East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, March 06, 2018, Image 15

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    EASTERN OREGON
marketplace
FR
EE
!
Place classified ads online at www.eastoregonmarketplace.com or call 1-800-962-2819 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
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211 S.E. Byers Ave.
333 E. Main St.
We accept:
Pendleton, OR 97801 Hermiston, OR 97838
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EAST OREGONIAN • HERMISTON HERALD • BLUE MOUNTAIN EAGLE • WALLOWA COUNTY CHIEFTAIN
TUESDAY
March 06, 2018
104 Special Notices
PLEASE CHECK YOUR
AD ON THE FIRST DAY
OF PUBLICATION.
502 Real Estate
504 Homes for Sale
NOW is the TIME to explore all
the possibilities for your new
home. Call 541 377 6855 today
for Reliable Representation.
Turn Here Realty & Travel
541-377-6855
GET A JUMP START on Spring
to find your new home- Multiple
listing allows your agent to find
the property to suit you. Call
Kerry.
TURN HERE REALTY &
TRAVEL
305 SW Court Ave
541-377-6855
$314,000- 3532sf (m/l), 4 bed,
3 bath home offers abundant
living space. 2 car garage,
multi-level deck, family room w/
kitchenette, bonus/ TV room.
Near hospital, easy walk to park.
Kevin 541-969-8243.  
Coldwell Banker Whitney
541-276-0021
Equipment will be sold as is with
no warranty implied, expressed
or given. Bids will be based on
current condition, including me-
chanical and safety items.
Equipment may be inspected
by appointment only at the Gil-
liam County Road Maintenance
Shop. To make an appointment
to inspect the equipment, call
(541)384-5717 or (541)980-
5716. Sealed Bids will be ac-
cepted by mail at Gilliam County
Court, P.O. Box 427, Condon,
OR 97823 or in person at the
County Court office, Room
108, 221 S. Oregon St., Gilliam
County Courthouse until 5:00
p.m. March 20, 2018. Bids will
be opened at the regular meet-
ing of the Gilliam County Court
at 10:15 a.m, Wednesday,
March 21, 2018. Gilliam County
reserves the right to reject any
and all bids received.
East Oregonian
3pm the day prior to
publication
Hermiston Herald
10am Tuesday
1-800-962-2819
classifieds@eastoregonian.com
You can
find your
dream home
504 Homes for Sale
502 Real Estate
SALE OF SURPLUS
EQUIPMENT
1992 CAT 140G Motor Grader
Serial # 72V15059
Hours 13,377
Minimum bid will be $50,000
CLASSIFIED LINE AD
DEADLINES
PERMIT #73
U.S. POSTAGE PAID
PENDLETON, OR
97801
STANDARD
PRE-SORT
107 Public Notices
GILLIAM COUNTY is accepting
sealed bids for the following sur-
plus equipment:
While we are happy to make
any necessary corrections,
we can not be responsible
for errors appearing for mul-
tiple days. Thank you!
Postal
Customer
Local
DROP by for a coffee and hon-
est professional guidance to find
the house on your wishlist. You
can choose from available prop-
erties all over the county to suit
your budget and style.
Turn Here Realty & Travel
305 SW Court
541-377-6855
CASH buyers are reading
your classified ad.
GET A JUMP START on Spring
to find your new home-Multiple
listing allows your agent to find
the property to suit you. Call
Kerry.
TURN HERE REALTY &
TRAVEL
305 SW Court Ave
541-377-6855
DROP by for a coffee and hon-
est professional guidance to find
the house on your wishlist. You
can choose from available prop-
erties all over the county to suit
your budget and style.
Turn Here Realty
305 SW Court Ave
541-377-6855
BUYER meets seller every day
of the week in the classified
columns of this newspaper.
110 Announcements
504 Homes for Sale
$232,000- NEW LISTING. Nice
North Hill location backs to
wheat field. Hardwood floors,
tile, sunroom. Double garage,
newer furnace, newer roof. Call
Dori 541-310-1001 cell.
Coldwell Banker Whitney
541-276-0021
REDUCED-- $69,900-CHURCH
for home or business---Make
this one your own special
place--currently used as home
--4/5/6 bedrooms... how will it
work for you? #17615728 Water
St Weston.
Turn Here Realty & Travel
541-377-6855
$189,900- Views!
Classic
mid-century, daylight base-
ment home. 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
hardwood floors, full basement.
Large deck, fenced private
backyard. Great location! Jef
541 969-9539 cell. #17092551
Coldwell Banker Whitney
541-276-0021
$125,000- Ukiah/ Country living
set in the mountains. Remod-
eled cabin like home. Large
deck to enjoy the views and
wildlife w/ large yard, large
shop. Carolyn 541-786-0822
cell. #17660017
Coldwell Banker Whitney
541-276-0021
$144,000- PILOT ROCK
1348 sf (m/l), 3 bedroom Pi-
lot Rock home. Family room
w/gas stove, slider off dining
room to large oversized fenced
backyard. Garden shed. Mar-
sha Morgan 541-377-5152 cell.
#18627503
Coldwell Banker Whitney
541-276-0021
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertising
in this paper is subject to
the Fair Housing Act which
makes it illegal to advertise
any preference, limitation, or
discrimination based on race,
color, religion, sex, handicap,
familial status, or national or-
igin, or an intention to make
any such preference, limita-
tion, or discrimination. Famil-
ial status includes children
under the age of 18 living with
parents or legal custodians,
pregnant women, and people
securing custody of children
under 18.
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any adver-
tising for real estate which
is in violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby informed
that all dwellings advertised
in this newspaper are avail-
able on an equal opportunity
basis. To complain of dis-
crimination, call HUD toll-free
at 1-800-669-9777. The toll-
free telephone number for the
hearing impaired is 1-800-
927-9275.
CASH buyers are reading
your classified ad.
Classified Ads work hard for you!
Check out our
Real Estate Listings
in the Classifieds
WE HEAR YOU!
Stop By and See Our New Garden Area!
Plants & Home Decor
Put a smile on the heart with
the power of flowers.
184 Personals
LOCAL, INDEPENDENT AUDIOLOGIST
Working within the community of Pendleton,
our clinic provides a variety of hearing healthcare
services including hearing assessments and
rehabilitation, education, and counseling.
HWY 395, HERMISTON
Contact Dayle or Grace at
541-567-4305
classifieds@eastoregonian.com
1-800-962-2819
to place your classified ad!
Mon-Sat 8am-6pm • Sun 12pm-5am
FULL SERVICE CLINIC
www.cottagefl owersonline.com
487 Bargain Bin
Our clinic also fi ts and dispenses sophisticated
hearing aids and related devices to suit all types
of hearing loss and life styles. Renata Anderson
is a certifi ed licensed audiologist with over
twenty years experience.
LIVING WELL WITH
CHRONIC PAIN:
If you live with chronic pain (not associated with
cancer), come learn about useful tools to help you
manage the effects of living with chronic pain. Six
FREE weekly sessions; attend alone or with a
support person.
SERVICE YOU CAN RELY ON!
You can trust Renata to provide a complete
hearing evaluation and a professional diagnosis
of your specifi c hearing loss. Call for an
appointment with Renata today and start
hearing what you’ve been missing.
Tuesdays, Mar 20 thru Apr 24
2:30-5:00pm
Contact Facilitator Helena Wolfe at 541-561-5443
Must pre-register, call 541-667-3509
502 Real Estate
Information or to register
call (541) 667-3509
or email
healthinfo@gshealth.org
www.gshealth.org
NOW is the TIME to explore all
the possibilities for your new
home. Call 541 377 6855 today
for Reliable Representation.
Turn Here Realty & Travel
541-377-6855
Pam Wagenaar,
Renata Anderson, MA
Administrative Assistant
2237 SW Court, Pendleton
541-276-5053 • www.renataanderson.com
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PLAYOFFS/1B
NIXYAAWII
MOVES ON,
PILOT ROCK
BOWS OUT
OF THE
WINNER
2017 ONPA
LOCAL GUIDE INSIDE
TODAY
‘American Idol’
finalist coming
to Stanfield
A LESSON
IN HOME
COOKING
FAITH/5A
Buckaroos move closer
to state tournament
DAWGS/1B
REGION/3A
2A tourney comes to town
N/3A
“Every day is a
new adventure
for us.”
WHITE HOUSE/6A
PREP HOOPS/1B
WEDNESDAY, FEBR
GENERAL
Golden Eagles on
quest for repeat
INTO
ROUND
TWO
HERMISTO
Y
, FEBRUAR
TUESDAY
142nd Year,
to plan?
Got a wedding
red.
We’ve got you cove
d
High-spee le
motorcyc
chase
27, 2018
One dollar
142nd Year, No. 95
2017 ONPA
WINNER OF THE
ENCE
GENERAL EXCELL
RTS/1B
UARY 28, 2018
142nd Year, No. 97
One dollar
HERMISTON
By PHIL WRIGHT
East Oregonian
‘Right’
to health
care dies
in Senate
Murder defendant Tyree
Houfmuse of Hermiston is
seeking release from jail
while the state has asked
to delay his trial as it waits
for more work by the crime
lab.
The Umatilla County
By ANTONIO SIERRA
East Oregonian
have
Bill would , with
needed work session
in
little time
ACHEN
By PARIS
Capital Bureau
it in the mail ahead
of
When they receive
election, thousands
of the May 15 residents could open up
Umatilla County have much of a choice.
their ballot and not Democratic nomination
Although the
District 2 is hotly
for Congressional Oregon State University
contested and the
Service
Extension
a
District will have
measure on the ballot,
has
the filing period
been slow for local
offices.
With a week left
6
before the March
filing deadline, most
one
seats only have no
Smith
person running or
one running at all. up
The offices
for election include
ve
state representati 57
seats for district
and 58, three seats
on the Circuit Court’s
two
Sixth District,
seats on the Umatilla
of
County Board and
Commissioners the Barreto
half the seats on the
city councils for
cities: Hermiston,
county’s three largest
water.
Pendleton and Milton-Free
Legislature
yet filed, the dean
Although he hasn’t of Representatives
House
of the Oregon a tenth term.
intends to run for Smith, R-Heppner, said
State Rep. Greg the short legislative
on
he’s been focused but he intends to file for
session in Salem,
seat before the
57
District
re-election to his
deadline.
he said.
“I better get on it,”
his run official,
While he hasn’t made
to raise money for
Smith has continued
See BALLOT/8A
A legislative
to
SALEM —
ask voters
referral to Constitution to
E.J. Harris
Staff photo by
amend the to cost-effective
make access ble health care the
.
Tuesday in Hermiston
and afforda
festival street site
right of all
working on the
levels dirt while
Oregon
A small excavator
reside nts
lacks the
votes to
Aney
by Kathy
Staff photo
pass the
& Grill during
Bar
Senate,
ay at Elvis’s
according
lunch Mond
sion over
to Senate
lively discus
a have a
Demo-
in Virgni
from PAE .
crats.
ed wording
test team
range
Despite propos were still
nned aerial ton UAS test
“there
ers of a unma at the Pendle
changes, about individual
Five memb their work
which
concerns state,” said Sen.
a break from
d to say
on,
suing the
He decline staying there, but esti-
s Anders
he
Laurie Monne chairwoman
age meant ss
company was
their patron
D-Gresham, Senate Health
mated that three times the busine the
L
of the
By JADE MCDOWEL
was doing normally do during
Committee. just down to
East Oregonian
he would r months.
said.
“We were
to come to
cold weathe extraordinary,” he
e at
ge
owners
downtown
the wire. Trying
“It’s been
business
Hermiston’s
ent on langua
first jobs arriv Range,
as a
local
As
more than $8
an agreem was just really
range
Other
district has added value in just
the
g the UAS
UAS
changes
are noticin of customers. Over an
million in assessed
Pendleton
tough.” measure, called
source
are
el Hoffm
es
new
Rapha
four years.
ness
The
new and
for the drone
Referral 203,
fall and winter,
local busi
The blossoming of come in
few events who also made
party
fit
has
House Joint
catered a
House along
ees,
wn improved features
g the bene
and
employ
public
y
Sundo
passed the 13.
seein
both
industr her restaurant,
’s only many forms,
done yet.
lines Feb. s
Anderson
A
visits to
IO SIERR
Q. The airport
is private, and it’s not
her
news,”
Monne
By ANTON
& Grill —
ian
Grill & Bar-B-
Monday that
“There’s lots of good said.
— Elvis’ Bar
East Oregon
announced would not hold
Clint Spencer
restaurant ng above average traffic.
ell said city planner large public projects
jobs
committee the referral. Even
also reporti
While
Dean Crosw
ant
in, the tech the
street and
a vote on committee had
Elvis’ cook eats at the restaur
Four years ed to follow ton
E.J. Harris
like the festival
both
team
Staff photo by
expect
though the
to send the
one UAS they work at the range. t Harkenrider Center — have
that were t of the Pendle
in the 200
floor,
its Projec
enough votes
day
now —
in the courtyard
s Range
Senate
shmen
tests
every
the
construction
System
to
establi
under
Airbus
a “pocket park”
the
Aerial
measure not enough votes
Whenever , people gather at a been taking up most of the
n District is planning
Unmanned g up.
of
there are bill in the larger
said private The Hermiston Downtow
ant to take
Vahana vehicle
a brighter,
are showin with the dozens range
the restaur
work attention, Spencer
the block of Main Street.
Main Street is
to pass the said.
the
to go
windows of air taxi. When the and businesses have also taken
Along
than it was
two
“If somebody wants
projects
body, she bill would have
who are using
more vital place
gander at the people often stop
personnel machines and the
-
initiative to complete down- have taken on, including flower outside and eat a sandwich four years ago when the city
“The
ive amend t
park”
day is done,
Hermiston
to do that,”
to test their funded by state grants,
on their own to enhance
g to
needed extens
baskets and a “pocket for the they’ll have a place not a lot of council created the
have a meal. describe it as a symbi- town.
to focus
to get the suppor
positions
nies are lookin
owners project they are planning
ments for it the Senate, and
she said. “There’s
Urban Renewal District
ell said.
“I would
revitalization.
A group of business
several compa
in the 200 block places to sit downtown.”
-
nship,” Crosw anecdotes
courtyard
downtown
s.
it needs in late timing in the
large
Hermiston
on
subsid
relatio
the
otic
to the
business
ss owner
hire worker Silicon Valley
ent meet regularly as
,
Bendixsen said money for During a presentation night,
given this committee chair
Local busine ce to the argum
District, whose of Main Street.
office
A^3, the aviation giant Airbus
some
to
on Monday
creden
recent Downtown
and
Susie Bendixsen,
session, the
lt decision
Law, owners raised last year with the city council
proj-
lend some city officials in
is to “revitalize,
integration
iary of French
g
it,”
counted 27 total 13
to hire an
made the difficu
is boostin mission and maintain the manager for Bendixsen
court- the project
—
made by
Emma Spencer
forward with
is looking ian for its Project Vahana n
test range
heads enhance,
and which looks out into the to add help of RARE planner take ects downtown since 2013
not move Majority Leader
months: the
like
y by putting ants economic, social, aesthetic,
likely
test technic in Pendleton. Moder
said Senate k, D-Portland.
Aney
t of Herm- yard, said they would a shade Porricolo and will landscaping
in restaur
the local econom
by Kathy
Inc., an engi- ,
air taxi project
cultural environmen
customers
Staff photo
Solutions
area.” planters and possibly benches turns watering the
lled
See DOWNTOWN/8A
Ginny Burdic referral been
in beds and
n
historic downtown
costs.
Technology ny that counts Airbus
on an egg-fi
Had the the Legislature,
s go to the iston’s Monday they discussed tree and wrought-iro
among
to save on irrigation
stores.
compa
y flakes Bed & Breakfast.
and
lodger
parks.
Boeing
in
neering
parsle
city
his
in
ed
and
On
and
they similar to those
approv al would have gone
gs in
Martin
nights
sprinkles
Bosen said
ton House
Lockheed , has two openin
beautification projects
ny on
area most
Kaligiannis ng at the Pendle
er
the propos in the November
downtown . In the days before
Chef Peter
to a UAS compa
its clients a maintenance manag
ay morni
buy
thanks
money
ental
they
Saturd
to voters
—
ton:
fall
n.
potato
Pendle chief for its experim
stay.
trips home, to take
demand spend
general electio , all 35 Demo-
into the Pend- an extended
increased services, their return and other gifts
and crew
n.
g some life
In the House the measure,
With the
chocolates
been adver- injectin
ones.
House’s
for
y.
aircraft divisio
ts.
it hasn’t
Pendleton has hired three new back to their loved works with a
crats voted 25 Republicans
from enemy governmen
UAS Range leton econom Here to fly
Although
and
he
happy for
tional classi- safe budget request document
Pendleton said military
while the
Trent Aguon
Bosen said to cook, clean
is more than
g,
tised yet,
Abling
FRIEDMANN
fied briefing The “An additional IT security
A
opposed it. Mitch Greenlick,
Tracy Bosen
ar-old buildin
employees
looking for
By GORDON R. regonlive
See UAS/8
manager Darryl
a two
ns with the range.
Rep.
ton House maintain the 101-ye
on Russian reads, is needed to expedite
PAE is also
The Oregonian/O
had been
who has repeat-
the Pendle
contractor pilots and other positio
ing what
t h r e a t s position
D-Portland,
Bosen owns a North Main Street
tion of Homeland
mechanics, project.
and
state implementa
had all bolster staff.
l
of State
c Inn,
to
TH/8A
recommendations
person
which has
Oregon Secretary asked the
See HEAL
for their own may only equal a handfu to Histori
breakfast,
since the
e l e c t i o n s Security Oregon elections from
has
While it the city is starting is bed and its rooms rented out
Dennis Richardson
to hire
y s t e m s protect foreign interference.”
y
s
of
$166,000
now,
for
six
industr
Legislature
of jobs that the drone
in potential
said the
combating
earlier
Oregon officials have 21 that
a staffer tasked with
see signs
by the
F e b r u a r y.
was one of at least
election hacking activities
HERMISTON
That briefing state Russian government targeted
t.
sion
Russian governmen
l
for posses
after the
n
was given in the
of the 2016 presidentia
The request comes Homeland Richardso
Pendleton, vehicle, first-de -
’s agency
Washington, ahead
of
ef
Hermiston,
stolen
election. Richardson the hacking
U.S. Department
al Center, staff also of a
al mischi o-
Oregon’s
with the Office
l
al, Medic
gree crimin
unauth
Security analyzed systems and D.C. by officials of National has previously said
his skin (vandalism) and .
Lucia Madrig an. where medica
Director
were not successful.
glass from
election security
Bureau attempts firewalls protecting
to a state of the
30, of Boardm sped removed
to
use of a vehicle
ng him.
Digital
Randy
found flaws, according the budget Intelligence, Federal
the rized
still trying ”
The vehicle Gill before releasi
n and Homeland Oregon’s elections systems stop
police Lt.
“We are
The
Olney,
soon found ed
document outlining
and
state,
flaws of Investigatio
hacking
aker.
of
Police
Nathan
WRIGHT
those
million
of
contain
away
24
secretary
Studeb
of
PHIL
As
aker.
led
By
average
which
request. Details
reviewed
ian
to the
nics locate ing to Studeb
be corrected Security.
Oregon’s top an
became entang ger vehicle,
officer
East Oregon
and electro
from
accord
is armed,
attempts daily, according
and how they should officials to Richardson is
The
stolen tools y outside the “We believe that he the public
on its passen
documents Nathan
by federal
of state’s office.
official.
given
Cpl.
secretary
elections
were
burglar
a
threats
report
aker.
Oregon’s
driver,
police
side.
was from according to Studeb oped and we are asking
Though details of flaws are agency has said those
Richardson in a classified to the
Hermiston injured after the
36, of
541-567-5519
and
“He
Olney,
was
security
for city, s then “devel may to call 911 or information
and
come from Russia
in December, according
Doug Gill ts dragged him Hermiston,
by Leslie elections the secretary of state’s have governments as well as
dragged
30 Officer
had
that Olney n.”
if they have n.”
document, signed
two suspec
secretary secret, is firm that another staffer other
after a traffic learned the car
approximately being information
d
about his locatio
license
with a handgu
individual actors.
office
Cummings, the deputy
also reporte
under a vehicle
yards before free,” be armed Morrow County
the wrong
ay.
Studebaker g fine and
to keep state elections
of state.
Olney
stop Saturd
The
an addi- is needed
police Cpl. plates.
thrown
on Saturday
the
Gill is “feelin
back to
Richardson received
about
Hermiston
to come
reported.
“Suspecting
Sheriff ’s Office
Madrigal
Stokoe at
stolen,
d a
Studebaker stayed to help Gill, afternoon arrested into the intends
Leonard
ay stoppe
soon.”
vehicle was
,” Stude-
her
Stokoe
3 a.m. Saturd Camry for a he called for backup Doug
Jail, work
ts escaped.
and booked County
and the suspec d 15 to 20 Umatilla
2014 Toyota violation near baker stated, and Cpl.
receive Shepherd
Gill
.
North-
minor traffic
Gill arrived and Gill tried to stitches at Good
ction of
the interse Street and East
Stokoe
passenger
ing
east Third
Olney and
e, accord
from detain
Gladys Avenu
statement
to a written
town
Upgrading down
Public and private
projects push value
up by $8 million in
first four years
staff to
Richardson seeks
st attempt
ed in arre
car, injur
agged by
Officer dr
Your Weekend
With one
THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 2018
week until
deadline,
BOARDMAN
Houfmuse seeks release before trial
many open
Dairy on
races remain
edge of
142nd Year, No. 96
PENDLETON
No. 94
ivering
nes are del
What dro
WINNER OF THE
AWARD
CE AWARD
EXCELLEN
ling
combat Russia medd
BUCKS
FALL
SHORT
SPO
WINNER OF THE 2017 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD
District Attorney’s Office
on Tuesday filed a motion
that would stall the trial
— now set to begin April
30 — until November. The
DA’s office claims the delay
is necessary because more
tests are still needed from
the Oregon State Crime
Lab, while Houfmuse’s
attorney says he should at
least be given the opportu-
nity to make bail.
Houfmuse, 35, faces
murder,
first-degree
manslaughter and weapons
charges in the May 2017
shooting death of James
Cragun. Houfmuse has
been in the county jail in
Pendleton since his arrest
in June with bail set at more
than $1 million.
Defense attorney Kara
Davis in a motion filed
Wednesday claims if the
state gets the delay, her
client will have been in jail
almost a year-and-a-half
while being presumptively
innocent.
See TRIAL/8A
Houfmuse
Port of Morrow general manager to retire after nearly 30 years
Stopping abuse bef
ore
One dollar
“Annie” at BMCC’s
• Bob
Clapp Theatre
Crawford sings
• at Aaron
Wildhorse Casino
Worldwide Play-In
• Weekend
on
Saturday
For times and
places
see Coming Events,
5A
shutdown
over ODA
violations
Weekend Weather
Fri
Sat
Sun
48/29
44/28
47/30
Bill would make
strangulation
prison. It also expands
a felony definition
the
By JADE MCDOWEL
of strangulation to
L
include knowingly
unanimously by the
East Oregonian
halting
Senate a person’s
and headed for
breathing by
a vote in applying
the House Friday
A bill making
pressure to their
in
through the Oregon its way waning days of the the chest.
short
Legis- session,
Advocates for domestic
lature would put
domestic strangulatio would upgrade violence
abusers who strangle
survivors are
n from a Class
their A misdemean
victims behind
or punishable applauding
the
bill’s
bars
for
message.
by up to 364 days
longer.
in jail to
a Class
“It makes
Senate Bill 1562,
passed able by C felony punish- about what a statement
up to five years in
will
tolerated,” said not be
Kathryn
THE FIG
HTER
LIFESTYLES/1C
STEEL DE
BUSINESS/8A ALINGS
3, 2018
AWARD
One dollar
SENATE BILL 1562
By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI
EO Media Group
it escalates
Chaney,
director
of
Domestic Violence
in Umatilla County. Services
“Hope-
fully it could be a deterrent.”
She cited a 2008
study
published in the
Journal
of Emergency
which found that Medicine,
who have escalated abusers
gulation are 750 to stran-
percent
more likely to
eventually
kill their victims.
The act
of cutting off a victim’s
air
supply — using
methods
ranging from squeezing
the
neck to covering
and nose — is a the mouth
flag for “potential huge red
lethality”
Chaney said.
“Preventing
someone
being able to breathe
saying, ‘I’m thinking is
of
killing you,’” she
said.
In her line
Chaney has met of work
many
See ABUSE/8A
Watch a game
vs.
142nd Year,
No. 98
WINNER
OF THE
MARCH
3-4,
2018
Hermiston
CAP
CONSTRU
CTIO
Chambe ITAL
r gets $1 N m BILL
illion, jail
doesn’t
2017 ONPA
GENERAL
EXCELLEN
CE AWARD
By JADE
MCDO
East Oregon WELL
ian
$1.50
Umatilla County
Jail better
accommodate
As the
in Pendle
mentally
ill holdin ton to create new
lature looks Oregon Legis- inmates.
g, booking
to wrap
“Needless
Saturday,
and storage hand, will get
areas that
to say,
it will vote up on disappointed,
$1
capital constru
on a
” Sheriff I’m jail to serve would allow the for what is describ million training
Terry a
inmates sufferi
the “Herm
ed as headqu events, as well
includes $1 ction bill that Rowan said.
mental
iston
ng
as the
million for
Rowan
arters of the
new buildin
under the health crisis or of Commerce & Chamber of comm
had testifie
a
chamber this facility can serve
influen
Umati
Wester
erce.
d
new home
Hermiston g for the Greater before the Joint
Ways and But the project ce of drugs. Facilit lla County Community n
“The
for the Hermi as a
Area
Means
Chamber of
Committee’s
Commerce,
didn’t make
y.”
the cut as
ston
nities of growing commu- Chamber of Comm
the bill headed
wester
In
they
for a renova but no money construction subcom capital the House
erce as
to Greg a news release, Rep. County continu n Umatilla suppor continue their work
last week,
tion to help
mittee where
and Senate
e to need
asking
the million
ting
in
additio
it was expect floors, said Smith of Heppn
community local business and
to upgrad for $1 Saturday
the new
er workfo nal meeting
ed to pass
e the jail
activities.”
facility will
and
night
rce
provide space
After a
Hermiston, or Sunday.
training space, development
for
comm
months-long
on the other meetings, educat
unity
search
and
ion and this facility will I believe to a the chamber moved
workforce
smaller space
development that need,” he help meet Corner
in the
said
stone Plaza
statement.
“I am also in a Highway
on South
excited
395 in Januar
See CAPIT
y
AL/10A
Fortresses
of learnin
g
The Lost Valley Farm near Boardman
has again landed in trouble with Oregon’s
water regulators, who have sought a
temporary restraining order against the
Crescent Valley
facility for continued wastewater viola-
vs. Pendleton
tions.
Friday, 6 p.m.,
In January, the Oregon Department of
Warberg Court
Agriculture levied a civil penalty of more
than $10,000 against the year-old dairy
for unauthorized wastewater discharges
and failing to maintain adequate manure
By PHIL
WRIGH
lagoon capacity.
East Oregon T
Subsequent inspections in February
ian
found that the dairy continued to violate
The crowd
the terms of its “confined animal feeding
building at jostled into the upper
to see the Pendleton High School
operation” permit by allowing lagoons to
Thursday
basketball
overflow, according to ODA.
afterno
locked doors game. School officia on
The agency has filed a lawsuit against
ls
ways to keep and blocked off
Greg te Velde, the facility’s owner,
and adjoini spectators in the hall-
seeking to stop the dairy from generating
rest of the ng foyer and out of gym
wastewater until it complies with permit
school where
the
session
class was
conditions and proves its wastewater
. The
officer hovere armed school resourc in
systems are fully functional.
By ERICKA CRUZ
No one d around the scene. e
Due to the risks posed by pathogens
There were checked bags or purses
and nitrate pollution, ODA claims that a Oregon GUEVARRA
pat downs no metal detectors, .
Public Broadcastin
temporary restraining order and prelim-
g
price of a . Admittance was no
inary injunction against wastewater Two
volunteer. ticket purchased from the
large retailers with
production are necessary to protect the
a
strong footings in
As school
environment and human health.
Northwest have the Pacific
prevent access s consider how
Lost Valley Farm opposed the agen-
to those lookin to
growing roster of joined a
do harm,
g to
cy’s request, arguing that such a tempo-
making changes to companies
of security the amount and means
Staff photo by
Heppner fans hold
E.J. Harris
gun sale
rary restraining order would effectively
up “spirit fingers”
policies.
question. has become a driving
during the first
as one of their
round of the 2A
“shut down its dairy operation” since Kroger —
players shoots
Pendleton Some schools, includi
minutes after the
girls state champion
the
free throws Thursday
High School
ng
ceiling began leaking
it’s not possible to sanitize equipment,
ships
that operates Fred company
money from
during the Mustangs
, have
from the rain. For at Pendleton High School.
’ 52-19 loss
clean barns and maintain cows without
stores in Oregon, Meyer
The
more on the 2A
bonds to add taxpayer-supp used
tournament see following game was delayed to Kennedy
fencing, camera orted
generating wastewater.”
ington, Alaska and Wash-
Sports, Page 1B.
buzz-in
for about 25
system
s and
and Eugene-based Idaho —
“As a result of the above consequences,
Mark Mulvih s.
Bi-Mart
ill is the superin
See DAIRY/8A
announced Thursday
dent of the
InterMountain
ten-
that
they will raise the
Service Distric
Educat
age for gun sales minimum
Umatilla, Morro t serving school ion
from 18 to
s in
w, Union
21.
counties.
Schools are and Baker
safest places
The companies
among
PENDLETON Walmart
join
and as commo for children, he the
and
said,
n as school
Sporting Goods, Dick’s
seem, they
remain rare. shootings
which
both announced
“But when
it does happen
would stop selling that they
Naloxon
trauma
e reverses
is permanent,”
, the
customers under guns to
active shoote
he said. “An
21. The
effects of opioid
retailers have imposed
trauma event.” r event is the worst
new
restrictions on ammunition
overdose
Preventing
sales after the shooting
a tragedy
Oregon
at
By KATHY ANEY
a Parkland, Florida,
share of schools have had
Soldiers of the
Contributed photo
high
555th Infantry
East Oregonian
school Feb. 14,
shooting at that trauma. The their Pendleton High
for a jump shortly
Battalion prepare
which left
1998
School stude
Springfield, Thurston High School
Army Airfield in after arriving at the Pendleton
nts head
April 1945.
Umatilla County Sheriff’s
See GUNS/8A
wounded, left two dead and , Safe at scho
for a securi
ty gate as
deputies will soon
ol
at Umpqu and the 2015 shootin 23 Throu
the leave
start
targets. Robert
carrying anti-overdo
school Friday
By PHIL WRIGHT
Roseburg, a Community Colleg g the EO gh the month of
se drugs.
March
in Pendle
left 10 dead
assessed them s toured schools
e, ways will report
The medication
East Oregonian
injured.
ton.
on many ,
and
and nine
schools
Staff photo
the ESD buildin for safety, includi
Clear
saves lives by naloxone
protect stude
by E.J. Harris
both on
That shootin
ng anyone glass in window
reversing
gs and early
and off campu
nts, center in
overdoses of prescription
g sparke
and Pendle
see
learnin
s lets safety.
A Umatilla County grand jury
s.
ton Police d Mulvihill Robert
said Robert Hermiston. Mulvih g And cubby in. Not all doors lock.
painkillers, heroin
The ESD,
Chief Stuart
indicted the former director of the
s to examin
By PHIL WRIGHT
s spotted
holes near
ill entranc
and the
immed
Mulvih
synthetic
school
e
Pendleton
painkiller
how local school staff, teache problems that could e are dangerous the main own iately put in tinted ill said,
s could
East Oregonian
Pendleton nonprofit Tonya’s House for
and became
rs and
took
offices, installe
glass at its
The law enforcemen fentanyl.
become
— anyone
stuff a bomb
smoke jumpers,
stealing more than $10,000 from the
harder landsc for granted as part students
d a door buzz-in
system, placed
in one.
and
Roberts’
will receive 60 doses t agency
ape.
of their
Robert Bartlett aims Bartlett along with
assessment
organization.
Friday
in better locatio surveillance camera
districts to
from the Umatilla
forced cubbie
to convince Pendleton Oregon Travel Experi-
s
ns,
Shawn Elizabeth
take practic look at buildings
Health Departmen County
s. The audit, and got rid of the
ence’s historical
al steps toward and
locals that it’s time
t to use
MacGregor,
56,
as Mulvihill
marker
over
to
the
program
next
more
put
two years.
give the Triple Nickles
want to
of Pendleton, goes
See FORT
Eastern Oregon
Eastern Oregon
roadside marker see a
RESS/10A
Staff photo by
their due.
Preven- Stensrud,
Prevention
Kathy Aney
to court Tuesday
near
tion
Drug
Pendleton to commemo-
of Umatilla County Drug Coordinator Mike
Coordinator overdose
Bartlett, 69,
for an arraignment
HERMISTON
Mike Stensrud, of
Public Health,
kit containing
sociology at teaches rate the 555th.
Umatilla name Narcan.
naloxone, under holds an
on charges of one
Eastern
County Public Health,
Markers are value
the brand
Washington University
will
count of first-degree
train officers on
in Cheney, Washington statements, Bartlett said,
aggravated
theft,
naloxone (with the use of tered naloxone 177 times
. that show who
He’s making the
in use of prescription
and what
seven of first-degree
name of Narcan). the brand Umatilla County. But, the
pain
Friday morning to drive is important to a place.
Funding
relievers
earlier
like Percocet and
theft and one of
the drug
from Purdue Pharma
Property own
leton to deliver a Pend- Likewise, the lack of a
to the tered the better is adminis- OxyContin.
presen- marker can
National Sheriff’s
second-degree theft. MacGregor
ers carry poth
chance the
tation on 555th Parachute
send the same
One reason to
tion helped bring Associa- person will recover.
MacGregor
is
ole burden
message. The members
use
By JADE
Infantry Battalion,
the kits to
naloxone is a recent
According to the
MCDO
on public
Umatilla County and
now a health educator at Yellowhawk
shift
Centers
the Triple Nickles, AKA, of the Triple Nickles
East Oregon WELL
road
other law enforcemen various for Disease Control and away from spot testing drugs
the were men who
Tribal Health Center on the Umatilla
ian
themselves.
first all-black airborne
literally
cies across the county t agen- Prevention, 42,249 people found during traffic stops so
the road say But property owners
Indian Reservation. She did not immedi-
Everyone
jumped from airplanes
unit in the United
that officers won’t
at no died in opioid-relat
agrees that
along
cost to taxpayers.
East McKin
off the beaten that law is meant
be exposed
ately return a phone message Wednesday.
the pothol
ed deaths to the
Army during World States into fires, but they also
ney
for
in 2016. According
potent
War jumped into
Local ambulance
They don’t Avenue are huge. es on by residents. path and accessed roads
Tonya’s House provided temporary
to the killer fentanyl synthetic pain-
II.
the flames
crews Substance Abuse
agree on what
mostly
East McKin
already carry the
it.
which comes
of racism and American
and Mental
shelter and care to teen girls in crisis. The
to do about which connects Southe
ney Avenu
They served out
year, emergency drug. Last Health Services Adminis- in both pill and powder form.
e,
of
with South
The road —
nonprofit closed in May 2017. Casey
medical
A
small amount of the
First Street, ast Fourth Street
tration, Oregon ranks
located in
See NICKLES/8A
service workers
the southe
traffic
the county
drug,
sees signific
White-Zollman chaired the Tonya’s
sixth
adminis- nationally
on employ from Union
ant
considered rn edge of Hermiston
for non-medical which is 50-100 times more
House board of directors. She said at
— is skip ees and locals Pacific Railroad
access road,” by the county as
See OVERDOSE/8A
who are
past
state, federal meaning it’s not a “local shortcut the high school traffic trying to
See THEFT/7A
a county,
home
has the right or city road but the
creates wear from Safeway. All or take a
to
public
A truck
owners are and tear that nine of that
The questio use it.
proper
McKinney drives around
expected to
it needs major n is what happen
the
Avenue on
shoulder the ty
s when for.
maintenance.
Tuesday potholes in the Staff photo by E.J. Harris
bill
Umati
“It doesn’
in Hermi
lla County
middle
t seem fair,”
ston.
of East boring proper
says it’s the
Gardner,
to fund the ty owners’ respon neigh- Avenue’s one of East said Roe
McKinney
residents.
sibility
filling of
the pothol
es
Schools upd
but also off ate buildings, install
sec
er tip line
for studen urity systems and
ts to report
train staff,
problems
they see.
Bi-Mart,
Fred Meyer
join others
to add gun
restrictions
The tourney has land
ed
Staff photo by E.J. Harris
Port of Morrow general manager Gary Neal has announced his plans to retire at the end of the year.
State will stop
putting foster
kids in hotels
Neal’s final year
NCIL
By KRISTIAN FODEN-VE g
Oregon Public Broadcastin
FRIDAY, MARCH
2017 ONPA GENERA
L EXCELLENCE
WEEKEND
EDITION
By JAYATI RAMAKRISHNAN
East Oregonian
More inside
Morrow County Grain
At the time, he said, the Port of
Morrow was fairly small, but he
“He took sand
and sage-
brush and
turned it into
the second
largest port in
the state.”
was attracted to its potential.
Growers breaks ground on
“There’s a freeway, railroad
As the Port of Morrow’s
$15-$20M terminal. Page 3A
to stop temporarily
mainlines, a transportation grid,
footprint expands, manager Gary
Oregon has agreed in hotel rooms,
irrigated agriculture,” he said. “It
Neal’s successor will have some
housing foster children
to settle a 2016 lawsuit.
big OPB
shoes to fill.
in December 2018, just shy of 30 was just — we can do more with
under an agreement an investigation by
“Since 2007, we’ve had pretty years in the position at what is now these products than just grow and
Two years ago,
meant
of foster homes constant,
— Greg Smith,
found that a lack
weeks in hotel pretty active growth in a the second largest port in the state. ship. We can do value added. There
sizable way,” Neal said.
Neal said he was approached were a lot of pieces of the puzzle, state representative and
some kids were spending
in a has been a big part of that about a job at the Port of Morrow and it looked like a good opportu- former Port of Morrow
rooms.
for 80 days Neal
One child was housed
growth since he took the helm in when he was the manager at the nity to figure that out.”
employee
of in 1989. He will retire Port of Clarkston in Washington.
Boardman
hotel.
chapter
See NEAL/7A
Attorneys with Oregon’s agreement
Tuesday’s
CASA filed suit.
settles that complaint.
of Human
The Oregon Department
reduce
ly
incremental
to
PENDLETON
Services has agreed in hotels to no more
the number of kids by 2020. Additionally,
year
per
24
than
age of 11 cannot spend
children under the in a hotel room.
more than five nights in a hotel, the state
The idea that gained the most
When it came to city vehicles
If a child is housed is transported to
Council considers how traction
she
was Mayor John Turner’s breaking down or equipment
must ensure he or
proposal to spend 50 percent of failing, Chalmers said the city was
school.
to spend $200,000
bans the state from
revenue on street maintenance often reactive instead of budgeting
The agreement also in welfare offices
kids
and repair, or “pot for potholes” as for their eventual replacement.
temporarily lodging
circumstances.
By ANTONIO SIERRA
Councilor Paul Chalmers referred
Councilor Scott Fairley wants
— except under limited
agreed to hire an
East Oregonian
to it. The council is currently trying to save the money while the
The state has also the root causes of
uncover
to
find
to figure out how to increase its council gets a better hold of their
expert
placements and to
As the city starts to collect road repair budget from $781,000 longterm budget outlook.
emergency hotel practice.
thousands of dollars from taxes on to $1.2 million, which would stop
alternatives to the welfare officials and
Fairley pointed to a projected
recreational marijuana sales, the street conditions from eroding decrease in the beginning fund
“State child
agreed that we all
Pendleton City Council’s interest further. Turner said that some of balance, the money the city uses to
children’s advocates placed in stable and
in how to spend the money is the marijuana money could help cover operating expenses between
want to see children
that are close to
starting to bud.
safe home-like settings
in that area.
the start of the fiscal year in July
school,” said Richard
At a city council workshop
their family and
for two
While
Turner’s
was
the
most
and
getting property tax revenue
guardian
Vangelisti, a temporary
Tuesday, City Manager Robb popular, other councilors pitched in November.
as plaintiffs in
girls who were designated
Corbett said the city is projecting their own ideas.
City staff is projecting the
the suit.
to generate $203,367 in marijuana
Chalmers suggested the council beginning fund balance will fall
revenue in the 2018 calendar year put half of marijuana tax revenue from $3 million in the 2018-2019
and he wants direction on how it toward a fund that would provide fiscal year to $1.8 million in
should be spent.
replacements for capital expenses.
See POTHOLES/8A
Pot tax revenue for potholes?
Theft charges
pending for
former Tonya’s
House director
Sheriff’s deputie
s to
anti-overdose dru add
g to arsenal
Black smokejumpers
made their mark
Local access
roads cause
funding dil
emma
for maintena
nce
See POTH
OLE/9A
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