REGION Friday, June 21, 2019 East Oregonian A3 Hermiston Butte to go up in fl ames Saturday By JESSICA POLLARD East Oregonian Staff photo by Jade McDowell Robert Peachey spends time at the H&P Cafe when he’s not out pulling weeds around town. Echo man improves city one weed at a time By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian ECHO — Robert Peachey may have lost a leg two years ago, but he didn’t lose his drive for community service. Three months after mov- ing to Echo he has been draw- ing attention in the commu- nity of about 700 people for his efforts combating weeds around town. Peachey can stand and walk very short distances, but mostly uses an electric wheel- chair to get around. He keeps garden gloves and a pair of pliers with him as he rolls through town in case he spots any weeds. He said he spent several hours the past week with a bucket in hand, pull- ing up weeds along the trail across from Echo School. “I don’t like a mess,” he said, pointing to a small green weed poking up through a crack in a sidewalk. “I like things being beautiful. Even seeing that weed there makes me want to pull it because it doesn’t belong.” Peachey, who is 59, said he got bad frostbite during the harsh winter of 2016 while living in Milton-Freewater. He lost a few toes up front, but complications from a hobo spider bite and diabetes even- tually led to getting a pros- thetic leg. He said he spent some time being homeless after that before ending up living in an adult foster home in Echo. Once there, he began tak- ing his chair down to the H&P Cafe on Main Street to grab a cup of coffee and chat with the locals who frequent the cafe. One day, he said, he noticed a bunch of weeds along a street and pulled them up. Things grew from there into a regu- lar hobby. “It wasn’t like I said, ‘OK, I’m going to go out and clean everything up.’ Something just happened,” he said. He even started doing some work cleaning up an overgrown yard for the own- ers of the H&P Cafe, push- ing a lawn mower and edger in front of his wheelchair. He said he refused the payment owner Mike Barzee offered him but did relent to trade the help for free coffees instead. “I’m what you would call a coffeeholic,” he said. Butch McClinton, who works at the H&P, said the help was much appreciated. “We’re always busy here and didn’t have time to get over there and the grass was getting long,” he said. Amy Johnson of Echo said she was extremely impressed when she started seeing Peachey across from the school every day clearing out weeds from a long section of gravel. She said she wished more people were like him. “I think everyone should know what he’s doing, because he isn’t asking for anything. He’s just doing it because he cares,” she said. Peachey said if anyone wanted to help out he wouldn’t say no to a bottle of water on hot afternoons. Other than that, he just likes to be paid in smiles. “People drive by and wave at me, and it makes me feel good, like maybe I’m appreci- ated,” he said. Crash seriously injures Umatilla County resident East Oregonian OREGON CITY — A Hermiston woman suffered serious injuries Wednesday in a head-on crash near Ore- gon City. Oregon State Police also reported three other crashes that day claimed four lives statewide. Lucia Smith, 28, was driving south on Highway 99E near milepost 16 when a north-going Toyota Tacoma crossed the centerline, smashing into her Jeep Com- mander. An ambulance took Smith to Oregon Health & Science University, Portland. State police reported receiving a driving com- plaint at 3:53 p.m. about the Toyota just before the crash. Hosein Reslmn, 36, of Mil- waukie, drove the Toyota. He also suffered serious injuries, and a emergency aircraft fl ew him to Legacy Emanuel Medical Center, Portland. State police also reported two Arizona residents died Wednesday in a crash near Crane. Troopers and other emer- gency personnel at about 11:15 a.m. Wednesday responded to the single-ve- hicle crash on Highway 78 near milepost 22. Joyce and Arnold Arends were driving east in a GMC Yukon when it went off the road and onto the shoulder. The GMC came Photo contributed by Oregon State Police Hermiston resident Lucia Smith suff ered serious injuries in this crash Wednesday near Oregon City when another ve- hicle struck hers head-on. Oregon State Police continues to investigate the crash. back onto the road, where it rolled multiple times before coming to rest on its top on the south side of the highway. The Arends died at the scene. The Harney County Sher- iff’s Offi ce and Burns Fire Department assisted at the scene, along with personnel from the Oregon Depart- ment of Transportation. Two other crashes on the opposite side of the state also were deadly, according to Oregon State Police. Randy Darnell, 61, of Bay City, died when his Mazda 3 left Highway 6 near Tillamook and struck a tree. And one person died in a head-on crash on Highway 99W near Junction City. Carol Sedano, 65, of Waldport, was heading south on the highway when her Toyota Corolla crashed into an oncoming Buick Rea, which then smashed into a tree. Jeffrey Taylor of Corval- lis drove the Buick. He died at the scene. He was 68. His passenger, Made- line Taylor, 66, of Corval- lis, suffered serious injuries. An ambulance took her to a local hospital. Sedano suffered critical injuries and required a fl ight in an emergency aircraft to a local hospital. State police reported it continues to investigate each of the crashes. 6/21 - 6/23 Cineplex Show Times $5 Classic Movie Showing Wednesday 12PM JULIUS CAESAR Toy Story 4 (PG) 2D 11:40a* 2:00p* 2:30p* 4:50p 7:10p 12:10p* 9:30p Men in Black: International (PG13) 1:40p* 4:20p 7:00p 9:40p The Secret Life of Pets 2 (PG) 12:00p* 2:20p* 4:30p 6:50p 9:10p Aladdin (PG) 12:50p* 3:40p* 6:30p 9:20p Shaft (R) Friday 21st to Tuesday 25th 7:20p Dark Phoenix (PG13) Friday 21st to Tuesday 25th 4:40p 9:50p Space Jam (PG) Wednesday 26th • 10:00a* * Matinee Pricing wildhorseresort.com • 541-966-1850 Pendleton, OR I-84 - Exit 216 HERMISTON — The Umatilla County Fire District 1 will set fi re to the Hermiston Butte Saturday in preparation for July 4. The burning may be rescheduled if it becomes too windy on Saturday. The public is invited to observe the burning, which will take place from noon to 6 p.m. The district asks that those who wish to watch stay on the soccer fi eld. Fire trucks will be stationed near the north end park- ing lots and the water spray park. Around 30 fi refi ghters will be at the scene from surrounding fi re depart- ments, including Echo, Pendleton, Umatilla, and UCFD1. The burn pro- vides an opportunity for seasonal fi refi ghters to train in fi re suppression and cleanup. Long-time residents will know that the burn- ing is nothing new, but in recent years the con- trolled burn has stretched from just the north side to the south side of the Hermiston Butte as well following a 2016 fi re, when fi rework embers set the south side on fi re during the show. The purpose of a con- trolled burn is to remove fuel — brush and grass — from the area to avoid future emergency fi res, in part before the Fourth of July Celebration in Butte Park. Controlled burns happen all across the nation to remove dif- ferent types of fuel, said UCFD1 Lieutenant Matt Hodge. And while fi refi ght- ers will be tackling the non-emergency fi re this weekend, it can be hard to tell if the July 4 weekend will result in many fi re calls. UCFD1 has four stations — two staffed and two volunteer — and some years all four get called out. Other years, Hodge said, the district is dealing with as little as one fi re. But high moisture from last winter has resulted in a lot of extra fuel growth, Hodge said. “It’s already very deceptively dry. Peo- ple need to be extremely careful,” Hodge said, “One errant spark could rip off an acre.” According to the UCDF1 website, this time of year constitutes a “no burn period.” The period excludes burns like small recreational fi res, bar- becues, and agricultural fi res. People who have ques- tions about the burn- ing policy are encour- aged to call Umatilla County Burning line at 1-541-278-6397. Walden joins with Dem rep to take out robocalls East Oregonian WA S H I N G T O N , D.C. — The U.S. House Energy and Commerce Chairman Frank Pal- lone, Jr., D-New Jersey, and Republican leader Greg Walden, R-Ore- gon, teamed up to stop robocalls. They pair Thursday unveiled bipartisan legis- lation, the Stopping Bad Robocalls Act, to end illegal robocall practices. “Americans deserve to be free of the daily dan- ger and harassment of robocalls,” Pallone and Walden said in a joint statement. “It’s time we end the robocall epi- demic and restore trust back into our phone sys- tem. We’re pleased to announce we’ve reached a deal on comprehensive bipartisan legislation to stop illegal robocalls.” Last year, an estimated 47.8 billion robocalls were placed nationwide, according to the news release from Walden’s offi ce, an increase of 17 billion calls over the pre- vious year. The illegal calls affect American life In increasingly harmful ways, from scams to dis- rupting the health care system. The legislation requires phone carriers to implement call authen- tication technology so consumers can trust their caller ID again, with no additional line-item for consumers, and includes a process to help rural carriers implement the technology. The act also allows carriers to offer call blocking services with no additional line charge on an opt-out basis. “Americans should be able to block robocalls in a consistent and trans- parent way without being charged extra for it,” the pair stated. “Our legisla- tion also gives the FCC and law enforcement the authority to enforce the law and quickly go after scammers. We look for- ward to moving this bill through the Commu- nications and Technol- ogy Subcommittee next week.” The new bill also includes provisions from the Support Tools to Obliterate Pesky (STOP) Robocalls Act, which Republic Reps. Bob Latta of Ohio and Mike Doyle of Pennsylvania introduced earlier this year. Latte and Doyle, the chair of the Commu- nications and Technol- ogy Subcommittee, are co-sponsors of the Stop- ping Bad Robocalls Act. LIVE MUSIC 9:00 PM FRIDAY, JUNE 21 Dakota Brown 8 S. E . CO U RT, P E N D L E TO N • 5 41 . 278 .1 1 0 0