A8 OFF PAGE ONE East Oregonian Friday, January 4, 2019 Resolutions: Exercise can fall by the wayside without preparation Continued from Page A1 different things until they find out what they like, which they will be more likely to stick with. “Planning ahead is a good idea too,” she said. “Pack your workout bag the night before; write your workout on your schedule.” Orien Fiander, chief oper- ating officer of Club 24, said a key metric for workout success is if people hit the gym eight times in their first month as a member. That seems to be the “magic num- ber” that indicates the person will likely follow through on their intent to exercise more. The important thing when starting or increas- ing exercise is to focus on the long-term, he said. Once people decide to start exer- cising they often push them- selves too hard while try- ing to achieve immediate changes. “A lot of times we’ll see failures because people say ‘I’ve decided to work out’ and then they overdo it and they’re uncomfortable,” he said. Another barrier can be intimidation. Fiander said Club 24 offers orienta- tions, but people who join gyms often feel intimidated by learning how to use the equipment and end up just sticking to a treadmill or elliptical, which might not offer the full fitness benefits they’re looking for. Fiander said if people want to give themselves the best chance of success, stud- ies have shown that people who exercise in the morn- ing are significantly more likely to stick with their rou- tine than people who fit it in at night. Dan Logman of Pendle- ton found success last year implementing an exercise goal, and since April 19 he has only missed nine days of working out at the gym. “I set a goal to do 300 workouts in a year, and I’m going to completely destroy that goal,” he said. For Logman, a series of health decisions have all Staff photo by E.J. Harris Instructor Tom Bailor teaches a tai chi class on Thursday at the Roundup Athletic Club in Pendleton. built on each other, each one making it easier for him to meet his next goal. Quit- ting alcohol, for example — he’s now 42 months sober — helped him be less slug- gish and freed up time for healthier pursuits. And he made his 300-day goal on April 19 because that’s when he started using a BiPap machine to help him sleep soundly through the night. “My energy levels changed completely,” he said. Logman said his motto when it comes to set- ting exercise goals is “no excuses,” and that attitude has paid off. His doctor just told him his results from recent blood work, includ- ing blood pressure and cho- lesterol, have all improved significantly. “I’m as healthy as I’ve ever been at 47,” he said. “I think I’m healthier now than when I was in my 20s.” He said that New Year’s resolutions tend not to work as well for people because they’re temporary situations, while what is really needed is a lifestyle change. Cindee Henderson of Higher Power Fitness in Hermiston also feels that setting New Year’s resolu- tions isn’t the best way to create lasting change. At Higher Power Fitness they try to help people move away from rigid thinking — “I have to weigh this much” or “I can’t ever eat this” — and instead focus on moder- ation and improvement. “The whole goal of fit- ness is to live your life and do the things you want to do with ease,” she said. She said they also try to help people have fun with exercise — something that can help it feel less like a chore. Symphony: Composer celebrates Malheur Wildlife Refuge Continued from Page A1 Gesme suggested composer Chris Thomas for the job. Thomas, a Pendleton native who now lives in Bend, composes and orches- trates for television and mov- ies. Thomas, 36, was nomi- nated for Best Orchestrator by the Film and TV Music Acad- emy in 2007 and Best Film & TV Music at the eWorld Music Awards in Hollywood in 2011. Bowerman met with Thomas and bonded immedi- ately over the project. “Chris jumped in with both feet,” Bowerman said. Thomas and the Bower- mans toured the refuge with members of the Friends of Malheur Wildlife Refuge. While Bowerman had spent plenty of time there, Thomas got his first look. Like Bower- man, he was blown away by the wildlife, the big sky and the color and texture of the hills. “Between April and June, there’s a cacophony of bird sounds that washes over you,” Bowerman said. “It’s like the way the waves make a contin- uous sound.” Thomas recorded some of those calls to insert into the symphony along with other sounds collected from the ref- uge. The soundtrack would join images meant to com- plement the music and make it a more full-body experi- ence. The sound tech person becomes another player in the orchestra. Future orches- tras that perform the sym- phony are expected to use the recordings. “They are written right into the score,” Bowerman said. Thomas said he did most of his composing walking around in nature. Ideas don’t come when he sits down at his computer, but when he walks a trail, they often “hit like lightning.” When they strike, he sings them into his phone’s recorder. “It’s important to be by myself,” he said, laughing. In the beginning, the two men envisioned a 12-to-20-minute piece. After speaking with various groups of people who care about the refuge, things expanded. Each of the groups — tribal members, birders, Friends of the Malheur National Wild- life Refuge and geologists — gave different input about what they thought the sym- phony should say. Thomas realized he had full symphony on his hands with five different move- ments. The first is “Dawn- ing Light,” the sound of life beginning. The second, “Sacred Basin,” tells the story of the thousands of years the Paiute people lived freely in the basin. The third, “Thun- der,” came after Thomas wit- nessed a thunderstorm on one of his trips to the refuge. It’s the shortest, darkest move- ment. The fourth, Thomas’ favorite, “Curlew Scherzo,” showcases one of the refuge’s residents, the long-billed cur- lew, and its operatic call. The final movement is a big, brass fanfare called “Awakening.” The Central Oregon Sym- phony will perform the work at a world premiere in Burns in May and later in Bend. Thomas said the orchestra is considering doing a multi-city tour in the Pacific Northwest. He hopes his hometown is one of the destinations. “It would mean the world to me to go to Pendleton,” he said. Bowerman couldn’t be happier with the result. “My hope is that this music will help with the healing pro- cess, including the commu- nities affected as well as the land itself, and remind people about the special place that is the Malheur Refuge,” he said. “It is pretty exciting stuff.” Contributed photo Jay and Teresa Bowerman helped launch the Malheur Symphony project. Report: Investigation determines legislative leadership ignored sexual harassment claims Continued from Page A1 a fear of retaliation for com- ing forward, and there is no confidence in the processes in place to protect them.” The report said the con- duct amounted to illegal workplace conduct, but pro- posed no sanctions. Senate President Peter Courtney and House Speaker Tina Kotek both objected to the report, saying it miscast their efforts to address the harassment. The report paints an unflattering image of some legislators and a culture where power trumped law when it came to harassment of those working in the Cap- itol for legislators and their committees. The detailed allegations will cast a political pall as the 2019 Legislature convenes in less than two weeks, with leaders still in place who Avakian’s agency said were responsible for the culture investigators found. House Republicans on Thursday night said in a statement, “Our hope is that the report would be the gen- esis for the development of a harassment-free workplace and that meaningful sanc- tions for future harassment cases can be put into place.” During the interim, the Legislature employs about 350. That doubles during the session, and nearly every class of employee had victims of what the report described as a hostile workplace. Avakian’s staff had to fight its way through the investigation as legisla- tive leaders tried to erect legal roadblocks to informa- tion. They relented and pro- duced internal records when ordered to do so by a state court. Investigators encoun- tered a history of silence by victims. One legislative employee signed a declaration in November that other work- ers “have disclosed to me that they have been sub- jected to sexually harassing conduct at the State Capi- tol,” the report said. The employee said the others didn’t want to speak out “due to fear that doing so will result in harm to their career opportunities.” The report said the evi- dence “reflects that peo- ple reporting issues were told to not speak about their complaints and some were warned about the possibility of defamation or retaliation claims for doing so.” In his statement accom- panying the report, Avakian said that “nobody should have to endure harassment at work or in a public place, and if there were ever a place a person should be guaran- teed fairness and justice, it is in the Oregon State Capitol.” Hoyle said Thursday afternoon she hadn’t read the report and wouldn’t com- ment on how she intended to proceed after taking over the office. “I feel very strongly there is only one commissioner at a time, and I’m not commis- sioner until Monday,” Hoyle said. The report recounts in detail the reported sexual harassment by former state Sen. Jeff Kruse chronicled in earlier investigations. The latest report found Kruse, a Republican from Roseburg, was inappropriate toward several women — Sens. Sara Gelser and Elizabeth Steiner Hayward, a lobbyist and two law students working in the Capitol. Kruse, who resigned ear- lier this year, could not be immediately reached for comment on Thursday. State investigators said they found evidence that Democrats ignored Kruse’s behavior because he was a powerful Republican ally. Steiner Hayward said Thursday that she disagreed with investigators’ conclu- sion that Courtney and Kotek allowed a hostile work envi- ronment and should have known about the issues after the complaints in 2016. “It’s not the presiding officers’ fault that Kruse couldn’t comply and I didn’t choose to complain again until November 2017,” she said. “I believe they took the situation very seriously.” Courtney said in a state- ment Thursday that he never knowingly let harassment take place. “I have taken severe actions beyond my author- ity to stop it. I will continue to work as hard as I can to create a workplace free of harassment,” he said. Courtney did pull Kruse off legislative committees in October 2017, days after allegations against Kruse became public. The scandal unfolded in the Capitol as the #MeToo movement took hold across the nation. At the center was Gelser, who finally went public with her complaints against Kruse and touched off a maelstrom at the Capi- tol. She proved a key witness for state investigators, shar- ing details about her own harassment and what she had heard about other such conduct. Thursday, Gelser declined to comment, writing in a text message that she was out of the country and couldn’t study the report. The report found that the Legislature’s chief attor- ney, Dexter Johnson, and Lore Christopher, its human resources director, advised at least one lawmaker not to go public with a complaint against Kruse. Gelser asked Steiner Hay- ward in a November 2017 text message why she was keeping secret her complaint against Kruse, according to the report. “Not my choice,” Steiner Hayward replied. “Dexter and Lore’s based on official process.” Christopher didn’t return email and voicemail mes- sages seeking comment. In a message to the Ore- gon Capital Bureau Thurs- day, Steiner Hayward said investigators took the text message out of context. “Johnson and Christo- pher merely asked me to not to release my statement until the investigation was for- mally started,” Steiner Hay- ward wrote. Steiner Hayward said she was not questioned as part of the Labor Bureau’s investigation. “All he has is his and oth- ers’ interpretations of my sit- uation,” she said. Avakian is a Democrat, and it’s rare for a leader to go after others in the same party as aggressively as he has. Avakian has often declined to be interviewed about the complaint. He has been characterized as a lone wolf within the Democratic Party. He ran for secretary of state in 2016 but lost to Dennis Richardson. In 2017, he said he would not seek another term as labor commissioner. The report found Kruse’s conduct was so well known through the Capitol that there was a running joke that he was out smoking a cigarette during the sexual harassment training. Ironically, Kruse was known to smoke inside the building despite prohibi- tions against doing so. “The record suggests that respondents, at least initially, took more serious steps to curb former Senator Kruse’s smoking than they did to curb his sexual harassment,” the report concluded. The report found that when legislative leaders did act, they often did so in pri- vate, treating complaints informally rather than doc- umenting them. A law- yer hired by the Legislature to investigate allegations against Kruse left two stu- dent interns believing they weren’t entitled to sue the Legislature because they weren’t paid employees. While the report found there was no intent to mislead them, it did note that such a response would discourage people from complaining. The report said lead- ers should have seen how women like the interns were vulnerable to Kruse’s advances, but failed to act “due to an acceptance of unwelcome conduct that is erroneously thought to not rise to the level of sexual harassment.” The report referenced inappropriate hugs by Kruse, and quoted Courtney’s chief of staff, Betsy Imholt, say- ing she wouldn’t have com- plained about such behavior. The misconduct also extended beyond Kruse, the report said. In 2017, a report surfaced that Rep. Diego Hernandez, D-Portland, had a list ranking lobbyists on attractiveness. Gelser told investigators that after she heard a complaint had been made about that, Christopher told lobbyists it would go nowhere because Hernandez was an up-and-comer who would have a lot of power. A legislative investiga- tion into the matter in 2017 ended with no one acknowl- edging such a list existed, the report said. The more recent inves- tigation uncovered hand- written notes taken by a human resources employee at the Legislature relating to an incident observed by a person whose name was redacted. That source report- edly witnessed state Rep. Bill Post, R-Keizer, holding a female staff member’s chin while out having drinks at a bar and “saying something about her being cute,” the report said. The report said the notes indicated the female staffer shared with a witness text messages from Post while they were at the bar. “Post mentioned at least 5 times that his wife was out of town,” according to the notes quoted in the report. Post said the allegation an investigation in 2017 “found nothing happened.” He said he didn’t learn who com- plained and was told by leg- islative administrators not to discuss the matter. Included in the 100,000 pages of materials the Leg- islature turned over to inves- tigators were handwritten notes from Kotek discuss- ing informal complaints about Rep. David Gomberg, D-Otis, alleging inappro- priate touching, telling a young woman to get ready for “birthday spankings” and saying an intern was a stripper. The report said the notes appear to be from 2013, and indicate Gomberg was told to stop his behavior. The note went on: “Not helpful for you if you discuss this conversation w/people in this building.” By Aubrey Wieber, Paris Achen and Claire Withy- combe of the Oregon Cap- ital Bureau contributed to this story.