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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (May 24, 2016)
TUESDAY, MAY 24, 2016 140th Year, No. 157 72 51 One dollar WINNER OF THE 2015 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD FIRE BURNS 3,000 ACRES NEAR HERMISTON PENDLETON SHINES AT STATE TRACK&FIELD/1B ANALYSIS Tax could raise $6B, ‘dampen’ growth By PARIS ACHEN Capital Bureau A proposed tax on the sales of large businesses would generate more than $6 billion in biennial state revenue starting in 2017- 19, but it also would slow income, employment and population growth during the next fi ve years, according to a state analysis of the initia- tive. The report projects that the tax, which likely will be on the November general elec- tion ballot, would amount to a $600 per capita increase in state taxes each year. The tax would reduce private-sector employment from what otherwise would occur, while it would increase the number of government jobs. The net reduction in employment — private and public — would be about 20,000 statewide by 2022, according to the analysis. “We don’t have any delu- sions. We know this won’t be the fi nal word on it,” Legislative Revenue Offi cer Paul Warner said Monday morning. “We know there will be a lot more work and analysis to do, but hopefully this will be a starting point.” Known as Initiative Peti- tion 28 (IP 28), the proposed See TAX/8A Staff photo by E.J. Harris A Hermiston Fire brush truck heads towards a fl areup while fi ghting a wildfi re along the eastern boundary of the Umatilla Chemical Depot on Monday west of Hermiston. BURLY BLAZE CHARS DEPOT Causes wrecks on I-82 East Oregonian A large, fast-moving brush fi re swept across the Umatilla Chemical Depot west of Hermiston Monday morning, burning two buildings and causing a multi-vehicle wreck on Interstate 82 that injured four people. Fire departments from around the region responded and worked into the afternoon to knock down the fi re, which burned over the top of the hundreds of cement igloos that once held munitions. Two buildings also were destroyed in the blaze. Smoke from the fi re limited visibility, causing a crash involving four motorcycles, a Mini Cooper, an SUV and a sedan. There were multiple injuries, but the extent is unknown. The four motorcyclists were traveling together from Tacoma, Washington. A LifeFlight helicopter fl ew one victim from the scene and ambulances took three other injured parties to Good Shepherd in Hermiston. As bystanders and later fi rst responders worked to take care of the injured, fl ames fl ared up multiple times along the side of the road, at one point jumping the interstate and burning the sagebrush in the median where the crash scat- tered debris. All four lanes were closed to traffi c for several hours. Hermiston Fire & Emergency Services was the lead agency on the fi re and reported on social media that crews “engaged in burn out opera- tions” to try to contain south and north fl anks of the fi re. Smoke drifted into Hermiston, and the Hermiston fi re department urged anyone with breathing diffi culties to keep windows closed See DEPOT/8A Staff photo by Jade McDowell First responders work on a victim of a crash involv- ing multiple motorcycles and vehicles, including the Mini Cooper in the foreground, on Interstate 82 Monday morning while a haze of smoke from a nearby brush fi re lingers over the scene. Staff photo by E.J. Harris Traffi c stands still in the southbound lane of Interstate 82 after a wreck near a wildfi re on the Umatilla Army Depot on Monday west of Hermiston. A camera and a first aid kit A s I stood on the side of Interstate 82 Monday morning, a camera in one hand and a fi rst aid kit in the other, I had a choice to make. Smoke fi lled my eyes and nose from the fi re moving quickly through the brush behind me, while in front of me lay debris and victims from a multi-car, multi- motorcycle crash. As a reporter, I should have been walking around snapping photos the moment I left my car. Jade But this was McDowell different than the Comment other crashes I’ve covered in my years as a reporter, my notebook and camera forming an invisible barrier between me and the trauma of the scene. This scene wasn’t nicely secure — cordoned off with caution tape, its victims hidden from view by a bevy of paramedics who arrived before me thanks to their lights and sirens. This time I was there fi rst. I didn’t mean to be. I was just driving down the interstate, looking for a vantage point to get some photos of the brush fi re burning through the former Umatilla Chemical Depot. Suddenly, I couldn’t see anything but smoke. The back of a semi-truck appeared in front of me. I swerved, but immediately there was a motorcycle on its side in front of me, its owner face down on the road and men running to his aid. See REPORTER/8A Lawmakers hear Owyhee monument arguments Supporters, opponents testify during hearing in Salem By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Bureau Mateusz Perkowski/EO Media Group Elias Eiguren, a rancher from Oregon’s Malheur County, speaks against the proposed 2.5 million acre Owyhee Canyonlands national monument during a press conference on May 23. SALEM — Advocates and opponents of a proposed 2.5 million-acre national monument in Eastern Oregon tried to enlist the support of state lawmakers during a recent legislative hearing. The two sides are mounting competing public relations campaigns to infl uence the possible designation of the Owyhee Canyonlands National Monument, which will ulti- mately be decided by President Barack Obama. Critics say the area is bigger than the Yellowstone, Yosemite or Grand Canyon national parks and would cover 40 percent of Malheur County. Ranchers and other natural resource users in the region have objected to the proposal, fearing the establishment of a national monument will entail new regulations on public land and invite additional environ- mental lawsuits. “We see it as a rash and somewhat of a belligerent move to force a monument in this area,” rancher Elias Eiguren told the House Committee on Rural Communities, Land Use and Water on May 23. While grazing could theo- retically continue within the national monument, the details of livestock management within its boundaries would surely be subject to costly litigation, Eiguren said. Rep. Cliff Bentz, R-Ontario, questioned why it’s necessary to designate the area as a national monument when it’s already protected under several federal environmental laws as a prop- erty of the U.S. Bureau of Land See OWYHEE/8A