ORANGE CRUSH CLEMSON TOPPLES NO. 1 ‘BAMA FOR TITLE SPORTS, B1 TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 2019 143rd Year, No. 57 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2018 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD FIRES RAVAGE TWO PENDLETON HOMES Hansell introduces fi refi ghting legislation Bills would give farmers more freedom to fi ght fi res By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian Staff photo by Kathy Aney Fire gutted a home at 1908 S.W. Goodwin about 3:30 a.m. Saturday. See Hansell, Page A8 Family of fi ve loses home, car and pets Environmental groups leave wolf plan talks By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian F ires Friday and Saturday destroyed two Pendleton homes. “It took everything,” Alicia Reynen said. “It took our two dogs, and my cat and all the presents my kids got for Christmas.” She said her husband, Jesse Reynen, was playing video games early Friday when he spotted fl ames on the front porch of their 1970 model trailer home at Shadeview Mobile Home Park, 1437 S.W. 37th St. She called 911 at 1:14 a.m. “He tried to fi nd a way to put it out,” she said, “and I ran after my kids because they were in two different rooms.” Alicia, Jesse and their three chil- dren, Dean, 4, Breelynn, 6, and Ath- ena, 8, escaped unharmed. Assistant fi re chief Shawn Penninger said crews rolled up at 1:17 a.m. and found the heavy fi re engulfi ng the trailer home and threatening to spread to more homes. In the wake of a July fi re that burned 80,000 acres of land in Sherman and Wasco counties, state Sen. Bill Hansell is introducing a package of bills that he thinks will improve fi refi ghting efforts on farmland. The four bills sponsored by the Athena Republican are intended to provide fl exibility in fi ghting wildfi res in the area and move a previ- ously unprotected land into the Oregon State Fire Marshal’s jurisdiction. At its height, the Sub- State Sen. Bill station Fire was the larg- Hansell est fi re in the United States, burning thousands of acres of wheat in the process. Hansell attended a debriefi ng on the fi re with Gov. Kate Brown and several other legislators in Sherman County. Opposed to rule allowing private citizens to kill wolves By GILLIAN FLACCUS Associated Press Staff photo by Kathy Aney Fire destroyed this mobile home at 1437 S.W. 37th Place on Friday. “They concentrated their effort on saving the adjacent trailer,” he said. The fi re caused some minor exte- rior damage to the next-door home, Penninger said, but there was no hope of saving the Reynen’s home. The fi re also totaled their 2017 Jeep Renegade in the driveway. Penninger said the cause appears to be hot coals from a wood stove. The coals were in a bucket on the wood deck, and something, perhaps the wind, knocked over the bucket, spill- ing the coals. He said he and the state fi re marshal concluded the blaze was an unfortunate accident. See Fires, Page A8 PORTLAND — Environmental groups in Oregon announced Monday they have withdrawn from talks on how to manage the state’s rebounding wolf population because of what they called a “broken” process, and concerns that state wildlife offi cials want to make it easier to kill wolves that eat livestock without try- ing other alternatives. The announcement came after months of negotiations to update rules on how and when wolves can be killed as their numbers increase and they spread farther west and south after reentering north- eastern Oregon from Idaho more than a decade ago. See Groups, Page A8 EVERY DROP COUNTS Local blood donations can help save lives around the country By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian Lives were being saved at the Hermiston Public Library on Monday. While patrons browsed through books on the main fl oor, people were trickling downstairs into a city-sponsored Red Cross blood drive. Karis Miller, one of several phlebotomists on-site, said Red Cross employees in the Tri-Cit- ies area spend their days traveling to churches, athletic clubs, librar- ies, hospitals, schools and other places willing to host a drive. “We do a lot of high schools,” she said. “People 19 and under make up a good 30 to 40 percent of what we collect.” On the other end of the spec- trum are many retired donors who have been donating regularly for years. “The older donors who donate all the time are starting to pass away and the next generation isn’t stepping up,” Miller said. After the blood is collected, it is sent to a processing center in Portland where it is tested for dis- eases, such as hepatitis, and sepa- rated out into three components: red blood cells, plasma and plate- lets. The components are then packaged and sent to hospitals, which have a contract with the Red Cross for a certain amount of blood per month in addition to extra supplies during a crisis. Red blood cells can be stored for up to 42 days, platelets are stored for up to fi ve days and plasma can be frozen and saved for up to a year. Usually blood processed at the Portland center will stay nearby, but if there is a surplus or a greater need somewhere else in the country, a donation in Oregon could end up in a patient in North Carolina. If a hospital in Eastern Oregon needs more blood urgently, they See Blood, Page A8 Staff photo by Kathy Aney/ Jennifer Fullerton watches as phlebotomist Victor Reyna, of the Red Cross, tends to the Umatilla woman during a blood drive Monday in the basement of the Hermiston Public Library.