THREE HURT IN 395 CRASH FOOTBALL/1B OF STANFIELD HERMISTON/3A KARL KRAUSE Enjoy a free coffee at Obie’s Express in Hermiston GROGAN, MURRAY LEAD ALL-STATE 19/16 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 2016 141st Year, No. 42 One dollar WINNER OF THE 2016 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Winter storm to make another surge East Oregonian Staff photo by E.J. Harris More snow is forecast to inundate the region starting Wednesday with meteorologists calling for upwards of seven inches in Pendleton. Another winter storm is expected to dump snow on the lower Columbia Basin on Wednesday. The National Weather Service in Pendleton issued a winter storm warning for all of Eastern Oregon, forecasting “signifi cant” snow beginning late Wednesday morning through 4 a.m. Thursday. A wet Pacifi c storm system is expected to move through the region, bringing 5-7 inches of snow to lower elevations — including Hermiston and Pendleton — through the night. Towns in higher elevations, including Heppner, Condon and John Day, can expect 7-9 inches of snow, according to the warning. Temperatures are expected to stay below freezing all week, with overnight lows in the single digits. The weather service warns that area roadways will be covered and slick, and less traveled side roads could become impassable. Updated forecasts can be found at the National Weather Service website, www.wrh.noaa.gov/pdt/. Measure 97 proponents unveil new tax proposal A Better Oregon proposes $4 billion tax hike plan By PARIS ACHEN Capital Bureau SALEM — The two sides that clashed bitterly over a corporate sales tax measure on the Nov. 8 ballot profess a willingness to work together to fi nd a solution to Oregon’s chronic revenue instability. But so far, both appear to be marking their battle lines, only this time for a skirmish in the Legislature rather than at the ballot box. Lawmakers face a delicate tightrope act in which they hope to prevent alienating one side or the other. Many of the players from both sides will remain the same as the fi ght moves to Salem. And in many ways, their messages going forward echo those they highlighted during the election. Business leaders have conceded the state needs more revenue. But they are demanding state pension reform and curtailed spending before they agree to any new business taxes. Meanwhile, A Better Oregon, which ran the Measure 97 campaign, continues to hammer on the need for big corporations to be more transparent and to pay their fair share. Sen. Mark Hass, D-Beaverton, chairman of the Senate Committee on Revenue, recently illustrated the challenge with a quip: If he could get people to agree to tax guitar playing, he would go for it. A Better Oregon, a coalition of public unions and advocacy groups, unveiled its legislative proposals including a scaled- back corporate sales tax, an expansion of health care provider taxes and a require- ment that companies disclose what they pay in taxes. Meanwhile, the business community is solidifying the power it realized during See TAX/7A Staff photo by E.J. Harris Robin Harris of Mission found this cat, Cleo, in her hay barn last weekend and called the number on her tags to fi nd the owners. It turns out the 7-month old kitten was wandering for the last two weeks after its family lost the cat during a wreck in Interstate 84 near Harris’ house. A long way home Kitten survives wreck and two weeks alone By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian A cat named Cleo will reunite with her family after a car wreck and days of wandering unfamiliar country. The saga started Nov. 28 when a tire blew on Amanda Egan’s van. Egan was in the process of moving from Utah to Washington and drove on Inter- state 84 about a mile east of the Wildhorse Resort & Casino. Her husband Shane was ahead of her in a Ford Tempo. He had pulled off at exit 216 to gas up and was waiting for her. Amanda had the couple’s three young daughters and the family’s pets — Cleo, a seven-month-old kitten, and a black Chihuahua-pug mix named Irene. “The van started to shake. The tire on the driver’s side blew apart,” Egan said. “I tried to move to the side, but we swerved and rolled over and landed on the top.” Egan believes she may have passed out for a short time. When she swam back to consciousness, she heard Elinor, 5, Molly, 3, and Adeline, 1, screaming in fright. Amazingly, all were fi ne, except for scratches and bruises. A police offi cer at the scene asked if anyone else was in the car and Amanda instantly remembered the animals. Both had vanished. Soon came the discovery that the dog had run into traffi c and been killed. No one could fi nd Cleo. Egan felt anguished as she assessed the kitten’s chances of survival. The family stayed in Pendleton three days to regroup. After renting a trailer and searching unsuccessfully again for the cat, they fi nally set off with heavy hearts for their new home in Bellingham, Washington. That was that. The girls cried for several nights, but life went on. Then, two weeks after the accident, the family got a surprise See KITTEN/8A Project Exploration looks at future Pendleton By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian Contributed image This concept drawing shows the “Eagles” parking lot repur- posed as a community plaza for the Pendleton Farmers Market and other events. Remnants of the soon-to-be replaced Eighth Street Bridge are used as decorative borders for the plaza. Project Exploration, an effort to launch several ambitious civic projects in Pendleton, is as much about re-ex- ploring old ideas as it is proposing new ones. The committee behind Project Explo- ration — a group that includes people associated with the city of Pendleton, Umatilla County, Community Action Program of East Central Oregon and other community organizations — explained its mission to the public for the fi rst time at a meeting Monday. “We’re trying to frame a big tent effort to make things happen,” Umatilla County Board of Commissioners chairman George Murdock said. Chuck Wood, a Pendleton city councilor and chairman of the Pendleton Development Commission, said the committee began gathering last June to discuss a plaza and other community projects. Later that month, Union Pacifi c Rail- road Co. agreed to demolish the vacated Webb’s Cold Storage building on South Main Street, opening up further possibil- ities for that area north and south of the railroad tracks. Wood shared pictures of concept drawings that showed the “Eagles” parking lot — the public parking lot across Southeast Frazer from the Fraternal Order of Eagles Lodge — repurposed as a community plaza for the Pendleton Farmers Market and other events. In the drawings, the remnants of the soon-to-be replaced Eighth Street See PENDLETON/8A