NORTHWEST East Oregonian A2 Saturday, March 6, 2021 Highway 30 could get a new name honoring Oregon veterans By KEVIN HARDEN Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — Oregon’s long stretch of U.S. Highway 30, from Astoria to the Idaho border, could become the Oregon Veterans Memorial High- way. Senate Bill 790, introduced on Feb. 24 by Sen. Tim Knopp, a Bend Republican, would rename Oregon’s 477-mile section of the national highway. On Wednesday, March 3, the bill was referred to the Senate Committee on Veterans and Emer- gency Preparedness. Retired U.S. Army Lt. Col. Dick Tobiason of the nonprofit Bend Heroes Foundation is the driving force behind SB 790. Tobiason, who served two tours during the Viet- nam War as an Army aviator, and his one-man nonprofi t operation led efforts on past legislation to rename eight Oregon highways to honor veterans. His legislative success rate is 100%. “I’ve never lost a vote in 12 years doing these highways,” Tobiason said. It’s simple math, he said. The Bend Heroes Foundation raises all the money needed to create 4-by-8 foot signs to be posted along the highway with the veterans designa- tion (probably more than $10,000 for Highway 30). It pays Oregon’s Department of Transportation to install them. Not a dime of taxpayer funds goes into the effort. “Why would the Legislature disapprove of this?” Tobiason asked. “It doesn’t cost them a cent.” There are nearly 100 signs honor- ing veterans installed on eight Oregon highways stretching more than 3,000 Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian An American fl ag and POW/MIA fl ag fl y from the handles of William Koston’s walker as he strolls along U.S. High- way 30 near Roy Raley Park in Pendleton on Friday, March, 5, 2021. Koston, who served with the 101st Airborne Division in Germany, said he fl ies the fl ags to remember those who have yet to make it home. A proposal intro- duced on Feb. 24 by Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend, would rename the Oregon stretch of Highway 30 as the Oregon Veterans Memorial Highway. miles across the state. Each desig- nated highway has between 10 and 18 signs, he said. That means driv- ers could see one veterans highway honor sign every 65 miles. U.S. Highway 30 extends 3,073 miles to Boston on the East Coast. It is the only major highway in Oregon not designated to honor veterans. It crosses 11 states and is the nation’s third longest coast-to-coast highway. Oregon’s section of the highway that winds along the Columbia River from the Astoria-Megler Bridge through Scappoose and Portland before heading east as part of Inter- state 84, is the beginning of Tobia- son’s plans for the road. He’s working with veterans groups and lawmak- ers in 10 other states to get the same designation all the way to Boston. Tobiason’s Bend Heroes Foun- dation has also asked Congress to designate the 3,365-mile U.S. High- way 20, which begins at Newport on the Oregon Coast and heads east Forecast for Pendleton Area TODAY SUNDAY A bit of rain and snow | Go to AccuWeather.com MONDAY Mainly cloudy with a shower TUESDAY A thick cloud cover WEDNESDAY Rather cloudy Sunshine; breezy in the p.m. PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 55° 39° 56° 32° 53° 33° 57° 35° 59° 34° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 59° 37° 59° 32° 57° 32° 60° 33° OREGON FORECAST 63° 35° ALMANAC Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. PENDLETON through 3 p.m. yest. HIGH LOW TEMP. Seattle Olympia 47/39 43/33 56/33 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 54/39 Lewiston 50/39 60/36 Astoria 50/40 Pullman Yakima 58/39 50/37 50/37 Portland Hermiston 53/41 The Dalles 59/37 Salem Corvallis 51/38 Yesterday Normals Records La Grande 46/31 PRECIPITATION John Day Eugene Bend 52/39 51/34 46/31 Ontario 53/31 Caldwell Burns 76° 37° 54° 32° 76° (2021) 0° (2019) 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date Albany 51/39 0.00" 0.00" 0.17" 1.08" 0.36" 2.41" WINDS (in mph) 52/30 45/25 0.00" 0.00" 0.17" 3.02" 4.06" 2.68" through 3 p.m. yest. HIGH LOW TEMP. Pendleton 41/26 51/39 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date HERMISTON Enterprise 55/39 55/37 71° 53° 52° 33° 74° (1972) 1° (2019) PRECIPITATION Moses Lake 51/38 Aberdeen 47/34 52/34 Tacoma Yesterday Normals Records Spokane Wenatchee 51/40 Today Boardman Pendleton Medford 53/36 Sun. WSW 8-16 WSW 8-16 WSW 7-14 W 7-14 SUN AND MOON Klamath Falls 45/26 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today 6:24 a.m. 5:49 p.m. 2:04 a.m. 10:47 a.m. New First Full Last Mar 13 Mar 21 Mar 28 Apr 4 to Boston, the National Medal of Honor Highway. Oregon’s section of Highway 20 is already known as the Medal of Honor Highway. SB 790 is also kind of an ending for Tobiason. He has proposed simi- lar bills since 2008 and testifi ed 14 times in favor of legislation. When he’s fi nished with the U.S. Highway 30 project, just about every major highway in the state will honor veter- ans or service men and women miss- ing in action. Between World War I (1914) and wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and the Persian Gulf (1990 and 2003), 6,000 Oregon soldiers, sailors (including Coast Guard), Marines, merchant seamen and airmen were killed. During that same time, about 15,000 Oregonians were wounded in combat and nearly 1,000 were prisoners. About 1,000 Oregonians remain missing in action from all of the confl icts. Oregon highways Tobiason and the foundation have designated include: • U.S. Highway 395, from Califor- nia to Washington, is the World War I Veterans Memorial Highway. • Interstate 5, from California to Washington, is known as the Korean War Veterans Memorial Highway and the Purple Heart Trail. • A section of I-5 from Albany to Salem is the Atomic Veterans Memo- rial Highway. • U.S. Highway 101, from Wash- ington to California, is the Persian Gulf, Afghanistan and Iraq Veterans Memorial Highway. • A section of U.S. Highway 26, from the Highway 101 intersection to Idaho, is the POW/MIA Memorial Highway. Tobiason is already planning his Eastern Oregon trip later this year when U.S. Highway 30 is offi - cially designed the Oregon Veterans Memorial Highway. He’s been to nearly every highway sign dedica- tion ceremony, racking up more than 5,000 miles on his vehicle. “We’ll have a big ceremony in Ontario,” Tobiason said. “We should have Idaho offi cials there, because their bill should be done about the same time.” Oregon legislative Democrats fl oat a $17 an hour minimum wage By MIKE ROGOWAY The Oregonian SALEM — Five Demo- crats in the Oregon Legis- lature have fi led a bill that would increase the state’s minimum wage from as low as $11.50 an hour in some places to $17 an hour state- wide. That works out to a little more than $35,000 a year for someone working 40 hours a week, beginning next year. The bill would do away with existing regional differences in Oregon’s minimum wage that were created to insu- late businesses from higher expenses in rural areas where the cost of living is lower. Although the proposed minimum wage hike has fi ve co-sponsors, they are all in their fi rst year in the Legisla- ture, and Democratic leaders have not listed the bill among their priorities. That proba- bly means it has little chance of passing — especially if Republicans were to threaten another walkout to block the bill. Just 1 in 15 Oregon jobs pay the minimum wage, according to the latest state data. The hourly minimum goes up every year under provisions of a bill passed in 2016, rising to $14 an hour this summer in the Portland area. It will increase to $12.75 an hour in Deschutes County and to $12 in Crook, Jefferson and other non-urban counties around the state. Oregon’s minimum wage is due to increase to $14.75 an hour in 2022 in the Port- land area, $13.50 an hour in Deschutes County and $12.50 in Crook, Jefferson and other non-urban counties. As of July 1, 2023, it would be adjusted annually based on the consumer price index. House Bill 3351 would do away with regional differ- ences and set a $17 minimum as of July 1, 2022. Annual increases based on infl ation would continue thereafter. Economists have long debated the effect of higher minimum wages on infla- tion and employment. The conventional wisdom that higher minimums would lead to major job losses was tested over the past several years, as Washington, Oregon and many other states raised their minimum wages while unem- ployment fell to an all-time low in the period before the pandemic. However, the nonparti- san Congressional Budget Offi ce concluded last month that a Democratic proposal to increase the federal minimum wage from $7.25 to $15 an hour over the next fi ve years would reduce employment by 1.4 million jobs. The research- ers also found that raising the federal minimum would lift 900,000 out of poverty and raise incomes for as many as 27 million Americans. Democrats had hoped to include the federal minimum wage hike in the coronavirus relief package now working its way through Congress, but that appears unlikely. Senate rules would require at least 60 votes to accomplish that and Republicans — who control half the chamber — are unan- imous in their opposition to raising the minimum that high. NATIONAL EXTREMES Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) High 90° in Kingsville, Texas Low -9° in Yellowstone N.P., Wyo. IN BRIEF NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY Schools spent most of federal aid on virtual learning Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. -10s -0s 0s showers t-storms 10s rain 20s flurries 30s snow 40s ice 50s 60s cold front E AST O REGONIAN — Founded Oct. 16, 1875 — 70s East Oregonian (USPS 164-980) is published Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, by the EO Media Group, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801. Periodicals postage paid at Pendleton, OR. 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About $121 million that has arrived in Oregon so far has helped schools across the state purchase laptops, internet hotspots and program licenses to set up the virtual learning programs that have dominated the Oregon classroom experience over the last year. But a second round of federal funds is expected to deliver another $499 million to school districts by the end of the month, the state’s share of a $900 billion relief bill passed in December 2020. And the bulk of that money should go toward reopening schools. What that looks like will differ from district to district. 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