Visit the Pendleton Round-Up Gift Shop for a free keychain CLYDE ALLSTOTT OF HEPPNER FBI ENDS AL WINS D.B. COOPER ALL-STAR INVESTIGATION GAME REGION/3A MLB/1B 82/52 WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 2016 140th Year, No. 193 One dollar WINNER OF THE 2015 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD PENDLETON Fire station location down to two MONSTERS SWARM CITY Pokémon Go a hit locally, nationally City to decide between former cinema, hospital By WILL DENNER East Oregonian By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian The Pendleton City Council have narrowed GRZQ WKH SRWHQWLDO OLVW RI ¿UH VWDWLRQV WR WKH sites formerly occupied by Pendleton Cinema and St. Anthony Hospital. But the council and public’s opinion on which would make for a better location are at odds. 7KHFRXQFLOGLVFXVVHGWKHFLW\¶V¿UHVWDWLRQ options and the bond the city would need to pass to pay for it at a workshop Tuesday. Based on response times, Fire Chief Mike Ciraulo and his staff prefer the Pendleton Cinema site, which was purchased by Good- will Industries of the Columbia to turn into a thrift store and collection center. Although Goodwill has since abandoned those plans, Ciraulo said Goodwill wants to work with the city because it intends to open a VWRUHLQWKUHHWR¿YH\HDUVDWDGLIIHUHQWORFDWLRQ The asking price for the Pendleton Cinema property is $550,000 and demolition costs should be around $50,000. See PENDLETON/9A Farmers sue Water Resources Department Agency accused of failing to protect water rights Staff photo by E.J. Harris A group of Pokémon Go players sit underneath the “Let’er Buck” statue play- ing the game on Tuesday in Pendleton. The statue, like many other monuments, is a Pokéstop where players can collect game pieces and attract Pokémon to catch. By GEORGE PLAVEN East Oregonian A group of farmers suing the Westland Irrigation District for allegedly cheating them out of water is also suing the Oregon Water Resources Department for failing to protect their senior water rights. 7KH VHFRQG VXLW ZDV ¿OHG LQ 8PDWLOOD County Circuit Court and accuses the Water Resources Department of standing by while the Westland Irrigation District “system- DWLFDOO\ PLVDSSURSULDWHG ZDWHU´ WR EHQH¿W junior rights holders. Plaintiffs in the case include ELH LLC, owned by Patrick and Dixie Echeverria; Oregon Hereford Ranch LLC, owned by Doug and Don Bennett; Paul Gelissen; Frank Mueller; Maurice and Lucy Ziemer; Craig and Cynthia Parks; and Richard and Kristine Carpenter. Together, they farm more See WATER/10A Staff photo by E.J. Harris A Pokémon called a Nidoran appears on the screen of a smartphone outside of the Prodigal Son brewery in Pendle- ton. Pokémon Go is an augmented reality game in which the game interfaces with the real world. Only a week since it has been released, Pokémon Go has become an instant cultural phenomenon. Nintendo’s latest entry in the Pokémon (a language twist on pocket monsters) franchise was released on July 6 on iOS and Android devices free of charge. Cate- gorized as an “augmented reality game,” Pokémon Go uses Google Maps tech- nology to create a virtual map of the user’s current location. With their smart- phones, users have to phys- ically walk around in order WR ¿QG 3RNpPRQ :KHQ Pokémon are nearby, people can swipe in the direction of the animal to throw Poké Balls and capture them. To some, the concept might seem silly, but game participation is growing quickly. Pokémon Go is soon expected to surpass Twitter in daily active users. People are creating Face- book groups and events for users to meet up and play. Nintendo stocks climbed 25 percent Monday. The game has caught on locally, too. Walk a few blocks in downtown Pendleton and you’re bound to see someone wandering around looking down at his or her smartphone. Parks, monuments and other distinguishable build- ings are designated as Poké Stops, where players can pick up items and capture Pokémon. Players can also set “lures” at these loca- tions, which attracts more Pokémon to the area for a temporary amount of time. 3HRSOH RIWHQ ÀRFN WR WKHVH lures simultaneously and have discovered an added social element from playing the game. “I used to stay at home and play games online,” said Tyler Heath, 17, of Pendleton. “Since I started playing this I’m never on social media anymore and I’m meeting people face to face now.” Certain locations are more advantageous for users. Take for example Pioneer Park at 400 NW Despain Ave, where there are four Poké Stops within See POKEMON/10A UMATILLA 7ROORIMREIRUFHV¿UHFKLHIWRUHWLUHDIWHU\HDUV By ALEXA LOUGEE East Oregonian The Umatilla Rural Fire Department has handed leadership over to a new chief IRUWKH¿UVWWLPHLQ\HDUV &KLHI 0LNH 5R[EXU\ RI¿FLDOO\ UHWLUHG IURPWKHGHSDUWPHQWLQ0D\DQGQHZ¿UH chief Steven Potts was sworn in on July 1. Those years of service have come at a personal cost to Roxbury, who said despite everything he’s seen he would not have chosen a different career. “It’s the best job I ever hated,” Roxbury said. “And the worst job I ever loved.” %HFRPLQJ D ¿UH¿JKWHU DQG SDUDPHGLF was a natural path for Roxbury, whose IDWKHU DOVR VHUYHG DV D ¿UH FKLHI IRU Umatilla. All the years of responding to calls took a toll on his mental health. “It came to a point where the only things “It’s the best job I ever hated. And the worst job I ever loved.” — Mike Roxbury, retired Umatilla Rural Fire Protection District Chief that made sense were scenes of chaos and destruction,” he said. Roxbury said he stopped having a life outside of work, and the abnormal became his normal. He was more comfortable at a scene of a tragedy than sitting on his couch at home. Around May 2015 those feelings became overwhelming. It was the 10-year anniversary of the drowning of Thomas See ROXBURY/9A EO fi le photo Umatilla Rural Fire Protection District Chief Mike Roxbury sits in a 1977 water tender during a 2014 campaign for a tax to pay for new equipment for the fi re department.