HERMISTON SERVES UP A WIN RAILROAD REPLACING 10,000 TIES 86/61 House to vote on GOP health care bill NATION/7A SPORTS/1B REGION/3A THURSDAY, MAY 4, 2017 141st Year, No. 143 One dollar WINNER OF THE 2016 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD PENDLETON SCHOOL DISTRICT SUPERINTENDENT SEARCH Candidates make their pitch to community By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian Agricultural burn has silver lining The four fi nalists vying to become the next Pendleton School District super- intendent got their fi rst chance to make an impression on the community, and the community got its fi rst chance to make an impression on them. Following a day of school tours and meetings with local education offi cials, the candidates gath- Chavez ered at Pendleton High School to meet with staff and the public before retreating behind closed doors for an additional round of interviews with the school board. Unlike the last superintendent search in 2016, none of the Fritsch fi nalists are from Eastern Oregon and almost all of them are sitting superinten- dents. The board’s fi nal choice will replace former superinten- dent Andy Kovach, who formally left the Stroder district Friday. • Aaron Chavez doesn’t suffer from a lack of superintendent experience, having served in a series of progressively larger school districts across Washington. After serving as a classroom teacher for six years in Finley, Wagner Washington, Chavez ascended to superintendent/principal position at Almira School District Staff photo by E.J. Harris The smoke from an agricultural burn condenses into a cloud Wednesday over a fi eld north of Pendleton. According to the National Weather Service in Pendleton it was a PyroCumulus, or fi re cloud, formed by rising smoke. BMCC prepares for tuition hikes Community colleges grapple with stagnant budgets By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian After considering a $7-per-credit hike in tuition, the six Blue Mountain Community College board members held their noses and voted in favor. Board member Susan Plass admitted feeling sick to her stomach before the offi cial vote at the April meeting. “It’s a travesty that the state is putting the cost of education more and more on the backs of the students,” Plass said. “Students struggle enough as it is with all the expenses.” The BMCC board is not alone as it struggles to fi nd revenue. The state’s other 16 community colleges are also preparing for pain as Oregon legislators grapple with a $1.6-billion budget shortfall. Many, if not all, of the state’s community colleges are considering similar bumps of tuition or fees. Judging by preliminary budget fi gures, state support will likely remain fl at while costs keep rising, said BMCC President Camille Preus. “PERS, health care, salaries and wages — every fi xed cost we have is escalating,” Preus said. “The state proposal for 2017-19 is $554 million, which is exactly what it was in 2015-17.” EO fi le photo Blue Mountain Community College will increase its tuition unless the Legislature provides an increase in funding this biennium. One concern is a collection of unfunded mandates such as Title IX, minimum wage and family leave. “Across the state, for the 17 community colleges, there is $70 million in unfunded mandates,” Preus said. “That’s about See CANDIDATES/10A $700,000 for us.” BMCC administrators will get a clearer idea of the budget hole after the forecast comes out around May 15. Decision coming The school board did not select a fi nalist Wednesday and will reconvene Thursday at 6:30 a.m. in executive session to continue the discussion. See BMCC/10A HERMISTON BOARDMAN Man found guilty of jealousy-fueled shooting Utility plans may preclude Carty gas plant expansion Carranza, 25, over a woman that Rodriguez had been dating. Rodriguez fi red a gun and the bullet Eduardo Rodriguez Barriga hit Lemus in the leg. After the was found guilty Wednesday after shooting, Rodriguez drove off and shooting another man last August in Lemus tried to follow him in his own vehicle while calling a dispute over a woman. 9-1-1. Dispatch told him The eleven jurors to stop following the found Rodriguez, 26, vehicle, and he parked guilty of second-degree at a convenience store assault and two counts where police and medics of unlawful use of a met up with him. weapon. His sentencing Lemus was treated will take place Monday, for a superfi cial gunshot May 8. wound to his leg. One juror fell ill before At Wednesday’s the trial concluded, hearing, Rodriguez tried but the decision was Rodriguez to convince jurors that he unanimous and the court had acted in self-defense. accepted the verdict. Rodriguez said that the morning Rodriguez was arrested in Umatilla shortly after the shooting, of the incident he had met with the which occurred August 24. He got See SHOOTING/10A into a dispute with Daniel Lemus By JAYATI RAMAKRISHNAN East Oregonian Negotiations to fi ll demand with existing resources By GEORGE PLAVEN East Oregonian Portland General Electric may hold off on expanding the Carty Generating Station in Boardman if offi cials can instead acquire additional energy from other Northwest facilities — including existing hydro and thermal plants — to meet future demand. PGE fi led its most recent Inte- grated Resource Plan, or IRP, with the Oregon Public Utility Commission in November 2016. The plan calls for adding 561 megawatts of capacity by 2021, primarily due to the scheduled closure of the Boardman Coal Plant. In order to hit that target, PGE has applied for site certifi cates to build two new units at the Carty natural gas plant, which also opened last year. Environmental groups and tribal activists opposed the request, favoring wind and solar energy over increased fossil fuels. Laurel Schmidt, a spokeswoman for PGE, said the permits to build at Carty are still pending, but the utility is considering alternatives and actively pursuing deals that could make up the energy shortfall from existing resources. PGE did recently renew its commitment to the Wells Dam in Douglas County, maintaining 135 megawatts of capacity over the next 10 years. That agreement was signed with the Douglas County Public Utility District on March 29. But after the Boardman Coal Plant closes, the utility will lose roughly 550 megawatts that needs to be recovered, along with an anticipated 1.2 percent load growth. See CARTY/10A