East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, December 13, 2016, Page Page 5A, Image 5

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    RECORDS
Tuesday, December 13, 2016
East Oregonian
PUBLIC SAFETY LOG
OBITUARIES
THURSDAY
Dale W. Stickley
Karl Lutz
Clovis, N.M.
July 6, 1943-December 2, 2016
Kennewick, Wash.
Dec. 11, 2016
7:20 p.m. - Emergency services in Hermiston received a
report of a vehicle striking a male near the Field Of Dreams on
East Diagonal Boulevard, Hermiston.
9:48 p.m. - A caller on East Beebe Avenue, Hermiston,
reported her neighbor died and someone was inside his home.
FRIDAY
11:50 a.m. - A caller reported a tenant that lives at the
recreational vehicle park at the Pilot Travel Center, Stanfield,
dumped raw sewage in the site’s waste container.
2:26 p.m. - The Umatilla County Sheriff’s Office received
second-hand information of a caller harassing a man living at
J D Gonzalez Trucking, 30386 Oldfield, Hermiston. The man
received a hundred calls and texts messages in 12 hours from
one person, which also sent calls and texts to the man’s wife.
2:56 p.m. - Someone broken the lottery machine at Fortune
Garden, 1200 N. First St., Hermiston, and video cameras
captured the incident.
10:58 p.m. - A Hermiston caller reported her friend showed
up and her place of business with a female, and the female
was trespassing. The man was the victim of the earlier phone
harassment.
11:12 p.m. - Two Rivers Correctional Institution, Umatilla,
reported a 59-year-old man in the prison was suffering a
possible heart attack. An ambulance from Irrigon took the man
to Good Shepherd Medical Center, Hermiston.
SATURDAY
1:07 a.m. - Juvenile girls ran around Spruce Village
Apartments, 625 N.W. Spruce St., Hermiston, swearing, yelling
and looking in windows to try and take photos of people.
6:55 a.m. - A semi driver at the Pilot Travel Center, 2115
S. Highway 395. Stanfield, reported another driver yelled and
threatened him for taking too long to get out of the parking spots.
10:27 a.m. - The Umatilla County Sheriff’s Office received
a report of five starving horses at Banks Lane and East Punkin
Center Road, Hermiston. They have been without hay for four
days, the caller said.
2:08 p.m. - Pendleton medics responded to Aldrich Park,
1000 N.W. King Ave., for a woman who broke her ankle.
2:46 p.m. - A man on East Wilshire Avenue, Hermiston,
reported a green parrot was at his bird feeder. He said he tried
to catch it, but it flew into a tree.
8:22 p.m. - A caller reported her father was at the mobile
home park Bella Vista Estates Cooperative, 705 Paul Smith
Road, Boardman, had a knife and was trying to kill her
boyfriend.
SUNDAY
1:32 a.m. - A mother asked Hermiston police to check on
the welfare of her 21-year-old daughter who was wrapped in a
blanket and outdoors in the area of East Gladys Avenue and
Northeast Fourth Street.
1:35 a.m. - A man at the Riverside Sports Bar & Lounge,
1501 Sixth St., Umatilla, reported he lost his identification
and wanted the number for the Mexican consulate. The caller
also was too intoxicated to understand and would not answer
questions.
6:52 a.m. - Boardman fire and ambulance responded to a
large barn on fire on Kunze Lane, Boardman.
1:33 p.m. - A man on Cobb Road, Milton-Freewater, reported
a burglary and the theft of his cellphone, .308-caliber Enfield rifle
and possibly more.
1:35 p.m. - Juvenile rivers on four-wheelers dragged others
behind them in the snow and ice in the Highland Summit area of
Hermiston. A caller said they were driving erratically and lacked
supervision.
4:05 p.m. - An older teen reported she did not want to drop
off her younger sister with their mother in Irrigon because she
seemed to be suffering a possible mental episode.
5:44 p.m. - The Morrow County Sheriff’s Office received a
second-hand report of a male beating a female at a trailer on the
61300 block of Dee Cox Road, Heppner.
10:40 p.m. - The Umatilla County Sheriff’s Office took a
report of domestic violence from a woman on Adams Road,
Pendleton.
ARRESTS, CITATIONS
Friday
•Pendleton police arrested Sarah Ann Pierre, 38, of
Pendleton, for giving false information, possession of metham-
phetamine, and violating parole.
•Stanfield police arrested Virgil Ray Robbins, 41, of
Hermiston, for driving under the influence of intoxicants,
supplying contraband (drugs), and driving while suspended/
revoked. Court records show Robbins is serving two years of
probation for a DUII conviction from Oct. 31.
Saturday
•Pilot Rock police arrested Terry Dean Schoen, 58, of
Hermiston, for menacing and felony fourth-degree assault, both
domestic violence charges.
•Umatilla County Sheriff’s Office arrested Mark Anthony
Cano Sr., 46, of Stanfield, for DUII, reckless driving, and
second-degree disorderly conduct.
•Oregon State Police arrested Mitchell Lee Carry Moccasin,
36, of College Place, Washington, for DUII. The arrest came
after a trooper responded to a two-vehicle crash at the intersec-
tion of highways 339 and 332, Milton-Freewater, where a Jeep
Liberty t-boned a Dodge Ram 1500 pickup.
The driver of the Dodge told the trooper he was facing south
and stopped a stop sign when the Jeep ran the stop and plowed
into his vehicle.
Carry Moccasin drove the Jeep, according to state police,
and right off the trooper smelled alcohol on his breath. Carry
Moccasin also had “bloodshot and glassy” eyes and showed
“signs of impairment” during a sobriety test.
State police also reported the trooper arrested Carry
Moccasin for drunk driving and took him to the Milton-Freewater
Police Department, where he took a breath test that revealed a
.19 percent blood-alcohol level, more than twice the .08 percent
legal limit. From there, the trooper took Carry-Moccasin to the
Umatilla County Jail, Pendleton.
•Umatilla County Sheriff’s Office arrested Jason Paul
Stinchcomb, 41, of Weston, for felony fourth-degree assault
(domestic violence).
Sunday
•Umatilla County Sheriff’s Office arrested Mikael Iacob
Butler, 18, no address provided, for second-degree theft and
second-degree burglary.
•Stanfield police arrested April Mae Bautista, 39, of Stanfield,
on a warrant for failure to appear in an assault and weapons
case and for possession of methamphetamine.
•Pendleton police arrested Dominick Ski Burrows, 28, no
address provided, for DUII.
Dale W. Stickley passed
away peacefully in his
home on December 2, 2016.
Dale was born to Rollie
Stickley and Ethel
(Holaday)
on
July 6th, 1943,
the youngest of
13 children in
Laramie,
Wyo.,
and has lived
nearly everywhere “West
of the Mississippi,” his
favorites being, Emmett
and Caldwell, Idaho; Herm-
iston and Irrigon, Ore., and
Clovis, N.M.
Dale is survived by his
children Darla Rae Phenix,
David Stickley, Deana
Davis and Danielle Stickley,
10 grandchildren and seven
great-grandchildren, as well
as three of his sisters, Rose
DeChand, Ada Sigman and
Zeta Smith, and his brother
PENDLETON PARKS &
RECREATION COMMISSION,
12 p.m., Pendleton Parks & Rec-
reation office, 685 Tutuilla Road,
Pendleton. (541-276-8100)
PORT OF UMATILLA COM-
MISSION, 1 p.m., Port of Uma-
tilla offices, 505 Willamette Ave.,
Umatilla. (541-922-3224)
PENDLETON
FARMERS
MARKET BOARD, 5:30 p.m.,
Pendleton Early Learning Cen-
ter, 455 S.W. 13th St., Pendleton.
(541-969-9466)
PENDLETON
LIBRARY
BOARD, 6 p.m., Pendleton Pub-
lic Library meeting room, 502
S.W. Dorion Ave, Pendleton.
(541-966-0380)
WESTON
CEMETERY
BOARD, 6 p.m., Memorial Hall,
210 E. Main St., Weston. (541-
566-3313)
MORROW COUNTY FAIR
BOARD, 6 p.m., SAGE Center,
101 Olson Road, Boardman.
(Ann Jones 541-676-9474)
BOARDMAN CITY COUN-
CIL SPECIAL MEETING, 6:30
p.m., Boardman City Hall, 200
City Center Circle, Boardman.
(Jackie McCauley 541-481-9252)
LEXINGTON TOWN COUN-
CIL, 7 p.m., Lexington Town Hall,
425 F St., Lexington. (541-989-
8515)
Dareo Quiriconi
Hermiston
Dec. 21, 1926-Dec. 9, 2016
Dareo Quiriconi, 89, of Hermiston died Friday, Dec. 9,
2016, in Heppner. He was born Dec. 21, 1926, in Wadsworth,
Nev. Burial will take place in Reno, Nevada. Burns Mortuary
of Hermiston is in care of arrangements. Sign the online
condolence book at burnsmortuaryhermiston.com
Allen Ernest Springer
Hood River
June 3, 1930-Dec. 11, 2016
Former area resident Allen Ernest Springer, 86, of Hood
River died Sunday, Dec. 11, 2016, at his home. He was born
June 3, 1930. Viewing will be held Wednesday, Dec. 14
from 2-4 p.m. at Anderson’s Tribute Center in Hood River.
Services will be held Saturday, Dec. 17 at 1 p.m., also a
the funeral Home. Anderson’s Tribute Center is handling
arrangements. Visit www.AndersonsTributeCenter.com to
leave a note of condolence for the family.
UPCOMING SERVICES
TUESDAY, DEC. 13
RICHARDS, CONNIE — Funeral mass at 11 a.m. at St.
Andrew’s Catholic Church, 48022 St. Andrews Road, Mission.
SMITH, D.O. — Memorial service at 4 p.m. at Bethlehem
Lutheran Church, 515 S.W. Seventh St., Hermiston.
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 14
SPRINGER, ALLEN — Viewing from 2-4 p.m. at Ander-
son’s Tribute Center, 1401 Belmont Ave., Hood River.
Umatilla County, union strike new labor deal
By PHIL WRIGHT
East Oregonian
After seven months of
negotiations, Umatilla County
and members of the American
Federation of State, County,
and Municipal Employees
agreed on a labor contract.
The county board of
commissioners on Wednesday
voted 2-0 to ratify the three-
year deal that includes cost of
living increases of 2 percent
each year for the 110 members
in the local. The contract is
effective July 1, 2016 and runs
through June 30, 2019.
Bargaining began May 9.
Seth Moore was the AFSCME
representative at the table for
the employees and took to
Facebook to provide updates
on the negotiations. He also
used those updates to criticize
the county’s team for a lack
of readiness and dragging out
the process. Commissioner
George Murdock in October
reported negotiations broke
down and on Aug. 31 both
teams asked for a mediator to
step in and help.
Commissioner
Larry
Givens said pay was the
hurdle that caused the need
for outside help. The union
wanted more than the county
could afford, he said, and both
sides were prepared to walk
out of the talks.
Moore agreed pay was an
issue. He said the union would
like to see Umatilla County
provide pay comparable to
counties with similar popu-
lations, such as Polk, Benton
and Coos counties. Moore
called the contract a compro-
mise, but one the members
ratified.
County commissioners in
July 2015 gave county-wide
elected officials a cost-of-
living increase of 3 percent
and increased their own pay
7.5 percent, making their
salary $86,273 a year. The
increases made the commis-
sioner pay comparable to
what Benton County pays
commissioners at the top of its
scale and about $20,000 more
than what Polk and Klamath
counties pay theirs.
Labor negotiations always
give employees and manage-
ment angst, Givens said, and
agreeing on a new contract is
a relief. Commissioner Bill
Elfering said if neither side
gets everything it wanted, it’s
probably a good deal.
“I think that’s probably the
case here,” he said.
The matter of insurance,
though, is going to bring both
sides back to the bargaining
table in 2017. The county’s
carrier, LifeWise Health Plan
of Oregon, is pulling out of
the state’s insurance market.
Jennifer Blake, the county’s
human resources director, at
the Wednesday meeting said
there are at least five insurance
companies the county can
turn to, and staff are working
on seeking bids as soon as
possible.
Robert Pahl, the coun-
ty’s chief financial officer,
added the county is facing a
“substantial increase” in the
cost health insurance of at
least 15 percent.
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
TUESDAY, DEC. 13
PENDLETON TOASTMAS-
TERS NO. 154, 6:30 a.m., Pendle-
ton City Hall community room, 501
S.W. Emigrant Ave., Pendleton.
TOPS CHAPTER OR 1110, 8
a.m., Missionary Baptist Church,
125 E. Beech St., Hermiston. 8
a.m. weigh-in followed by meeting
at 8:45 a.m. (Margaret Wetterling
541-720-0276)
BIBLE STUDY, 10 a.m., First
United Methodist Church, 352 S.E.
Second St., Pendleton. (Rev. Jim
Pierce 541-276-2616)
GREENFIELD GRANGE PI-
NOCHLE, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Green-
field Grange 579, 209 N.W. First
St., Boardman. (541-481-7397)
“THE LIFE MODEL: LIV-
ING FROM THE HEART JESUS
GAVE YOU” BOOK STUDY
GROUP, 1-2:30 p.m., Bowman
Building, 17 S.W. Frazer Ave.,
Pendleton. (Pat 541-276-6671)
TOPS CHAPTER OR 1169,
4-5:30 p.m., Hermiston Assembly
of God Church, 730 E. Hurlburt
Ave., Hermiston. Use west side
door. (Janell Bailey 541-571-5744)
STUDYING THE MIRACLES
OF JESUS, 4-6 p.m., Good Sa-
maritan Ministries, 319 W. Locust
Ave., Hermiston. (541-564-1041)
ARC OF UMATILLA COUN-
TY, 5:30 p.m., The ARC Building,
215 W. Orchard Ave., Hermiston.
(541-567-7615)
COLUMBIA RIVER TOAST-
MASTERS, 6-7 p.m., Umatilla Se-
nior Center, Umatilla.
WOMEN’S BIBLE STUDY, 6
p.m., Landmark Missionary Bap-
tist Church, 125 E. Beech Ave.,
Hermiston.
PENDLETON BABE RUTH
BASEBALL LEAGUE ANNU-
AL MEETING, 6 p.m., Hodgen
Distributing banquet room, 4340
Westgate, Pendleton. Anyone
interested in volunteering for the
2017 season or applying for a
position on the board of directors
is encouraged to attend. (Pamela
Duso 541-276-0121)
AWANA, 6:30-8 p.m., Pendle-
ton Baptist Church, 3202 S.W. Nye
Ave., Pendleton. For children age
3 through sixth grade. (541-276-
7590)
A SHARP PLAYERS OR-
CHESTRA REHEARSAL, 6:30-
8:30 p.m., Pendleton High School
band room, 1800 N.W. Carden
Ave., Pendleton. Intermediate or-
chestra for players of any instru-
ment. (JD Kindle 541-276-0320)
PRELUDES
ORCHESTRA
REHEARSAL, 6:30 p.m., Blue
Mountain Community College
McRae Activity Center, 2411 N.W.
Carden Ave., Pendleton. For be-
ginning strings players of all ages.
(JD Kindle 541-276-0320)
HATROCKHOUNDS GEM &
MINERAL SOCIETY, 7-8:30 p.m.,
First Christian Church, 775 W.
Highland Ave., Hermiston. (541-
720-4950)
ADAMS NEIGHBORHOOD
WATCH, 7 p.m., Adams Ladies
Parlor, Main Street, Adams.
KRAZY HORSE QUILTERS,
7 p.m., Thimbles Fabric N More,
1819 Westgate Place, Pendleton.
WOMEN OF THE IRRIGON
MOOSE, 7 p.m., Irrigon Moose
Lodge, 210 N.E. Third St., Irrigon.
(541-922-1802)
WILLOW CREEK SYMPHO-
NY REHEARSAL, 7:30-8:30 p.m.,
Irrigon Jr./Sr. High School, 315 E.
Wyoming Ave., Irrigon. Prepara-
tory orchestra for all ages. Does
not rehearse June-July-August
or during Christmas-New Year
holidays. (RaNiel Dunn 541-289-
4696)
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 14
CREDIT PROFESSIONALS
INTERNATIONAL, 7:30-9 a.m.,
Shari’s Restaurant, 319 S.E.
Nye Ave., Pendleton. (LaFrance
Grubbs 541-276-5318)
WILLOW RUN LADIES GOLF
CLUB, 8 a.m., Willow Run Golf
Course, 78873 Toms Camp Road,
Boardman. Rain or shine. Need
not be a member to play. (541-
481-4381)
LATINO BUSINESS NET-
WORK, 9 a.m., Hermiston Confer-
ence Center, 415 S. Highway 395,
Hermiston. Promoting, educating
and supporting Latino business-
es in the greater Hermiston area
through networking, advocacy and
business community partnership.
(Debbie Pedro 541-567-6151)
DEMOCRATS
OF
MIL-
TON-FREEWATER, 11:30 a.m.,
Oasis Restaurant, 85698 Highway
339, Milton-Freewater. (Nora Con-
nors 541-938-3432)
PENDLETON CHAMBER OF
COMMERCE, 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.,
location varies, location varies,
Pendleton. December meeting:
Wildhorse Resort & Casino. Cost
is $13 for members if paid in ad-
vance, $16 for all others, RSVP
required. (541-276-7411)
SAFE COMMUNITIES, 12-1
p.m., Good Shepherd Medical
Center conference rooms 1 and 2,
610 N.W. 11th St., Hermiston. Free
monthly meetings to work on safe-
ty strategies for our communities.
If you have an interest in stopping
domestic violence, bullying, or oth-
er safety related concerns, please
join us! We discuss how to make
safety a priority in our communities
and put planning into action! (541-
667-3509)
CAY-UMA-WA TOASTMAS-
TERS, 12-1 p.m., Wildhorse Re-
sort & Casino, 46510 Wildhorse
Blvd, Pendleton. Everyone wel-
come. (Jeannette Taylor 541-276-
9492)
HERMISTON
KIWANIS
CLUB, 12 p.m., Desert Lanes
Bowling Alley, 1545 N. First St.,
Hermiston. (541-567-6728)
ALTRUSA INTERNATIONAL
OF PENDLETON, 12 p.m., Red
Lion Inn, 304 S.E. Nye Ave., Pend-
leton.
LOTTERY
3731)
MORROW
COUNTY
COURT, 9 a.m., Irrigon Public Li-
brary, 200 N.E. Main Ave., Irrigon.
(541-676-9061)
M I LT O N - F R E E WAT E R
CEMETERY MAINTENANCE
DISTRICT NO. 3, 12 p.m., Mil-
ton-Freewater
Golf
Course
restaurant, 301 Catherine St.,
Milton-Freewater.
(541-938-
5531)
PORT OF MORROW COM-
MISSION, 1:30 p.m., Port of Mor-
row, 2 Marine Drive, Boardman.
(541-481-7678)
PENDLETON
FACADE
COMMITTEE, 3:30 p.m., Pend-
leton City Hall administrative con-
ference room, 500 S.W. Dorion
Ave., Pendleton. (Julie Chase
541-966-0204)
Friday, Dec. 9
Saturday, Dec. 10
Megamillions
19-27-47-67-68
Megaball: 1
Megaplier: 5
Estimated jackpot: $43 million
Lucky Lines
04-08-09-15-FREE-20-22-26-
31
Estimated jackpot: $48,000
Pick 4
1 p.m.: 7-7-7-9
4 p.m.: 4-1-5-5
7 p.m.: 5-5-3-7
10 p.m.: 1-3-9-6
Powerball
12-21-32-44-66
Powerball: 15
Power Play: 2
Estimated jackpot: $85 million
Megabucks
02-18-21-26-27-47
Estimated jackpot: $2 million
Lucky Lines
04-05-09-14-FREE-17-23-26-
31
Estimated jackpot: $49,000
Pick 4
1 p.m.: 9-1-3-4
4 p.m.: 0-4-9-3
7 p.m.: 7-9-2-5
When they say “I love the snow!”
and you say “Let’s go to a show?”
541-567-4063
Ric Jones,
BC-HIS
Former Pendleton resident Karl Lutz, 69, of Kennewick,
Wash., died Sunday, Dec. 11, 2016, at his home. He was
born in Seulinger, Germany. Hillcrest Memorial Center in
Kennewick is handling arrangements.
Don Grubbs, as well as
countless family.
He is preceded in death
by his parents, nine of his
siblings, cousins,
nieces,
and
nephews and his
grandson Christo-
pher Stickley.
There
is
a
memorial in the
works planned for Herm-
iston, Ore. All other plans
are still unknown.
Dale
Stickley
was
a Vietnam veteran and
suffered, as many do, from
PTSD. After many years of
self-medicating he finally
sought and received treat-
ment. Please, if you or a
loved one suffer, seek help.
Muffley Funeral Home in
Clovis, N.M., is in charge of
arrangements (http://www.
muffleyfuneralhome.com)
OBITUARY POLICY
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 14
UKIAH SCHOOL DISTRICT,
8 a.m., Ukiah Community School,
201 Hill St., Ukiah. (541-427-
DEATH NOTICES
The East Oregonian publishes paid obituaries. The obituary can in-
clude small photos and, for veterans, a flag symbol at no charge.
Obituaries may be edited for spelling, proper punctuation and style.
Expanded death notices will be published at no charge. These in-
clude information about services.
Obituaries and notices can be submitted online at www.eastorego-
nian.com/obituaryform, by email to obits@eastoregonian.com, by fax
to 541-276-8314, placed via the funeral home or in person at the East
Oregonian office.
For more information, call 541-966-0818 or 1-800-522-0255, ext. 221.
MEETINGS
TUESDAY, DEC. 13
Page 5A
Verna Taylor,
HAS
Forrest Cahill,
HAS
10 p.m.: 9-9-0-5
Win for Life
01-05-20-67
12/12-12/13
Sunday, Dec. 11
Lucky Lines
01-06-10-13-FREE-17-24-26-29
Estimated jackpot: $50,000
Pick 4
1 p.m.: 0-1-0-7
4 p.m.: 8-2-3-9
7 p.m.: 0-2-4-8
10 p.m.: 6-0-2-8
Monday, Dec. 12
Pick 4
1 p.m.: 3-6-7-9
O
R
ORDER
YOUR HOLIDAY
CENTERPIECES EARLY!
Flowers • Candles • Jewelry
Plants • Balloons & More!
Put a smile on the heart with
the power of flowers.
405 N. 1st St., Suite #107,
Hermiston
HWY 395, HERMISTON
541-215-1888
Mon-Sat 8am-6pm • Sun 12pm-5am
246 SW Dorion, Pendleton
541-567-4305
www.cottagefl owersonline.com
Cineplex Show Times
$5 Classic Movie
12/14 12:00
THE RED SHOES
Fantastic Beasts and Where to
Find Them (PG13)
2D 7:00
3D 4:00 10:00
Arrival (PG13)
4:40 7:10 9:40
Moana (PG)
2D 4:50 7:20
3D 9:50
Office Christmas Party (R)
4:20 6:40 9:20
Allied (R)
4:10 6:50 9:30
Credit & Debit Cards accepted
Cineplex gift cards available
* Matinee Pricing
wildhorseresort.com
541-966-1850
Pendleton, OR I-84 - Exit 216