FLYNN IN TALKS WITH CONGRESS ATHLETE OF THE WEEK: JACOB SPEED NATION/9A SPORTS/3B leg for the fourth-place P arent Eastern Oregon INSIDE: at the season-opening TIPS FOR PARENTS on March 23. He also placed fifth in the 100 April 2017 Later-in-life parenting PAGE 5 Ditch your gummy vitamins? PAGE 3 Reading in the great outdoors PAGE 13 Baby shower basics PAGE 10 EE FR FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 2017 141st Year, No. 119 Your Weekend WINNER OF THE 2016 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Umatilla airman Austin Bieren dies in Syria East Oregonian • • • Tylor and the Train Robbers live at 40 Taps Arbor Day tree giveaway at Smitty’s Ace Hardware Itts Cuzzen live at the Pheasant, Hermiston For times and places see Coming Events, 6A One dollar Staff Sgt. Austin Bieren, 25, of Umatilla died Tuesday while serving as an Air Force security forces airman in northern Syria. The Department of Defense released Bieren’s name Thursday and stated that he appeared to have died from natural causes in a non-combat situation. His mother Tracy Finck said joining the years, Rachel, sister military had been Brianne Bieren and her son’s plan from a nephew Jaren, a young age. “who he adored,” “He was as well as parents amazing, kind, Tracy and Jody smart, always Finck and John wanted to join the and Amber Bieren. service,” she wrote His identical twin in a brief message brother, Thomas, to the East Orego- Austin Bieren died at age 14. nian. Finck said She said he leaves behind Bieren played basketball and an “amazing” wife of six football as a Umatilla High School student. According to AirForce Times, Bieren is the second American serviceman known to have died in Syria. There are currently about 900 U.S. troops there providing support to Opera- tion Inherent Resolve in the fi ght against ISIS. Bieren was assigned to the 21st Space Wing at Colo- rado’s Peterson Air Force Base. A post by the Peterson Air Force Base’s Facebook page said Bieren “was a valuable and beloved member of our team and will be sorely missed. His dedication to his country was evident in his actions – he was a superb Airman.” Rep. Greg Smith (R-Hep- pner) led the Oregon House of Representatives in a moment of silence Thursday in honor of Bieren. Catch a movie BOARDMAN Health problems plague UmCo Paramount Pictures via AP Scarlett Johansson stars in the live-action adaptation of the popular manga and anime, “Ghost in the Shell.” Public health director sees glimmers of hope For showtime, Page 5A Weekend Weather Fri 56/39 Sat 62/39 Sun By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian care of the animals. Umatilla County Sheriff Terry Rowan said his department will be reimbursed with the funds from the sale, and any remaining money will be returned to Hockensmith. Rowan said as part of the agree- ment, Hockensmith cannot participate in the purchase of livestock, nor can he ask a third party to purchase livestock Umatilla County ranked near the bottom of Oregon counties in a new national report that scrutinizes health behaviors. In the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s annual County Health Rankings report, Umatilla County was 31st of the state’s 36 coun- ties. Researchers considered smoking, binge drinking, lack of physical activity, sexually transmitted diseases, teen births and other behav- iors to reveal which counties are healthy and which are lagging behind. For Umatilla County, the news was mostly grim, but the report included at least one glimmer of hope. Smoking fell from 23 percent of the adult population in 2012 to 17 percent, which has held steady over the past two years. Seventeen percent is average among Oregon counties, but higher than the nation’s 14 percent. Obesity, poverty, inac- tivity, sexually transmitted infections and poor access to health care continue to plague the county, though it made incremental improvements in lowering alcohol use and number of alcohol-impaired driving deaths. A third of residents struggle with obesity, up from 26 percent in 2012. Teen births numbered 51 per 1,000 females aged 15-19, up from the state average of 27 and the national average of 17. Twenty-six percent of Umatilla County children live in poverty, compared with the state’s 20 percent and a national rate of 12 percent. At 6.5 percent, the county unemployment rate tops the state (5.7) and the nation (3.3). Meanwhile, Morrow County fared a little better than its eastern neighbor, ranking 20th among 36 counties. Fifteen percent of adults smoke. The county boasts fewer sexually trans- mitted diseases, better rates of mammography screening and less violent crime than the state average. Both counties have a shortage of primary care physicians, dentists and mental health providers. The ratio of primary care doctors to residents are 3,730-to-one in Morrow County and 1,970- to-one in Umatilla County. See CATTLE/10A See HEALTH/10A 58/36 Fired DEQ commissioners defend hiring of director By PARIS ACHEN Capital Bureau SALEM — Three former state environmental quality commissioners say they were fi red Wednesday by Gov. Kate Brown because they defi ed the governor in selecting a director for the Department of Environmental Quality. Commissioners kept the Governor’s Offi ce informed every step of the way in their search for a new director, but Gov. Brown did not make her wishes known until the “11th hour,” former commission chairwoman Colleen Johnson wrote in a statement. “She went so far as to suggest that any decision contrary to her wishes could have negative consequences,” Johnson wrote. The three commissioners — Johnson, Morgan Rider and Melinda Eden — received a phone call early Wednesday informing them of Brown’s decision. The governor’s See DEQ/10A Staff photo by E.J. Harris Ordnance Brewing out of Boardman began canning the fi rst of its products on Thursday starting with their EOD Double IPA. CAN-DO BREWERY Ordnance begins canning, distilling to reach new markets By GEORGE PLAVEN East Oregonian A row of empty 12-ounce cans rattled down the mobile conveyor Thursday inside Ordnance Brewing, where they were washed, date- stamped and fi lled with a hoppy West Coast IPA. Craig Coleman, one of the managing partners for the Boardman craft brewery, stood by as thousands of cans were sealed and snapped into orange plastic six-pack holders. For the fi rst time, Ordnance has started canning some of its signature beers, which Coleman said will open new markets to the young business. “We’re doing what we can to get our beer in front of people,” Coleman said. “It’s a real crowded and loud marketplace out there.” In addition to EOD double IPA, Ordnance will be canning its Bloops blueberry wheat, made with locally grown blueberries. By the end of Friday, Coleman expects to fi nish canning 14 pallets, each containing about 9,000 individual cans. Six-packs should start hitting shelves across Oregon and Washington in early April. Staff photo by E.J. Harris A crew cans IPA on the fl oor of Ordnance Brewing on Thursday in Boardman. This is the fi rst run of canned product from Ordnance. “It’s a package that works,” Coleman said. “Not everybody does bottles.” In fact, aluminum cans have some distinct advantages over glass bottles, Coleman said. First, cans do not allow light to penetrate into the beer, as over- exposure to light can break down the alpha acids in hops and leave the beer tasting skunky. Cans are also easier to take on the go, which is especially useful for beer drinkers who enjoy an active lifestyle. “There are a lot of places you can’t take a bottle,” Coleman said. Ordnance hired Craft Canning See ORDNANCE/10A HERMISTON Cattle from neglect case sold in auction Hockensmith barred from owning livestock for 5 years By JAYATI RAMAKRISHNAN East Oregonian Months after being found neglected and starving on a Hermiston ranch, more than 100 cattle were sold at the Hermiston Livestock Commission on Tuesday. A few are left on the property and scheduled to be sold next week. According to George Murdock, a Umatilla county commissioner, Tues- day’s sale brought in $141,656 before expenses including yardage and feed were deducted. The Umatilla County Sheriff’s Department has taken the lead in caring for the animals since they were seized from owner Michael Hockensmith in January, and has spent more than $50,000 in feed, water and