REGION Saturday, August 27, 2022 East Oregonian Incoming Morrow County Commissioner Wenholz subject of ethics investigation By MARCO GRAMACHO East Oregonian HEPPNER — An incom- ing Morrow County commis- sioner is the subject of a state ethics investigation. The Oregon Govern- ment Ethics Commission on Aug. 19 voted to investi- gate Jeff Wenholz for possi- ble violations. Wenholz in the May primary won a slim victory to serve in Position 2 on the Morrow County Board of Commissioners. He takes offi ce for a four-year term in January 2023. The ethics commission scheduled a public meeting to discuss the fi nding of cause on Feb. 3. Jonathan Tallman in March sent the ethics commission a written complaint against Wenholz, chair of the Morrow County Planning Commission, indicating Wenholz may have used his position for fi nancial gain and may have failed to report additional income on his 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019 Annual Verifi ed Statements of Economic Interest. In the complaint, Tall- man explained that Wenholz, besides the commissioner’s take his family’s land. He and position, is the vice president his parents own a coff ee shop of the board of directors for in Boardman in which they sell the Umatilla Electric Cooper- their fruits and vegetables. ative, and director of “Amazon Web LS Networks (a high- Services has moved speed business fiber in right next door and internet company). has teamed up with The conflict of UEC, by using the law interest, according to of eminent domain, to Tallman, lies in that take my parents’ land away from them. They Wenholz failed to disclose he is compen- Wenholz intend to use the land sated from UEC and to put in a 230 kilovolt failed to recuse himself from power line to deliver electricity discussion on several land use to their business,” he said. proposals involving UEC in his According to Tallman, his role as a Morrow County plan- family off ered to work with ning commissioner. UEC and Amazon to fi nd a Wenholz denied there is way to compromise and bene- anything to Tallman’s claims. fi t both of them. He explained there is no “They would rather just conflict of interest because take the land for their own UEC is a 501(c) organization. personal use,” he complained. This is a designation under the Tallman said he remem- United States Internal Revenue bers that around 1994 he met Code that confers tax-exempt Wenholz and they used to play status on nonprofi t organiza- basketball together. tions. Specifi cally, it identifi es “I still consider Jeff a friend which nonprofi t organizations of mine, but he thinks he is are exempt from paying federal above all of us,” he said. income tax. Wenholz, who lives in Irri- “These accusations have no gon, has served on the Morrow foundation,” Wenholz said. County Solid Waste Advi- Tallman also accuses sory Committee and Morrow Umatilla Electric Cooperative County Planning Commission. of working with Amazon to Additionally, he served on the Morrow County Umatilla Chemical Depot Citizens Advisory Commission for 11 years. He has also served for the past fi ve years on the Morrow County Budget Committee, and since 2019, on the Good Shepherd Medical Center Board of Trustees. He narrowly defeated Melissa Lindsay of Heppner for Position 2 on the Morrow County Board of Commis- sioners in the May 17 primary election. Lindsay received 1,287 votes to Wenholz 1,313, with six write-ins, for a total cast of 2,606. Wenholz received 50.4% to Lindsay’s 49.4% in the fi nal tally. He received a majority of votes, plus one; the number required to win was 1,304. The race did not qualify for an automatic recount, despite Wenholz’s thin margin of victory, county Clerk Bobbi Childers reported at the time. To qualify requires a diff er- ence of just a fi fth of 1% of all votes, or about 5.2 in this case, well below Wenholz’s 26-vote advantage. That’s just under a 1% diff erence. Childers certi- fi ed the results on June 8. National Weather Service predicts more hot days By JOHN TILLMAN East Oregonian PEN DLETON — Another round of excessive heat is on the way to the Pacifi c Northwest, and much of Eastern Oregon is right in the heart of it. The National Weather Service’s Climate Predic- tion Center on Tuesday, Aug. 23. issued a U.S. Hazards Outlook valid for Aug. 31 to Sept. 6 at noon. The CPC warned of moderate risk of excessive heat from portions of the Pacifi c Northwest through the Northern Rockies. It found slight risk of exces- sive heat in portions of the Pacific Northwest, Great Basin, Northern Intermoun- tain Region, Central and Northern Rockies and the Northern Plains for Aug. 31 to Sept. 4. The CPC’s models agreed the two-week forecast period starts with a strong mid-level ridge centered over western North America, extending eastward toward the middle of the continent. This is expected to maintain an increased potential for excessive heat over parts of the central and western Lower 48 through the middle of the period. The NWS in Pendleton on its website reported Northeast- ern Oregon and nearby areas have at least a 40% chance of excessive heat Aug. 31-Sept. 2, with at least a 20% chance for those highs on Sept. 3 and 4. Long-range models have high temperatures of 95 to 105. Normal highs for Sept. 1 and 2, Thursday and Friday next week, are 80 to 88 degrees, the NWS website said. Neighbor 2 Neighbor, 715 S.E. Court Ave., did open up cooling stations earlier this year, Vice Chair Shirley West- fall said. “What we found out was that most were going to the casino,” she added. “So not much demand here.” Chair Dwight Johnson said Neighbor 2 Neighbor has guidelines for when to open cooling stations. “When we have sustained triple digit highs, as earlier this summer, then we consider opening up,” he reported. “It depends on how many consec- utive days over 100 are fore- cast.” Stepping Stones Alliance, Hermiston, which offers warming stations in winter, is not operational. “We will begin operations in time for the 2022/23 winter season,” SSA said in an email. CHI ST. ANTHONY HOSPITAL Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian, File A total of 39 health care technical workers Wednesday, Aug. 23, 2022, at CHI St. Anthony Hospital in Pendleton voted for union representation through the Oregon Nurses Association. Technical health care workers vote to unionize showed that today with our union victory. We are health PENDLETON — Thir- care workers fi ghting for the ty-nine health care techni- well-being of our commu- cal workers Wednesday, nity and every patient that Aug. 23, at CHI St. Anthony comes through our doors.” Hospital in Pendleton voted CHI St. Anthony CEO for union representation Harry Geller said hospi- through the Oregon Nurses tal administration “will continue working together Association. The association in a to fulfill our primary press release reported the concern, providing the high- est quality of health technical workers care to our patients, identified a wide while maintaining a range of issues in favor of organizing pleasant workplace a union, including environment for ensuring safe staff - all. Every voice has ing, providing high been heard.” quality care for With a success- Geller patients and their ful vote, members community and will now move on seeking equitable wages. to electing a bargaining Katie Heath, a radiology team, circulating surveys to technologist at CHI St. determine key issues to be Anthony, said the vote was the focus of bargaining with a victory for worker protec- management and setting tions and collective bargain- bargaining dates to achieve ing rights, just as the nurses their fi rst contract. This vote is one of a at the hospital do. “We as health care work- number of successful new ers have the power to change union organizing drives our future and have a voice across the state in which in the workplace,” she said ONA has participated, in the press release. “We including eff orts of health have the power to create care workers with the St. the work environment Charles Health System in our patients, families and Bend, providers in Eugene community deserve. We as and nurses at Samaritan employees are not numbers North Lincoln City hospital and our voices matter. We in Lincoln City. East Oregonian P ENDLETON ’ S MOST September Events Pendleton Farmers’ Market PENDLETON Downtown Pendleton Every Friday, 4-7PM ROUND-UP PCA Creation Station Pendleton Center for the Arts September 1st, 11AM-3PM Jam Night Pendleton Center for the Arts September 1st, 7PM Sweet n’ Juicy 40 Taps September 1st, 7-10PM Ladies Golf Classic Wildhorse Resort & Casino September 2nd – 4th Get Wild in Pendleton Downtown Pendleton September 3rd, 11AM-10PM Artist Reception: Lisa Jarrett Crow’s Shadow Institute of the Arts September 8th, 5PM Round-Up Grounds & Happy Canyon Arena September 10th – 17th Shop Local, Grow Your Heritage 138 SE Court Ave. Tuesday - Saturday 10 AM - 4 PM Hall of Fame Inductee Banquet Pendleton Convention Center September 11th, 12-7PM Bart Budwig Great Pacific September 14th, 7-9PM Sum People 40 Taps September 15th, 7-9PM First Draft Writer’s Series Pendleton Center for the Arts September 15th, 7-8:30PM Jacob Jolliff Pendleton Center for the Arts September 21st, 3PM A3 & B OUTIQUE 541-310-7086 reride-western-resale.com 108 SE Court Ave. • Pendleton, Oregon Mon. - Sat. 10am - 5:30pm • Sunday 10am - 2pm BOOK SALE! 3 RD SATURDAY EVERY MONTH 125 S MAIN STREET, PENDLETON, OR 97801 541-276-9292 • TUESDAY - SATURDAY, 10AM-4PM