FINALS FROM 2A TOURNEY SPORTS/1B GOP SETS SIGHTS ON NOVEMBER Oil leak shuts down Pilot Rock Elementary REGION/3A OREGON/2A TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 2018 142nd Year, No. 99 WINNER OF THE 2017 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD One dollar Black ice, speed to blame for wrecks on Cabbage Twenty vehicles tangled and nine people injured By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian Staff photos by E.J. Harris Golden Eagle pride Clockwise from top: Tribal drummers perform during the pre-game warmups of Nixyaawii’s 56-54 loss to County Christian in the state 1A championship game on Saturday in Baker City. Sky Smith, 12, of Mission dances to tribal drummers during halftime. Spectators and fans participate in a round dance as tribal drummers play a song during halftime. For more on the game, see Sports, Page 1B. Legislature adjourns meeting narrow goals By PARIS ACHEN Capital Bureau SALEM — Oregon legislative leaders Saturday celebrated a 28-day policy- making session marked by some bipartisan legislation. The Legislature’s Demo- cratic leaders launched the session Feb. 5 with lofty ambitions of universal health care and a cap and invest program. Adjourning Saturday lawmakers left the state Capitol having passed smaller policy advancements with consensus from the Republican minority in many instances. “This session surprised me,” said Senate President Peter Courtney, D-Salem. “I was worried that we were over-committed, doing too much, but we just adjourned eight days before the consti- tutional deadline.” Lawmakers made a fix to the state’s domestic violence gun laws, passed some measures to push back on Trump administration policies and made changes to help fund affordable housing and shed light on pharmaceu- tical drug prices. The Legislature’s “short” session — held in even-num- bered years — was sold to voters in 2010 as a time to fix laws and adjust the state budget. In 2016, the Legis- lature used the short session to pass major policies such as an increase in minimum wage and limits on the use of See SESSION/8A Oegon State Police continues to investigate the series of crashes on the icy interstate near Pendleton that injured nine people Saturday night. Five suffered serious injuries, according to state police. Ground and air ambulances took victims to St. Anthony Hospital, Pendleton and Kadlec Regional Medical Center, Richland. State police Lt. Mike Turner in Pendleton said having victims in hospitals in different states adds another layer to a complicated investigation. “We’re just continuing to try to put all the pieces together,” Turner said. Oregon State Police have not confirmed the identities of the victims. Turner said OSP has received media questions about a fatality from the crash, but no agency or hospital involved has confirmed any deaths. At this point, he said, state police do not have information that anyone died at the scene or afterward. State police reported 20 vehi- cles — seven semi-tractors and 13 passenger cars — were involved. Turner explained there was not one large pile-up but instead separate crashes on the westbound side of Interstate 84 near milepost 223, about 13 miles east of Pendleton. The preliminary investigation revealed speed and black ice helped create a domino effect resulting in the multiple collisions. Around 6:20 p.m. a passenger car stopped on the roadside because a crash already was blocking traffic, according to the daily log from state See WRECK/8A Two rallies converge on Capitol Student demonstration focuses on gun control, immigrant allies support DACA By PARIS ACHEN Capital Bureau SALEM — Surrounded by hundreds of students demonstrating for stricter gun laws, Gov. Kate Brown Monday signed into a law a bill that bans convicted domestic abusers and stalkers from buying or owning guns. House Bill 4145 also prohibits those who have a domestic violence restraining order against them from having firearms. Proposed by the governor, the legislation was arguably the only signa- ture law to emerge from the Legislature’s 28-day poli- cymaking session, which ended Saturday, March 3. The bill was approved in the House with bipartisan support and passed the Senate with bipartisan opposition. Brown touted the legis- lation as the nation’s first gun safety law since the tions already in place on gun ownership and closes the so-called “boyfriend loop- hole” or “intimate partner loophole,” as the governor later started referring to it. Domestic abusers who have been married, cohabitated or had children with their victims were already banned from having guns. The bill signed into law Monday expands that ban to dating partners, with whom the victim may not have lived with nor had children with. “This loophole needed AP Photo/Andrew Selsky desperately to be closed, High school students from Lake Oswego hold a and this bill closes it and rally for gun control on the steps of the Oregon State protects victims of domestic Capitol on Monday in Salem. violence equally,” said shooting rampage at the “Today marks an important Doreen Dodgen-Magee of Marjory Stoneman Douglas milestone, but we know Moms Demand Action. About 54 percent of High School in Parkland, we have more to do. It’s Florida, Feb. 14. long past time we hold the mass shootings — those in “I’m proud to sign this White House and Congress which four or more people bill, making Oregon the accountable. Now’s the time are killed — between 2009 first state to take action to enact real change and and 2016 were related to to prevent senseless gun federal gun safety legisla- domestic abuse, she said, violence since the tragedy in tion.” See RALLIES/8A Parkland, Fla.,” Brown said. The bill expands restric- “I’m proud to sign this bill, making Oregon the first state to take action to prevent senseless gun violence since the tragedy in Parkland” — Kate Brown, Oregon governor