HIGH SCHOOL TEENS GET A TASTE OF THE FAB LIFE RESURRECTING PENDLETON’S BOB WHITE FIELD REGION, A3 SPORTS, B1 E O AST 144th year, No. 90 REGONIAN Friday, February 21, 2020 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2019 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Your Weekend • IMBIBE @ BLUE, BMCC Student Union • MARDI GRAS FUNDRAIS- ER DINNER/AUCTION, Hermiston Community Center • ZWICKELMANIA, Ordnance Brewing FOR TIMES AND LOCATIONS CHECK COMING EVENTS, A5 Weekend Weather FRI SAT SUN 53/31 54/38 57/35 AP Photo/Anna Reed, File airport lease dispute lingers By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian PeNdLeTON — The Pend- leton City Council was on the verge of significantly raising a street maintenance fee, but the crowd who filled council cham- bers Tuesday night weren’t there to complain about their utility bills. airport business owners and their supporters came out in force for the public comment section of the council meeting to object to the way staff from the eastern Oregon regional airport were negotiating leases with tenants near the airfield and surrounding industrial park. The issue has been ongoing for more than a year and came to a head when the airport commis- sion was updating the airport’s lease language and included a “reversionary clause,” a piece of contract language that allows the airport to take back rented land once the tenant’s lease is over. airport business owners argued that the reversionary The Senate Chamber is viewed on the first day of the short legislative session at the Oregon Capitol in Salem. Critics of Senate Bill 1530 have argued that the session, which should last just 35 days and end on March 8, wasn’t designed to pass transformational legislation like cap and trade. ‘A horrible piece of legislation’ Oregon counties voice opposition to cap and trade By ALEX CASTLE East Oregonian U MaTiLLa COuNTy — While tensions continue to boil on both sides of the aisle in the Oregon Legislature over cap and trade, eastern Oregon counties are making it clear where they stand. On Wednesday, the umatilla County board of Commissioners voted unan- imously to issue an official letter of opposition against cap-and-trade legis- lation, while Morrow County Commis- sioners Melissa Lindsay and don rus- sell recently signed a letter of opposition issued by the eastern Oregon Counties association. “This is a horrible piece of legisla- tion,” russell said. “it’s just bad.” The eOCa letter, which all three of umatilla County’s commissioners signed too, includes signatures of rep- resentatives from all 14 eastern Oregon counties and 34 commissioners in total. along with those in eastern Oregon, nine other counties have proclaimed opposition to the bill across the state. as of Thursday, 64% of Oregon’s counties have issued official opposition to cap and trade. Those counties make up 82% of the state’s land mass. Senate bill 1530, this session’s revised cap-and-trade bill, would cap carbon emissions for transportation, Lindsay Murdock Russell “I UNDERSTAND THE STATE HASN’T PERFORMED A FISCAL ANALYSIS YET, BUT THE SMALL BUSINESSES AND FARMERS I’VE TALKED TO HAVE, AND THEY’RE NERVOUS.” — Melissa Lindsay, Morrow County commissioner manufacturing and utility companies throughout the state and require those companies to obtain allowances for each metric ton of emissions per year. Those allowances could be purchased from companies that remain under the cap, with the idea that available allowances will dwindle as the state moves toward its goal of cutting emissions by more than 80% by 2050. Lindsay said Morrow County received the notice about declaring offi- cial opposition from the eOCa on too short of notice this week, so the board was unable to bring it to a vote and issue a letter on behalf of the county. umatilla County opted to draft a let- ter of its own and made a late addition to Wednesday’s agenda in order to vote on it. Commissioner George Murdock said he reworked a few portions provided in the eOCa letter to tailor their opposi- tion specifically to SB 1530 rather than any potential environmental legislation to be considered in the future. “We’re concerned about the eco- nomic impact study that has not been conducted with respect to Senate bill 1530,” Murdock read from the letter at Wednesday’s meeting. “it’s a premature legislative action. We think it has a neg- ative impact on eastern Oregon.” both Lindsay and russell listed the lack of an economic study as primary reasons for their opposition as well. “i understand the state hasn’t per- formed a fiscal analysis yet, but the See Legislation, Page A8 See Airport, Page A8 Hermiston associate takes advantage of program ashli Palmer one of the first to graduate using Walmart’s Live better u By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian HerMiSTON — ashli Palmer’s Walmart career has funded two dif- ferent college degrees, but the com- pany had a much more direct hand in the most recent one. Palmer started at Walmart at age 20, working as an overnight stocker in their La Grande store to help pay her way through a bachelor’s degree in business from eastern Oregon university. Now, more than 15 years later, she is the first Oregonian to graduate through Walmart’s Live better u, which offers Walmart associates the opportunity to earn a college degree or other certifications for only $1 per day. “i push this program to every- one, because it’s designed for people who are working and have lives,” she said. “They made it so easy for working professionals, and at such a great cost.” Palmer has done “a little bit of everything” for the company over the years, but currently works as the human resources manager at the Walmart distribution Cen- ter in Hermiston. When Walmart announced Live better u in 2018, she jumped at the chance to increase her knowledge by pursuing a bach- elor’s degree in supply chain, See Graduate, Page A8 Staff photo by Ben Lonergan Ashli Palmer, the operations manager at the Walmart Distribution Center in Hermiston, recently completed Walmart’s Live Better U program, a pro- gram that allows Walmart employees to get a college degree for $1 a day.