PRANKSTERS FARM FIRE STRIKE IN GUTS SHED HOLLYWOOD REGION/3A 12/6 NATION/8A TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 2017 141st Year, No. 56 One dollar WINNER OF THE 2016 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD HERMISTON Weather leads to spate of crashes in new year East Oregonian Staff photo by E.J. Harris Sorted plastics sit in bins at the entrance to the Sanitary Disposal facility Friday outside of Hermiston. GOOD USE OF REFUSE Sanitary Disposal collects about 11,800 tons each year to recycle Homeless camp cleanup tops two tons By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian One man’s trash becomes another man’s new hubcaps in the recycling industry. Every day at the Sanitary Disposal transfer station outside Hermiston people add to the piles of broken, bulky 1990-era televisions and empty wine bottles, glad to “We’re trying fi nally be rid of “that junk in the to extend more garage.” But after awareness and drop-off those education. items take on a It just has not new life. Stripped down to their been a part of components, sepa- rated by material our culture.” and compressed — Bill Kik, into bales, recy- clable objects will maintenance supervisor for Sanitary Disposal eventually re-enter the economy as fodder for everything from steel beams to egg cartons. “It gets it out of the waste stream, which just makes dollars and sense,” said Bill Kik, maintenance supervisor for Sanitary Disposal. On Thursday dozens of old refrigerators See RECYCLE/10A The new year brought another wave of winter weather to Eastern Oregon, creating treacherous roads and causing dozens of crashes. Highways remained open throughout the day, but emergency medical personnel responded to several rollovers and other crashes. Pendleton ambulance crews responded to many crashes along I-84 since Sunday. Pendleton covers the inter- state from about Echo to the Umatilla Indian Reservation, but Pendleton Fire Chief Mike Ciraulo said city ambulances often roll beyond those limits to help partner agencies from Hermiston to the top of Cabbage Hill. Ciraulo also said as fas as he knew, none of crash victims Pendleton helped suffered serious injuries. Medics stay busy with the weather, he said, but providing emergency service is what the job is all about. Umatilla County Fire District 1 had responded to seven crashes on Monday See CRASHES/10A By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian Staff photo by E.J. Harris Metal household appliances are separated and await being salvaged for scrap metal at the Sanitary Disposal facility Friday outside of Hermiston. 9,441.77 1,210.98 800.71 147.86 tons of scrap metal tons of cardboard tons of wood tons of newspaper 85.91 83.6 43.49 42.13 tons of electronics tons of food waste tons of glass tons of plastic 15.18 10.21 2.72 2,370 tons of tin cans tons of aluminum tons of offi ce paper gallons of motor oil Recycling collected by Sanitary Disposal in 2015 by the ton, as reported to the Department of Environmental Quality Umatilla County authorities Thursday cleaned up another transient camp and threw out more than two tons of materials. Undersheriff Jim Littlefi eld said the camp was on the banks of the Umatilla River adjacent to Old River Road, about half a mile south of the homeless camp the sheriff’s offi ce cleared out in early March. He said the sheriff’s offi ce at that time heard rumors of a second camp in the area, but citizen complaints did not start rolling in about the site until August and September. The agency found the camp spread across Oregon Department of Transpor- tation property, county property and “a sliver of private property,” Littlefi eld said. The site had about six regulars unlawfully living in tents and a small recreational trailer. Deputies trespassed people from the site and made several arrests there, Littlefi eld said, primarily on warrants. Littlefi eld also said the sheriff’s offi ce checked the camp periodically and found See CAMP/9A Secret Native American sites thrust into dam debate Environmental review looks to boost salmon By KEITH RIDLER Associated Press BOISE, Idaho — A little-known federal program that avoids publicizing its accomplishments to protect from looters the thousands of Native American sites it’s tasked with managing has been caught up in a big net. The Federal Columbia River System Cultural Resources Program tracks some 4,000 historical sites that also include homesteads and missions in Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana. Now it’s contributing information as authorities prepare a court-ordered envi- ronmental impact statement concerning struggling salmon and the operation of 14 federal dams in the Columbia River Basin. A federal judge urged offi cials to consider breaching four of those dams on the Snake River. “Because of the scale of the EIS, there’s no practical way for us, even if we wanted to, to provide a map of each and every site that we consider,” said Sean Hess, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation’s Pacifi c Northwest Region archaeologist. “There are See TRIBES/9A Jesse Tinsley/The Spokesman-Review via AP, File This Oct. 19, 2016 fi le photo shows the Lower Granite Dam on the Snake River in Washington state.