Tribes, county seeking quicker fi x for Thorn Hollow Bridge | REGION, A3 E O AST 144th Year, No. 206 REGONIAN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2020 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2020 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD County to vote on Second Amendment ordinance The measure to prevent fi rearm regulation may confl ict with state law By ALEX CASTLE East Oregonian UMATILLA COUNTY — Local voters have one countywide ballot measure to decide on this November — Measure 30-145, also known as the Second Amend- ment Sanctuary Ordinance. But whatever fate the measure meets on Nov. 3, it’s unclear how the ordinance will prevent reg- ulation of fi rearms for Umatilla County residents. Umatilla County District Attor- ney Dan Primus has read the mea- sure and said his offi ce’s role will continue as usual regardless of the outcome. “My understanding is we’ll continue to follow the laws of the state of Oregon,” he said. “When we take the position we do at the prosecutor’s offi ce in Umatilla County, just as any other prosecu- tor in the state, we take an oath to uphold the law of the state of Ore- gon. So, we’re going to continue to do that.” Umatilla County Sheriff Terry Rowan, who is running unop- posed for another four-year term in November, said he read the measure “months ago” but wasn’t familiar enough with it to offer an opinion. “It all comes down to how the document is worded, and will it withstand litigation,” he said. “That’s certainly always the challenge.” Measures bearing similar lan- guage as Measure 140-35 and its intent are before voters in Clat- sop, Columbia and Coos counties, while others were rejected from the ballot in other counties, such as Curry and Harney. “This ordinance would prevent Umatilla County and its employees from devoting resources or partic- ipating in any way in the enforce- ment of any law or regulation that affected an individual’s right to See Second Amendment, Page A8 ON THE OPINION PAGE This November, Umatilla County voters will vote on the Second Amendment Sanctuary Ordi- nance. Page A4 Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution is visible behind a sign welcoming people to Blue Mountain Community College in Pendleton on Monday, Oct. 5, 2020. State prison system wants to cancel contract with BMCC By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian P ENDLETON — Blue Mountain Com- munity College sits on a hill overlooking Eastern Oregon Cor- rectional Institution, and for decades, the college has sent edu- cators down the hill to teach adult education classes to inmates behind prison walls. As the program draws to a close, that relationship is now in jeopardy. In late August, the Oregon Department of Corrections told BMCC and other community colleges across the state that it intended to end its educational contracts in 2021. For BMCC, that means losing out on a $3 million annual contract that encompasses 27 jobs across three state prisons: EOCI, Two Rivers Correctional Institu- tion, and Powder River Correc- tional Facility in Baker City. BMCC President Dennis Bailey-Fougnier said the col- lege wasn’t consulted ahead of the department’s decision. “That was news to us, to be honest with you,” he said. With dozens of jobs at stake, Bailey-Fougnier said the state’s prisons benefi t from having experienced educators lead the program. BMCC is now working with East Oregonian, File Inmate tutor Fabian Solis helps fellow inmate Wayne Woodruff un- derstand a math question during a GED class on Jan. 25, 2018, at Eastern Oregon Correctional Institution in Pendleton. a coalition of college adminis- trations and unions to try to get the state to reverse its decision. But the department of cor- rections remains fi rm that sig- nifi cant changes need to be made to the prison’s adult edu- cation programs, which include GED courses and English as as second language classes. “DOC has an unprece- dented budget shortfall and this change allows for signifi cant savings,” department com- munications manager Jenni- fer Black wrote in a statement. “Repurposing contract dollars for DOC staff positions will give the department greater fl exibility in the delivery of adult basic education program- ming, will increase weekly classroom hours, allow for con- sistency between institutions as (adults in custody) trans- fer from one institution to the next, and enhance case man- agement information-sharing both during the AIC’s incarcer- ation phase and as AICs transi- tion to the community.” In a Sept. 30 letter to the Oregon Community Col- leges Association, department Director Collette Peters wrote that the state prison system started the year with a $110 million projected shortfall and has spent the ensuing months making cuts, slashing $25 mil- lion from its budget before the Oregon Legislature lopped off another $2.4 million in August. Canceling its contracts and creating 70 positions inter- nally would save the depart- ment $1 million, or about 6% of the $16.4 million DOC spends over its two-year budget cycle on outsourcing its adult educa- tion programs. But the department thinks it could cushion the blow of future budget cuts in a differ- ent way, by offsetting some of its staff reductions. “(The) conversion allows for the creation of a substan- tial number of (department) staff positions, establishing positions for qualifi ed staff to go into in the event their posi- tions are impacted by future layoffs,” correctional division staff wrote in a policy memo. In an Oct. 6 email, depart- ment communications coor- dinator Vanessa Vanderzee wrote that instructors would be expected to have a bachelor’s or master’s degree depending on the position, but existing prison staff could also fi ll positions for coordinators, lab supervi- sors and administrators. Pete Hernberg, the president of BMCC’s faculty union, said prisons could actually see a dip See BMCC, Page A8 OSU hall of fame team has ties to Pendleton Kyle Rosselle, Richard Seigler both part of hall of fame Oregon State football team By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian PENDLETON —The 2000-01 Ore- gon State University football team brought together players from across the country to produce one of the school’s best teams of all time, but the team also had two Pendleton connections. Kyle Rosselle and Richard Sei- gler are members of a team that was recently inducted in the Oregon State University Athletics Hall of Fame, a ceremony honoring them postponed by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Steve Fenk, an associate athletic director at OSU, said the team will get an “actual celebration” sometime in 2021. But what links together Ross- elle and Seigler is more than just the years they spent at Oregon State. For Rosselle, Pendleton is the hometown that springboarded both his football and post-football careers. For Seigler, Pendleton is the town he chose to set- tle down in to further his own profes- sional career. A Hall of Fame year Rosselle may have become the rare Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian See Football, Page A8 Richard Seigler poses for a portrait in the offi ce of his practice, Enrich Therapy, in Pendleton on Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2020.