A8 OFF PAGE ONE East Oregonian Friday, August 30, 2019 School: After technical difficulties, new school is set to open Continued from Page A1 second year at the school after transferring from a school in Washington, said she’d already been into the building before to help some of the teachers move into their classrooms. She said she was most excited by the expanded space compared to the cramped confines at the old Nixyaawii. Shawn Joseph helped his daughter Shelby and his niece Susie Patrick, both students at Nixyaawii, with their lockers. Joseph said he was a mem- ber of one of the first graduating classes at Hopi High School on the Hopi Reservation in Arizona, so he knows how important the new school is to the tribes and the students themselves. Susie said she’s looking for- ward to the improved wi-fi at the new Nixyaawii. She said last year, the internet would go out during class and students wouldn’t even be able to access Google to research things for class. The previously spotty internet Staff photo by Ben Lonergan Crews work to finish the floors at the new Nixyaawii Community School during an open house on Thursday afternoon. was a source of frustration for teachers as well. Nixxyaawii social studies teacher Zack Brandsen said he’d have to scrap whole lesson plans when the internet went out. Chelsea Hallam, a math and language arts teacher, said some students mentally checked out in class when the technology required for the lesson wasn’t working. She thinks the tribes’ invest- ment in a new school could inspire students to do better in class. “They like to play it cool like it’s not a big deal, but you can tell they’re excited,” she said. One of the reasons Nixy- aawii needed a bigger school was because of its surging enrollment. The old Nixyaawii was burst- ing at the seams with its prior 85-student enrollment cap, and the new facility has allowed the school to set a new 105-student ceiling. Heinrich said 93 students have enrolled at Nixyaawii for the 2019-20 school year, and although he doesn’t expect Nixy- aawii to reach the new cap this year, he anticipates it will happen eventually. Heinrich doesn’t foresee rais- ing the cap past 105 students, and Brandsen said the future of Nixyaawii will be trying to bal- ance community demand with Nixyaawii’s small-school appeal. Kicker: Taxpayers Movement: Sights set on Gov. Kate Brown to see nearly $1.6B refund next year Continued from Page A1 Continued from Page A1 The unprecedented rev- enues have roots in a num- ber of factors, including federal tax changes that led businesses to put off paying taxes until this year, ratchet- ing up corporate tax receipts by around 50%. Economists say those impacts are likely short term. “Even without a reces- sion, we’re expecting that it’s going to be hard to match the revenue we saw in the last biennium,” state econ- omist Mark McMullen told lawmakers on the House and Senate revenue committees. Another factor that could dampen the size of future kickers: a new corporate activities tax that lawmak- ers passed this year. That tax is expected to raise roughly $1 billion a year to pay for schools. But because it also could raise prices for con- sumers, lawmakers reduced personal income tax rates. McMullen explained this shift will reduce income tax money flowing into the general fund, even though overall revenues won’t be impacted. And that means fewer possible dollars flow- ing back in the form of kicker payments. “Thank you for that facet of the law,” McMullen told legislators. State economists have missed the mark on state revenue projections in each of the last three bienniums, triggering a kicker. In the 2011-13 budget cycle, they hit the “sweet spot” where revenues came in above pro- jections but not by enough to trigger a refund. Lawmakers, who appeared in good spirits when hearing of the record revenues, alluded to that fact on Wednesday. “My takeaway, in spite of the future and the possi- ble headwinds, is that Ore- gon’s economy is really strong,” state Sen. Mark Hass, D-Beaverton, told economists. “You missed the sweet spot by about a billion and a half, but you had some obstacles out there.” Staff photo by Alex Castle A truck sits blocking I-84 eastbound near milepost 212 fol- lowing a fatal single-vehicle accident Thursday afternoon. Crash: Cause still unknown Continued from Page A1 “I just went running,” she said. “I just feel awful for his family.” Those closest to the scene said ambulances and police showed up within 5 minutes. A Life Flight heli- copter landed shortly after. Marcos Prado was trav- eling to Boise, Idaho, when he saw dust spray into the air and other vehicles began to pull off the road. As he tried to help, Prado noticed cars beginning to drive around the scene. He decided to stand in the road to help stop traffic. “I just figured there shouldn’t be a lot of peo- ple coming through this,” he said. Clare James was driv- ing behind Prado when the crash occurred, though she didn’t report see- ing anything. James is an ICU nurse at PeaceHealth Southwest Medical Center in Vancouver, Washing- ton, and tried to help the injured driver. But she said she quickly realized there wasn’t anything she could do. Traffic was soon stopped in both lanes as the Oregon Department of Transpor- tation arrived and asked Pendleton Police Depart- ment to close Exit 209. Exit 210 was jammed from traffic before ODOT could have it officially closed. Within an hour, a tow truck arrived to remove the damaged vehicle from the interstate while ODOT directed traffic into the right lanes. two booths offering recall petitions. They named busi- ness taxes, environmen- tal policies, and legislation allowing undocumented immigrants to obtain driv- er’s licenses. The state GOP’s petition outlines its issues on the back, saying Brown over- turned the will of the voters by allowing undocumented immigrants to get drivers licenses and approving new taxes. She attempted to vio- late peoples’ medical free- dom and impose environ- mental regulations, it says. She failed to fix an under- funded pension system or a troubled foster care sys- tem, and supported use of the emergency clause on bills to keep policy from being referred to the voters, it says. Brown, they say, is the person responsible for turn- ing Oregon into a tax-happy, gun-hating, business-kill- ing liberal haven. At the state GOP’s booth, the traffic to sign the petitions ebbed and flowed. Salesmen hawking beef jerky and massage chairs competed for the atten- tion of fairgoers streaming through the pop-up mall. To the south of the GOP booth, a woman demon- strated dirt-repelling wel- come mats. To the north a team of men pitched peo- ple on the benefits of Dish satellite TV. The massage chair salesmen aggressively defended their territory. But when people saw the large cardboard cut- out of Trump or the “recall Kate Brown” banner, many seemed giddy. “They can’t sign it fast enough,” said Sam Sapp, who was working the booth on a recent morning. They rushed over, eagerly asking where they could sign, often follow- ing up with “I hate her” or “She’s terrible.” Disliking politicians is an American tradition, but the recall process is gener- ally reserved as a response to corruption or scandal, not a rejection of policy. In fact, no recall of a state official has ever made it to the Ore- gon ballot. The Oregon Republican party claims it is on pace to get more than 300,000 signatures by the Oct. 14 deadline. According to volunteers, the party has reported aver- aging a signature per min- ute, though the party has not released how many sig- natures it’s actually gotten. To many seasoned polit- ical observers, the pros- pect of recalling Brown is as likely as Santa Claus and eight tiny reindeer fly- ing around the world every Christmas Eve. Thomas Wheatley, Brown’s campaign adviser, believes Republicans are juicing the stats. Photo contributed by Mark Buzzard Santa, who declined to give his full name, signs a petition at the Oregon State Fair to recall Gov. Kate Brown. “I’m extraordinarily dubious about this claim, though they do operate in the world of alternative facts,” he said. The majority of those interviewed at the fair about signing the petitions strug- gled to specify why they wanted to recall Brown, and seemed to be doing so based on a gut feeling. Most commonly, people brought up cap and trade — a failed effort by the Leg- islature that Brown backed to curb greenhouse gas emissions. “My understanding is that a lot of people just don’t think Salem cares about them right now,” said Linn County GOP Chair Adam Keaton, pointing to that county’s agriculture, timber and trucking industries. There was also a hefty degree of conspiracy mon- gering. Some affiliated with the effort say they fear retal- iation. They shared rumors that people signing the peti- tions or volunteering with the campaigns have been targeted for arson, beat up or had their cars vandalized. Opponents sometimes cite Brown’s unconven- tional path to the gover- norship: as secretary of state, Brown moved into the job as directed by the state constitution with John Kitzhaber’s resignation in February 2015. The next year, 985,000 people voted for Brown, giving her 139,418 more votes than Bud Pierce, the Republican nominee. Last year, about 934,000 people voted for Brown. She beat GOP opponent Knute Buehler by 119,510 votes, according to the state Elections Division. While the petition sign- ers often said Brown isn’t following the will of the voters, she won re-election campaigning heavily for the policies they oppose, such as greenhouse gas capping and an education funding package. “We are proud of the accomplishments from this year’s legislative session,” Wheatley said. “Historic investments in our schools, stable health care funding, bold steps to make hous- ing more affordable, tack- ling dirty diesel, campaign finance reform, and much more.” Though some doubted Brown really did campaign on such policies. “You know, I don’t believe that,” said Lincoln City resident Dee Right. “I don’t believe it was in full detail. I think she lied.” Right stopped by the fair booth, but had already signed the petition. “She’s only benefiting the metropolitan areas and not the rural cities that make up Oregon,” Right said. Right was especially bothered by the cap and trade proposal, which she said would kill the logging and trucking industries. Right said she’s been a registered Democrat her whole life, yet when she saw a recall booth in Lin- coln City, she pulled an ille- gal U-turn to sign it. She’s never been political, she said, but spoke with passion when disparaging Brown. “She’s making a mess, and she doesn’t listen to the people,” Right said. Two months ago, Right switched her affiliation. “Sometimes you gotta do what you gotta do,” she said, adding she took sev- eral sheets to get friends and family to sign as well. At the state fair, it took three Marion County GOP volunteers at a time to work the booth. They each had sets of two recall petitions and one to refer a highway tolling proposal for the Port- land area to voters. They’re working the booths from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. every day of the fair. It’s a total of 132 four-hour shifts. One woman, who declined to be named, asked for a voter registration card so she could change from a Democrat to a Republican. She happily obliged when asked to sign the toll peti- tion in addition to the recall ones. “What is wrong with her?” she said of Brown. “‘Cause Kate Brown’s crazy,” said Jill, a Salem woman, when asked why she signed. “She’s destroy- ing the state.” Jill was one of many who declined to give their full names, citing fear of retri- bution from liberals. Some also talked about Brown as a boogeyman. One woman organizing vol- unteers at the “Flush Down Kate Brown” fair booth declined to give her name because she was scared, though she couldn’t say what of. Brown might take her business away or jail her for her activism, she said. “People say Kate Brown has her party — they will retaliate against you,” the Stayton woman said. “It’s just what people are saying.” The woman said she’s getting her information from Brown’s critics, and hasn’t talked much to the other side. She said it’s pos- sible some might be using rhetoric to stoke the sort of fear she feels. She was one of the few who said they believe there will be a recall vote. “The passion of the peo- ple — I think this will be successful,” she said. Michael Anna, visit- ing the state fair from Bea- verton, said he didn’t like Brown’s politics and didn’t think she was good for the state. He particularly dislikes cap and trade. “It’s a big scam, and it’s not necessary,” said Anna. “And I read somewhere the only reason they want to do it is to say, ‘We’re the first state to do this.’ There is no man-made global warming.” In fact, Oregon’s cap and trade proposal was modeled after one that passed in Cal- ifornia years ago. Sometimes, critics focused on what Brown hadn’t done. “She hasn’t done any- thing that she promised,” said Kaleb Jones, of Mon- mouth, who at 19 was one of the younger signers of the petition that the Oregon Capital Bureau spoke to. “When she got elected the first time, she got elected because she promised to help the homelessness problem, and then obvi- ously that didn’t change at all. She didn’t do any- thing, and she got reelected — I don’t know how — so I guarantee you that she’s just going to do nothing again.” Keaton, the Linn County GOP chair, said Brown has a cavalier attitude, but admitted she as governor is only so responsible for poli- cies the state’s 90 legislators pass. But, he said, “Brown does get the final say on a lot of this stuff.” “On the whole, I think it’s a lot easier to focus on Kate Brown ... making a single focus point of the recall effort is a lot easier than focusing out into dif- ferent 15 different represen- tative, Senate races,” Kea- ton said. “So I think that helps simplify the effort while at the same time focusing on someone who has been rather egregious in the operation.”