Pendleton’s Jennings to throw javelin in Junior Olympic event | SPORTS, A8 E O AST 143rd year, No. 200 REGONIAN Thursday, July 25, 2019 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2019 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Up for grabs Pendleton business to go to auction, ending years of legal disputes between owners By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian Councilor starts talks on homeless shelter Pendleton City Council mulls changes to the way it deals with homelessness P ENdlETON — The ham- ley’s western store, cafe and steakhouse could have new owners Thursday. hamley’s owners Par- ley Pearce of Walla Walla and Blair Woodfield of Lake Oswego reached a deal after years of legal disputes to sell the iconic Pend- leton businesses to the highest bidder. Woodfield waived the initial bid of $2.5 million from hIPO, a limited-liability company of Payette, Idaho, that owns much of the hamley debt, according to court records, and instead opted to go to auction under terms he and Pearce agreed to. u.s. Bankruptcy Judge Trish Brown in Portland signed the order Mon- day allowing the auction to take place Thursday at 1 p.m. at the law offices of Black helterline, Portland, for no more than four hours. Woodfield said getting to this point has been long in coming and the auction could deliver benefits all around. “I’m hoping whoever gets it will be a good owner, and I think there are buy- ers who will be good for hamley’s, and good for the employees and good for Pendleton and good for the whole area,” he said. Beyond that, Woodfield said, he will be there and see what happens. Pearce, too, said he will be in the room and fighting to keep Hamley’s with the help of a friend and backer who could be worth $50 million-$100 million. “We intend to bid as long and as far as we can go,” he said. Others with deep pockets also seek to own the hamley companies, includ- ing the Confederated Tribes of the umatilla Indian reservation. Chuck sams, speaker for the tribes, said the CTUIR first expressed inter- est in hamley’s in 2012, but the own- ers wanted too much money. Woodfield in 2016 approached the tribes for buy- ing the businesses, and the tribes were ready to offer $3.1 million, according to court documents. The tribes and its members have had relationships with the hamley family and business dating back to the com- pany’s inception in 1905, sams said, and tribal members crafted saddles for hamley’s. From his understanding, he said, the tribes will be one of five com- panies bidding to own hamley’s. Pearce also said local interests might not prevail. hamley’s caught the atten- tion of a seattle bidder, he said, who has assets in the hundreds of millions and perhaps billions. “If the tribes are going to be success- ful,” Pearce said, “they better put their big boy pants on and bring their wallet.” PENDLETON By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian PENdlETON — The Pendleton City Council spent time at a Tuesday workshop agreeing that homelessness is an issue, but what to do about it remained an open question. Councilor Carole Innes, a member of a committee on homelessness, said she’s met with nonprofits that serve Pendleton’s homeless population. additionally, she’s begun volunteer- ing with Neighbor 2 Neighbor, Pend- leton’s weekly day center program. See Shelter, Page A7 BAKER CITY hedman remains in Baker County Jail By JAYSON JACOBY EO Media Group Staff photo by Kathy Aney The Hamley’s steakhouse, western store and cafe will be auctioned to the highest bid- der on Thursday in Portland. But the money, Pearce stated, is not his main concern. “My only genuine hope here is who- ever ends up winning cares about ham- ley’s and Pendleton,” he said. “That’s all I really care about.” This is the second time in 13 months the hamley’s establishments were going to auction. Woodfield in 2016 sued Pearce to break off from the businesses and to oust Pearce from controlling them. hIPO came in months later and bought $1.2 million in hamley debt, and in June 2018 planned to auction off stocks of the company to recoup the funds. Woodfield at the time considered the auction a setup to allow Pearce and his cohorts to have hamley’s, so he declared bankruptcy to block that auc- tion. The bankruptcy also put a hold on the lawsuit. Thursday’s financial action could mean Pearce and Woodfield, former longtime business partners, split for good, Woodfield gets the payout he wants and the court fights conclude. The outcome for hamley’s and its many employees will be up to whoever comes out on top. BaKEr CITy — The Oregon man who was arrested in Baker City on July 8 and is accused of murdering a man in Walla Walla, Washington, remains in the Baker County Jail but he is likely to be extradited soon to Washington. Colby James hed- man, 23, is being held on $1.1 million bail — $1 million on the Hedman Washington murder charges and $100,000 for a variety of charges in Baker County, district attorney Matt shirtcliff said. Both are full bail, shirtcliff said, meaning hedman, who police said is a transient whose last known address was in heppner, would have to post the full amount to be released. shirtcliff said the Walla Walla County District Attorney’s Office has started the process to extradite See Jail, Page A7 Committee maintains county needs a manager umatilla County Charter review Committee believes county should appoint county manager By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian PENdlETON — The umatilla County Charter review Commit- tee continued to advocate for a man- ager to oversee county government. review committee chair Michele Grable said that move is about rec- ognizing the needs of the future. Grable addressed the commit- tee’s final report with the county board of commissioners during its public meeting Wednesday at the county courthouse in Pendleton. she said the committee eliminated its recommendation to change the board from three full-time commis- sioners to five part-timers “strictly based upon the input” from commis- sioners Bill Elfering and John sha- fer during a May 29 work session. “We decided that upon your rec- ommendation that moving to a five-member board of commission- ers would not be advisable,” she said. “That it would be a very hard sell to the public. Change is difficult. and it would not be in the best inter- est of the county to pursue an elec- tion that was not likely to succeed.” she also said she could see how the board could consider the change threatening because it took away power and reduced salaries. still, See Charter, Page A7 Staff photo by Ben Lonergan Michele Grable, chair of the Umatilla County Charter Review Committee, ad- dresses the county board of commissioners Wednesday morning in Pendle- ton concerning the committee’s recommendation to hire a county manager.