A8 OFF PAGE ONE East Oregonian Wednesday, May 22, 2019 Election: Stanfield passes school bond there would be no guarantee the district would win that lottery again the next time. Stanfield School District has an old bond that will be dropping off of residents’ tax bills in June. The new bond will replace that one, at $2.70 per $1,000 of assessed value. Burton said she enjoyed the experience of going out into the community and knocking on doors to edu- cate people about the bond, and she was grateful to vot- ers for their support. “I feel really fortunate to work in a district where the community is so support- ive,” she said. SCHOOL BOARD RACE TO BE DETERMINED BY WRITE-IN VOTES Some local races, like Pendleton School Board Position 6, drew no candidates, meaning the elec- tion will be determined by write-in votes. Umatilla County Elections Manager Kim Lindell said the county will post a raw total of write-in votes on election night, but staff won’t start tallying write-in votes until Wednesday. Lindell said winners in write-in races won’t be determined until the election is certified on June 4. Each winner will be sent a form in the mail asking them if they will accept the elected position. If not, the elected body with the vacant seat has the ability to appoint someone to the seat. EO file photo Rail cars roll down the hump and into the yard at the Union Pacific Railroad Hinkle Locomotive Service and Repair Facility and Freight Classification Yard near Stanfield in May 2012. Layoffs: Union Pacific announces layoff of up to 195 employees at Hinkle Continued from Page A1 of accelerating (Union Pacific’s) continuous improvement plan and implementing Precision Scheduled Railroading principles,” he wrote in an email. Union Pacific announced its Unified Plan 2020 last year to improve efficiency. It announced record earn- ings in 2018 of more than $6 billion, and during a first quarter earnings call with shareholders on April 18 announced record 2019 first quar- ter net income and a 15% increase in earnings per share compared with 2018, despite the fact that total volume decreased by 2% compared with the previous year. During the call, Chief Operating Officer Jim Vena said UP increased train length by 7% and was focused on reduc- ing “touch points” where trains are handled. He said the company had “stopped humping cars at Hinkle and Pine Bluff, Arkansas, and curtailed yard operations in Salt Lake City, the Kansas City complex and But- ler Yard in Wisconsin, to name a few.” State Rep. Greg Smith, R-Heppner, called the cuts at Hinkle “devastat- ing” for the area. “These are good fam- ily wage jobs with ben- efits,” Smith said. “That job loss is going to have a significant economic effect throughout the region.” State Sen. Bill Hansell, R-Athena, said he found out about the job cuts on Tuesday afternoon. Hansell questioned whether legislation, such as the recent gross receipts tax, is making neighboring states more attractive to business. That’s been the talk in some circles at the Capi- tol, he said, and perhaps Union Pacific relocating operations from Hinkle to Idaho and Washington signals that is happening. However, Hansell cau- tioned, he does not know if that’s the case here. George Murdock, chair of the Umatilla County Board of Commission- ers, said Union Pacific has long been a “major employer” in the county. “These are the kind of jobs people occupy for an entire career, so their loss is particularly acute,” he said. “I had heard rumors that it was a possibility, but had hoped it was only a rumor.” Murdock said his understanding was Union Pacific would continue to have a presence at Hin- The Tribes: CTUIR agrees to buy Pendleton Country Club Continued from Page A1 a business plan and present it to the board of trustees within the next six to seven months. In an interview, CTUIR spokesman Chuck Sams said the tribes are still deter- mining whether the country club property will be added to the tribes’ land trust. The country club pur- chase gives the CTUIR two 18-hole golf courses. The Wildhorse golf course is already in the midst of ren- ovations that will include a new clubhouse that will fea- ture a restaurant, banquet room, and bar. Founded in 1929, the Pendleton Country Club was previously operated as a member-owned nonprofit. The organization’s 2017 tax forms show that for that year, the country club employed 30 people and took in $664,740 in rev- enue versus $673,262 in expenses. The country club also listed more than $3 mil- lion in total assets. In a text message, Sam Byrnes, the president of the Pendleton Country Club Board of Directors, wrote that he was out of town and had not seen the CTUIR’s press release. When prompted for comment again, he did not respond. Staff photo by E.J. Harris Golfers fill the parking lot at the Pendleton Country Club clubhouse south of Pendleton. Wildhorse Resort and Casino has already assumed golf course maintenance supervision and will integrate the property into its daily operations. kle and the county will remain a major freight route. He said it will be important to work with the unions and affected employees in the coming months. While the jobs rep- resent a significant loss for the area, Hermiston’s increasingly diversified economy helps absorb the blow. Drotzmann pointed to the closure of the Sim- plot plant in 2004 and the closure of Hermiston Foods in 2017 as an exam- ple of times that Hermis- ton lost one of its largest employers but continued to grow. “This community is really resilient,” he said. That might be small comfort to the employees whose jobs have been cut in recent months. Locals took to community Face- book forums on Tuesday to share that family mem- bers had been laid off or to share condolences with friends who had lost jobs. Oregon has designated CAPECO in Pendleton as the lead organization for when major job losses occur in Hermiston, and CAPECO will conduct trainings and job fairs for former Hinkle employees in June. In the meantime, some employees will be eligible to apply for trans- fer to one of Union Pacif- ic’s other rail yards. STANFIELD SCHOOL BOARD BOARDMAN RURAL FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT Cecili Longhorn is win- ning the open seat on the Stanfield School Board, defeating Jim Griffin with 201 votes to 182 votes. Loren Dieter and David Boor are winning the at-large seats on the Boardman Rural Fire Protection District. Five candi- dates filed for the two seats, and Dieter has the most votes, 238, and Boor is in second place with 173. Bill Hancock was in third with 136 votes. Morrow County Clerk Bobbi Childers said the outcome was unlikely to change, but she has some ballots yet to count. MORROW COUNTY HEALTH DISTRICT MORROW COUNTY TURNOUT PORT OF MORROW COMMISSION Voters renewed the 5-year local option tax 79.9 percent to 20.1 percent. The 39-cent levy funds {span}Pioneer Me- morial Hospital,{/span} Heppner, three clinics across the county and county-wide ambulance services. Morrow County voters returned 33 percent of ballots. The county sent out 6,282 ballots and re- ceived 2,071, as of 8 p.m., when polls closed. All election results remain unofficial. John Murray won Posi- tion 5 on the Port of Mor- row with 1,157 votes over 807 for Debbie Radie. ECHO SCHOOL BOARD Emily Spike is headed to take Position 2 on the Echo School Board. She defeated incumbent Connie Caplinger with 105 votes to 18 votes. ATHENA- WESTON SCHOOL BOARD Incumbent Jennifer McClure-Spurgeon won another term on the Athena-Weston School Board, defeating chal- lenger Shannon Hoehna with 190 votes to 126. UMATILLA COUNTY TURNOUT Umatilla County shows 5,861 out of 43,686 voters cast ballots for a turnout of 13.4 percent. The Oregon Secretary of State reported the statewide average was 19 percent as of 8:30 p.m. All elections results are unofficial. Umatilla County elections manager Kim Lindell said her office is awaiting for ballots from the several drop boxes, but she expected to post final results as early as 9:30 p.m. UMATILLA SCHOOL BOARD UMATILLA FIRE DISTRICT Umatilla School Board member Toby Cranston retains his seat with 254 votes over challenger Jennifer Armstrong’s 178 votes. Incumbent Fred Sheely won another term on the Umatilla Fire District, tak- ing 268 votes to 149 for challenger Kelly Payan. UMATILLA COUNTY FIRE DISTRICT Incumbent Spike Piersol heads back to serve on the Umatilla County Fire District No. 1 with 1,441 votes to defeat challeng- er Sebastian Sanchez with 490 votes. Democratic impeachment calls swell as McGahn defies subpoena By MARY CLARE JALONICK AND LISA MASCARO Associated Press WASHINGTON — More Democrats are call- ing — and more loudly — for impeachment pro- ceedings against Presi- dent Donald Trump after his latest defiance of Con- gress by blocking his for- mer White House law- yer from testifying on Tuesday. A growing number of rank-and-file House Dem- ocrats, incensed by former counsel Don McGahn’s empty chair in the Judi- ciary Committee hear- ing room, are confront- ing House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and pushing her and other leaders to act. Their impatience is running up against the speaker’s pref- erence for a more method- ical approach, including already-unfolding court battles. Pelosi summoned some of them — still a small fraction of the House Democratic caucus — to a meeting of investiga- tors Wednesday to assess strategy. Some other Demo- cratic leaders, while back- ing Pelosi, signaled that a march to impeachment may at some point become inevitable. “We are confronting what might be the larg- est, broadest cover-up in American history,” Majority Leader Steny Hoyer told reporters. If a House inquiry “leads to other avenues including impeachment,” the Mary- land Democrat said, “so be it.” Reps. Joaquin Castro of Texas and Diana DeGette of Colorado added their voices to the impeachment inquiry chorus. “There is political risk in doing so, but there’s a greater risk to our country in doing nothing,” Castro said on Twitter. “This is a fight for our democracy.” Tweeted DeGette: “The facts laid out in the Mueller report, coupled with this administration’s ongoing attempts to stone- wall Congress, leave us no other choice.” One Republican con- gressman, Justin Amash of Michigan, has called for impeachment proceed- ings. He said Tuesday he thinks other GOP law- makers should join him — but only after reading special counsel Robert Mueller’s report carefully. Republican House leader Kevin McCarthy dismissed Amash as out of step with House Repub- licans and “out of step with America.” And Sen. AP Photo/Andrew Harnik Ranking Member Rep. Doug Collins, R-Ga., right, listens as Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., left, speaks at a House Judiciary Committee hearing without former White House Counsel Don McGahn, who was a key figure in special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation, on Capitol Hill in Washington on Tuesday. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said wryly of Amash’s position, “I don’t think it’s going to be a trend-setting move.” As Democrats weigh their options, Trump is almost taunting them by testing the bounds of executive power in ways few other administrations have. The White House contends that even former employees like McGahn do not have to abide by subpoenas from Congress. A short time later House Judiciary Chairman Jer- rold Nadler issued sub- poenas for more Trump administration officials — former White House communications direc- tor Hope Hicks and Annie Donaldson, a former aide in the White House coun- sel’s office — for docu- ments and testimony. Trump’s former White House counsel is the most- cited witness in Mueller’s Trump-Russia investiga- tion report, recounting the president’s attempts to interfere with the probe. And that makes his silence all the more infuriating for Democrats. Nadler gaveled open Tuesday’s hearing with a stern warning that McGahn will be held in contempt for failing to appear.