WEATHER East Oregonian Page 2A REGIONAL CITIES Forecast THURSDAY TODAY Pleasant with plenty of sunshine Mostly sunny 84° 53° 92° 57° FRIDAY SATURDAY Sunny Nice with sunshine PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 92° 63° 85° 57° 83° 57° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 95° 54° 88° 51° PENDLETON through 3 p.m. yesterday TEMPERATURE HIGH LOW 78° 90° 107° (1898) 64° 60° 40° (1897) 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 0.00" 0.00" 0.02" 7.32" 5.00" 8.01" through 3 p.m. yesterday HIGH LOW 80° 90° 104° (1965) 67° 59° 44° (1987) 0.00" 0.00" 0.01" 4.94" 3.25" 5.96" SUN AND MOON Aug 10 Aug 18 Last Aug 24 5:41 a.m. 8:21 p.m. 6:39 a.m. 8:46 p.m. New Sep 1 John Day 85/48 Ontario 87/55 Bend 82/46 Burns 84/41 Caldwell 85/52 Hi 69 79 82 70 84 78 84 83 88 85 86 81 78 95 64 67 87 87 84 80 86 83 79 78 80 84 89 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 Lo 55 39 46 52 41 46 53 49 51 48 47 46 43 58 50 52 55 51 53 59 44 56 56 43 58 59 56 W pc s s pc s s s s s s s s s s pc pc s s s pc s s s s pc s s NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY Thu. Hi 70 88 88 68 90 86 92 90 95 93 91 89 86 98 64 66 93 94 92 88 92 91 87 86 86 93 94 Lo 56 44 53 53 48 52 53 54 54 54 49 53 47 61 51 54 61 55 57 59 50 55 60 47 58 62 60 Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. W s s s pc s s s s s s s s s s s pc s s s s s s s s s s s WORLD CITIES Today Hi 93 88 88 73 75 73 80 88 90 60 84 Beijing Hong Kong Jerusalem London Mexico City Moscow Paris Rome Seoul Sydney Tokyo Lo 75 79 69 58 55 60 62 70 76 54 76 W s t s pc t sh pc s t r t Thu. Hi 92 89 88 71 76 75 71 88 93 63 87 Lo 75 82 69 57 53 58 57 69 78 52 77 W pc t s sh t pc t s pc sh c WINDS Medford 95/58 PRECIPITATION Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today First Full Albany 84/55 Eugene 84/53 TEMPERATURE 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date 87° 59° Spokane Wenatchee 79/56 86/60 Tacoma Moses 77/51 Lake Pullman Aberdeen Olympia Yakima 86/56 77/47 68/52 78/49 89/56 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 77/55 84/59 Lewiston 88/53 Astoria 86/57 69/55 Portland Enterprise Hermiston 80/59 Pendleton 78/46 The Dalles 88/51 84/53 88/57 La Grande Salem 81/46 83/56 Corvallis 84/54 HERMISTON Yesterday Normals Records 89° 60° Seattle 75/56 ALMANAC Yesterday Normals Records 97° 63° Today SUNDAY Pleasant with brilliant sunshine Wednesday, August 3, 2016 (in mph) Boardman Pendleton Klamath Falls 86/47 REGIONAL FORECAST Eastern and Central Oregon: Pleasant today with plenty of sun; cooler in the south and upper Treasure Valley. Western Washington: Clouds giving way to sun today. Clear tonight. Mostly sunny tomorrow. Eastern Washington: Sunshine and patchy clouds today. Clear tonight. Mostly sunny tomorrow. Cascades: Pleasant and warmer today with plenty of sunshine. Clear tonight. Northern California: Low clouds followed by some sun at the coast today; plenty of sunshine elsewhere. Thursday NE 3-6 N 4-8 UV INDEX TODAY Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Coastal Oregon: Partly sunny today; pleas- ant across the north. Partly cloudy tonight. Today WSW 4-8 W 4-8 1 4 7 7 211 S.E. Byers Ave., Pendleton 541-276-2211 333 E. Main St., Hermiston 541-567-6211 2I¿FHKRXUV0RQGD\WKURXJK)ULGD\DPWRSP &ORVHGPDMRUKROLGD\V www.eastoregonian.com To subscribe, call 1-800-522-0255 or go online to www.eastoregonian.com and click on ‘Subscribe’ (DVW2UHJRQLDQ(USPS 164-980)LVSXEOLVKHGGDLO\H[FHSW6XQGD\0RQGD\ DQG'HFE\WKH(20HGLD*URXS6(%\HUV$YH3HQGOHWRQ25 3HULRGLFDOVSRVWDJHSDLGDW3HQGOHWRQ25Postmaster:VHQGDGGUHVVFKDQJHVWR (DVW2UHJRQLDQ6(%\HUV$YH3HQGOHWRQ25 1 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 Subscriber services: For home delivery, vacation stops or delivery concerns: 1-800-522-0255 Didn’t receive your paper?&DOO EHIRUHQRRQ7XHVGD\WKURXJK)ULGD\ RUEHIRUHDP6DWXUGD\ for same-day redelivery — Founded Oct. 16, 1875 — 4 SUBSCRIPTION RATES /RFDOKRPHGHOLYHU\ 6DYLQJVRIIFRYHUSULFH (=3D\ SHUFHQW ZHHNV SHUFHQW ZHHNV SHUFHQW ZHHNV SHUFHQW (=3D\ RQH\HDUUDWHZLWKDPRQWKO\FUHGLWRUGHELWFDUGFKHFNFKDUJH Single copy price: 7XHVGD\WKURXJK)ULGD\6DWXUGD\ Copyright © 2016, EO Media Group -10s -0s showers t-storms 0s 10s rain 20s flurries 30s 40s snow 50s ice 60s cold front 70s 80s 90s 100s warm front stationary front 110s high low National Summary: Storms in the Southeast and Southwest will bring the risk of flash flooding today. Storms over the northern Plains and Rockies can bring damaging winds. Storms will dot the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes. Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) High 106° in Imperial, Calif. Low 32° in Stanley, Idaho 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 86 92 79 83 88 92 84 78 89 83 88 89 101 96 89 93 59 90 87 98 90 92 92 100 101 83 Lo 66 73 70 65 54 75 55 65 74 69 70 70 80 62 67 73 48 67 77 77 71 73 75 83 78 66 W t t pc pc s t s s t t pc s s s s c sh t pc s pc t pc t s pc Thur. Hi 85 90 81 85 82 94 91 82 89 85 89 92 101 80 90 94 68 79 86 97 89 90 95 97 100 82 Lo 64 72 69 67 57 74 66 66 75 69 75 71 80 56 72 75 55 56 76 77 72 72 73 81 78 65 W t pc pc pc s pc s s t t pc pc s pc pc pc c pc pc pc pc t pc t pc pc Today Hi Louisville 90 Memphis 96 Miami 88 Milwaukee 85 Minneapolis 90 Nashville 91 New Orleans 93 New York City 80 Oklahoma City 99 Omaha 91 Philadelphia 83 Phoenix 97 Portland, ME 80 Providence 82 Raleigh 84 Rapid City 93 Reno 95 Sacramento 97 St. Louis 90 Salt Lake City 94 San Diego 76 San Francisco 70 Seattle 75 Tucson 91 Washington, DC 84 Wichita 100 Lo 73 79 79 71 74 73 79 67 75 75 65 84 61 60 71 57 60 58 75 66 67 54 56 75 70 77 W pc t pc pc pc pc t pc s pc pc t s s t t s s t s pc pc pc t pc s Thur. Hi 90 96 90 87 88 93 92 81 100 92 85 102 83 81 84 80 95 85 94 94 76 68 80 95 85 101 Lo 74 79 79 72 64 73 80 68 75 68 66 86 63 61 71 52 60 56 77 71 67 57 57 76 72 75 W c pc pc pc t pc pc s s pc s t pc s t pc s s pc pc pc pc s t pc pc Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice. 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Hinchliffe were based on 1886 charter and holds They were further what was best for Waits- elections each May for rafÀe may have violated mayor and all ¿ve city shocked to learn that burg. “We both always kept an council seats. WAITSBURG – Mayor Nestlé’s contractors had Oregon gun law As a ¿nal caveat to his Walt Gobel has resigned already been in the city’s open mind, we were willing from his position with the watershed scoping out the to listen to others, and we constituency, Gobel wrote: By DIAN VER VALEN Walla Walla Union Bulletin LAKE OSWEGO (AP) ² A pastor in an afÀuent suburb of Portland may have run afoul of Oregon law when he transferred an AR-15 assault riÀe that he won in a softball league rafÀe to a gun-owning friend for safe- keeping without performing a background check. The Oregon State Police will open an investigation into whether the Rev. Jeremy Lucas violated any law, spokesman Capt. Bill Fugate told The Associated Press on Tuesday, although the deci- sion on charges would fall to the district attorney. Lucas, of Christ Church Episcopal Parish in Lake Oswego, a suburban town about 10 miles south of Port- land, drew national attention recently when he used $3,000 in discretionary church funds to buy as many of the rafÀe tickets as he could for a softball league fundraiser to send high school students to a regional tournament in California. Lucas, 41, wanted to win so he could destroy the gun. He told the AP on Tuesday that he has received overwhelming support from parishioners. “The money that was used to buy the rafÀe tickets has been more than replaced,” he said. “We’ve gotten support from all over the country, with people sending checks and money. It’s struck a chord.” Last year, state lawmakers passed a new law that made transferring a gun without a background check illegal, even if the arrangement is between two private parties and no money changes hands. If Lucas were to be convicted of a misdemeanor charge of unlawful transfer of a weapon, he could face a ma[imum ¿ne of $6,250 and up to a year in jail. Lucas told the AP he has not heard from authorities and is not worried about the investigation. “If they get in touch with me, I’ll be happy to talk to them and tell them everything they want to know,” he said. Lucas ¿rst read about “We thought it should be looked into. And now he can’t get the gun back without violating (the law) again.” — Kevin Starrett, Oregon Firearms Federa- tion executive director the rafÀe of the AR-15 in Portland’s alternative weekly newspaper, Willamette Week. He decided to try to win the gun to get it out of circula- tion, while at the same time sending the players from the Big League Girls’ All Star Softball Team to the tourna- ment. They were selling $20 tickets to raise $6,000 for the trip. When he won, Lucas passed a background check and took possession of the weapon. But when he told The Washington Post in an inter- view last week that he had given the riÀe to someone else for safekeeping, the Oregon Firearms Federation took note. The group strongly opposed last year’s Senate Bill 941 because its members feared the law would wind up criminalizing gun owners, said Kevin Starrett, the group’s executive director. Starrett last week wrote a letter pointing out Lucas’s potential law violation and mailed it to the Oregon State Police, the Lake Oswego Police Department and 30 state lawmakers, he told the AP on Tuesday. He called Lucas “vocally anti-gun” and accused him of trying to make a political statement with his parishioners’ money. “We thought it should be looked into,” he said. “And now he can’t get the gun back without violating (the law) again.” It’s unclear when the Oregon State Police will complete its investigation. Fugate, the spokesman, had no other details. city of Waitsburg effective immediately, according to a news release he issued via email Tuesday. Gobel, who has been mayor in Waitsburg since 2010, became the center of controversy following an announcement in July that Nestlé Waters North America is interested in building a water-bottling plant inside the city. Council members during that meeting expressed their shock and disap- pointment that Gobel and City Administrator Randy Hinchliffe had already met with a Nestlé representa- tive several times since February without their city’s springs to determine whether such a project in Waitsburg had merit. “I’m a little bit dumb- founded sitting here tonight,” council member KC Kuykendall said during the July 20 meeting. Nestlé was ordered to stop all exploratory work in the watershed immediately while city council consid- ered the corporation’s interest. Demonstrators protesting at the city park the following Monday held signs suggesting that Gobel be recalled. In his press release, Gobel said the actions taken by himself and worked toward what was best for the community,” he stated. “In this situation, Randy and I were not given an opportunity to explain the how or why of the sequence of events,” he wrote. “Councilman Kuykendall and most of the public present at the meeting were quick to jump to their own conclusions without knowing the actual facts.” City council member Marty Dunn is currently mayor pro tem. Hinchliffe was not immediately available to explain how the city will handle the resignation. Waitsburg operates on an “To those who have pushed for my recall, I say you won! You have won the battle, but if you continue to reject all possibilities of growth for this community, you will not win the war.” “Our community will continue to regress as long as you maintain your ‘mob’ attitude when possible community devel- opment presents itself,” he continued. “After all, this situation is not the ¿rst time this has happened. I am embarrassed that our community has treated some of the presenters on possible community or economic development very rudely.” Too much lead: Water shut off at two Medford schools MEDFORD (AP) — Drinking water has been shut off at two Medford schools after of¿cials said tests revealed it contained too much lead. The results received late last week showed water from 3 percent of ¿xtures at Jackson Elementary and 80 percent of ¿xtures at Roosevelt Elementary exceeded the 20 parts per billion level at which the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency calls for cleanup measures. The ¿ndings came after the district completely replaced plumbing at both schools in 2009. Of¿cials said tests taken between 2011 and 2015 showed no indication of elevated lead levels. “These are the last (schools) that we expected there to be any problems; it just doesn’t make any sense to see those elevated levels,” said Ron Havniear, the district’s facilities and support services manager. The Mail Tribune reports school of¿cials sent parents a letter, took additional samples for a retest and distributed water Corrections 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. 5-6 $7 bottles for students and staff to use during the Kids Unlimited summer camp program at Roosevelt and Jackson. The Medford Water Commission will take samples Wednesday or Thursday to see if the lead is coming from the munic- ipal water supply. If that’s eliminated as a source, the district will look at its plumbing to ¿nd the source of the lead, Havniear said. “We’re in a holding pattern until we get the next round of samples back,” he said. In the meantime, the district is referring parents with concerns to medical professionals who can determine whether blood tests are warranted. Without federal mandates for testing water systems in school build- ings and with the Flint, Michigan, water crisis at center stage of the debate, Gov. Kate Brown has called on Oregon’s 197 school districts to craft procedures for testing lead, radon and other chemicals at their campuses by this fall.