OFF PAGE ONE Saturday, July 6, 2019 Water: Umatilla County approves deal with NOWA Continued from Page A1 Shrinking water lev- els in the area’s basalt aquifers have taken farm- land out of production or moved it to less prof- itable dryland crops. NOWA was launched with a grand vision of a water recharge project that would build three pipes from the Columbia River and allow farms to use that water instead of groundwater, giving the aquifers time to recharge. The water pulled from the river would be mitigated by municipal water rights transferred and left in the river. Factors ranging from government bureaucracy to a lawsuit against West- land Irrigation District have slowed the proj- ect, however. The coun- ty’s purchase of the inter- est discussed Wednesday would help preserve the central arm of the proj- ect by keeping the option open to pipe water to the depot area. Once the final deal goes through, the county will be guaranteed intake capacity of 30 csf year- round and will have first right to an additional 15 csf except for July 15-Sept. 30. It will also obtain an easement to build a pipeline to pump the water to the former depot. The depot is in the final stages of being transferred from the U.S. Army to the locally-controlled Colum- bia Development Author- ity. The CDA plans to market portions of the depot for industrial devel- opment, and water avail- ability will improve the land’s marketability. Commissioners voted unanimously Wednes- day to sign the option agreement. “There is no question about the importance of this project to industrial and agricultural growth of the region,” commis- sioner Bill Elfering said. East Oregonian A9 Wildfire risk picks up in parts of Northwest By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press BOISE, Idaho — Western wildfire risk is increasing in spots following a slow start to the season, the National Inter- agency Fire Center reported. An exception is Alaska, where fires are already active. “From what I am hearing from the field, the fine fuels across the Great Basin are now cured and able to support fire activity should it occur,” said Bryan Henry, NIFC Predic- tive Services acting national fire weather program man- ager. “The higher elevations are delayed still. The only sur- prise out there nationally is how wet the Northern Rockies have been and continue to be.” Much of the Northwest has normal risk, NIFC reported. But areas west of the Cas- cade Crest in Washington and Oregon, and north along the Canadian border, likely have above-normal risk as heavy fuels remain drier than usual. Moderate to severe drought remains across much of Washington and Oregon, particularly in western por- tions. Above-normal tem- peratures are expected espe- cially west of the Cascades, where below-average summer rainfall is likely. Predicted above-average precipitation for the Rocky Mountains and Great Basin may extend into eastern Oregon and Washington. In the Northern Rockies, NIFC expects normal sig- nificant large fire potential, except across the northern Idaho panhandle and north- western Montana, where the potential should be above nor- mal through early September in part because of continued moderate drought. Tempera- tures likely will be above aver- age in much of the region. Lower elevations in the Great Basin have seen grasses cure in most areas below 5,000 feet except in northeastern Nevada and parts of eastern Idaho and western Wyoming. Boise-based NIFC said fine- fuel loading is well above nor- mal in many lower elevations, though some brush is yet to dry; when that live-fuel mois- ture drops, large-fire potential will increase quickly in July. The region has above-nor- mal potential for large fires in August and September at lower elevations in western Nevada, and normal potential elsewhere. Northern California has above-normal July poten- tial for significant large fires, except in the higher-eleva- tion Mendocino National Forest near the central coast. NIFC said factors include dead and down fuels in the northern Sacramento Val- ley, heavy brush growth and a robust, mostly cured crop of fine fuels. Rainfall was well above average in the 2018-19 season. Risk likely is below normal in the Northern Sierra above 6,000 feet. High-ele- vation snowpack was above average entering July. Snow- melt likely will conclude by late July, though soil and fuel moisture should linger. Conditions that are warmer and drier than average are expected through October. Boquist: Conduct hearing scheduled for July 8 in Salem Continued from Page A1 come heavily armed”? I’m probably not the origi- nator of that phrase. It’s prob- ably been used in many other circumstances in the last four decades of military and gov- ernment service. So the origination of this whole discussion was, you know, over a month ago, and it went back and forth, including — there are emails on what is legal, what is not legal. Do you have the author- ity to arrest? If you have the authority arrest, you know, what happens? And of course, there’s correspondence with the state police involved in this. There’s electronic cor- respondence with the Mar- ion County District Attor- ney. Because remember, if you’re going to arrest some- body, you have to prosecute them if it’s a criminal deal, because other than that, it’s false imprisonment. This comment actually come up multiple times before I actually shared the com- ment directly with the super- intendent of state police and a captain in the building in, you know, that was out there. And of course, their response is the same as response back that, “okay, it’s not our job to come arrest you.” OK. And if you notice, nobody got arrested. Now, the media is quite familiar with this are all kinds of threats floating around all kinds of quotes. The best one in the building here is they’re going to arrest us and bring him in and chains and orange jumpsuits. But none of that happens. So in the video tape the KGW took that has doesn’t release the entire 15 min- utes of the interview, which our communications direc- tor asked me to do the inter- view. The reason is quotable, because it is a quote from, you know, at least a dozen conver- sations before directly with the Oregon State Police on you know, “it would be ille- gal for you to come arrest, it would be a false arrest.” And of course, they see this is purely political free speech and discussion, you know, within the politics and the realms. Did you think about what sort of response you would get? Absolutely. And what was your thought? The thought is, is that all of the qualified law enforcement officers and the people would know that they should not be violating the law, and that this was purely a political issue, which it is. It is purely outright polit- ical retribution. And the fact that I have a document, which I’ve given to you, that says there is no complaint, infor- mal or formal, and that it was instigated by news reporters — reporters plural — both in writing, I was told, and ver- bally, that this is a political issue. One hundred percent. It is unfortunate the rest of the tape was not put out. Were you expecting this would garner national media attention? I don’t think I would expect national media atten- tion at all. And of course, I mean, considering the writ- ten responses, there’s no com- plaint. I mean, you gotta real- ize the media picked up and started running with this. And the real response has been over the last 72 hours in which, you know, people are claiming there’s a for- mal complaint and informal complaint. And there’s all this. And of course, that’s the media. In hindsight, do you regret the comments? In hindsight, yeah, that’s an interesting thing. It’s like foresight, if you can see for here’s my philosophy in life. So the answer is no. Here’s what everybody goes around and saying, “well, in hind- sight, I would do something different.” Well, the problem is, if you were starting all over … you’d have the same circumstances in the same place, you’d make the same comment. So I look back in hindsight is know, if I, if I made a mistake, not saying I did in any particu- lar case, or not, I’d probably make the same statement. So the notion like you can go back and, you know, change the circumstances, to me, is nonsensical. What you do is you learn by your mistakes and go forward. You were in the build- ing Saturday, but not on the floor. Why was that? I went to caucus. The dis- cussion in caucus was try- ing to end and sine die on that evening, period. That evening. And what bills we would give rules suspension for, and what bills we would not give rules suspension for, Oregon Capital Bureau Photo/Aubrey Wieber The scrutiny given to Sen. Brian Boquist, R-Dallas, intensified to unprecedented levels in June when in one day he made two comments that literally brought national media to his door. and trying to leave. There was a belief that we would be done on Saturday night. I was asked by Herman Baertschiger, if in exchange for killing four bills, I would try and keep the peace and not go to the floor. I think I’ve only stayed for one sine die. So that was my first session in the House. Because the thing happens at the end of the session, so the public understand, is what’s called the Christmas tree bill. This is the literal horse trading bill. This is the bill where people get payoffs for the votes they made. And it appears to me, this was a grand payoff that happened on Sunday, back and forth. And so I generally do not vote on the Christmas tree bill because I mean, it’s pork poli- tics, and its worst as far as I’m concerned. And so Laurie (Monnes Anderson) and I discussed, OK, well, I leave anyway. If I leave and if whomever wants to then come in and vote and have your votes count. When you came on the floor Sunday, were you aware that Sen. Sara Gelser said she would not be on the floor with you? Absolutely not. Sara has not talked to me. Nobody’s talked to me. The only reports I’ve seen is what’s in the media. Did you insist on having a gun with you on the floor Sunday? That is a bald faced lie. OK, that is a bald faced lie. And three senators are enti- tled to their free speech, if the issue is a legislative or politi- cal issue on the floor. If this is an employment issue, which they are claiming presently, and their shenanigans come Monday, then they are lia- ble in a court of law. At this point, I’m going to give them the advantage that it is politi- cal free speech. Do you regularly carry a concealed firearm on the floor? Yes, I have a concealed weapons permit. Yes, I have occasionally carried a gun on the floor based on the secu- rity threat in this building is established. And at this point, I probably have 25 death threats against me. Now, the answer to your question is that did I carry a gun down on the floor during the last couple of days? The answer is no. Furthermore, anyone who claimed I did, needs to check their facts. Because let’s face reality, it is already a hostile situation, created for political purposes. OK, so why did you leave on Sunday? When I left, there was supposed to be two bills. We were going to do a Christ- mas tree bill and the Christ- mas tree implementation bill: pork one and pork two. Right. That’s what was left. My understanding is they horse traded, somebody horse traded. The governor threat- ened, this is supposedly, right. The governor, with Peter Courtney, threatened that they would she would line- item veto all of the Repub- lican projects — basically political blackmail, extor- tion, which is probably legal in politics. Okay, so I’m not blaming her for horse trad- ing. Apparently, what trans- pired is she did that, and said, you know, if you don’t give me an opportunity to vote on the cigarette tax referral, that she’d veto these projects. They brought back a reconsideration of the speak- er’s housing bill. And then they brought back the tobacco tax referral. So it was actually four bills in the last 20 min- utes of the session, or what- ever it was. The Christmas tree proj- ect bill is always held hostage to the end, and that’s the best way to do it: hostage. So if you’re somebody that who’s supposed to get a $55 mil- lion project out in your dis- trict, mostly rural Oregon, by the way, and you don’t, you know, kowtow, you can be have your project line-item vetoed. That whole process that even though this is supposed to be a public record, it’s kept secret to the very end, both- ers me. Then they opened both chamber doors and both ends and they look across, and then they talk about Kum- baya. There’s no Kumbaya in this building, period. There is no Kumbaya. This build- ing has been a hostile work in place for member employ- ees, at least since February of last year. And so this notion of then, OK, everybody’s all friendly, and we make up, you know, simply bothers me, it’s a charade. Is there concern the divide between you and other members in this building is beyond repair? First off, you’re right, it’s wide. Here’s the, here’s the issue that started. On Aug., 17, 2018, I sat in the law offices of Barran Liebman with Peter Courtney, with Ginny Burdick and Senator (Jackie) Winters and myself, and an equal amount of House mem- bers. This was in regard to the sexual harassment com- plaints against the Legisla- ture. It came apparent in that meeting that there was more than dishonesty happening on the side of the Legislature in dealing with the sexual harassment allegations. You need to remember, I am a hostile witness in at least one of the lawsuits that’s out there. There are two other lawsuits that I cer- tainly will be called into. I have multiple written formal complaints that have been stonewalled in direct viola- tion of law. Now, many of the members of the media famil- iar with so to say that we’re going to have better rela- tionships until this place is cleaned out, is simply false. There needs to be outside state and federal investiga- tors looking into the actions of the Oregon State Senate. To my knowledge, I do not know that that is not happen- ing right now. And so, no, we’re not going to have good working relationships to the clean house. Are you going to show up to the hearing on Monday? If there’s a hearing, I’ll come. I don’t even know what the committee hear- ing is going to consider. So I don’t can’t make a spec- ulation of what it is they’re going to do. We Hear You! You deserve total audiological care. Professional. Experienced. Local. Renata Anderson, MA Pam Wagenaar, Administrative Assistant 2237 SW Court, Pendleton UP TO 50% OFF! SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE! Saager’s Shoe Shop Milton Freewater, OR 541-276-5053 www.renataanderson.com