Visit Elite Guns & Bows in Pendleton for a free hat RICHARD ROBERT OF MILTON-FREEWATER HEPPNER BACK IN 2A SEMIS 2016 SET TO BREAK HEAT RECORD WORLD/7A 56/37 FOOTBALL/1B TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2016 141st Year, No. 21 One dollar WINNER OF THE 2016 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD PENDLETON Marijuana regulations must be set by Jan. 3 By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian Voters slap down mosquito control steps, but he could say that the district’s fi nances were in good enough shape that it wouldn’t have to cut services in the immediate future. “Five years ago we set fi nan- cial goals, and one of those goals was getting away from the need for these local option levies, and we’re almost there,” he said. Any extra money could have gone toward additional controls for West Nile virus, however. Gerard said this year the district had 34 samples of mosquitoes Although Pendleton voters strongly endorsed legalizing marijuana sales and taxing them, residents shouldn’t expect new pot shops in town overnight. Land use regulations for marijuana busi- nesses were approved by the Pendleton City Council Nov. 1, but city attorney Nancy Kerns said ordinances creating a special marijuana business license and enacting a 3 percent sales tax needs to be passed before potential retailers can open their doors. Kerns said she wanted to give staff more time to review drafts of the laws before proposing them to the city council, meaning they’re not likely to be discussed at Tuesday’s meeting. Kerns said she is hopeful all city regulations should be in place by Jan. 1. Mark Pettinger is a spokesman for the Oregon Liquor Control Commission, the public agency that regulates recreational marijuana sales for the state. Pettinger said Pendleton and all the other cities and counties that repealed bans on marijuana sales will have until Jan. 3 to begin issuing licenses, giving the city a grace period to enact its fi nal spate of ordinances. Potential retailers would have a high bar to clear with both the city and the state to start selling marijuana in 2017. While a current iteration of the business license ordinance isn’t yet public, staff did write a draft when the city council briefl y considered medical marijuana regulations in June 2015, which required marijuana retailers to get approval from the state before it could See MOSQUITO/8A See MARIJUANA/8A EO fi le photo A fi eld technician from North Morrow Vector Control District checks a sample for mosquito larvae while checking pools of standing water in September 2012 in a pasture near Irrigon. The district passed a renewal bond in 2016, while the West Umatilla Mosquito Control District did not. Tax levy for West Umatilla County Mosquito Control rejected By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian Voters in west Umatilla County are more worried about their tax bills than mosquito bites, if last week’s election results are any indication. Unoffi cial results show the West Umatilla County Mosquito Control District’s proposed tax levy of fi ve cents per $1,000 of assessed value failing by 33 votes. In the past the levy, which the district has pursued every four years to bolster its funding, USDA-Agricultural Research Service has passed easily. Sixty-three percent of voters approved the levy in 2012 and in other years support was even higher. Board chair Glenn Chowning said he suspected this year’s “no” vote was more a commen- tary on high property tax bills in the area than it was a refl ection on the district itself. “Anything that looks like another tax, people don’t want it,” he said. Chowning also said Herm- iston has so many new people that many of them don’t know how bad the mosquitoes used to be. “People don’t know the affect the district had,” he said. Randy Gerard, district manager, said it would be up to the board to determine next HERMISTON Trump could have huge Bus system gets green light impacts on Oregon health care Service to begin Jan. 2 By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian Hermiston’s free public bus system is about to become a reality. The Hermiston City Council approved a contract with the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation on Monday to begin the service on Jan. 2. Under the contract, Kayak Public Transit will provide a fi xed-route bus service free to any member of the public for at least 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. The route will loop through Hermiston once each hour, stop- ping in residential neighborhoods as well as grocery stores, medical clinics and government buildings. The bus will also provide doorstop service for qualifying disabled residents who cannot reach a bus stop on their own but live within three-fourths of a mile of a stop. “This is a great start,” city councilor Rod Hardin said. “It’s something that’s been needed here for years.” The city expects to spend $125,000 on the fi rst six months to get the system up and running, then apply for federal 5311 transporta- tion funding that CTUIR planning director J.D. Tovey told the council he doesn’t “see any reason” would See BUS/8A By NICK BUDNICK Capital Bureau Oregon has plenty to lose when it comes to President-elect Donald Trump’s vow to change the nation’s health care system. His surprise victory threatens state offi cials’ hope of plugging a looming budget hole with $1.25 billion in federal health care reform payments, and his vow to imme- diately repeal Obamacare creates uncertainty for more than 470,000 Oregonians who received coverage or subsidies under the law. However, Trump already has signaled a willingness to reconsider aspects of the federal Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, and observers believe nobody’s coverage is in immediate danger. Any changes could take until 2018 to fi lter down. Here’s what Orego- nians should know as Trump prepares to take Trump offi ce in January: Oregon Health Plan About 1 million Oregonians are enrolled in the state’s version of Medicaid, the government low-in- come health care program. Of those, 378,607 adults qualifi ed under Obamacare’s expansion of Medicaid, which in Oregon boosted the maximum income to qualify from 100 percent of the federal poverty level to 133 percent. Instead of having to earn $20,160 or less to qualify, a family of three could make a little more than $26,800 under the new cap. But while Trump has vowed to repeal and replace Obamacare, it’s unclear how that might affect Medicaid expansion. Jeff Heatherington, CEO of Port- land-based Family Care, one of 16 See HEALTH/8A District attorney drops serious charges against protesters Portland high schoolers join anti-Trump protest By ANDREW SELSKY Associated Press Beth Nakamura/The Oregonian via AP Portland Public School students walked out of schools Monday and converge on Pioneer Courthouse Square and crossed the Hawthorne Bridge for a protest against the results of last week’s presidential election. PORTLAND — Facing a huge backlog of cases, prosecutors in Port- land on Monday dropped more serious charges against the more than 100 protesters who have been arrested in the city since Donald Trump was elected president. The protests continued on Monday as hundreds of high school students took to the streets, chanting slogans like “Peaceful Protest” and “No Trump, No KKK” as they marched across the city in the rain. Almost a week of anti-Trump protests in Portland have ranged from peaceful to violent, when vandals smashed windows of businesses and cars and caused other mayhem. Portland Mayor Charlie Hales on Monday accused them of “criminal behavior.” Police and prosecutors focused on the vandals, putting photos of them online and asking the public to help identify them or to contribute their own photos or video of them in the act of damaging property. But nearly all of the more than 100 people who were arrested on charges such as attempted assault on a peace offi cer and disorderly conduct will instead receive traffi c citations for failing to obey a police offi cer, according to a joint statement from Portland police and the Multnomah County District Attor- ney’s offi ce. That offense is punishable by a fi ne of up to $1,000. The statement said the “sheer number of arrests during protests over the last See PROTEST/8A