CHUCKWAGON CAFE CLOSING AFTER 48 YEARS IN BUSINESS WEEKEND EDITION THE PRISONS OF MANDELA AND NAPOLEON LIFESTYLES, C1 REGION, A3 SPORTS, B1 E O AST 143rd Year, No. 93 HARD WORK EQUALS SUCCESS FOR BUCKS WRESTLERS REGONIAN FEBRUARY 23-24, 2019 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2018 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD EOCI cuts $300K in energy use Classroom outbursts disrupting instruction Local districts see increase in teachers injured by students By JAYATI RAMAKRISHNAN East Oregonian Staff photo by E.J. Harris Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution has found ways to save about $300,000 off their annual electric bill. By overhauling their heating system, insulating buildings and replacing older style lightbulbs with LEDs, the institution has cut their overall utility bill by 20 percent. By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian T he state prison in Pendleton is working hard to keep the lights on and the power use down. Moves to save energy are shaving about $300,000 a year from East- ern Oregon Correctional Institution’s power bill. Ron Miles said that’s in actual savings and estimations for the rest of the fi scal year, which ends in June. Miles is the supervising executive assistant at EOCI, the only prison in the nation to earn the U.S. Department of Energy’s 50001 Ready designation. That’s a fancy way of stating the prison is using global best practices to save energy. Miles said the prison staff is proud of the achievement, but it was not the goal. “When we started down this path,” he said, “the idea was we would be the best in terms of reducing our carbon footprint and the overall effi ciency effort.” Mike Cleveland is the pris- on’s physical plant manager and has headed up EOCI’s change to conserve power and resources. When he took the manager posi- tion in 2003, gas bills in the win- ter were $100,000 a month. That far exceeded his spending author- ity and required the approval of the superintendent. “She asked how many months is this,” Cleveland recalled. “I said December.” The big bills led him to seek remedies for almost 500,000 square feet of building space, he said, but energy effi ciency was not part of the design. EOCI opened in 1985, becom- ing the fi rst prison the state estab- lished outside of Marion County. The state originally built the place See EOCI, Page A10 In classrooms across Eastern Oregon, teachers have seen a swell in concerning behaviors: verbal outbursts, or students getting violent toward themselves, peers and teachers. A report published last month by the Oregon Education Association reveals that statewide, schools are dealing with these problems more frequently. John Scanlan, a teacher at Pendleton’s Sunridge Middle School, said teachers have noticed more students coming into class ill-equipped to handle their emotions. He said there have been instances of students fl ipping desks, lashing out, and teachers having to do “room clears” — removing all the other students out of a room while one child is out of control. As board member for the National Education Association, Scanlan travels to Washington, D.C., three times a year to meet with congressional delegates and lobby for education policy. When he went this month, he said law- makers were blown away by the reports they heard. “Senator Wyden’s education person asked us what a ‘room clear’ was,” he said. “He’s talking about education at the pol- icy level, but this is a real boots-on-the- ground situation.” Increase in reports Staff photo by E.J. Harris Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution adminis- trators have replaced 109 high-pressure sodium lights at the prison with LEDs. LED lights provide two-thirds more light at two-thirds less wattage. Hermiston School District provided data for teachers injured on the job in the past fi ve years. There has been a steady increase in the number of teacher injury reports, as well as reports in which a stu- dent caused the injury. In 2015-16, there were two student-related teacher injury reports, and in 2017-18 there were 13, out of 24 total teacher injury reports. District spokesperson Maria Duron said there is a difference between reported injuries and worker’s comp claims. An employee is required to report an incident, but may decline to submit a claim. Addi- tionally, she said, there has been a recent push by the Oregon School Employees Association to report student-related inci- dents, which has caused the incident count to climb. See Outbursts, Page A10 Committee shakeups amid shifting Capitol culture Democrat, Republican lose seats for lack of civility By AUBREY WIEBER and CLAIRE WITHYCOMBE Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM – Growing political ten- sions at the Legislature boiled over Thursday as House Speaker Tina Kotek stripped a powerful Portland Democrat of two committee chair- manships because of his behavior. Kotek at the same time booted a Republican legislator off a commit- tee, justifying both steps as moves to keep governance in the Capitol civil. She acted, she said in a statement, “to uphold the new standards we are all trying to model.” Committee placements are not just a matter of ceremony or title. Chairs have signifi cant infl uence over legis- lation, with authority to kill a bill by never giving it a hearing or advancing legislation to a fl oor vote. Greenlick Post See Capitol, Page A10 CHI St. Anthony Hospital Family Clinic is recognized as a Patient -Centered Primary Care Home. 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