Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, February 23, 2011, Page TEN, Image 10

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    TEN - Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, February 23,2011
PUBLIC NOTICE
TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF
SALE Loan No: \xx7338
T.S. N o.: 1289406-09.
Reference is made to that
c e rta in deed m ade by
Donald R. Hinkley, As His
Sole and Separate Self, as
Grantor to Mid-columbia
Title Company, as Trustee,
in favor of Banner Bank,
as Beneficiary, dated June
14,2002, recorded June 19,
2002, in official records of
Morrow, Oregon in book/
reel/volume No. xx at page
No. xx, fee/file/lnstrument/
m icrofilm /reception No.
2002-4553 covering the
following described real
property situated in said
County and State, to-wit:
Beginning at the Southeast
c o rn e r o f se c tio n 23,
Township 5 North. Range
26, east of the Willamette
M eridian, in the County
o f M orrow and Stat, of
Oregon; thence West 220
feet; thence North 0°22’
West 576.75 reel more or
less to a point on the South
tight of way (old) Highway
730; thence Northwesterly
along the said southerly
right of way of said Highway
7 W, 100 feet more of Jess to
the point of beginning of
this description: Thence
South 280 feet; West 100
feet thence North 280 feet
more or less to a point on
the South right of way of
said Highway 730: thence
Southwesterly along the
said Highway right of way
102 feel more or less to
the point o f beginning.
C om m only know n as:
75036 C olum bia Lane
Irrigon Or 97844. Both the
beneficiary and the trustee
have elected to sell the said
real property to satisfy the
obligations secured by said
trust deed and notice has
been recorded pursuant
to Section 86.735(3) of
Oregon Revised Statutes:
the default for which the
foreclosure is made is the
grantor’s: Failure to pay
the monthly payment due
april 1, 2010 of principal,
interest and impounds and
subsequent installm ents
due thereafter; plus late
charges; together with all
subsequent sums advanced
by beneficiary pursuant to
the terms and conditions of
said deed of trust. Monthly
payment $605.09 Monthly
Late Charge $23.07. By this
reason of said default the
beneficiary has declared all
obligations secured by said
Deed of Trust immediately
due and payable, said sums
being the following, to-wit;
The sum o f $59,692.35
to g e th e r w ith in te re s t
thereon at 7.500% per
annum from March 01,2010
until paid; plus all accrued
late charges thereon; and all
trustee’s fees, foreclosure
costs and any sums advance
by the beneficiary pursuant
to the terms and conditions
of the said deed of trust.
Whereof, notice hereby is
given that, Cal-W estern
Reconveyance Corporation
the undersigned trustee will
on May 10, 2011 at the
hour of 1:00pm, Standard
of Time, as established by
Section 187.110, Oregon
Revised Statutes, At the
court street entrance to
morrow county courthouse
100 C ourt S treet C ity
o f H eppner, C ounty o f
Morrow, State of Oregon,
sell at public auction to the
highest bidder for cash the
interest in the said described
real property which the
grantor had or had power
to convey at the time of the
execution by him o f the
said trust deed, together
with any interest which the
grantor or his successors in
interest acquired after the
execution of said trust deed,
to satisfy the foregoing
obligations thereby secured
and the costs and expense of
sale, including a reasonable
charge by the tru ste e.
N otice is further given
that any person named in
Section 86.753 of Oregon
Revised Statutes has the
I
right to have the foreclosure
proceeding dismissed and
the trust deed reinstated by
payment to the beneficiary
of the entire amount then
due (other than such portion
of said principal as would
not then be due had no
default occurred), together
with the costs, trustee’s
and attorney’s fees and
curing any other default
complained of in the Notice
o f Default by tendering
the performance required
under the obligation or
trust deed, at any time
prior to five days before
the date last set for sale. In
construing this notice, the
masculine gender includes
the feminine and the neuter,
the singular includes plural,
the word “grantor” includes
any successor in interest to
the grantor as well as any
other persons owing an
obligation, the performance
o f which is secured by
said trust deed, the words
“trustee” and “beneficiary”
includes their respective
successors in interest, if any.
Dated: January 03, 2011.
Cal-Western Reconveyance
Corporation 525 East Main
Street P.O. Box 22004 El
Cajon Ca 92022-9004
Cal-Westem Reconveyance
Corporation Signature/By:
Tammy Laird R-362955
02/02, 02/09, 02/16, 02/23
Published: February 2,9,16
and 23, 2011
Affidavit
PUBLIC NOTICE
Morrow County Citizens
A public meeting o f the
Morrow County Special
Transportation Committee
will be held on February
28, 2011 at 5:00 pm at
the Morrow County Court
House Annex, 150 Rock
Street, Heppner, Oregon.
Gayle L. Gutierrez Morrow
County Treasurer
Published: February 16 and
23, 2010
Affidavit
PUBLIC NOTICE
On Monday, March 7,2011
the Morrow County Parks
Board Meeting will meet
at 500 NE Main Avenue in
Irrigon at 2pm at the Irrigon
City Hall. Morrow County
is in charge of Anson Wright
Park, Cutsforth Park and
the M orrow-Grant OHV
Park. The public is invited
to attend our quarterly
meetings.
Published: February23 and
March 2,2011
CO-GEN PLANT
-Continuedfrom Page ONE “We will start the plant us­ gallon of fuel to produce
erative and good to
work with,” he added. He
said that the port insisted
that the company operate
the plant in Heppner and not
dismantle it to move some-
where else. C hristensen
estimated the plant would
employ about 16 people
operating 24 hours per day
on four shifts. Earlier he
had said the plant could
provide up to 20 jobs, with
truck drivers and others
included.
C hristensen is a
farmer from the Treasure
Valley area where a growers
group has formed a co-op,
Agri Energy Producers, to
control the process from
growing to distribution to
producing electricity, and
this co-op has been working
to line up financing for pur­
chase of the go-gen plant.
C hristensen said
eventually the plant will
burn sorghum to produce
electricity, but initially it
plans to use wood fiber
from the forest to bum and
generate steam to make
electricity. He said if the
company buys the co-gen
plant it plans on putting in
a digester to prepare the
wood and the sorghum.
ing standard wood fuels and
then shift to 100 percent ag
fuels,” he said. The plant
will be owned by a co-op
of growers that will grow
the sorghum. He said it
takes about 10,000 acres of
sorghum to produce enough
fuel annually for the 10
megawatt plant. He said
there is already one grower
in the area growing about
120 acres. In comparison
Christensen said it would
take 100,000 acres of sor­
ghum to power its Board-
man coal fired plant, as has
been discussed.
C hristensen said
wood burns well in the
plant, but it produces five
to 10 percent ash, while the
sorghum produces one to
two percent. The by-product
of burning the sorghum is a
“soil mineral” that can be
added back to the fields to
give back nitrogen, potash
and nutrients. "The growers
will benefit from that,” he
says. Sorghum is a rotation
crop that uses 300 units of
nitrogen per acre and less
water than com.
As opposed to eth­
anol, which has not worked
out well as a fuel substitute,
since it takes more than a
CHAMBER PROGRAM
-Continuedfrom Page ONE areas of growth, and that
school who might
be considered “m isfits”
and don’t always follow the
rules, but he said creativity
can be learned and is in all
of us. He added that creativ­
ity is in all people, but as we
age society discourages cre­
ativity, and people develop
mindsets against creativity,
which limits opportunities,
viewpoints and the creative
process. By improving our
mental mindsets Di Salvo
says we think and see dif­
ferently and can enter the
realm of creativity and in­
novation.
As an example of
business that used the inno­
vative and creative process
Di Salvo talked about Wal-
Mart and Burger King and
how they decided where to
locate their new stores. He
said Burger Kind would not
do a lot of research such as
McDonalds, but just ended
up following McDonalds
and put outlets near where
McDonalds, which did do
lots of research, located.
In the case o f Wal-Mart
he said Sam Walton, the
founder, would go up fly
around in his plane and find
is where Wal-Mart would
locate their next store.
Di Salvo, who has
a PHD and spent 17 years
o f business management
and administration, has an
interesting story on how he
arrived in Heppner. He grew
up in Buffalo New York in
what he called your typical
Italian American Family.
His family owned a truck­
ing business. In addition to
many years in business and
running six tax preparation
franchises Di Salvo sold
homes in Virginia Beach
Virginia and has a patent
pending on an ice cream
he created called Di Salvos
Ice Cream. He moved to
Oregon for a job that did not
work out and then moved to
Heppner.
Di S alvo has a
connection with another
Italian American» living
in Heppner. He grew up a
“stones throw” from Dino
Antonucci, the pastor of the
local Christian Life Center
Church,, in Buffalo. “I did
not know him back then,
but I could have literally
thrown a stone to his house
from mine,” Di Salvo said.
a gallon of ethanol, Chris­
tensen said he can prove
that sorghum energy pro­
duction has a “net energy
gain”.
During an earlier
visit to Heppner, C hris­
tensen had said that the
sorghum is a hybrid de­
veloped by a California
company called Ceres that
must be grown under center
pivot irrigation and can get
up to 20 feet tall. He said
the advantage of using an
agricultural product rather
than wood waste to bum in
the co-gen plant is control
over the condition of-the
material. He said with sor­
ghum they can control the
moisture content between
30 and 40 percent, and it
is generally cleaner than
wood. Last week he said the
plants can grow up to 12 to
15 foot high in “very tough”
soil conditions.
Although the grow­
er’s co-op is open only to
growers, Christensen says
he has found it necessary
to bring in investors to keep
the project moving forward.
He said they have partnered
with an Arizona company,
SW Energy, that is putting
up a brand new 20 mega­
watt plant “from the ground
up” in Arizona, but said his
company is two years ahead
of them on sorghum pro­
duction, which is the reason
for the partnership.
“There is going to
be some start up issues with
the facility,” he said “We
are going to have problems
and we know that. I hope to
come back to you soon and
say that we are operating,”
he said.
Sheriff's Report
The M orrow County S heriff’s Office reports
handling the following business:
-Continuedfrom Page
-MCSO was noti­
EIGHT fied that Terri Lynn Goo-
for Failure to Ap-
pear/Strangulation.
-MCSO received
a report of a bashed car in
Heppner.
-MCSO arrested
Tiffany Rose Joye Noel
Wells, 23, for Assault IV.
-B oardm an A m ­
bulance received a call
regarding a 63 year old
subject with terminal who
was having severe pain and
refusing medication. The
patient was transported to
Good Shepherd Hospital.
D e c e m b e r 7:
-MCSO was notified that
Daniel Luiz Bale, 34, was
arrested by S pringfield
PD on an IJC warrant for
Failure to Appear/Driving
While Suspended.
-MCSO was noti­
fied that Shalon Garlynn
Angel, 33, was arrested
by Morrow County Parole
and Probation for Probation
Violation.
D e c e m b e r 9:
-MCSO arrested a juvenile
on a Juvenile Department
Probation Violation.
-MCSO issued a
citation to Kode Lyle Prag,
19, for Driving Uninsured,
Failure to Have Required
Lighting, and Failure to
Carry Registration.
-M CSO arrested
John Horner Jr., 46, for
Violation of RO.
dling, 41, was arrested by
Stanfield PD on an IJC war­
rant for Failure to Pay Fine/
Driving While Suspended.
-Boardman Ambu­
lance transported a patient
who was disoriented and
confused to Good Shepherd
Hospital.
D e c e m b e r 10:
-BPD received a report of
a shoplifter detained. BPD
arrested Judy Ann Tellez,
21, for Theft III.
-BPD issued a cita­
tion to Rusom G. Gebregz-
abher, 36, for Violation of
the Speed Limit by driving
45 mph in a 30 mph zone.
D e c e m b e r 11:
-MCSO arrested Travis
Richards, 20, was arrested
on a Circuit Court w ar­
rant for Failure to Appear/
Wildlife Violation (x4) and
Waste Wildlife (x4).
-M CSO arrested
William Raymond Gibson,
43, on a Morrow County
Circuit Court warrant for
Probation Violation/Unlaw-
ful Possession o f Meth-
amphetamine. Gibson was
also arrested on an Irrigon
Justice Court warrant for
Failure to Appear/Driving
While Suspended. Gibson
was cited for Speed Racing,
Driving While Suspended
Violation, and No Insur­
ance. BPD assisted.