FARMERS CELEBRATE $5.6 MILLION GRANT TO REHAB RAIL NORTHWEST, A2 WEEKEND EDITION DREAMS BECOME A REALITY RIVERSIDE’S ESTRELLA DALTOSO SIGNS LETTER OF INTENT TO PLAY SOCCER IN PORTLAND LIFESTYLES, C1 SPORTS, B1 E O AST 143rd Year, No. 163 REGONIAN JUNE 1-2, 2019 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2018 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Smoke’s effect on wildland fi refi ghters’ health unknown By JES BURNS Oregon Public Broadcasting When Timothy Ingalsbee thinks back on his days in the 1980s and 1990s fi ght- ing wildfi res in the Pacifi c Northwest, he remembers the adventure of jumping out of a helicopter into the wilderness. “Ideally we’d have at least one skid touching the steep slope,” he recalled. There was the camaraderie of sleep- ing with his crew out under the stars or smoke-fi lled skies. And then there were the colors. “I had amazing vistas of crimson red sunsets over the mountains,” he said. But Ingalsbee, who went on to found the Eugene-based Firefi ghters United for Safety, Ethics and Ecology, doesn’t want to remember everything. “I tried to forget about all the forests I inhaled,” he said. “I remember some sea- sons, I just had been so impacted by this smoke. I lost my sense of smell and taste for several months. It wasn’t until maybe the next spring it started coming back.” Over the past few years, Pacifi c Northwest communities have been get- ting better acquainted with wildfi re smoke. The issue has become a politi- cal, economic and public-health light- ning rod. But even in the most affected places, people can get some relief by lim- iting time outside and using air fi lters and By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian P ENDLETON — Matthew and Sara Allison are beaming in the photo they took in front of Crater Lake, their last bit of Oregon sightsee- ing before leaving June 5, 2016, for home in Boise. He was 27, she was 30, they were married fi ve years. They never made it back. Sara was behind the wheel of their Ford Focus so Matthew could rest during the drive on narrow Highway 20 east of Burns when James Decou of Clearfi eld, Utah, drove his fl at- bed hauling semi head-on into the couple’s car. Matthew suffered broken ribs, a lacerated spleen, head trauma and more, and required a fl ight in an emergency helicopter from Harney District Hospital, Burns, to Legacy Emanuel Hospital, Portland. Sara died in the crash. Matthew Allison recounted the story May 7 in Pendleton while testifying in federal court during the civil trial for his injuries and his wife’s death. Court records show he brought the urn containing Sara’s cremains to the wit- ness stand. See Smoke, Page A8 Oregon lawmakers recommend new ditch-cleaning bill See Road Rage, Page A8 By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press SALEM — A key group of Oregon lawmakers has recommended spending $700,000 to implement new regulations allowing farmers to clean more sediment from ditches with less red tape. Currently, farmers must obtain a state fi ll-removal permit to dredge more than 50 cubic yards of dirt from drainage ditches, which is considered an overly burdensome and frequently ignored requirement. Under House Bill 2437, that limit would increase to 3,000 cubic yards of material per mile of drainage ditch over fi ve years, as long as the channels are dry and unin- habited by sensitive salmonid fi sh, among other provisions. Because additional government employees would need to oversee the pro- See HB 2437, Page A8 Pendleton Class of 2019’s rising Starr By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian PENDLETON — Every Pendle- ton High School senior who crosses the grass at the Round-Up Grounds Satur- day accomplished something to reach graduation. But Morningstarr Red- crane might easily take the best name in the Class of 2019. The senior, who goes simply by Starr, has stories for both of her names. The name Morningstarr came from her mother, who came up with it as a childhood “dream name” for herself. The name stuck in her mind as she grew up, and when she bestowed it on Starr when she was born, it took on extra meaning because her daughter became the “brightest part” of her life. An enrolled member of the Con- federated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, Starr’s surname came from her mother’s “great-great-great- great-grandfather,” who held the name Redcrane before it became the family’s last name. A boarding school changed her grandfather’s last name to “Crane” before the family restored it for Starr and the rest of the grandchildren. But Starr didn’t earn a high school diploma and get a near full-ride schol- arship to Oregon State University based on her incandescent name. When she was interviewed on Thursday, Starr had just gotten her braces removed. As she adjusted to her freshly straightened teeth, Starr recalled how she and her orthodontist were talking about the ins and outs of dental school and what her options were. Starr wants to join the pre-dentistry program once she arrives in Corvallis. “Everyone hates going to the den- tist,” she said. “When I go to the dentist, See Graduate, Page A8 CHI St. Anthony Hospital Family Clinic is recognized as a Patient -Centered Primary Care Home. 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