WEEKEND EDITION BUCKS DOMINATE THE MATS WRESTLING/1B TOP PHOTOS OF 2016 TOP ALBUMS OF 2016 LIFESTYLES/1C ENTERTAINMENT/3C 12 9 3 6 141st Year, No. 55 DEC. 31, 2016-JAN. 1 2017 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2016 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD BOARDMAN Biomass test day delayed at coal facility TOP STORIES OF F rom stories that captured national headlines (the Malheur occupation, Hermiston murder-suicide, naked intruder caught in a tree) to hyper-local milestones (completion of the EOTEC event center and two new Pendleton schools), 2016 kept us busy. What follows is our selection of the biggest news stories of the year in the pages of the East Oregonian, based on regional relevance, historic signifi cance and reader interest. 2016 Cold weather deters alternative fuel trial By GEORGE PLAVEN East Oregonian A major step toward deter- mining whether the Boardman Coal Plant can run entirely on biomass will have to wait until after the new year. Portland General Electric had planned to conduct a full-day test burn at the plant using nothing but woody debris by the end of December. However, as winter weather had Orego- nians cranking up the heat, PGE needed all resources on deck to keep up with the surge in electricity demand. Steve Corson, PGE spokesman, said the biomass trial at Boardman will instead be held sometime during the fi rst quarter of 2017. “We were in the midst of the coldest weather we’ve had this month, and we needed that power generation at the coal plant,” Corson said. Workers at the plant did use a partial mix of coal and biomass for three days — Dec. 6, 8 and 12 — which Corson said provided further information about how the material behaves with the facility’s pulverizers. “It is similar to coal, but there are distinctions,” Corson said. PGE has until 2020 to decide what to do with the Boardman facility, the state’s See BIOMASS/10A STACIE EKSTROM OF IONE Enjoy a free peppermint mocha at Bloomz Coffee Bar in Hermiston AP fi le photo Duane Ehmer of Irrigon, a supporter of the group occupying the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, walks his horse Hellboy near Burns on Jan. 7, 2016. East Oregonian 1. Standoff at the wildlife refuge Ammon Bundy, joined by his brother Ryan and a small band of followers, took a “hard stand” against federal control of Western lands and the imprisonment of two ranchers. They seized the Malheur Wildlife Refuge in Harney County and spent weeks in a slow-motion standoff with authorities. For 41 days the state’s attention was on the remote bird sanctuary, and the nearby town of Burns was divided between those standing by the occupiers and those demanding the out-of-state armed protesters to leave. The Bundys were arrested in a Jan. 26 traffi c stop that included the fatal shooting by police of occupa- tion spokesman Robert “LaVoy” Finicum as he exited his vehicle at a road block and attempted to draw his gun. Two vehicles were headed north on their way to a public meeting in John Day, where a mostly sympa- thetic crowd had gathered at the community center. After Bundy’s arrest and Fini- cum’s death, many of the remaining protesters left the refuge, but four holdouts remained until a tense standoff Feb. 11 that ended peace- fully. The occupation, which lasted 41 days, heightened the debate over public land management in Western states. Eleven men pleaded guilty ahead Contributed photo James “JJ” Hurtado (left) and Ken Valdez (right). Staff photo by E.J. Harris Braelyn Cragun, 10, lights a candle during a vigil for James “JJ” Hurtado and Ken Valdez on August 24, 2016 in Hermiston. of a fall trial that ended with the surprise acquittals of the Bundy brothers and fi ve co-defendants. In an explosive ending, a team of federal marshals tackled defense lawyer Marcus Mumford as he yelled at the judge. Paperwork fl ew as Ammon Bundy’s attorney writhed on the ground, screaming. The year closed with some defen- dants trying to withdraw their guilty pleas and government prosecutors pressing ahead with a February 2017 trial for seven remaining defendants. 2. Murder-suicide shocks Hermiston Hermiston was shaken by a brutal crime that claimed three lives and left another person wounded in August. On Aug. 18, Jason Huston, 45, killed 14-year-old James “JJ” Hurtado at a remote location near the Umatilla River outside of Hermiston before driving into town and kicking in the door of high school friend and fellow wrestling coach Kenneth Valdez, also 45. He entered the bedroom, killed Valdez and wounded Hurtado’s mother Andria Bye before calling 9-1-1 to report the shooting and then turning the gun on himself. Police, friends and family — knowing only that Hurtado had last been seen with Huston — searched desperately for the teenager, who had been set to begin his freshman year at Hermiston High School, over the course of several hours before fi nding his body. Huston and Bye had previously dated and Huston had remained a father fi gure to Hurtado, but Herm- iston Police Chief Jason Edmiston said it is likely no one will ever know for sure Huston’s motives that day. After the shootings hundreds of people attended a candlelight vigil for Hurtado and Valdez at McKenzie Park, while others started a schol- arship in Hurtado’s name, collected donations for the families and started the “I Love My City” campaign to perform positive acts of service in the community. 3. Boardman tree farm felled The Boardman Tree Farm is getting the ax to make way for more conventional crops and, possibly, a second mega-dairy in Morrow County. GreenWood Resources, which has owned the 25,000-acre poplar tree farm since 2007, agreed in January to See 2016/12A Region struggles to draw high-level therapists By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian Staff photo by E.J. Harris Qualifi ed Mental Health Professional crisis supervisor Dan Wilcox works long and often erratic hours due to staffi ng shortages at the Westgate crisis center in Pendleton. Workforce availability is an issue in staffi ng mental health facilities in the state. When it comes to providing mental health care in rural Oregon, money isn’t the issue – rather, the determining factors are manpower and the rising number of mentally ill. A recent Mental Health America ranking placed Oregon 51st as far as prevalence of mental illness in the state and 49th overall when including other factors such as workforce availability. Lifeways administrators Sandy Shelton and Carol Eck must fi ll vacancies when they come open at the company. It’s not easy to lure therapists and psychiatrists from the city. Shelton, Lifeways’ chief clinical offi cer, said she dreams of a busload of masters-level therapists moving to Pendleton. “That would be the best day ever for See HEALTH/10A