NORTHWEST East Oregonian A2 Thursday, January 24, 2019 Oregon to help amid federal government shutdown By ANDREW SELSKY Associated Press SALEM — With the fed- eral government shutdown in its second month, officials in Oregon are looking to help beleaguered federal employ- ees, possibly with millions of dollars in assistance, authori- ties said Wednesday. Almost 10,000 federal employees in the state are not getting paid because of the shutdown, huge swaths of federal lands are unattended, creating wildfire hazards. Also, food stamps for 320,000 Oregonians are at risk if the shutdown persists past Febru- AP Photo/Andrew Selsky, File This Jan. 15, 2019, file photo, shows a notice saying training by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on workplace harassment has been canceled in the Oregon state Capitol in Salem. ary, said Lisa Taylor, spokes- woman for state Senate Presi- dent Peter Courtney. He is drafting a bill to Amazon testing delivery by self-driving robots of them will be roaming the sidewalks and streets of the neighborhood. Amazon says a worker will accompany the robots at first, but it didn’t pro- vide additional details of how the service would work. The company did not respond to questions about the test. Several companies have been testing similar deliv- ery robots on college cam- puses that deliver fast food or snacks to students. Amazon says its robot, which it is calling Scout, can navigate around pets and pedestrians. By JOSEPH PISANI AP Retail Writer NEW YORK — Ama- zon is bringing delivery robots to the streets of a Seattle suburb. The online shopping giant says it started to test self-driving robots in Sno- homish County, Washing- ton, on Wednesday that can bring Amazon packages to shoppers’ doorsteps. The robots are light blue, about the size of a Labrador, have six wheels and the Amazon smile logo stamped on its side, accord- ing to Amazon photos. Six Amazon via AP, File This undated file photo provided by Amazon shows a self-driving delivery ro- bot that Amazon is calling Scout. Forecast for Pendleton Area TODAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY Low clouds and fog breaking Low clouds and fog breaking Low clouds and fog breaking Low clouds and fog breaking Mostly sunny 48° 33° 45° 32° PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 48° 34° 43° 29° 52° 28° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 50° 33° 47° 33° 48° 34° 48° 30° 53° 31° OREGON FORECAST ALMANAC Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. PENDLETON through 3 p.m. yest. HIGH LOW TEMP. Seattle Olympia 49/37 38/31 46/29 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 48/34 Lewiston 47/34 50/36 Astoria 50/37 Pullman Yakima 41/31 50/36 45/32 Portland Hermiston 52/36 Salem The Dalles 50/33 52/33 51/33 Yesterday Normals Records La Grande 44/27 PRECIPITATION John Day Bend 52/34 49/27 46/27 Ontario 45/28 Caldwell Burns 56° 42° 43° 29° 60° (1947) -26° (1930) 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date Albany Eugene 0.37" 1.53" 0.96" 1.53" 0.81" 0.96" WINDS (in mph) 45/28 41/18 0.62" 2.07" 1.11" 2.07" 1.35" 1.11" through 3 p.m. yest. HIGH LOW TEMP. 48/33 51/34 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date HERMISTON Enterprise Pendleton 41/25 52/35 Corvallis 52° 43° 42° 28° 63° (1935) -20° (1930) PRECIPITATION Moses Lake 49/35 Aberdeen 36/30 38/28 Tacoma Yesterday Normals Records Spokane Wenatchee 50/40 Today Boardman Pendleton Medford 54/29 Fri. WSW 3-6 SW 6-12 NNW 4-8 W 4-8 SUN AND MOON Klamath Falls 44/21 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2019 Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today 7:26 a.m. 4:49 p.m. 9:34 p.m. 9:51 a.m. Last New First Full Jan 27 Feb 4 Feb 12 Feb 19 NATIONAL EXTREMES Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) High 82° in Punta Gorda, Fla. Low -24° in Alamosa, Colo. NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY allow federal employees who are working but not being paid to receive unemployment benefits, Taylor said. That’s in defiance of the U.S. Labor Department, which says fed- eral employees who are on the job without pay cannot collect unemployment. Only those not working during the shut- down can receive benefits. “I’m absolutely disgusted at what is happening at the federal level,” said House Speaker Tina Kotek. She said she’s open to the state helping federal employees without access to unemployment. The move comes as states are starting to fill gaps as the longest-ever federal govern- ment shutdown drags on. Among those working with- out pay are federal prison guards, air traffic controllers, TSA agents and U.S. Coast Guard personnel. Private citizens also are helping. In Astoria, home to a Coast Guard unit that has continued search and rescue missions, more than 1,300 federal employees and their families lined up at a Masonic Lodge last weekend for donated food, toiletries and other necessities, The Daily Astorian newspaper reported. Courtney’s bill will have an emergency clause and be retroactive, with a draft expected by the end of the week. “We cannot simply say it’s the federal government’s job, not our problem,” Courtney said in a statement. The cost to the state is expected to be millions of dollars. “This isn’t going to be a cheap and easy fix,” Taylor said. U.S. Senator Jeff Merk- ley said Monday that if Ore- gon provides aid, he’ll seek reimbursement from the fed- eral government. “If we have a bill to reopen government, we can put a reimbursement clause in there,” he said. Jackson County asks state to deny gas pipeline permit MEDFORD (AP) — Jackson County commis- sioners are asking the state to block a proposed natural gas pipeline that would ferry gas over 229 miles of South- ern Oregon to an export ter- minal near Coos Bay. The Oregon Department of State Lands is considering whether to grant the project a key permit and is taking public comment until Feb. 3. There is broad opposition to the pipeline in Klamath, Jackson, Douglas and Coos counties, The Mail Tribune reported Wednesday. Pembina Pipeline Corpo- ration, a Canadian company, wants to use the pipeline to export North American nat- ural gas to Asian markets. But county commission- ers have long been opposed to the project because of the possibility that emi- nent domain could be used against property owners unwilling to have the pipe- line cross their land. “All indications are that the benefits to Jackson County will be extremely minimal, while the costs to our wetlands and water bod- ies is high,” the letter says. Pembina says the proj- ect would create 1,400 jobs during the pipeline’s con- struction and 1,000 jobs while the export terminal is being built. More than 200 people would have permanent jobs once construction is done, mainly at the export facility, it says. The project would gener- ate $60 million annually in tax revenue for the Southern Oregon counties, according to Pembina. In their letter, Jackson County officials said there is no guarantee that Pem- bina would cover the costs of restoration if the pipeline is damaged or fails. They point to the exam- ple of PG&E. The power utility announced it will go through Chapter 11 bank- ruptcy after its equipment was implicated in 2017 and 2018 wildfires that burned 24,600 structures and killed more than 100 people in California. The letter says Pembina wants to use water from res- ervoirs, a lake and an irriga- tion canal in Jackson County to fill the pipeline and test its strength. “These water sources are important for irrigation, fire suppression and livestock watering,” the letter says. “Considering the drought conditions of the last sev- eral years, and extreme fire conflagrations in Oregon and this region of the coun- try, removing water from these sources is detrimen- tal to our ranching commu- nity and a life-safety issue when reducing water supply available for wildland fire suppression.” The pipeline would cross 87 waterways and wetlands in the county, including the Rogue River, and cross beneath the Rogue River north of Shady Cove. County officials say in the letter the crossing is too close to homeowners, who would be subjected to con- struction and drilling noise and other effects. They also worry about the leakage of drilling fluid into the river. BRIEFLY Parent company of The Bulletin files for bankruptcy BEND (AP) — Western Communica- tions, the parent company of The Bulletin, has filed for bankruptcy. The Bulletin says court filings made Tues- day show the company owes more than $10 million to more than 1,000 creditors and has assets of $10 million to $50 million. Its largest unsecured creditor is newsprint supplier Page Cooperative Inc. of King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, which is owed about $946,000. Western Communications previously filed for Chapter 11 protection in 2011 fol- lowing a three-year dispute with the Bank of America, the company’s largest creditor at the time. The company emerged from Chapter 11 protection in April 2012. Western Communications is also the par- ent company of The Baker City Herald and four other Oregon publications, as well as two California newspapers. Eugene, Lane County plan would bring homeless off streets EUGENE (AP) — Elected leaders for Eugene and Lane County are supporting an ambitious, expensive push aimed at lower- ing to zero the number of homeless people camping along local streets and in parks. The Register-Guard reports that the series of 10 recommendations by Tech- nical Assistance Collaborative, a Bos- ton-based consultant, includes construction of a 75-bed low-barrier homeless shelter and hundreds of additional units of supportive housing. It also calls for the expansion or improve- ment of existing programs spread across numerous public agencies and nonprofit providers to better help homeless people secure housing and keep them in it. The Eugene City Council voted Tuesday to have City Manager Jon Ruiz work with Lane County Administrator Steve Mokro- hisky to develop a plan by May 1 to imple- ment the consultant’s recommendations. The plan would require a large infusion of public money, likely running into the tens of millions of dollars, that elected leaders would have to identify to pay for both con- struction and annual operating costs. Woman sues Home Depot for $1.5M after termination BEND (AP) — A Bend Paralympic ath- lete is suing Home Depot for $1.5 million, claiming the company did not consider her disability when it fired her in 2017. The Bulletin reports in a complaint filed Tuesday in Deschutes County Circuit Court, Barbara Buchan claims that after suffering a concussion in a fall at work, management fired her for keeping $11 worth of presenta- tion materials in her vehicle overnight. Buchan suffers from a traumatic brain injury sustained in 1982 when she was com- peting for a spot on the U.S. Cycling Team. Buchan later achieved success as a Paralym- pic athlete before she started work at the Bend Home Depot in 2006. She’s seeking damages for lost wages for claims including retaliating on a worker’s comp claim and disability discrimination. The Atlanta-based corporation has yet to be served with complaint and a spokesper- son declined to comment. Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. -10s -0s 0s showers t-storms 10s rain 20s flurries 30s snow 40s 50s ice 60s cold front E AST O REGONIAN — Founded Oct. 16, 1875 — 211 S.E. Byers Ave., Pendleton 541-276-2211 333 E. 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