railway already moves,
and the oldest munici-
pal-owned railroad in the
country is on track for a record
year, Operations Director
Matt Wiederholt said.
“Our car count is going
up; we’re having a stellar
year,” he said. “Right now,
we’re over where we were the
whole year last year, and we
still have four more months.
:HVKRXOGEHDWODVW¿VFDO\HDU
by at least 300 carloads.”
The projected year-end
total for carloads is 874, a
roughly 50 percent increase
from 583 in 2014-15,
according to the railway’s
numbers. Projected revenue
shows a similar success story.
The railway expects to bring
in $839,600 by the end of the
year, a 42 percent increase
from the $590,366 it brought
in last year.
It’s a big turnaround from
about a decade ago, Wieder-
holt said.
Back in 2004, the railroad
By AARON WEST
The (Bend) Bulletin
PRINEVILLE
—
Business is heating up at
Prineville’s Railway and
Freight Depot.
In the next couple of
months, a new deal the
railway struck last year
with a transport services
company will give the short-
line railroad the equipment
to heat liquid to scorching
temperatures. The new boiler,
a machine that can make the
most viscous liquids watery
with heat, will allow for
unloading and loading of
liquid products that haven’t
been able to move in and out
of Central Oregon before.
Superior Bulk Cargo, the
Chicago-based
company
that will own and operate
the boiler at the freight depot
north of Redmond where the
Prineville Railway’s tracks
tie in to the main north-south
line, is setting up its facilities
now. And when the boiler
goes online later this spring,
Superior Vice President of
Operations Steve Lowman
said the railway will be able
to move a completely new
kind of product.
“The rail car will arrive
to the site transporting a
liquid, and then we’ll hook
the boiler up to the car and
wasn’t making enough
money to sustain itself and
was eating away at the slush
fund it had built up in the
1960s, when the local logging
industry made the railroad
so successful the people of
Prineville didn’t have to pay
taxes.
“We were not operation-
ally viable,” said Wiederholt,
who the city hired for the job
in 2004. “We were milking
money out of that slush fund.
The city considered shutting
(the railway) down.”
But instead of closing the
doors on the railway, built
nearly a hundred years ago
in 1918, it decided to invest
instead. Using the slush
fund money, the city built
133,000 square feet of ware-
house space, which allowed
customers to unload and load
cargo on-site, and even set up
shop on the premises.
The two clients and 80
carloads the railroad had in
2004 — a low point, Wieder-
holt said — began to turn
around. Now with 32 service
agreements, more freight
depot built in 2013 and the
ability to move new kinds
of product with the boiler,
Wiederholt said it nearly feels
like the 1960s again.
The boom can be traced
directly back to the service
agreements,
which
are
contracts
the
railway’s
customers enter into to use its
facilities. Customers pay the
railway to load and unload
the goods they’re bringing
into Prineville, as well as
for the railway’s warehouse
space to store the products.
“We haul everything from
tires, lumber, magnesium
chloride de-icer, animal
feed, diesel — those are our
primary commodities right
now,” Wiederholt said. “Tires
are our biggest shipper right
now. Les Schwab — all of
their domestic tires come in
by rail.”
The fact that the railway is
PXQLFLSDORZQHGLVDEHQH¿W
to customers, Wiederholt
said. While a privately
operated railroad is in the
business of making money,
the Prineville Railway’s
priority is supporting the local
economy by creating busi-
ness and jobs. The customers
don’t seem to mind.
“The biggest difference
is the service,” said Dustin
Corwin, Prineville branch
manager for Carson, a fuel
transport company. “It’s
like a corporation versus
a mom-and-pop business.
That’s how I would compare
the two different types of
railway. I think Prineville
is
extremely
customer
service-oriented.”
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Sun and clouds
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Partly sunny
48° 33°
50° 29°
FRIDAY
Sunny
Partly sunny
More clouds than
sun
PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST
47° 27°
51° 33°
54° 39°
HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST
54° 30°
54° 27°
PENDLETON
through 3 p.m. yesterday
TEMPERATURE
HIGH
Yesterday
Normals
Records
LOW
51°
55°
80° (1934)
36°
35°
11° (1906)
PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 3 p.m.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Last year to date
Normal year to date
0.08"
0.88"
0.56"
3.25"
1.70"
3.11"
HERMISTON
through 3 p.m. yesterday
TEMPERATURE
HIGH
Yesterday
Normals
Records
LOW
54°
57°
79° (1934)
36°
34°
10° (1944)
PRECIPITATION
24 hours ending 3 p.m.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Last year to date
Normal year to date
Trace
0.63"
0.44"
2.12"
1.11"
2.71"
SUN AND MOON
Sunrise today
Sunset tonight
Moonrise today
Moonset today
First
Full
Mar 15
Mar 23
7:07 a.m.
7:01 p.m.
11:49 a.m.
2:01 a.m.
Last
New
Mar 31
51° 28°
52° 31°
54° 38°
Seattle
50/35
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Apr 7
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REGIONAL CITIES
Today
SATURDAY
Spokane
Wenatchee
45/27
52/32
Tacoma
Moses
50/31
Lake
Pullman
Aberdeen Olympia
Yakima 53/28
43/29
49/34
50/31
55/29
Longview
Kennewick Walla Walla
48/35
49/35 Lewiston
55/30
Astoria
50/32
50/38
Portland
Enterprise
Hermiston
50/39
Pendleton 38/24
The Dalles 54/30
48/33
53/34
La Grande
Salem
43/27
50/40
Albany
Corvallis 50/41
51/40
John Day
41/34
Ontario
Eugene
Bend
49/32
50/38
43/28
Caldwell
Burns
47/31
41/26
Astoria
Baker City
Bend
Brookings
Burns
Enterprise
Eugene
Heppner
Hermiston
John Day
Klamath Falls
La Grande
Meacham
Medford
Newport
North Bend
Ontario
Pasco
Pendleton
Portland
Redmond
Salem
Spokane
Ukiah
Vancouver
Walla Walla
Yakima
Hi
50
41
43
54
41
38
50
46
54
41
48
43
39
56
50
54
49
55
48
50
46
50
45
38
48
49
55
Lo
38
23
28
43
26
24
38
30
30
34
25
27
24
37
43
45
32
30
33
39
26
40
27
26
37
35
29
W
sh
c
c
c
c
c
sh
r
pc
c
c
sh
c
c
sh
sh
c
pc
pc
sh
c
sh
pc
c
sh
sh
pc
NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY
Wed.
Hi
52
44
49
60
47
41
56
49
54
48
55
46
43
62
56
60
53
56
50
56
52
57
46
44
54
53
57
Lo
37
20
27
46
23
22
34
29
27
34
26
25
20
37
41
42
29
28
29
35
24
35
27
23
35
31
27
W
pc
sf
pc
pc
pc
sf
pc
pc
s
sf
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
s
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
sf
pc
pc
s
WORLD CITIES
Today
Beijing
Hong Kong
Jerusalem
London
Mexico City
Moscow
Paris
Rome
Seoul
Sydney
Tokyo
Hi
59
65
56
52
81
32
53
58
49
79
52
Lo
32
61
45
41
51
21
36
43
34
67
38
W
pc
pc
pc
c
s
pc
pc
sh
pc
t
s
Wed.
Hi
66
70
54
49
81
37
50
58
52
77
56
Lo
39
66
44
37
52
30
35
44
35
67
45
W
s
c
pc
pc
pc
sf
pc
sh
s
sh
c
WINDS
Medford
56/37
(in mph)
Klamath Falls
48/25
Boardman
Pendleton
REGIONAL FORECAST
Coastal Oregon: Cloudy today; showers;
however, dry in the south.
Eastern and Central Oregon: A shower to-
day, except a rain or snow shower in central
parts and near the Cascades.
Western Washington: Mostly cloudy today
with spotty showers. Partly cloudy tonight
with a shower in places.
Eastern Washington: Clouds and sun today
with a shower in places, but a snow shower
in the mountains.
Cascades: Cloudy and cold today with snow
showers, accumulating a coating to an inch.
Northern California: Partly sunny today.
Warmer in central parts; cold in the interior
mountains.
Today
Wednesday
WSW 8-16
WSW 8-16
WNW 3-6
W 4-8
UV INDEX TODAY
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
0
1
2
POULSBO, Wash.
(AP) — The police chief
in Poulsbo has resigned
after investigations into his
conduct.
The Kitsap Sun reports
Poulsbo Police Chief
Al Townsend resigned
Monday, saying in a
resignation letter he
believes he had become a
distraction for the city and
the police department.
Townsend, who had
been chief since early 2013,
had been the subject of
recent investigations by
the city into whether he
had a romantic relationship
ZLWKDQRI¿FHU+HKDV
denied any wrongdoing
and Poulsbo Mayor Becky
Erickson says he was
cleared of the allegations.
Erickson says Townsend
resigned after she told him
he would be placed on
administrative leave as the
city looked into what she
called “other information.”
The department’s deputy
chief since February, Andy
Pate, has been named
interim chief.
Corrections
Real Estate Advertising: Jodi Snook
541-27-267 Msnook#eastoreJonian.Fom
THURSDAY
Poulsbo police
chief resigns amid
investigations
7KH 8PDWLOOD &RXQW\ 9HWHUDQV¶ 6HUYLFHV RI¿FH LQ
Milton-Freewater is open Thursdays from 9 a.m. to 4
SPDQGWKH3HQGOHWRQRI¿FH¶VKRXUVDUH0RQGD\WKURXJK
Wednesday and Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Incorrect
information was printed in the March 9, 2016, East Orego-
nian in a brief on page 5A.
The East Oregonian works hard to be accurate and
sincerely regrets any errors. If you notice a mistake in
the paper, please call 541-966-0818.
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Single copy price:
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Forecast
WEDNESDAY
BAKER CITY (AP) —
Seven months after Baker
County fought its largest
ZLOG¿UHHYHUDKHOLFRSWHU
has returned to the region
— this time with wood
instead of water.
The Baker City Herald
reports that the chopper
is dropping hundreds
of tons of wood mulch
on land burned by the
&ODVVLÀHG$GYHUWLVLQJ
1--62-21 Flassi¿eds#eastoreJonian.Fom
Copyright © 2016, EO Media Group
TODAY
Helicopters to
drop wood mulch
on scorched land
&RUQHW:LQG\5LGJH¿UH
The Forest Service hired
Mountain West Helicopters
of Provo, Utah, for the
work.
The mulch is expected
to stabilize steep slopes that
were stripped of vegetation
E\WKH¿UH
Ray Lovisone of
Wallowa-Whitman National
Forest is overseeing the
work. He says it will reduce
the risk of mudslides in
Stices Gulch and along
Highway 245.
Lovisone says the work
focuses on about 88 acres
where the combination of
steep ground and high-
LQWHQVLW\¿UHKDVFDXVHGD
high risk of slides.
3
2
0
8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m.
0-2, Low
3-5, Moderate 6-7, High;
8-10, Very High;
11+, Extreme
The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ num-
ber, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.
Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
-10s
-0s
showers t-storms
0s
10s
rain
20s
flurries
30s
40s
snow
ice
50s
60s
cold front
70s
80s
90s
100s
warm front stationary front
110s
high
low
National Summary: Rain will linger in New England as severe storms roll through part of
the Midwest today. Windy conditions will sweep over the Plains. Snow showers will dot the
Rockies as rain dampens the Northwest.
Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states)
High 98° in Cotulla, Texas
Low 10° in Clayton Lake, Maine
NATIONAL CITIES
Today
Albuquerque
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Birmingham
Boise
Boston
Charleston, SC
Charleston, WV
Chicago
Cleveland
Dallas
Denver
Detroit
El Paso
Fairbanks
Fargo
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Jacksonville
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Hi
66
81
60
62
48
82
45
49
85
70
61
56
82
50
58
77
18
51
83
85
71
87
67
72
82
77
Lo
37
62
48
46
30
60
32
42
62
53
46
48
56
25
47
49
10
35
70
65
49
60
41
52
47
56
W
s
s
pc
r
c
s
c
r
s
pc
t
pc
s
s
pc
s
sf
r
pc
pc
pc
s
c
s
pc
s
Wed.
Hi
64
78
62
70
46
77
49
58
86
69
58
59
78
49
61
79
17
43
77
80
64
85
62
74
73
84
Lo
35
56
45
45
25
54
31
43
62
45
41
43
51
25
41
48
5
31
65
67
43
62
37
53
45
57
W
s
c
pc
sh
sf
c
pc
c
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
pc
s
sf
sn
pc
c
pc
pc
pc
s
pc
s
Today
Louisville
Memphis
Miami
Milwaukee
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Omaha
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Portland, ME
Providence
Raleigh
Rapid City
Reno
Sacramento
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Diego
San Francisco
Seattle
Tucson
Washington, DC
Wichita
Hi
75
80
85
48
55
81
83
58
72
62
63
84
44
53
77
53
58
65
78
47
69
62
50
82
63
66
Lo
53
50
68
42
40
54
68
49
40
37
47
58
38
43
57
31
33
42
49
34
56
49
35
52
50
36
W
pc
pc
s
t
r
s
pc
c
s
t
pc
s
r
r
pc
c
pc
pc
c
sh
s
pc
sh
s
r
s
Wed.
Hi
65
74
85
54
47
71
81
60
70
59
69
87
53
58
83
48
60
69
65
50
74
65
51
84
73
65
Lo
47
48
67
37
35
45
68
49
40
36
47
59
38
44
51
25
34
46
44
35
56
52
36
54
49
33
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain,
sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
W
s
pc
pc
c
sh
pc
c
sh
pc
pc
sh
s
c
c
pc
c
s
s
pc
pc
s
s
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pc