BMCC STAYS ALIVE KENDRA, BAND IS BACK IN QUEEN OF ROUND-UP PILOT REGION/3A ROCK VOLLEYBALL/1B LIFESTYLES/1C WEEKEND, NOVEMBER 19-20, 2016 141st Year, No. 25 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2016 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Election creates uncertain future for migrants By SOPHIA TAREEN Associated Press SCOTT WYN OF IONE Visit Kopacz Nursery for free gardening gloves Fine-tuning fl ows Agencies to address federal dams in study Columbia and Snake river dams 97 mb Colu ia Chelan Seattle 90 By GEORGE PLAVEN East Oregonian 11 Spokane WASHINGTON Wenatchee 90 Olympia 6 5 r Snake R i ve Yakima Astoria 82 Longview Pacific Ocean Vancouver Portland 101 5 Richland 5 Kennewick lumbia Riv e r Co The 1 Dalles 2 3 84 Umatilla 7 Pasco 4 8 IDAHO 9 Lewiston Walla Walla Pendleton . After nearly two decades, the federal government is taking another look at how to operate and maintain its network of dams through the interior Columbia Basin. The dams — 14 in all — are critical to the way of life in the Pacifi c Northwest. They provide for the transportation of goods, irrigation of crops, recreation for boaters and anglers and enough hydro- electricity to power roughly 7 million homes. Agencies also are responsible for protecting endangered fi sh, wildlife and other cultural resources. Now, thanks in part to a court order, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Bureau of Reclamation and Bonne- ville Power Administration are developing an updated environmental impact statement, or EIS, that will impact everything from salmon survival to the cost of 12 10 Coulee Dam OREGON S na ke R See MIGRANT/16A Staff photo by E.J. Harris The Bonneville Power Administration, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the Bureau of Reclamation will develop an updated environmen- tal impact statement on the 14 dams on the Columbia River system. R i ver CHICAGO — Immi- gration hotlines are buzzing. Legal clinics are seeing an infl ux of clients. Public schools are fi elding frantic questions from parents and students. Since the election, Donald Trump’s tough talk on immigration has stirred anxiety nationwide among immigrants regard- less of legal status. They are turning to lawyers, schools, advocacy groups and congressional offi ces for help. “We’re operating with a lot of unknowns, and a certain amount of fear comes with that,” said Vanessa Esparza-López, a managing attorney at the Chicago-based National Immigrant Justice Center. In Chicago, a hotline run by the state’s largest immigrant-rights group received more than 330 calls in the week after the election, compared with the usual 100 or so. Denver school offi cials sent a letter to parents in response to questions about the election’s effect on students living in the country illegally. The New York Legal Assistance Group said it’s receiving 40 to 60 daily calls about immigration, up from 20 to 30. The Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles reported 19 walk-ins on a single day, all with citizenship 84 Dams included in the recent court ruling N 20 miles 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Bonneville The Dalles John Day McNary Ice Harbor 6. Lower Monumental 7. Little Goose 8. Lower Granite 9. Dworshak 10. Albeni Falls 11. Grand Coulee 12. Chief Joseph 13. Libby (Mont.)* 14. Hungry Horse (Mont.)* *Not shown Sources: U.S. Army Corp. of Engineers fl ipping on the light switch. The process is underway with a series of public scoping meetings in Oregon, Wash- ington, Idaho and Montana, including Thursday’s stop in Walla Walla that drew 123 people. The Columbia River System includes Bonneville, The Dalles, John Day Alan Kenaga/Capital Press and McNary dams on the main stem Columbia River between Oregon and Wash- ington, as well as Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose and Lower Granite dams on the Lower Snake River. Steve Fischer, environ- mental team lead for the Army Corps Northwest Division in Portland, said the open house-style meet- ings are intended to gather input on issues that will be analyzed and potentially incorporated as part of the fi nal EIS. “This is a key time in the process,” Fischer said. Photo by Andy Porter/Union-Bulletin Dressed in her orca cos- tume, Port Townsend resi- dent Debra Ellers was part of a small group of dem- onstrators at a meeting in Walla Walla Thursday to draw public comment on a new Environmental Impact Statement for 14 federal dam projects on the Colum- bia and lower Snake rivers. “At the end of the day, it’s not about what we think. It’s about what the public thinks.” Public comments for the scoping period are due Jan. 17, 2017. The next meeting will be held Monday from 4-7 p.m. at the Holiday Inn Express in Pasco. Breaching dams The agencies will have until spring 2020 to come up See DAMS/16A UMATILLA COUNTY VOTER TURNOUT Moving, college and candidates: reasons not to vote General election voter turnout (Percent turnout per region) Oregon 78.7% Morrow Co. 76.7 Umatilla Co. 71 U.S. 58.2 Sources: United States Election Project; Oregon Secretary of State EO Media Group graphic 3 of 10 registered voters in county didn’t cast a ballot, or at least it wasn’t counted By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian Tucker Wilson of Helix turned 18 last December and said he voted in both the primary and general election. “I’m not necessarily pleased with the outcome,” he said. “But I’m hoping for the best.” Yet unoffi cial results from Umatilla County Elections Division show Wilson’s ballot has not been counted, and neither were those of 10,725 other county residents. That was enough to give Umatilla County the worst voter turnout in the state. Wilson said he mailed his ballot Oct. 30 from Spokane, where he is studying biology at Whitworth University. Maybe that was not enough time, he said, to make it to the elections department. More than 27,600 Umatilla County voters cast ballots in the November general election, generating a turnout just better than 71 percent. The Oregon Secre- tary of State’s Elections Divi- sion reported neighboring Morrow County was at 76.7 percent, and Josephine County in southwest Oregon had the second worst turnout at almost 74 percent. The statewide voter turnout was 78.5 percent. Wallowa County had the top turnout, with almost 85.5 percent of its 5,211 voters casting ballots. Counties keep lists of who voted and who did not. The East Oregonian obtained a copy of the Umatilla County list, which contains the names, contact information, and party affi liation of people registered to vote, as well as See VOTING/16A