OFF PAGE ONE Thursday, July 18, 2019 East Oregonian A7 ICE: Some Hermiston residents are on high alert Continued from Page A1 ment action. Last Friday — after the arrests near Hermiston — President Donald Trump reported that ICE was plan- ning raids across the country to arrest thousands of undoc- umented immigrants, start- ing July 14. “They’re going to take people out, and they’re going to bring them back to their countries, or they’re going to take criminals out — put them in prison or put them in prison in the countries they came from,” Trump told reporters. Since then, CNN reported people in major cities across America have been unable to confi rm many reports of ICE activity. Meanwhile, some local residents are still on high alert following the arrests and multiple ICE sightings in the Hermiston area. A sergeant from the Herm- iston Police Department who spoke with an ICE offi cer July 9 was led to believe that there was a small operation occur- ring in the Eastern Washing- ton and Oregon area, HPD Chief Jason Edmiston stated. Edmiston stated it was later determined the offi - cer had a large caseload and did not “have time to address immigration violations.” “We cannot enforce immi- gration law and will not. Our involvement will only be to assist an offi cer that is in need of immediate help due to dis- tress. This is something we would do for [any] entity or agency,” Edmiston stated. Zaira Sanchez, the exter- nal communications director with the organization Raices — which aims to “unite and educate Latinx people” of Umatilla County — said the organization had received recent reports of ICE sight- ings in the area. She said early last week that ICE offi cers had been spotted questioning people in a van outside of Lorena’s on 11th Street in Hermiston. “That invoked a lot of fear,” Sanchez said. “Peo- ple were quick to check in on family members in vans that day.” Sanchez said that the Port- land Immigrant Rights Coa- lition hotline had received eight calls from the Hermis- ton area recently. The hotline takes reports of sightings and interactions with ICE in Oregon, and has volunteers trained to verify those sight- ings and provide resource referrals. She said Raices hopes to form a rapid response team for immigration rights, but that the organization cur- rently lacks the capacity. There were reports on social media of ICE sight- ings at Walmart last Friday as well. Jesse Roa, who works with the Tri-Cities Immigrant Rights Coalition, said the sighting was reported by vol- unteers specialized in spot- ting ICE offi cers. He said there were also sightings in the Irrigon area. Roa said that some peo- ple were using vacation time to avoid going out during the sightings, and others were leaving the area. “(This) is tearing the community in half and add- ing a lot of fear. Not only for migrant families, but for people who are friends or relatives to families,” Roa said. “I think this commu- nity is really resilient. I’m pretty sure the community is going to come together to help each other.” Turbines: More wind power means more transmission lines Continued from Page A1 developers pushing to build turbines at new sites across the region are stirring a brew of new and age-old confl icts: bird and bat mortalities, push- back from rural communities that resist change and obsta- cles created by the limited power grid infrastructure. Gone with the wind For years, wind was dis- missed as a fi ckle power source that could never meet a signifi cant portion of the nation’s energy needs. New technologies and falling costs, however, are changing the industry. According to the American Wind Energy Association, since 2009, the cost of wind energy has plunged 69%, making it the most afford- able power source in much of the U.S. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, the installation cost for a com- mercial-scale wind turbine today is $3 million to $4 mil- lion. The industry, which for decades relied on tax incen- tives, is being weaned off subsidies, said Janine Ben- ner, director of the Oregon Department of Energy. Most U.S. wind turbines are manufactured in the U.S. Benner said Oregon has 8 manufacturers. Vestas, the world’s largest wind turbine manufacturer, is based in Portland. New turbines, Benner said, are more effi cient. Blades are longer. Rotors are better. And they are taller. One of the new- est models stands at 650 feet — taller than Seattle’s Space Needle. But bigger turbines mean more controversy. The birds and the bats Birds and bats have a fraught history with wind turbines, but new technolo- gies are making it easier for winged creatures and wind power to co-exist. The wind-bird controversy dates to the 1990s, when con- servationists found thousands of bats and birds annually — including protected spe- cies, such as Golden Eagles — dying or being mutilated at California’s Altamont Pass wind farm. Bat mortalities are often harder to quantify, said Todd Katzner, a research wildlife biologist with the U.S. Geo- logical Survey. Because bats are tiny, their remains often vanish. Industry advocates say mortalities from turbines are scant compared to millions of annual bird deaths caused by cats, power lines, vehicles or crashes into windows. Katzner calls this an unfair comparison. “It matters what spe- cies you kill,” said Katzner. “Songbirds probably crash into every house in North America. You never hear of a Golden Eagle killing itself by crashing into a window, but eagles do die from turbine blades. If you killed a million chipping sparrows, it would affect only 1% of the popu- lation. If you killed 100,000 Golden Eagles, you’d wipe out the entire U.S. Golden Eagle population twice.” Researchers are pushing for laws and practices that kill fewer birds. One solution is choosing sites for wind farms away from migratory fl yways. But siting is challenging. In the West each year, more than a billion birds follow the Pacifi c Flyway — a migration path stretching from Arctic tundra to tropical rainforest. However, said Garry George, the National Audu- bon Society’s renewable energy director, tracking birds in the western U.S. is diffi cult because migration pathways change based on rainfall and plants. Face-recognition tech- nology isn’t just for smart phones and Facebook. Scien- tists use similar artifi cial intel- ligence-based technologies, such as IdentiFlight, to train machines to recognize and track bird species. Kevin Martin, direc- tor of environmental per- mitting at Terra-Gen Power, devised a GPS tracking sys- tem for protecting endangered California condors from death-by-turbine. Energy companies pay for and operate these technol- ogies because it’s expected and, sometimes, required. But developers have more to worry about than wild- life. They must also please U.S. power capacity by source, 2018 Many farmers, however, don’t want a bigger grid. The U.S. Department of Energy estimates the potential market share of wind energy could be as high as 20% by 2030 and 35% by 2050. Battle over B2H (In billions of kilowatt hours) Wind: 275 or 6.6% Hydropower: 292 or 7% Natural gas: 1,468 or 35.1% Biomass: 63 or 1.5% Coal: 1,146 or 27.4% Nuclear: 807 or 19.3% Solar: 67 or 1.6% Other: 61 or 1.5% Total (all sources): 4,178 billion kWh NOTE: Totals may not equal 100 due to rounding. Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, 2018 Sierra Dawn McClain and Alan Kenaga/Capital Press landowners. Farming wind turbines Threemile Canyon Farms — which encompasses 93,000 acres near Boardman — is near the Columbia Gorge. The hills along the gorge buckle together like a great patchwork quilt of gold, brown and green draped over the earth. Trees grow bent from the gusts that tear across the plateau. A wind develop- er’s dream. In 2007, Marty Myers, general manager of Threemile Canyon Farms, accepted an offer from then-developer John Deere Renewables to erect six wind turbines on the farm’s land. For Myers, the turbines are a low-maintenance source of added income. The developer is responsible for maintenance and bird monitoring. Myers grows organic crops on that portion of the farm, leaving uncultivated a 1-acre patch under each turbine. “It’s good business for a farmer,” he said. “No matter what happens in the ag mar- ket, it’s a source of stability.” Myers said he wanted more turbines but was pre- vented because the farm lies too close to the Boardman Air Force Range, where turbines could interfere with low-fl y- ing planes. “These turbines are fas- cinating things,” said Myers. “When night comes and the red lights of the turbines fl ash across the fi elds, it’s like somethin’ from outer space.” He gestured west, toward the violet hills and Shepherd Flats, the neighboring wind farm. “I wish those ones were mine, too,” he said. An interstate for electricity Not everyone in Board- man, however, is happy with the energy industry. More wind power means more transmission lines, which concerns rural people. Todd Cornett is secretary for the state Energy Facility Siting Council, a branch of the Oregon Department of Energy responsible for ensur- ing that energy sites are cho- sen responsibly. According to him, even if turbines generate enough power, it’s useless if it can’t be moved to where it’s needed and when it’s needed. An expanded grid is essential — more high-tension power lines. There’s the roadblock. The U.S. uses 21st-cen- tury technology to pro- duce energy, but still uses 20th-century infrastructure that can’t effi ciently move energy from windy rural locations to urban markets. America’s power grid is like the nation’s roads before President Dwight Eisenhow- er’s Interstate Highway Sys- tem. Cornett said that how- ever much wind developers want to expand, they will be limited by access to trans- mission lines and substations. One common criticism of renewable energy is that it’s intermittent — the wind doesn’t always blow. But on a big enough grid, that’s not a problem. Boardman to Heming- way, or “B2H,” is a pro- posed 500-kilovolt transmis- sion line that would string together 180-foot tall steel towers, 74% of which would be on private land. The power line would snake across 290 miles from Boardman in eastern Oregon to Heming- way in southwestern Idaho. Many rural people aren’t happy about it. In June, the Energy Facil- ity Siting Council held a series of public hearings about the transmission line. On June 27, according to hearing tran- scripts, more than 200 people attended a 4-1/2-hour hearing in La Grande to express their concerns. Residents said the power line will degrade natural areas with a 250-foot-wide clear cut, increase the like- lihood of wildfi res linked to transmission lines, cause health issues from electro- magnetic fi elds, blot the land with an eyesore and damage the wagon tracks of the Ore- gon Trail. “I would no longer be able to reside or fulfi ll my life- long dreams and goal of liv- ing here,” said resident Greg Larkin. Cornett of the EFSC said building another trans- mission line is like adding another straw to your drink. You can only suck a certain amount of liquid through one straw, but add another straw and you can pull up more. Add B2H, he said, and you can move more power quicker. It remains to be seen whether rural communities will add another straw to their drink. Tale of two counties Not everyone is upset. Two Oregon counties, Gilliam and Sherman, have thrived because of wind power. Welcome to Condon — a rural town in Gilliam County. Wheat and cattle, a couple dozen streets, popula- tion 675. K’Lynn Lane, execu- tive director of the Con- don Chamber of Commerce, grew up here. Over the years, she watched agricul- ture fl ounder, families sell off land, survivors hang on. The wind industry, Lane said, is what turned the town around. Lane’s husband got a job working in management at the Montague Wind Power Facility, one of the largest wind sites under construction in the West. “Condon was dying,” said Lane. “Wind power brought stable jobs with good benefi ts and gave people hope. Now look around — doesn’t this street look like something out of a Norman Rockwell painting?” Sherman County. We end where we began. When the turbines went up 17 years ago, said former County Judge Gary Thomp- son, things got crazy. “It was like a gold rush,” he said. “All the big develop- ers were knocking on doors. Everybody wanted a piece of the action.” Jealousies cut deep, said Thompson. People whose land wasn’t good for turbines felt jilted. To curb resent- ments, Thompson struck a deal with developers. While farmers negotiated with developers, the Sher- man County government, led by Thompson, also nego- tiated on behalf of the com- munity. The deal they struck was for developers to pay the county, which in turn would pay residents whose view of Mount Adams now included a panorama of tur- bines. They modeled the plan after Alaska, where residents receive a dividend generated by revenue from the state- owned Prudhoe Bay oil fi eld. Thompson kept checks under $600 so county clerks wouldn’t have to fi le hun- dreds of tax forms. Since then, every Sherman County head of household who has owned property for more than a year has received an annual Christmas check. The county has invested the rest in infrastructure. Thompson said the haves and the have-nots may be at the heart of the debate over wind turbines in rural com- munities. Those who benefi t like them. Those who don’t benefi t don’t like them. Raiders: Thunderous sound of motorcycles replaced by roar of B-25 Continued from Page A1 community support that make this event shine.” As the thunder of hun- dreds of motorcycle engines died off, the wind kicked up and fi lled dozens of Ameri- can fl ags held by the crowd of bikers. Out of the whip- ping wind, the roar of a B-25 bomber swept over- head before landing and taxiing to the waiting group. The plane, a B-25J Mitchell nicknamed the “Heavenly Body,” is a part of the Erick- son Aircraft Collection in Madras and was fl own by Pilot Bill Shephard. “I think everyone holds something different that brings a special meaning to this for them,” Shephard said. “For me it is the liv- ing history and the ability to continue the legacy for many of the veterans that fl ew a B-25.” For Jim Benji of Yakima, Washington, the event brought him back to his Staff photo by Kathy Aney A Harley hearse bearing a box with the names of all deceased Oregon veter- ans roars onto the Eastern Oregon Regional Airport tarmac as part of the Ride with the Raiders event. childhood. “It brings back memo- ries,” Benji said. “I grew up in Spokane and remem- ber the noise of the planes overhead constantly. It just brings back that feeling.” Following the event the B-25 took off carrying the names of thousands of Ore- gon’s fallen service mem- bers in an urn bound for Madras. Since starting in 2015, Staff photo by Kathy Aney Capt. David Bower helps load a box containing the names of all 17,000 di- ceased Oregon veterans into a B-25 bomber for a short fl ight. Bike Week has revolved around the convention cen- ter. The event includes coor- dinated rides, a motorcycle show, and a classic rock concert, which has featured bands like Three Dog Night and Grand Funk Railroad. This year, the Marshall Tucker Band headlines the festivities with a concert Saturday night. Pendleton Bike Week will continue through Sun- day morning with daily events, group rides, and concerts for motorcy- cle enthusiasts of all ages. Organizers expect the event will draw 16,000 people across the week.