WEATHER East Oregonian Page 2A REGIONAL CITIES Forecast SUNDAY TODAY MONDAY Quite cold; a bit of p.m. snow Cold with icy mix 22° 18° 34° 27° TUESDAY A bit of morning snow; cloudy Snow or fl urries possible PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 39° 29° 35° 24° 31° 18° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 33° 26° 19° 17° PENDLETON through 3 p.m. yesterday TEMPERATURE HIGH LOW 17° 40° 70° (1914) 0° 26° -6° (1942) PRECIPITATION 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date 0.00" 0.11" 0.35" 0.11" 0.01" 0.35" HERMISTON through 3 p.m. yesterday LOW 19° 40° 58° (2009) 0.00" 0.10" 0.24" 0.10" 0.01" 0.24" SUN AND MOON Jan 19 Bend 29/25 Burns 16/13 7:35 a.m. 4:28 p.m. 12:52 p.m. 1:56 a.m. New First Jan 27 Feb 3 Caldwell 16/14 Astoria Baker City Bend Brookings Burns Enterprise Eugene Heppner Hermiston John Day Klamath Falls La Grande Meacham Medford Newport North Bend Ontario Pasco Pendleton Portland Redmond Salem Spokane Ukiah Vancouver Walla Walla Yakima Hi 39 9 29 49 16 21 34 20 19 31 37 22 22 42 41 48 13 22 22 31 29 33 22 26 31 26 23 Lo 33 6 25 49 13 18 33 16 17 28 32 20 19 41 36 43 11 14 18 29 26 30 19 21 28 23 14 W r sn sn r sn sn i sn sn sn sn sn sn i r r sn c sn sn sn sn pc sn sn c sn NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY Sun. Hi 46 27 34 53 35 37 42 36 33 42 40 38 36 45 48 53 29 31 34 37 33 40 31 38 40 32 28 Lo 39 20 24 42 23 27 36 25 26 37 28 32 29 36 40 42 28 22 27 34 25 36 26 26 36 27 13 Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. W r sn i r i sn r i sn sn sn sn sn r r r sn sn i i i r sn sn i i sn WORLD CITIES Today Beijing Hong Kong Jerusalem London Mexico City Moscow Paris Rome Seoul Sydney Tokyo Hi 39 75 55 50 71 -7 36 40 49 78 50 Lo 26 67 39 41 39 -19 34 25 33 68 39 W sn pc s c pc c i s pc s s Sun. Hi 45 77 49 48 68 -8 43 44 49 82 47 Lo 21 63 37 40 36 -14 36 31 32 72 43 W s s s c pc s c pc pc s r WINDS Medford 42/41 PRECIPITATION Jan 12 John Day 31/28 Ontario 13/11 -2° 28° -8° (1974) 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today Full Last Albany 33/32 Eugene 34/33 TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normals Records 31° 20° Spokane Wenatchee 22/19 20/16 Tacoma Moses 37/29 Lake Pullman Aberdeen Olympia Yakima 24/20 25/23 36/33 35/29 23/14 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 34/30 26/23 Lewiston 21/17 Astoria 28/27 39/33 Portland Enterprise Hermiston 31/29 Pendleton 21/18 The Dalles 19/17 22/18 25/19 La Grande Salem 22/20 33/30 Corvallis 33/31 HIGH 36° 24° Seattle 37/32 ALMANAC Yesterday Normals Records 38° 29° Today WEDNESDAY Rain, ice and snow possible Saturday, January 7, 2017 Klamath Falls 37/32 (in mph) Today Sunday Boardman Pendleton NNE 4-8 NNE 4-8 N 4-8 WNW 4-8 UV INDEX TODAY Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. REGIONAL FORECAST Coastal Oregon: Occasional rain today into tomorrow. Monday: periods of rain. Eastern and Central Oregon: Today: snow, accumulating 1-3 inches in the south, cen- tral parts and and reaching the north today. Western Washington: Snow and sleet will spread from south to north this afternoon; some rain at the coast. Eastern Washington: Mostly cloudy today; a bit of snow toward the Cascades and in the far south late. Cascades: Snow today, accumulating several inches. Snow level rising as high as 5,000 feet south. Northern California: Rain today; snow, accumulating 6-10 inches in the interior mountains. 0 1 1 211 S.E. Byers Ave., Pendleton 541-276-2211 333 E. Main St., Hermiston 541-567-6211 Office hours: Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Closed major holidays www.eastoregonian.com To subscribe, call 1-800-522-0255 or go online to www.eastoregonian.com and click on ‘Subscribe’ East Oregonian (USPS 164-980) is published daily except Sunday, Monday and Dec. 25, by the EO Media Group, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801. Periodicals postage paid at Pendleton, OR. Postmaster: send address changes to East Oregonian, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801. The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ num- ber, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2017 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Local home delivery Savings off cover price EZPay $14.50 41 percent 52 weeks $173.67 41 percent 26 weeks $91.86 38 percent 13 weeks $47.77 36 percent *EZ Pay = one-year rate with a monthly credit or debit card/check charge Single copy price: $1 Tuesday through Friday, $1.50 Saturday Copyright © 2017, EO Media Group Richardson presses for audits of ‘controversial’ topics He cited the Columbia River Crossing and the Business Energy Tax Credit SALEM — Secretary of (BETC) program adminis- State Dennis Richardson said tered by the Oregon Depart- this week he wants his office ment of Energy as other to pursue audits on controver- examples. The BETC program was sial topics. Although the Republican audited by an outside firm has claimed he will run the last year, and the Legislature convened a joint office in a nonpar- committee to tisan manner, review the energy his office’s audit department. choices may be Richardson also under wider scru- said he wanted to tiny than usual in a conduct audits on state with a heavily government proj- Democratic govern- ects as they unfold ment. — although he did Richardson not yet have details said he asked the Richardson Thursday about head of the audits division why there hadn’t what sort of projects would fit been an audit of programs the bill. Ideally, he said, such such as Cover Oregon, the audits would look both at state’s failed health insurance finances and processes. There are detailed proce- exchange. “The answer was that the dures in place for deciding process from the previous which programs to audit every audit division director was, year, according to documents that if it is controversial, then provided by the Secretary of that means that the Legisla- State’s Office. Audits are divided into ture is already aware of it and is looking at it and so we don’t three types — information need to be involved, we’ll go technology, performance and audit something that’s not financial audits. Some financial audits controversial or where there’s no publicity,” Richardson are required every year. The statewide single audit, for said. Richardson said he under- example, is required so the stood that position, but that state can receive funding having been a legislator, he from the federal government. Performance audits knows legislators have limited staff. His goal is to assemble a often make news. Typically team within the audit division they are more digestible, to audit agencies or programs containing written recom- when problems become mendations for agency or program improvements. public. Auditors keep notes of “I think we need to have a small group of the auditors potential audit topics while whose workload allows them they are conducting other to be utilized to go toward the audits and keeping track fire if there’s a fire burning of current events. Those somewhere,” Richardson ideas are kept in a database that describes the agency said. 0 0-2, Low 3-5, Moderate 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme Didn’t receive your paper? Call 1-800-522-0255 before noon Tuesday through Friday or before 10 a.m. Saturday for same-day redelivery By CLAIRE WITHYCOMBE Capital Bureau 0 8 a.m. 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. Subscriber services: For home delivery, vacation stops or delivery concerns: 1-800-522-0255 — Founded Oct. 16, 1875 — 0 or program, the issue, and potential questions to ask as part of an audit. Requests for audits can also come from legislators, agency directors, or the state’s hotline for complaints of fraud and waste. Every year, the auditing team reviews the database of ideas — ranging in the hundreds — and whittle it down to 30 to 40 “priority topics,” which in turn are reviewed by managers. The audit division director, the deputy director and performance audit managers vote on the topics and then the team discusses the most popular ideas to determine about a dozen topics for the upcoming year. Then the secretary of state and deputy secretary review the list and give feedback, which might prompt further discussion or adjustments to the audit schedule. The criteria used in evaluating program choices are varied, but can be summarized in three ways: The complexity of the audit, potential public benefit — including public safety issues, cost savings and “key challenges” for the state as a whole — and risk. “We are on the lookout for topics that are high risk, where we suspect the controls in place over a program are weak and where the resulting effects would be large,” according to documentation from the Secretary of State’s Office. The office also, according to internal documents, prefers to “focus our perfor- mance audits on program improvement rather than identification of past wrong- doing.” -10s -0s 0s showers t-storms 10s rain 20s flurries 30s 40s snow ice 50s 60s cold front 70s 80s 90s 100s warm front stationary front 110s high low National Summary: Snow will spread northward along the immediate Atlantic coast as spotty snow affects the Upper Midwest. A storm will bring heavy rain, flooding, ice and high country snow to the Pacific coast. Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) High 84° in Marathon, Fla. Low -48° in Walden, Colo. NATIONAL CITIES Today Albuquerque Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Billings Birmingham Boise Boston Charleston, SC Charleston, WV Chicago Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit El Paso Fairbanks Fargo Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jacksonville Kansas City Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Hi 42 31 29 29 18 30 19 27 44 20 17 18 38 31 20 51 -8 3 78 42 16 55 27 48 32 64 Lo 28 15 19 14 11 15 18 15 21 9 4 12 24 18 11 34 -18 -10 65 26 5 27 9 41 17 55 W pc pc sn sn pc pc sn sn sn pc s pc s s pc s pc s pc s s r s pc s r Sun. Hi 54 37 30 26 17 36 38 26 42 20 21 20 47 47 22 61 -6 14 79 50 21 47 34 60 37 72 Lo 34 22 17 14 10 24 34 11 23 10 16 13 36 36 15 41 -14 -2 64 39 15 31 22 48 24 57 Today W s s s pc c s sn sf s s s pc s pc s s s pc pc s s s pc pc s pc Louisville Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Omaha Philadelphia Phoenix Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Diego San Francisco Seattle Tucson Washington, DC Wichita Hi 20 28 83 15 8 27 39 27 37 21 29 67 23 27 28 12 42 54 25 25 69 59 37 70 29 37 Lo 9 17 55 3 -3 13 30 19 16 9 17 49 6 13 7 3 41 52 12 24 54 56 32 47 17 15 W s s t s s s pc sn s s sn pc sn sn sn s sn r s pc c r c pc sn s Sun. Hi 27 37 70 22 16 33 48 28 41 30 27 74 21 25 30 28 52 61 31 43 73 61 41 77 28 40 Lo 19 26 60 18 12 24 38 15 26 17 14 54 3 8 -3 9 41 51 24 39 58 52 36 53 15 23 W s s pc s pc s s pc s pc pc s c sf s pc r r pc i pc r r s s s Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice. Advertising Director: Marissa Williams 541-278-2669 • addirector@eastoregonian.com Advertising Services: Laura Jensen 541-966-0806 • ljensen@eastoregonian.com Multimedia Consultants: • Terri Briggs 541-278-2678 • tbriggs@eastoregonian.com • Elizabeth Freemantle 541-278-2683 • efreemantle@eastoregonian.com • Jeanne Jewett 541-564-4531 • jjewett@eastoregonian.com • Chris McClellan 541-966-0827 • cmcclellan@eastoregonian.com • Stephanie Newsom 541-278-2687 • snewsom@eastoregonian.com • Dayle Stinson 541-278-2670 • dstinson@eastoregonian.com • Audra Workman 541-564-4538 • aworkman@eastoregonian.com Classified & Legal Advertising 1-800-962-2819 or 541-278-2678 classifieds@eastoregonian.com or legals@eastoregonian.com NEWS • To submit news tips and press releases: • call 541-966-0818 • fax 541-276-8314 • email news@eastoregonian.com • To submit community events, calendar items and Your EO News: email community@eastoregonian.com or call Tammy Malgesini at 541-564-4539 or Renee Struthers in at 541-966-0818. • To submit engagements, weddings and anniversaries: email rstruthers@eastoregonian.com or visit www.eastoregonian. com/community/announcements • To submit a Letter to the Editor: mail to Managing Editor Daniel Wattenburger, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801 or email editor@eastoregonian.com. • To submit sports or outdoors information or tips: 541-966-0838 • sports@eastoregonian.com COMMERCIAL PRINTING Production Manager: Mike Jensen 541-215-0824 • mjensen@eastoregonian.com BRIEFLY Drone engine maker to set up facility in Columbia Gorge SEATTLE (AP) — An Australian company that makes engines for aerial drones is planning to set up a facility in the Columbia Gorge, following a $90 million agreement to supply engines for a Boeing subsidiary. The Seattle Times reports that Orbital, based in Perth, signed a three-year deal to supply Insitu, a major drone manufacturer, with a new unmanned aerial engine. Orbital plans to move into an existing facility within six months, probably in the Washington town of Bingen where Insitu is headquartered. Orbital will initially bring about 15 jobs to the area, with more expected later. Orbital has been working with Insitu for four years on a new propulsion system for Insitu’s ScanEagle UAV, a long-endurance drone that features a sophisticated digital imaging system. It’s used extensively by the U.S military for surveillance in combat zones such as Afghanistan and Iraq. Authorities: Victims appear to be part of murder-suicide HUBBARD (AP) — Five people, including three children, found dead in a fire in western Oregon appear to have been part of a murder-suicide, authorities said Friday. Investigators picking through the burned home near rural Hubbard found the remains of a man, woman and the children. Kris Holland/Yakima Herald-Republic via AP, File In this 2009 file photo, Insitu demo team specialist Brian Jones displays a drone aircraft in Bingen, Wash. Australian company Orbital, that makes engines for aerial drones, is planning to set up a facility in the Columbia Gorge following a $90 million agreement to supply engines for a Boeing subsidiary. Autopsies show the children were shot to death; the woman died of blunt- force trauma to the head; and the man died from a gunshot wound to the head, the Marion County Sheriff’s Office said. The sheriff’s office did not identify the bodies, but records show the residence belonged to Erin Kroeker, 39, and Keith Kroeker, 42, and that they had three children. Authorities said they do not believe there is any immediate danger to the public. Firefighters called to the property early Tuesday near Interstate 5 between Portland and Salem found the home, a shop and a detached garage ablaze. Each structure was appar- ently ignited separately. The sheriff’s office said it won’t comment on evidence or give more details as the investigation continues. Police find missing Oregon woman in trunk of her car MILWAUKIE (AP) — The body of an Oregon woman who had been missing for more than a week was found in the trunk of her car, authorities said. The Kia Optima belonging to 68-year-old Merrilee Cooley was spotted by police Thursday night at an apartment complex in the Portland suburb of Milwaukie, Clackamas County sheriff’s Sgt. Brian Jensen said. Detectives responded and found the body in the trunk. Police have not released additional details. “We’re trying to piece together if we have a suspect,” Jensen said. Cooley lived alone at a mobile home and needed a walker to get around. Corrections The East Oregonian works hard to be accurate and sincerely regrets any errors. If you notice a mistake in the paper, please call 541-966-0818. AFTER CHRISTMAS SALE *EXCLUDING FRESH FLOWERS You Never Know What You’ll Find At A Collectors West Gun & Knife Show! January 7 th & 8 th Hermiston Conference Center Flowers • Candles • Jewelry Plants • Balloons & More! Put a smile on the heart with the power of flowers. HWY 395, HERMISTON 541-567-4305 Mon-Sat 8am-6pm • Sun 12pm-5am 7t4BUBQ4VOBQt*OGPDPMMFDUPSTXFTUDPN www.cottagefl owersonline.com