Heppner gazette-times. (Heppner, Or.) 1925-current, October 12, 2011, Page EIGHT, Image 8

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    EIGHT - Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, October 12,2011
-Continuedfrom PAGE
SEVEN
10-1B-3(A), PENALTY,
CLASS 1 PENALTY, TO
PROVIDE FOR A FINE
AMOUNT. Passage of the
ordinance would provide
for monetary penalties
for violation of Title 10
of the Irrigon Code. Any
objection or remonstrance
may be made in writing and
filed with the City prior to
the hearing. Objection or
remonstrance will be heard
at the hearing. Persons who
would like to attend and
need assistance are urged
to call Irrigon City Hall at
(541) 922-3047, or TTY
relay at (800) 735-2900 in
advance of the meeting.
Gerald W. Breazeale City
Manager
Published: October 5 &
12,2011
Affidavit
P U B L IC N O T IC E
City o f Irrigon Public
Notice
The C ity C ou n cil o f
Irrigon will hold a public
hearing on October 18,
2011 at 6:00 PM at Irrigon
City Hall, 500 NE Main
Avenue, Irrigon, Oregon,
regarding ORDINANCE
209-11,AN ORDINANCE
P R E S C R IB IN G THE
PERM ITTED LEGAL
GROWING OF MEDICAL
MARI J U ANA
IN
IRRIGON . Passage of the
ordinance would regulate
the growing of marijuana
for medical use within the
city limits of Irrigon. Any
objection or remonstrance
may be made in writing and
filed with the City prior to
the hearing. Objection or
remonstrance will be heard
at the hearing. Persons who
would like to attend and
need assistance are urged
to call Irrigon City Hall at
(541) 922-3047, or TTY
relay at (800) 735-2900 in
advance of the meeting.
Gerald W. Breazeale City
Manager
Published October 5 & 12,
2011
Affidavit
P U B L IC N O T IC E
City o f Irrigon Public
Notice
The C ity C ouncil o f
Irrigon will hold a public
hearing on October 18,
2011 at 6:00 PM at Irrigon
City Hall, 500 NE Main
Avenue, Irrigon, Oregori,
regarding ORDINANCE
208-1 l.AN ORDINANCE
AMENDING CITY CODE
TITLE 4, CHAPTER 1,
NUISANCES, SECTION
4-1-1, DEFINITIONS,
I N O P E R A B L E
VEHICLE.
Passage of the ordinance
would more clearly define
the d escrip tio n o f an
inoperable vehicle. Any
objection or remonstrance
may be made in writing and
filed with the City prior to
the hearing. Objection or
remonstrance will be heard
at the hearing. Persons who
would like to attend and
need assistance are urged
to call Irrigon City Hall at
(541) 922-3047, or TTY
relay at (800) 735-2900 in
advance of the meeting.
Gerald W. Breazeale City
Manager
Published: October 5 &
12,2011
Affidavit
P U B L IC N O T IC E
City o f Irrigon Public
Notice
The C ity C o u n cil o f
Irrigon -vYill hold a public
hearing on October 18,
2011 at 6:00 PM at Irrigon
City Hall, 500 NE Main
Avenue, Irrigon, Oregon,
regarding ORDINANCE
210-11, AN ORDINANCE
PROVIDING FOR ONE
INOPERABLE VEHICLE
TO BE A L L O W E D
TO BE KEPT FOR A
PARTS VEHICLE AND
E S T A B L IS H IN G A
PERMIT PROCEDURE
FOR SUCH USE. Passage
o f the ordinance would
provide for parking of a
"parts vehicle" outside of
a garage within the City
of Irrigon by permit. Any
objection or remonstrance
may be made in writing and
filed with the City prior to
the hearing. Objection or
remonstrance will be heard
at the hearing. Persons who
would like to attend and
need assistance are urged
to call Irrigon City Hall at
(541) 922-3047, or TTY
relay at (800) 735-2900 in
advance of the meeting.
Gerald W. Breazeale City
Manager
Published: October 5 &
12 , 2011
Affidavit
Plaintiff,
v s. SA M M Y EA R L
WOODALL,
Defendant.
PUBLISHED SUMMONS
No. 11CV142
TO:
SAMMY EARL
WOODALL, the above
named defendant.
IN THE NAME OF THE
STATE OF OREGON,
you are hereby required
to appear and defend the
Complaint filed against you
in the above-entitled Court
on or before the expiration
of 30 days from the date of
the first publication of this
Summons; if you fail to so
appear and answer, plaintiff
for want thereof will apply
to the above-entitled Court
for the relief prayed for in
the Complaint, to wit:
The c o m p la in t seeks
re c o v e ry a g a in st the
defendant Sammy Earl
Woodall for damages in
the amount of $ 105,817.50
for breach of a 2010 farm
partnership agreem ent
between the plaintiff and
defendant; for damages in
the amount of $ 105,817.50
for breach of the partnership
duties by defendant; for
damages in the amount of
$80,817.50 for breach of
a 2011 farming agreement
by defendant; for damages
in the amount of $15,000
for conversion of plaintiffs
p erso n al p ro p e rty by
defendant; and for damage
in the amount of $15,000
for trespass by defendant on
plaintiffs real property.
Additionally the plaintiff
seeks the dissolution of the
parties' farm partnership and
an accounting of its financial
activity. Also plaintiff seeks
specific performance of
the parties' 2011 farming
agreement and damages in
the amount of $53,557.52
for defendant's failure to
perform under the terms
of the agreement and for
plaintiffs attorney fees.
This Summons is published
by order of the Honorable
Ronald J. Pahl, judge of the
above- entitled Court made
and entered on the 29th
day of September, 2011,
directing publication of this
summons once each week
for four consecutive weeks
in the Heppner Gazette
Times, a
new spaper
published and of general
circulation in Morrow
County, Oregon.
Date of first publication:
October 5, 2011
Date of last publication:
October 26,2011
N O T I C E
TO
DEFENDANT: READ
THESE
PAPERS
CAREFULLY
You must "appear in this
case or the other side
will win automatically.
To "appear" you must
file with the court a legal
paper called a "motion" or
"answer". The "motion" or
"answer" (or "reply") must
be given to the court clerk
or administrator within 30
days of the date of first
publication specified herein
along with the required
filing fee. It must be in
proper form and have proof
of service on the plaintiff
attorney or, if the plaintiff
does not have an attorney,
proof of service on the
plaintiff.
If you have questions, you
should see an attorney
immediately. If you need
help in finding an attorney,
you may call the Oregon
State Bar Lawyer Referral
Service at (503) 684-3763
or toll free at (800) 452-
7636.
DATED this 30th day of
September, 2011.
William J. Kuhn
OSB No. 762075
Attorney for Plaintiff
P.O. Box 428
Heppner, OR 97836
Published: October 5, 12,
19 and 26, 2011
Affidavit
COUNTY
GOVERNMENT
-Continuedfrom PAGE county court now making
ONE all the decisions for the
p o in ted by the
county, not the cities.
Heppner City Man­
ager Dave DeMayo dis­
agreed that a committee
appointed by the county
could make any significant
changes.
“How can you be
inside an organization and
change it? You have to be
external,” he said.
Heppner resident
Louie Carlson was in at­
tendance at the meeting and
asked what the reason was
for wanting to change the
charter.
“The county court
has turned its back on the
cities,” Mayor Les Paustian
explained.
“If you are want­
ing to change the county
charter because of tippage
money, you are going down
the wrong path,” Carlson
told the mayor and city
manager.
“I think you are
justified in being put out (by
the county’s treatment of
the city). But I think this is
the wrong way to go,” said
Carlson, who is himself
a former Morrow County
Judge.
M ayor Paustian
said there are basically two
people on the three-member
NRCS announces
EQIP/WHIP cutoff
Local farmers and
ranchers interested in fi­
nancial and technical as­
sistance for conservation
Deadline for
measures on their working
classified advertising lands have until October 31
to apply for Environmental
Quality Incentives Program
Monday 5:00 pm
(EQIP) and Wildlife Habi­
CONTACT
tat Improvement Program
The Heppner Gazette-Times (WHIP) funding for Federal
fiscal year 2012.
PHONE: 541-676-9228
“EQIP and WHIP
FAX: 541-6769211
are
voluntary
conservation
EMAIL:
programs
to
help
farmers
megan@rapidserve.net
and ranchers improve and
enhance the condition of
water, soil, wildlife habitat,
and other natural resources
. UNITED states
Statement of Ownership, Management, and Circulation
E» (All Periodicals Publications Except Requestor Publications)
on private working lands,”
says Kacee Lathrop.
Heoprer ik-,p4e.-Tn^«.s
LM olh liH
The USDA Natural
Weetv^
’ll k n i n i
rc S s itK rs * ;
Resources Conservation
i&ft \M w.ivwjn w ijri, Hz.oofwr o < l q-ieau C .U I -I.H . S l z A Service (NRCS) accepts
applications for EQIP and
WHIP year-round. Fund­
ing decisions, however, are
fci/tA
PC)
I.Hr«»r>r.r Q i. qiM U
made at cutoff points during
the year, with the current
H ihum c (iL fli/LUo
ranking period closing on
October
31 for Morrow
rif-yn(\ SiAnS ■ Qn t,
Q(L_ÇTfeiC___
County. Applications that
address local conservation
Slatto
LLC
priorities are evaluated and
Pfl Rflr.îa~),
ûfc
tyiu'A
pn te..
OtLSlMU
ranked for funding. The
Q \f
^V«S
svj 6)^a. tioaSemrs û% Ç7fcc number o f applications
■AprfA
SU-S wvl
, Hg^teritr ¿it- UHU.
accepted will be based on
ranking and available fund­
ing.
« Mona rroMOnqr
P U B L IC N O T IC E
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT
OF THE STATE OF
OREGON
FOR THE COUNTY OF
MORROW
W. RONALD BECKET,
at Known O ften at PuM oafon (Nat eetrtm) (M oot a * . oourXy Mate unti
Coniaci Morion
10 Qwnor (Do no* I— » Mao* »»o »M 0 M o n M oowM »y o ooipoMfBn. gftte *0 nomo nnO oo M o m of (ho oorpofMon ImmodNM) toÊomudbytbm
Mountain Glen Apartments
Units Now Available
Two and Three Bedroom Apartments For Rent
Rent Based On Income
Modern Appliances • Laundry Facilities
Location behind Pioneer Memorial Hospital in Heppner
‘ ■r
1 Poroont or Mara olTom Amoum at Bond* Malaga*, a
For waiting list and application, call 676-9232 TDD
#1-800-545-1833 for hearing impaired
(2 Ta* «ah* (For oc
O Haa cnongod Durtng Pi
n '■•ça JH PSN 'ÎSOO’ 000003- PWVACY NOTICI t a ou. prtvocy potcy on »
Your ad will reach most newspapers in Oregon fo r only $200. Contract rate
discounts available upon request Oregon Classified Advertising Network A
service o f Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association.
V ^ P o n P . T - 6 r f V 7 d i u > - ~ T t r r v e \ __________
It M irtin a MMuroafOrautaMon
C ontact the H epp n e r Gazette-Tim es (541) 676-9228
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hiblished. October 12, 2011
I
flute, and is active
both in the community and
in St. Patrick’s Catholic
Church.
Wh i l e Mu r r a y
doesn’t like some aspects
of her job—such as strug­
gling with insurance com­
panies and squeezing pay­
ments from Medicaid—
helping people makes all
the struggles worthwhile.
She’s also quick to share
the acclaim, noting that she
has a hard-working, profes­
sional staff.
“ I c o u l d n ’t do
it without my pharmacy
team,” she says. “They’re
great.”
Daughter of Port
of Morrow Commissioner,
Larry Lindsay, and Corrine
Lindsay, Ann was bom and
raised in Morrow County.
When she married John
Murray, she married into
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Services
DIVORCE $135. Complete preparation. Includes
children, custody, support, property and bills division. No
court appearances. Divorced in 1-5 weeks possible. 503-
772-5295, www.paralegalaltematives.com, divorce@
usa.com.
Manufactured Homes
HAVE AN old mobilehome, 1973 or newer, that has
to be moved? Save thousands: we'll pick up. J and M
Homes, 541-928-1471.
WE HAVE MANY foreclosed and repossessed homes
available, new lists available every month. Call J and M
Homes. 541-928-1471.
Education/Schools
ALLIED HEALTH career training. Attend college
100% online. Job placement assistance. Computer
available. Financial aid if qualified. SCHEV certified.
Call 800-481-9409, www.CenturaOnIine.com.
Help Wanted
DRIVERS/COMPANY-Lease - Work for us or let
us work for you! Unbeatable career opportunities.
Trainee, company driver, lease operator, earn up to $5 lk.
Lease Trainers earn up to $80k. 877-369-7104. www.
centraltruckdrivingjobs.com.
-Continued from PAGE a family that has a long
ONE history of operating local
U M .O M t .C M M r O M M M
0 TMMNumMa at J
NRCS is prioritiz­
ing the ODFW’s Mule Deer
Initiative area, which is the
Heppner Unit, to improve
rangeland conditions. For
EQIP, conservation pri­
orities in Morrow County
may include practices that
address rangeland health,
such as grazing manage­
ment, stock water devel­
opments, cross fencing,
herbaceous weed control
of annual grasses and broa-
dleafs, rangeland seeding,
and wildlife habitat im­
provements.
This year, WHIP
will focus efforts on restor­
ing declining aspen stands
that provide year-round
benefits to wildlife and un­
derstory plant diversity.
“Even though the
Heppner Unit is thç target
area, I encourage anyone
thinking of implementing
conservation projects to
apply, as the focus area
will move in the future and
EQIP and WHIP funding
will be set aside for other
resource concerns,” says
Kacee Lathrop.
Interested parties
should contact the Heppner
USDA-NRCS service cen­
ter located at 430 Linden
Way or call 676-5021.
PHARMACIST OF
THE YEAR
This Institution is an Equal Opportunity Provider
STATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDS
county. He said the salaries
of approximately $35,000
per year for each of the
two commissioners could
be cut in half and two more
commissioners added, thus
not incurring any additional
expense. The county judge
makes about $65,000 per
year and is considered a
full-time position. Under
home rule, he would be
replaced by a full-time pro­
fessional administrator.
On the subject of
replacing elected positions
such as assessor, clerk,
treasurer and surveyor with
people appointed by the
court, Paustain said that
would not be such a bad
idea because “the elected
officials up there are not
very productive people.”
“If you (the mayor)
as a citizen of Heppner
think the charter should be
changed, that is your right.
I don’t think it is a city
function,” councilmember
High said.
The council appar­
ently agreed, and although
Paustian had already men­
tioned the names of two
Heppner residents who had
expressed interest in serv­
ing on the committee, the
council declined to make
any appointments.
pharmacies. Father-in-law
Rod Murray remains ac­
tive in the family’s Condon
store, and one of John’s
brothers and his sister are
both pharmacists. Ann and
John’s daughter, 23-year-
old Laurie, also plans to
follow her parents in the
profession. Laurie is in her
sixth year in the pharmacy
program at Oregon State
University. The couple also
has four sons, Luke, Sean,
Ian and Kevin.
With such close
connections to the commu­
nity, Ann says the best part
of her job is helping and
working with local friends
and family.
“When you know
people, you can make a
difference. You care,” she
says. “It’s never boring.”
I