$1.50 THURSDAY, MAY 5, 2022 146th Year, No. 59 MAY 4–11 WINNER OF 16 ONPA AWARDS IN 2021 INSIDE ‘THE TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA’ A GO! AT BMCC Explore M us eu open s m , 202 2 PA GE 3 WW W.G OEA STE RNO REG Read ‘The Dreamer s’ PA GE 6 Listen Ja zz co ncert PA GE 14 ON.COM A morning chorus Ladd M Festiva arsh Bird Page 8 l is May 13-15 Draft on Roe v. Wade draws predictable reactions By WYATT TEGGINS East Oregonian UMATILLA COUNTY — The leaked draft of the Supreme Court’s majority opinion to over- turn the landmark Roe v. Wade case is bright-lining the diff erences on the two sides of the debate from the halls of Congress down to the local level. The political jou r nalism company Politico on Monday, May 2, published the 98-page fi rst draft on its website. In the draft, Justice Samuel Alito stood in opposition to the 1973 ruling, commenting WALLOWA COUNTY ODFW approves killing two wolves it, “Imposed a highly restrictive regime on states.” Later he stated, “The Constitution makes no refer- ence to abortion.” Oregon Executive Director of Planned Parenthood Advocates, An Do, stood in direct opposition to this claim in a press conference Tuesday, May 3. “This is about what we care about,” she said. “It’s about the right to privacy, the right to marry who you want.” Do portrayed the dismissal of Roe v. Wade was open- ing the fl oodgates to attacking civil rights. If passed, it will be in the hands of each individual state to address what restrictions they place on abor- tion. While Oregon most likely will stay pro-abortion, Planned Parent- hood is looking to expand into Ontario, anticipating a mass surge of patients across the Idaho border. In a press conference, Lisa Gardener, CEO of Planned Parent- hood in Southwestern Oregon, made it clear that expansion into Eastern Oregon is imminent, but how soon is unknown. Idaho Gov. Brad Little has made several attempts to pass fetal heart- beat laws that would make it virtu- ally impossible for abortions to occur in the state. Planned Parent- hood brought a lawsuit to the Idaho Supreme Court, temporarily block- ing the bill before it could take eff ect in April. Little in a letter to the Idaho Senate acknowledged this was a likely outcome: “I fear the novel civil enforcement mechanism will in short order be proven unconsti- tutional and unwise.” Eastern Oregon will be the most accessible place for Idahoans to receive care. Planned Parenthood offi cials made it clear that by doing so they would be taxing an already taxed system. Providing a brick- and-mortar location in Eastern Oregon would take service provid- ers that Planned Parenthood doesn’t have. Eastern Oregon also has the most dissent to abortion laws inside of Oregon. Father Daniel Maxwell of the Hermiston Catholic Church expressed nothing but support to the possible Supreme Court ruling. “We Catholics will be over- joyed because it will make abor- tion unthinkable by many people,” he said. See Reaction, Page A9 Snipping back the chill Warming systems and a little luck save Milton-Freewater orchard from spring frost By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press By EMRY DINMAN Walla Walla Union-Bulletin JOSEPH — The Oregon Depart- ment of Fish and Wildlife has issued a kill permit for up to two wolves from the Chesnimnus pack in Wallowa County. State wildlife biologists deter- mined members of the pack were responsible for two confirmed attacks on livestock between April 25 and 27 on a public grazing allotment north of Joseph, resulting in three dead calves. ODFW can authorize lethal take of wolves that prey on livestock after two confi rmed depredations in nine months. That is the current standard for “chronic depredation” in Eastern Oregon, where wolves were removed from the state endangered species list in 2015. Tom Birkmaier, who ranches along Crow Creek, said Tuesday, May 3, he received the kill permit April 29. He is allowed to take two Chesnimnus pack wolves in Dorrance Pasture or Trap Canyon Pasture, where the kills were confi rmed. “I asked for the removal of the pack,” Birkmaier said. “They issued me a kill permit for two.” The kill permit is good through May 24. He said his latest wolf attacks were on April 30, when a cow took wolf bites to protect her calf. “She saved her calf … she had two bite marks on her ribs,” he said. “I walked that cow and her calf down 7 miles to my ranch and I’m now taking care of them.” See Wolves, Page A9 ILTON-FREEWATER — Winter weather in the middle of April could have been disastrous for Dana Dibble, admits the third-generation Milton-Freewater grower as he inspects his orchards, vine- yard and U-pick raspberries. But with the Walla Walla Valley having warmed up after a series of freezing nights, Dibble thinks his plants escaped mostly unscathed, due in part to preparation and good luck. Dibble is quick to credit a lucky atmospheric cloud cover with taking the bite out of the unlucky cold front. A blanket of clouds acted as an insu- lating layer on several particularly cold nights, Dibble said, preventing temperatures from drop- ping dangerously low. “So, whether I did anything — we got really lucky,” Dibble said. “We got really lucky. We had a couple of nights that we should have got wiped out, but clouds came over, and when the clouds come over, it can save ya.” The cold weather early in April was particularly prolonged, with daily lows in the Walla Walla-area fl uctuating from 31 to 33 degrees between April 10-16. But cold weather is a common occurrence for the region, Dibble said. This is the third year in a row that a spring frost has threatened his fruit, he continued, and temperatures at 5 degrees below zero around New Year’s seem to have hit his apri- cots hard, which are producing around 25% of their normal crop. Even if he has avoided losing fruit to this month’s frost, he worries that weeks of colder weather have made pollinators less eff ective, which would reduce the amount of fruit produced by his apple and cherry trees. “There was fairly good pollination weather early on,” Dibble said. “My plums are probably OK. Early cherries may be OK.” M Photos by Greg Lehman/Walla Walla Union-Bulletin Top: Dana Dibble looks over some very early cherries in his Milton-Freewater orchard, April 19, 2022. Above: A bee does the important work of pollination in Dana Dibble’s cherry orchard, April 19, 2022. The late-blooming Benton varieties may be hampered by pollinators in a torpor from the unseasonably cold weather, though the extent of this concern isn’t yet clear. See Orchard, Page A9 Pendleton job fair beckons workers Labor shortage continues to be a common hurdle By JOHN TILLMAN East Oregonian PENDLETON — About 40 employers in Pendle- ton participated in a job fair Tuesday, May 3, aiming to fi ll the ranks of their staff s. Ta m my T hom p s on , regional recruiter of driv- ers for First Student charter bus rental, was among the companies and businesses in the main hall of the Pendle- ton Convention Center. The company recently won the contract to serve the Pendle- ton School District. “We really need help,” Thompson said. “We’re desperate. First Student off ers school bus drivers $21.50 per hour, depending on experience, with a $4,000 sign-on bonus for new hires and $6,000 for those pre-certifi ed. The nonprofi t Clearview Disability Resource Center, 1114 S.W. Frazer Ave., also was looking for part-time bus drivers. It transports people to medical appointments, both in and out of town, to the Tri-Cities or Portland. “We need three drivers, but they have to pass back- ground checks,” recruiter Jeremy Umbarger said. Pendleton Chamber of Commerce Executive offi- cer Cheri Rosenberg and schools to careers coordi- nator Patti Hyatt organized the event. Private companies and government entities alike came to the fair. Rosenberg estimated that by 4:30 p.m., approxi- mately 200 people had gone through the convention center. She said the employ- ment situation in Pendleton is no worse and no better than anywhere else. See Workers, Page A9 Kathy Aney/East Oregonian Jeremy Umbarger of Clearview Disability Resource Center, Pendleton, mans a table at a job fair Tuesday, May 3, 2022, at the Pendleton Convention Center. Clearview has 10 vans and off ers nonemergency medical transportation to people on the Oregon Health Plan. The business faces a common prob- lem — fi nding enough employees.