Bulletin Daily Paper 01-28-15

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

WEDNESDAY January28,2015

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PrePbasketb SPORTS • C1

OUTDOORS • D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Turtle GPS —Howdoesa sea turtle find her waybackto the beach whereshewas born to lay her eggs?A3

OSU-CASCADES SITE DISPUTE

a enum r i

LEGISLATIVE PREVIEW

c o i nuesTransport

• Land useboard askscity, school andopponentsto stop filing spree

objections to the ordering of documents is a ploy to gain more time.

By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

The state has told the city of

Plus: Lunchtimewalks

— A little exercise canboost your mood during the workday, a new study says.A3

Bend, OSU-Cascades and opponents of the university's proposed campus to stop arguing over a legal document's table of contents. The dispute pits the city and

university against Truth In Site, an organization of neighbors

who argue the school's proposed west-side location will create a parking and traffic disaster. The legal battle has focused on whether the campus adheres to land use law, and an

independent hearings officer and the Bend City Council have sided with OSU-Cascades.

Most recently, however, Truth In Site appealed to the Oregon

Land Use Board of Appeals,

After a series of objections,

which can overturn a local land

responses and counter-respons-

use ruling. As part of LUBA's procedure, the city is required

es that began in early December, LUBA issued an order Jan.

to submit the entire record of documents that went into its

20 telling all three parties to

cease filing documents on the

By Taylor W.Anderson

decision-making process. A

matter. "LUBA will rule on the pend-

The Bulletin

ing objections to the record in due course," the order reads. SeeOSU-Cascades/A5

egon's legislative leaders on Tuesday showed there are plenty of issues they should easily agree

battle has erupted over whether the record,which isnearly 6,000

pages, is properly organized and whether Truth In Site's

SALEM — Or-

Political memorabiliaA man hopes to dohis father's collection justice — but the price tag is steep.A5

on in 2015. But when

talking about raising the gas tax to help fund transportation projects and creating permanent clean fuels require-

Office kitchens —Forget the simple break room. These firms make it the centerpiece of their office.C6

ments, dark clouds

to make hundreds of phone calls and arrange meetings for Coulibaly through the wives of fellow assailants. She is believed to have then

Emergency personnel pull injured Bendhiker Chris Brinegar, 35, up a steep section of cliff Tuesday along the Deschutes River after he fell from a rocky section near Dillon Falls. Brinegar wastaken to St. Charles Bendwith life-threatening injuries, according to a newsrelease from Deschutes County Sheriff's Lt. Bryan Husband. Brinegar was listed in critical condition Tuesday night, according to a hospital supervisor. About 30 to 40 responders were onthe sceneafter Brinegar, whowashiking with a friend, fell approximately 30 feet onto rocks near the river from the Deschutes River Trail early Tuesday afternoon, according to Husband.Thesite was about a quarter-mile downstream from theDillon Falls boat ramp. Bend Deputy Fire Marshal Dan Derlacki said because Brinegar dropped nearly vertically from the west side of the river canyon, it"tooka huge group effort" to set up andimplement a ropesystem to pull him out. Three firefighters and two police officers were down in the rocky canyon to lift Brinegar into a rescue basket. Then he was hoisted up, taken on awheeled litter back to theareanear the Dillon Falls boat ramp and loaded into anAirLink ambulance andtaken to the hospital. The rescuetook

fled to'Ibrkey just before

about 2~/2 hours.

the rash of killings in Paris this month, and she is since

Brinegar hadwalkeda short ways off the trail, lost his balanceandfell from the overlook, according to the news release. Husbandsaid alcohol might havebeena factor in the incident.

And a Web exclusiveWithout access to the Internet, youth in Cubacobble together a miniature web of their own. beutlbuuetiu.cem/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Female terrorists find place in the ranks By Molly Hennessy-Fiske Los Angeles Times

PARIS — From biki-

ni-clad beachgoer to veiled jihadist fugitive, the partner of Paris gunman Amedy Coulibaly underwent a startling metamorphosis that illuminates the dan-

gerous potential behind militant groups' efforts to increase their recruiting of female terrorists.

Although French police initially questioned Hayat Boumeddiene, 26, five

years ago, they acknowledge that she was later able

believed to have crossed

into Syria. "Hayat's case is just the latest example of how governments overlook and understate women's involve-

plan is a key issue in Salem

emerged. Speaking at a leg-

r'

islative panel hosted

by The Associated Press, House and Senate leaders from

both parties agreed

'I

the state's primary

focus is improving the education system. They agree some Oregon forests that are choked with fire fuels should be cleaned up and partially logged to improve forest

health. They agree there should be btpartisanship this session when it comes

to improving rural economies. But there are is-

sues that could put vital legislation in doubt after the Legislature convenes Monday. The state needs more money for its roads. About a quarter of its transporta-

(

tion funding comes from the federal government through a line that nearly dried up last year and has become inconsistent

e

nationwide.

SeeSalem/A5 1

II

Governor

airs pot concerns By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin

SALEM — One

thing Gov. John Kitzhaber and his

— Bulletin staff report

Republican challeng-

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

ment in terrorist groups,"

er, Dennis Richard-

said Jayne Huckerby, an

Seattle will publicly shame non-composters

son, shared during the campaign was their opposition to the ballot measure that will legalize marijuanainOregon starting in July.

By Roberto A. Ferdman

composting a habit. But come

Now re-elected, Kitzhaber still has

June, after a public education

issues with what

campaign lasting several months about the new rules, violators will begin facing fines — $1 per infraction for households, and $50 per breach by apartment buildings and businesses. SeeSeattle/A5

juana will look like in his state, and he's sending his thoughts to the people in charge of the coming regulations. SeeGovernor/A5

associateprofessor at Duke University law school who

studies the groups and advises governments in counterterrorism strategies.

Female terrorists have a long history of exploiting gender stereotypes to avoid detection, and though counterterrorism

measures have become more effective, experts

The Washington Post

Too lazy to separate your trash? Too bad if you're living in Seattle.

Seattle began enforcing this

mercial establishments, must have a composting service haul away their food waste, drive

the waste to a processing site or compost it themselves at home

said the Paris attacks show that more needs to be

month a new law, which aims to

or on-site.

done to stem the growing

curb the amount of food sent to

The law applies not only to food but also any cardboard or

number of women like

landfills. As of Jan. 1, residents

paper with food on it.

Boumeddiene joining mili-

of the city, including all com-

For those unwilling to coop-

erate, there will be a price. For now, the cost of defiance will come in the form of public shaming. Those who refuse to separate their garbage will find their bins tagged with a red sign for all to see. The hope is that the tags will

help serve as both a warning as well as an incentive to make

recreational mari-

tants in Syria. Women comprise about

10 percent of those joining Islamic State from Europe, about 20 percent of those

joining from France, Huckerby said. SeeFemale/A4

TODAY'S WEATHER Mostlycloudy High 52, Low32 Page B6

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope 0 6 Outdoors B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State Bf-6 Sports Ef-6 Dear Abby 06 Ob i tuaries B5 TV/Movies

AnIndependent

D1 - 6 C1-4 D6

Q i/i/e use recycled newsprint

v<>l. iia, No. ze, 30 pages, 5 sections

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IIIIIIIIIIIIII 88267 02329


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