Page 8 Spilyay Tymoo, Warm Springs, Oregon ‘Large enough to serve you... Small enough to care’ 866-299-0644 2020 Chevrolet Equinox - 27,959 miles - $29,995 #67138A 2019 Honda - 25,507 miles - 2018 Buick Encore - 35,500 miles - 2018 Chevrolet Traverse - 90,000 miles - $24,995 $31,995 #03977B #36425A 2017 Chevrolet Tahoe - 41,054 miles - 2017 Chevrolet Malibu - 120,175 miles - $51,995 $13,995 #09541W #60686B 2015 Chevrolet Equinox - 133,374 miles - 2015 GMC Terrain - 93,779 miles - $13,995 $18,995 #460039A #30585A 2013 Buick Verano - 115,495 miles - 2010 Chevrolet Traverse - 87,404 miles - $10,995 $12,995 #84393C #79203A 2010 Chevrolet Suburban - 127,790 miles - 2007 Chevrolet Suburban - 160,774 miles - $18,995 $17,995 - #09165A #17690X September 8, 2021 Zone 6 September tribal fishery The Columbia River Inter- Tribal Fish Commission and member tribes have set a Sep- tember fishery. The zone 6 fishery is from the present to 6 p.m. on Fri- day, September 10. Gear is set and drift gillnets with 8-inch minimum mesh size restriction. Allow- able sales: Salmon (any species), steel- head, shad, yellow perch, bass, walleye, catfish and carp may be sold or retained for subsistence. Fish landed during the open period are allowed to be sold after the period con- cludes. Sturgeon may not be sold, but sturgeon from 38 to 54 inches fork length in the Bonneville pool, and stur- geon 43-54 inches fork length in the The Dalles and John Day pools may be kept for subsistence purposes. Closed areas: Standard sanctuaries applicable to gillnet gear. The standard Spring Creek hatchery sanc- tuary is in place. The zone 6 platform and hook and line fishery regu- lations remain unchanged. $33,995 #17690B First responders fight vaccine mandate First responders—includ- ing some in Jefferson County—are challenging the state of Oregon’s vaccine mandate. The first responders have taken the matter to court, posting plans to defy the or- der. They also wrote to Gov. Brown, informing her they won’t be enforcing mandates in their jurisdictions. In Jefferson County, doz- ens of firefighters, the Fra- ternal Order of Police and State Troopers filed suit in the county court. The lawsuit alleges the governor’s decision to man- date state employees get the covid vaccine by October 18, or lose their jobs, violates the state and federal constitu- tions. The suit came two days after a trooper in Bend was placed on leave. “I’ll likely get fired for this,” Trooper Zachary Kowing said. In a social media video, Kowing sits in uniform, in his patrol car and blasts the gov- ernor, her mandate and any- one who gets the vaccine ‘out of fear.’ By mid-last week Oregon State Police had placed Kowing on paid leave pend- ing an investigation. Portland attorney Dan Thenell is representing Kowing, as well as the plain- tiffs in last week’s Jefferson County lawsuit. He said the cases are separate, but the point is clear. “There are many troopers who are not going to get this vaccine and are prepared to lose their job over this,” Thenell said. He’s hoping it won’t come to that. The lawsuit argues the governor’s vaccine mandate, among other things, violates rights to free expression, un- der the Oregon and U.S. con- stitutions. Thenell calls the governor’s executive order “unlawful” and says even amid a global pandemic, la- bor unions should have been allowed to negotiate. The governor’s executive power, even amid an emer- gency like a global pandemic, doesn’t trump bargaining rights when it comes to con- ditions of employment, the attorney said. Pushback against vaccine mandates is also mounting nationwide. In Oregon, nurses in Tualatin have ral- lied against the requirement. The Portland Police Associa- tion has warned that offic- ers, under a mandate by the city, will resign over it. And last month, Columbia County Sheriff Brian Pixley told Gov. Brown he won’t enforce vaccine or mask mandates, writing in an open letter, “We have had enough of your overreaching man- dates and bullying threats.”