STEPHEN HILL OF LEXINGTON Enjoy a free coffee at Obie’s Express in Hermiston DEBBIE REYNOLDS DIES AT 84 DUCKS BEAT UCLA RECORDS/5A SPORTS/1B 40/30 THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2016 141st Year, No. 53 One dollar WINNER OF THE 2016 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Deadly fi res increase in 2016 Three die in structure fi res; most are human-caused By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian EO Media Group fi le photos New laws will take effect in Oregon beginning Jan. 1, including increased fi nes for poaching, criminal penalties for imper- sonating military personnel or public servant to intimidate another, a widened defi nition of soliciting prostitution and the banning of sky lanterns. By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian The 2016 legislative session was a short one, but Oregon lawmakers had enough time to approve a handful of new laws that will go into effect Jan. 1. Some — like a law authorizing the governing body of Tillamook County to establish wetlands — apply to a very narrow segment of the state’s population. But others will affect all Oregonians. As always, not knowing about a new law is not a valid legal defense if you get caught breaking it. Criminal impersonation Sending intimidating emails to your neighbor while pretending to be the city planner is now a crime. Senate Bill 1567 makes it illegal to impersonate a public servant, veteran or member of the Armed Forces with the intent to cause another person injury. The new law applies even in cases where the specifi c job title or government department used by the impostor does not actually exist. Oregon’s previous identity NEW YEAR, NEW LAWS Releasing sky lanterns and impersonating the mayor will be crimes in Oregon starting Jan. 1, while poaching penalties will go up signifi cantly theft law was interpreted by the courts to only apply to imper- sonations that involved fi nancial fraud, leaving prosecutors unable charge those who did so only to intimidate or embarrass. The new law defi nes “injury” to include physical harm, threats, harass- ment and intimidation. The crime is a Class A misde- meanor punishable with up to a year in prison and/or a $6,250 fi ne (a separate law already in effect makes impersonating a police offi cer or judge a Class C felony). Poaching penalties Would-be poachers who get caught unlawfully taking or killing wildlife will face substan- tially higher fi nes in the new year. The penalty for illegally killing moose, mountain sheep and mountain goats will double from $25,000 to $50,000. A variety of other fees will increase signifi cantly, including a hike from $1,000 to $5,000 for over- sized sturgeon and from $100 to $1,000 for wild turkeys and sage grouse. See LAWS/3A Structure fi res in Umatilla County claimed three lives so far in 2016, an increase from years. Fires in homes, trailers or other build- ings claimed a life in both 2015 and 2014, according to a search of records and news stories. Investigators in all but one case determined the fi res had human causes. • Feb. 27 in Athena — Smoking mate- rial, possibly a cigarette, caused the fi re in a trailer that killed one man. • June 1 near Hermiston — Fire in a onion shed at Columbia Basin Spreaders Inc. left one man dead. The Oregon Occupational Safety and Health Division has yet to release a cause. • Aug. 1 in Stanfi eld — Smoking materials or electrical wiring sparked the home blaze that took a man’s life. • Mixing explosive materials to make fi reworks killed one Pendleton man in 2015, and investigators determined a 2014 fi re that killed a man in his RV in Stanfi eld was accidental. Tom Bohm, fi re marshal for Umatilla County Fire District No. 1 based in Hermiston, reported electrical issues topped the district’s list of fi re causes so far this year, with 14. Exposure fi res — a fi re that started outside a building but consumed a structure — was second, with 11, followed by eight smoking materials caused blazes and seven fi res caused by cooking. The Pendleton Fire Department this week responded to two home fi res, and human causes were to blame in each. A space heater started the blaze Sunday night in the third story of the home at 503 N. Main St. And a cardboard box left on a stove started a fi re Tuesday night at a home on Jones Circle. Shawn Penninger, assistant chief and fi re marshal, said the occupants extinguished the burn before fi refi ghters arrived. Most investigations of building fi res reveal a human factor at play, Penninger said. The National Fire Protection Associ- ation reports cooking equipment is the leading cause of home structure fi res and home fi re injuries in the United States. From 2007-11 there were 366,600 home structure fi res nationwide, and cooking fi res accounted for 156,000, almost 43 percent. Home heating was the second most common cause. Children playing with fi re outside caused 37,400 home fi res, the third most, See FIRE/3A OUR NEW NEIGHBORS Pharma family fi nds fi t in Pendleton By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian They met in Southern Oregon and lived in the Portland metro area, but Eastern Oregon was completely new to Marc and Celeste Rizzo when they moved to Pendleton in February. Despite their unfamiliarity, Celeste accepted a job as a phar- macist at St. Anthony Hospital. The Rizzos packed up their Hillsboro home and headed east, bringing their infant daughter Bianca in tow. Her husband, Marc, is also a pharmacist. And although she was concerned he would have trouble fi nding an open position, he landed a pharmacy job at Walgreens within a few days of moving to town. Good timing has often worked to the Rizzos’ benefi t. Celeste grew up in Eureka, California, a small timber town 100 miles south of the Oregon border. Celeste eventually moved to Ashland, working for a timber company to help locate endan- See RIZZO/3A Staff photo by Kathy Aney Marc and Celeste Rizzo pose with their daughter Bianca on their front porch.