WEEKEND EDITION THE WEEK IN PHOTOS ECHO’S EMILY RAY RANKED EOU GOES ‘TEST-BLIND’ 5TH IN OREGON GIRLS CLUB TO BENEFIT INCOMING TRAPSHOOTING STUDENTS LOCAL, A7 SPORTS, B1 NORTHWEST, A2 DECEMBER 5-6, 2020 145th Year, No. 22 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2020 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD New whiskey celebrates repeal of Prohibition Pendleton distillery launches Cabbage Hill, company’s fi rst aged wheat whiskey By BEN LONERGAN East Oregonian PENDLETON — After more than two years aging in the Ore- gon Grain Growers Brand Dis- tillery basement, the fi rst three barrels of the distillery’s new Cab- bage Hill aged whiskey emerged from the cellar for bottling earlier this week — just in time for the 87th anniversary of the repeal of Prohibition. “It’s a lot of science and a lot of fi ngers crossed,” said Kelli Bul- lington, co-owner of the distillery. Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Staff bottle the inaugural run of Cabbage Hill aged wheat whiskey at the Oregon Grain Growers Brand Distillery in Pendleton on Thursday, Dec. 3, 2020. Thursday, Dec. 3, marked the culmination of fi nger crossing and science as the fi rst bottles of whiskey began to fi ll and a team of staff went about the process of corking, labeling and sealing the roughly 800-bottle inaugural run. Cabbage Hill marks the dis- tillery’s fi rst aged wheat whiskey, a product that has been a dream of owners Kelli and Rodney Bul- lington since they fi rst opened the Pendleton micro-distillery in 2016. In the true spirit of their past projects, which have focused on local ingredients and production, the wheat whiskey features wheat from local farmers milled and dis- tilled in Pendleton, according to Bullington. After a multi-month distill- ing process in 2018, the 120-proof spirit was poured into wine bar- rels and left to age in the distill- ery’s basement, said Bullington. From there, Bullington, her hus- band, and the rest of the Oregon Grain Growers Brand Distillery staff did the best they could to for- get about it, periodically checking the color and fl avor, and waiting for the American oak barrels to work their magic. “The whiskey pulls from that color and that fl avor and the char that’s been in there and everything else that’s been in there,” said Bul- lington of the barrels. Wes Murack, who helped with the distilling, barreling and bottling process, and has been involved in brewing and distilling See Whiskey, Page A9 ‘Visionary force’ behind Threemile Canyon Farms dies Marty Myers passes away at his home of natural causes By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press BOARDMAN — Marty Myers, general manager of Threemile Canyon Farms and a member of the Oregon Board of Agriculture, has died. He was 68. A spokes- woman for R.D. Offutt Co., which owns Threemile Canyon Farms, said Myers died Tuesday, Dec. 1, at his home of natu- Myers ral causes. In a company statement, Offutt CEO Tim Curoe said Myers was the “visionary force” behind Threemile Canyon Farms, which includes Oregon’s largest dairy operation. “(Myers) had a vision for the farm to be a sustainable opera- tion, which was well ahead of the times,” Curoe said. “He brought that idea into reality by creating a See Myers, Page A9 Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian A sign along Southwest 18th Street in Pendleton advertises the future site of the Blue Mountain Community College Agricultural Complex and Arena on Friday, Dec. 4, 2020. Back on — for now FARM II, Umatilla County Jail upgrades make governor’s preliminary budget By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian P ENDLETON — Funding for two regional projects are back in Gov. Kate Brown’s budget proposal, but success is still far from certain. In 2018, both Blue Mountain Community College’s FARM II facility and a Umatilla County Jail renovation project were proposed by the governor and approved by the Bailey-Fougnier Hansell Levy Oregon Legislature. But both projects had their funding tied to Oregon Lottery revenues, and with the COVID-19 pandemic forcing many video poker machines to go dark, the states told local governments over the summer that the money wasn’t available. Despite the setback, local legislators and political leaders continued to lobby the gover- nor’s offi ce on funding the projects in the 2021 legislative session, a tactic that paid off when she included $13.7 million for FARM II and Murdock Smith $1.8 million for the jail renovation in her Tues- day, Dec. 1, budget announcement. “It has been a long haul full of hopes and frustrations, and while being in the initial budget proposal isn’t a sure thing, in the long run, it is certainly an important milestone,” a Wednesday, Dec. 2, city of Pendleton press release states. The three legislators that will represent See Budget, Page A9 Foundation Foundation VIRTUAL DECEMBER 5, 2020 Auction AUCTION OPENS V I E W T R E E S A N D S I G N U P TO B I D AT sahpendleton.org/festivaloftrees @ 1 0 : 0 0 A M • C LO S E S @ 8: 0 0 P M