BULLDOGS EYING A MOVE UP TRUMP TAPS SON-IN-LAW AS ADVISER 29/15 Pair in jail after ramming police car and fl eeing SPORTS/1B NATION/7A REGION/3A TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 2017 141st Year, No. 61 One dollar WINNER OF THE 2016 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Flu ramps up in Oregon Getting fl u shot lowers misery quotient By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian You might want to get that fl u shot. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that Oregon is one of eight states where fl u is considered widespread. Flu Bites, Oregon’s public health fl u tracker, shows a steep spike in cases over the last two weeks in December. Lane County’s Health and Human Services reported seven deaths in the Eugene-Springfi eld area, all elderly. Though most fl u victims don’t die, they can be miserable for days or weeks. Pam Schulz, infection control prevention nurse at Good Shepherd Medical Center in Hermiston, said people can crank down their degree of misery by getting vaccinated. “You can still catch it, but you shouldn’t get as sick — you get hit by the pickup instead of the Mack truck,” Schulz said. Good Shepherd and Pendleton’s St. Anthony Hospital have experi- enced a steep rise in fl u-like illness in their emergency rooms. “Over the past three weeks, we’ve taken quite a jump,” said Tracy Wart, St. Anthony’s infection prevention nurse. “Last week, we tested 31 people in the ER with fl u symptoms. Of those 31, 14 came back positive. The majority of people testing positive had not been vaccinated.” Schulz said Good Shepherd tested Staff photo by E.J. Harris The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that Oregon is one of eight states where the fl u is widespread. See FLU/8A Brown takes oath as elected governor By PARIS ACHEN Capital Bureau upside-down by the ankles a lot” when he came around to annoy his older brothers and their friends. Whenever they broke a light bulb in the basement playing pool (Dewey correctly guessed that investing in a pool table would keep his children and their friends safely within earshot more often) the older boys would send Dale on his bike to fetch another one before Mom and Dad got home. “Let’s just say we had a SALEM — Gov. Kate Brown was sworn in for the fi rst time as elected governor Monday, after serving in the position for nearly two years. The governor used her inaugural address to unveil her legislative agenda for the year. “Under my leadership, we will continue to move Oregon forward,” Brown told an audience in the Oregon House of Representatives chamber. Brown, as secre- tary of state, ascended to the governorship in February 2015 when then-Gov. John Kitzhaber stepped down amid a scandal over consulting Brown contracts awarded to his fi ancée, Cylvia Hayes. In Oregon, where there is no lieutenant governor, the secretary of state is next in line. She became the fi rst openly bisexual governor in national history. Brown was elected in November with an overwhelming majority to complete that last two years of Kitzhaber’s four-year term, defeating Republican challenger Dr. Bud Pierce of Salem. During her speech Monday, Brown called on Oregon lawmakers to set aside their differences to work together this session to tackle Oregon’s $1.7 billion revenue shortfall. “We have to come together and know that we are all on the same side,” Brown said. She also said Oregonians should resist any attacks on civil rights in the wake of New York billionaire Donald J. Trump’s election as president. “We must guard against prejudice based on race, ethnicity, religion or belief,” See PRIMMER/8A See BROWN/8A Staff photo by E.J. Harris Hermiston city councilor Doug Primmer, left, and his brother Pendleton city councilor Dale Primmer grew up in Hermiston after their parents move to the area from Seattle in 1977. B ROTHERS P RIMMER THE Siblings elected to city councils of ‘rival’ towns, hope to learn from each other By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian Family gatherings at the Primmer house now include two city councilors. Dale Primmer, 44, was sworn into the Pendleton City Council a week ago while Doug Primmer, 53, was sworn in Monday for his second term on the Hermiston City Council. They may be each be known as Councilor Primmer in their respective communities, but their parents still like to remi- nisce about the days of their sons’ youthful hijinks. “It was wild around our dinner table with four boys,” their mother Donna recalled. Not too wild, their father Dewey added — the four Primmer brothers and their younger sister never gave him trouble with drugs or “anything like that.” But in 1977 when the family moved to Hermiston the fi elds surrounding their house provided a childhood paradise of pheasant hunting and building a motorbike track. “Every weekend we’d jump in the Blazer and off we’d go,” Dewey said. “It was fi sh, fi sh, fi sh and every fall it was hunt, hunt, hunt.” Doug was the oldest. Dale was the youngest of the boys, so Doug said Dale “got hung HERMISTON Investigation fi nds dead, malnourished cattle Sheriff’s offi ce recommending animal neglect charges By GEORGE PLAVEN East Oregonian Fourteen dead cattle were discovered Saturday at a property on Columbia Lane and South Edwards Road in Hermiston, which the Umatilla County Sheriff’s Offi ce is investigating as a case of animal neglect. Another 15 cattle were so malnourished they could not be moved safely, according to Sheriff Terry Rowan. One calf was so weak it could not stand and had to be euthanized, Rowan said. None of the sick animals appeared to have enough food or water. Authorities are working with a special prosecutor from Benton County who specializes in animal neglect cases, and reports should be turned in to the Umatilla County district attorney early this week. Rowan said they will recommend pressing charges against the cattle owner, 55-year-old Michael Hock- ensmith of Hermiston. For now, though the cattle have technically been seized, Rowan said the animals will be left in place due to their numbers and fragile health. When is it time to consider assisted living? 1550 NW 11th Street • Hermiston 541-564-2595 • 800-550-3449 regencysunterracehermiston.com See the choices available - schedule your tour today! Offi cers will be checking daily to make sure they receive proper care. “We do not believe they can be transported without further loss,” Rowan said. “From this point forward, we’re just ensuring continued care.” The incident was fi rst reported Thursday, Jan. 5 by an anonymous caller who noticed seven dead cows that were clearly visible from See CATTLE/8A