2 OFFICERS SHOT IN SEATTLE RUSSIA BANS JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES DAWGS EKE OUT VICTORY NORTHWEST/2A FAITH/7A SPORTS/1B FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 2017 141st Year, No. 134 WINNER OF THE 2016 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD PENDLETON Your Weekend • • • Oregon East Symphony performs Saturday Eastern Oregon MS Walk in Heppner March for science and science fair event For times and places see Coming Events, 5A Catch a movie Permit requested for fi rst marijuana grow City’s second cannabis retailer opens By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian On April 20, marijuana’s unoffi cial holiday, Pend- leton’s cannabis industry showed more signs of growth. The city released the agenda for the Planning Commission meeting next Thursday where the commission will consider granting conditional use for a marijuana grow, a fi rst for Pendleton’s budding cannabis market. According to a city staff report, GhostTown Organix, a Boise company, wants to start a marijuana grow at 2515 N.E. Riverside Place, the site of an old Prairie Market grocery store. See MARIJUANA/10A Staff photo by E.J. Harris A Boise company called GhostTown Organix has ap- plied for a conditional use permit to open a marijuana grow operation in the old Prairie Market on Southeast Riverside Place in Pendleton. Brown orders state hiring freeze UMATILLA Jose Haro/Open Road Films via AP A love triangle takes center stage during the Armenian Genocide in “The Promise.” For showtime, Page 5A For review, Weekend EO Weekend Weather Fri Sat Sun 62/42 66/45 60/43 One dollar First in series of orders aimed at cutting expenses, improving efficiency Watch a game vs. By PARIS ACHEN Capital Bureau Hood River vs. Pendleton Saturday, Noon & 2 p.m., at Pendleton Staff photo by E.J. Harris Many bills beat deadline and live on in Legislature Students take class outside for Earth Day TOP: Blue Mountain Wildlife director Lynn Tompkins holds up a raptor scull to a group of second graders from McNary Heights Ele- mentary School during Earth Day fi eld trip at the McNary Dam Wild- life Area on Thursday in Umatilla. By CLAIRE WITHYCOMBE Capital Bureau SALEM — Tuesday was the deadline in the Oregon Legislative Assembly for policy bills to move out of the chamber where they origi- nated, or into one of a handful of key committees. With the exception of bills assigned to bicameral committees — or to those in the rules, revenue or ways and means committees — bills that have not been passed by either the House or the Senate are effectively dead for this session. Legislators are still See BILLS/10A LEFT: Fourth graders color animal masks for a game during an Earth Day fi eld trip at the McNary Heights Wildlife Area on Thurs- day in Umatilla. For the full story see page 3A. Staff photo by E.J. Harris Former Milton-Freewater offi cer pleads guilty to assault, misconduct Has 30 days to relinquish police certifi cation By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian Former Milton-Freewater police offi cer Brian David Scott took a deal Thursday in the assault case against him. The movie ended his law enforcement career. Umatilla County Circuit Court records show Scott, 38, pleaded guilty to one count each of third-de- gree assault and fi rst-degree offi cial misconduct. The plea came after a settlement conference in Hermiston circuit court. Misconduct is a misdemeanor, but the assault conviction is a Class C felony in Oregon. Scott faced charges of second-de- gree assault, unlawful use of a weapon and fi rst-degree offi cial misconduct stemming from his Sept. 26, 2016, arrest of Jeffery Allen Fields, 46, of Milton-Freewater, for theft. Oregon State Police reported Scott pushed Fields in the back while his wrists were in cuffs. Fields struck his head on a concrete wall in the Milton-Freewater Police Department and suffered injuries to his scalp and Scott vertebrae. State and federal court records show Fields has not fi led a lawsuit in the matter. He is serving two years of probation on domestic violence charges. Scott resigned from Milton-Free- water police in December. He worked for the department starting in September 2014. Court records show he and his family are moving to Colorado. Circuit Judge Eva Temple presided over the closed-door conference and sentenced Scott to three years of probation, which bans him from possessing weapons, fi rearms or dangerous animals and mandates he must not have any contact with Fields. Scott also will have to undergo an anger management evaluation and complete any treat- ment through a court-ap- proved provider, complete 100 hours of community service and pay a fi ne of $500. Scott also has 30 days to relin- quish his police certifi cation from the Oregon Department of Public Safety Standards and Training. The documentation allowed him to work as a police offi cer. ——— Contact Phil Wright at pwright@ eastoregonian.com or 541-966- 0833. SALEM — Gov. Kate Brown Thursday ordered a temporary statewide hiring freeze to help address Oregon’s $1.6 billion revenue shortfall. The executive order was the fi rst of a series scheduled for the next several weeks aimed at cutting expenses and improving e f f i c i e n c y, according to the Gover- nor’s Offi ce. “Oregon’s children and families deserve the chance to lead healthy and Brown productive lives. But the cuts to the state budget recently proposed by the Legislature put the most vulnerable Oregonians even more at risk than they are now. This is unacceptable,” Brown said in a statement. The hiring freeze goes into effect immediately and will last until each state department’s budget is approved by the Legislature, according to the Governor’s Offi ce. The Governor’s Offi ce is still calculating how much the hiring freeze could save, said Brown’s communications director, Chris Pair. This order also pares spending on state travel expenses and consolidates offi ce space. Senate Republican Leader Ted Ferrioli of John Day has been calling for a hiring freeze for several weeks. The hiring freeze, if left in effect, could save an estimated $790 million in the next two years, according to the Senate Republican Offi ce. The offi ce based the number on consultation with the Legislative Fiscal Offi ce, according to an email from Paul Rainey, caucus administrator for the Senate Republic Offi ce. The Department of Correc- tions, Oregon Youth Authority, Oregon State Hospital and some Department of Human Services divisions would “not be able to freeze,” the email states. “If these were excluded, the See OREGON/10A