September 1 - IPT general excellence

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Monday, September 1, 2014

Teachers emphasize hard work with AVID program

50 YEARS OF WILDERNESS

INTO THE WILD

Vallivue expands college readiness program to elementary school level By KELCIE MOSELEY kmoseley@idahopress.com

© 2014 Idaho Press-Tribune

CALDWELL — Jon Zubizarreta’s classroom is decorated, but not with periodic table charts and motivational phrases — his walls are covered with college flags. Zubizarreta is the one and only teacher for the AVID program at Vallivue High School, otherwise known as “Advancement Via Individual Determination.” This is the third year the program has been in place at the high school and Sage Valley Middle School. This year, it has also expanded to the fourth- and fifth-grade classrooms.

Please see AVID, A13

Plan outlines 161,400 acres suitable for wilderness designation By RICH LANDERS

N

The Spokesman-Review

orthern Idaho’s backcountry rivals any area in the state. It’s wild, rugged and home to wolves, grizzly bears and the rarest of North American big-game species, the woodland caribou. But there’s no official wilderness north of U.S. Highway 12 and the Selway-Bitterroot area. The southern two-thirds of Idaho may be famous for spuds, but wilderness is the Panhandle’s hot potato. On the eve of the 50th anniversary of the wilderness act, the Forest Service released a management plan, years in the making, that outlines 161,400 acres suitable for official wilderness designation in the 2.5 million acres of the Idaho Panhandle National Forests. Many of the roadless areas highlighted in the 1987 version of the forest plan have been protected and still qualify for official wilderness, the most restrictive land category in the agency’s management repertoire. Use of motorized vehicles and equipment, including chainsaws, is prohibited in wilderness areas as well as mechanical equipment such

Magistrate judge: Judicial system might favor affluent offenders By LAURIE WELCH, The Times-News

Photos by Rich Landers/The Spokesman-Review

Top: Mountain goats often greet hikers at the top of Scotchman Peak, a popular trail destination in the proposed Scotchman Peaks Wilderness north of Lake Pend Oreille. The roadless area has garnered the most consensus for wilderness designation in the Idaho Panhandle. Directly above: Rachael Reckin, Kootenai National Forest archeologist, and Phil Hough of the Friends of the Scotchman Peaks Wilderness, check out views on the trail to Star Peak, a destination in the proposed wilderness spanning the Idaho-Montana border. The area overlooks the Clark Fork River and Lake Pend Oreille.  EDITOR’S NOTE: Idaho’s largest newspapers – the Post Register, the Idaho Statesman, the Lewiston Tribune, the Idaho Press-Tribune and the Spokesman Review – have collaborated on a four-part series about wilderness in Idaho. Today’s story celebrates the Wilderness Please see Wilderness, A11 Act 50 years ago on Sept. 3.

as mountain bikes. Nearly 7 percent of the IPNF is recommended for wilderness or wilderness study in the 2013 plan – an acreage increase of 8 percent since the last plan was approved 25 years ago.

Feds examine stricter railroad rights of way rules

U.S. Department of the Interior’s office says it was too lenient with land usage 15 years ago By KEITH RIDLER The Associated Press

BOISE — Thousands of miles of active railroad tracks in 11 Western states cross public land on 200-foot-wide rights of way granted under an 1875 law intended to encourage westward expansion. But the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Office of the Solicitor determined it made a mistake 15 years ago by allow Deaths Norma Adams Bob Brown

ing too much discretion on what modern-day railroads can build or allow third parties to build on that land. A proposed water pipeline in California having nothing to do with railroad operations prompted the agency to fix the 1989 error that could also be used to put in oil or natural gas pipelines. In mid-August, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management issued a memorandum to field AP Photo/Flathead Beacon, Justin Franz, File offices about the change that requires rights of way work to In this Sept. 18, 2011 file photo, Amtrak’s Empire Builder rounds a turn near East serve railroad operations only. Glacier Park, Mont. The U.S. Bureau of Land Management says it made a mistake

Richard Cowdery Ray James Mardi Keen

Probation fees show the high cost of being poor

giving active railroads too much discretion on what can be built on 200-foot-wide

Please see Railroad, A11 rights-of-way crossing thousands of miles of public land in 11 western states. Wayne Mai Ruby Reese  Obituaries, A7

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Classifieds ������� C4-5 Comics ��������������� C3 Legals ��������� C4, 7-8

Lottery �������������� A2 Movies �������������� A2 Opinion ����������� A12

BURLEY (AP) — Staying out of jail on probation is expensive, with costs hitting hard for those who are less affluent. In Idaho, people who can readily pay misdemeanor fines and court costs often get waived through the system if they don’t have prior criminal history or drug and alcohol issues. But if their wallet doesn’t allow immediate payment, they are sometimes put on probation, though some judges grant extended time to get fees paid. The cost difference can run nearly $1,000 a year. The judicial system might favor an affluent offender, who can more easily pay fines and fees and might not have to go to court or on probation, agreed Rick Bollar, Minidoka County magistrate judge. “There has always been a concern in the judicial system about how much justice can be bought,” Bollar said. “But if creating structure for an individual through probation by means of compliance in maintaining insurance and employment creates disparity, hopefully probation also does some good for that person.” If the crime was violent, such as domestic violence, or the person has drug or alcohol issues, he goes on supervised probation. In those cases, a judge also can order random drug and alcohol testing twice monthly, which can be adjusted by the probation officer.

Please see Probation, A13

There has always been a concern in the judicial system about how much justice can be bought.” RICK BOLLAR Minidoka County magistrate judge

CORRECTION Concordia University School of Law is a nonprofit organization. An article in the Sunday edition of the Idaho Press-Tribune mistakenly identified the college as a for-profit school. Weather ������������ A2

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A2

LOCAL NEWS

Idaho Press-Tribune • Monday, September 1, 2014

Tuesday

Today’s Forecast (NOAA)

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

idahopress.com

Sunday

Idaho temperatures

SUNRISE: 7:09 a.m. SUNSET: 8:20 p.m. MOON

Statistics as of 6:20 p.m. yesterday (NOAA)

Station

1st qtr. Full Last qtr. New 09/02 09/08 09/15 09/24

Sunny, warmer

Sunny

Sunny

74/52

87/53

79/51

Mostly sunny Mostly sunny

76/50

Partly cloudy

79/51

81/55

Partly cloudy

83/56

Wind E 10 mph

Wind NW 10 mph

Forecast highs for Monday, Sept. 1

Sunny

Pt. Cloudy

City Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Birmingham Bismarck Boston Buffalo Casper Charleston,S.C. Charlotte,N.C. Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Columbus,Ohio Dallas-Ft Worth Des Moines Detroit El Paso

Cloudy

Seattle 74° | 55° Billings 75° | 52°

Storm Tracker 2

FORECAST Clear skies and light winds will make for a chilly start to your Labor Day with morning lows dipping down into the lower 50s. Sunny but cool for Labor Day with a high of 79. We will have more of a westerly or southwesterly flow for warmer temperatures on Tuesday with highs near 87 under sunny skies. No precipitation expected Wednesday and Thursday, but look for cooler temperatures with highs in the mid 70s both days. Highs rebound into the lower 80s for next weekend. The Idaho Press-Tribune and KBOI have partnered to bring more accurate weather reports to you daily. Nampa temperatures are taken from the weather station located at the Idaho Press-Tribune. Also visit idahopress.com for morning and late afternoon video weather reports provided by KBOI.

Minneapolis 76° | 66°

San Francisco 74° | 60°

Chicago 83° | 71°

Denver 80° | 50°

Los Angeles 83° | 67°

Detroit 85° | 69°

New York 86° | 73° Washington D.C. 90° | 73°

Atlanta 93° | 72°

El Paso 99° | 70° Houston 90° | 78°

Cold

-0s

0s

10s

20s 30s 40s

50s 60s

Warm Stationary

70s

80s

Pressure Low

Stats as of 1 p.m. yesterday (Weather Underground) Rain

Billings Denver Portland,Ore. Salt Lake City Seattle Spokane

Hi Lo Pre.

74 56 78 53 77 58 76 61 70 57 .13 71 53

Stats as of 7 p.m. yesterday (AP)

Hi Lo Prc 92 66 61 42 89 71 .48 89 72 92 73 .50 91 71 78 61 .43 85 67 75 71 .26 73 46 .13 93 75 91 74 .06 71 53 .03 85 68 81 71 .03 82 73 1.84 95 76 89 68 84 68 .04 100 71

Otlk Clr PCldy PCldy Rain Cldy PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy PCldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Rain Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Rain Clr

Fairbanks Fargo Great Falls Helena Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jackson,Miss. Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Miami Beach Milwaukee Mpls-St Paul Nashville New Orleans

52 34 75 60 .19 70 47 71 50 87 74 82 73 MM 83 69 .01 86 73 93 71 54 52 .38 93 67 104 80 87 74 87 69 79 73 .06 88 74 .28 92 81 78 64 85 62 84 71 .94 92 74 .18

Rain PCldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Clr Rain Rain Clr PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Rain Cldy PCldy Cldy

New York City 90 73 .62 Oklahoma City 97 70 Omaha 85 69 .02 Orlando 93 76 .05 Pendleton 76 51 Philadelphia 93 72 .92 Phoenix 109 84 Pittsburgh 76 69 1.06 Portland,Maine 85 62 .02 Raleigh-Durham 91 73 Rapid City 72 51 .90 Reno 89 56 Richmond 94 74 Sacramento 95 63 St Louis 93 73 San Diego 77 68 San Francisco 75 62 Sioux Falls 82 64 Tucson 102 74 Washington,D.C. 96 77 Wichita 99 71

Rain PCldy Cldy PCldy Clr Rain Clr Cldy PCldy PCldy Cldy Clr PCldy Clr Rain PCldy Clr PCldy Clr Cldy PCldy

BLUE TURF

High

90s 100s 110s

Global temperatures Showers

City

Miami 88° | 79°

Fronts

-10s

Stats as of 7 p.m. yesterday (AP)

49 71 0.07 55 70 0.00 50 69 0.10 49 71 0.01 42 64 0.04 49 75 0.10 49 78 0.07 52 71 T 48 66 0.32 52 70 0.05 40 65 0.03 51 72 0.02

CALDWELL AIRPORT High/Low temperatures............................ 73/46 Average high/low temps........................... 85/56 Total precipitation yesterday...................... 0.00” IDAHO PRESS-TRIBUNE High/Low temperatures............................ 75/52 Average high/low temps........................... 85/56 Total precipitation yesterday...................... 0.00” BOISE AIRPORT High/Low temperatures............................ 74/48 Average high/low temps........................... 85/56 Record high/low............ 102 in 2004/39 in 1887 Total precipitation yesterday.......................0.00” Total precip. month to date.........................0.16” Total precip. year to date.............................8.61” Total precip. year to date last year ��������������4.91”

U.S. temperatures

National forecast

Deni Hawkins

Northwest temperatures

CHALLIS COEUR D ALENE IDAHO FALLS JEROME MCCALL MTN HOME AFB ONTARIO OR POCATELLO REXBURG SALMON STANLEY TWIN FALLS

Lo Hi Pre.

Almanac as of 6 p.m. yesterday (NOAA)

T-storms

Flurries

Snow

H STATS F VIDEOS

Ice

Location Lo Hi Condition London 54 68 clr Baghdad 115 pcPossible For The MexicoGreat City Lakes 59 72 rn Strong 84 Storms Beijing 64 79 rn Paris 55 70 pc Showers and thunderstorms will be likely from the Great Lakes to Berlin 54 68 cdy Rome 68 86 pc Guatemala 64 75 rn Sydney 50 68 pc the Central Plains, where some strong storms will be possible. Kabul 63 86 pc Tokyo 70 79 rn Showers and thunderstorms will also extend from New England to

1132203

H STORIES F STANDINGS

H ROSTERS F SCHEDULES

H BRONCO BANTER

BEST BOISE STATE SPORTS COVERAGE. PERIOD.

the Southeast.

Weather Underground • AP

LOTTERY

Drawings: Sun., Aug. 31

Local raw milk believed to be cause of illness PARMA — Public health officials are recommending throwing away raw milk from a Parma producer after two associated cases of illness were reported. Officials said Sunday that two Canyon County residents who consumed raw goat milk from Treasured Sunrise Acres in Parma have been diagnosed with Cryptosporidiosis. The milk was produced between Aug. 24 and Aug. 31, and sold in stores in Boise, Caldwell, Ketchum and Star. Treasured Sunrise Acres Dairy, Idaho State Department of Agriculture, and local and state pub-

Pick 3: Day 7 3 7 Night 4 5 8 lic health officials say that anyone who purchased raw goat or cow milk during that time should discard it immediately. Cryptosporidiosis, or Crypto, is a microscopic parasite causing a diarrheal illness. Common symptoms include diarrhea, stomach cramps or pain, dehydration (which is often most serious in the very young and the very old), nausea, vomiting, fever and weight loss. Symptoms usually begin 2 to 10 days after infection and normally last for one to two weeks. Once a person is infected, the parasites live in the intestines and are passed in the stool. Those who have consumed the raw milk product and are experiencing symptoms are advised to

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consult their health care or legal holiday, it delays Allied provider for testing and Waste in Canyon County for a day. treatment. If the holiday falls on the weekend,

Holiday closings Here’s a look at what’s open and closed for Labor Day: n Government offices: State, Canyon County, and Nampa and Caldwell city offices are closed. n Trash service: Pickles Butte Landfill in Canyon County is closed. Trash pickups: Allied Waste and Benjamin’s Rural Disposal will be delayed by one day for the rest of the week. Pickups normally scheduled for today will be picked up on Tuesday and so on for the rest of the week. NOTE: Whenever Pickles Butte Landfill is closed on a weekday

idahopress.com/calendar Don’t see your event here? Add it and view more events at idahopress.com/ calendar.

Wednesday CALDWELL — Caldwell Farmers Market, 3-7 p.m. Indian Creek, Seventh and Blaine. Every Wednesday afternoon until Sept. 10, Caldwell will host its farmers market. The market will feature fresh and local produce, speciality foods, baked goods and local crafts. Each week, there will be hot

Transportation Public Comment Open House, 10 a.m.-7:30 p.m. COMPASS, 700 NE Second St., First Floor Board Room. COMPASS is food and live entertainment soliciting comments through available. For information, Sept. 9 on projects, plans visit caldwellidfarmersmarket. and reports that will help com. shape the Treasure Valley’s BOISE — Idaho Job and transportation system over Career Fair, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. the next five years. At the The Riverside Hotel, 2900 open house, you can review W. Chinden. Attend the free materials, ask questions and Idaho Job and Career Fair submit comments. Learn to help local businesses more at compassidaho.org. and local organizations find interested candidates Friday who are in between jobs or looking for a new career. PARMA — Annual The fair will also feature free University of Idaho workshops on resume and Fruit Field Day, 8:30 a.m. interviews. University of Idaho Parma MERIDIAN — Research Orchard, 31727

Curing the

Incurable!

stores are open. South to 14th Avenue South each n Karcher Mall will be open today Saturday from 6 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. through Oct. 25 for the Nampa from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Benjamin’s Rural runs as usual. Farmers Market. n Postal services: Post offices will n Northside Boulevard, lane be closed and only express mail will restrictions while bridges are be delivered. Regular mail delivery repaired. and post office hours will resume n Interstate 84 westbound offNAMPA Tuesday. ramp, auxiliary left turn lane closed n Intersection of Third Street n Banks: Most banks are closed during restriction on Northside South and 12th Avenue South, and will resume normal hours on Boulevard. closed Thursday night. Tuesday. n Sunnyridge Road from East n Intersection of Third Street n Schools: All local schools are Hawaii Avenue to East Greenhurst South and 11th Avenue South, closed. The College of Western Road, closed through Sept. 22 for Idaho offices will be closed. Classes closed Tuesday, Wednesday and street repairs. Friday night. will resume Tuesday. n Intersection Second Street n Libraries: The Caldwell and CALDWELL South and 12th Avenue South, Nampa public libraries will be n Marble Front Road near closed Thursday night. closed. n Intersection of Second Street Bridgeport Avenue, lane closure n Bus service: Valley Ride will through Sept. 30 while overhead South and 11th Avenue South, not operate routes today, but will transformers are changed. closed Tuesday, Wednesday and return to normal times Tuesday. n Happy Day Boulevard near n Supermarkets: Most supermarFriday night. n Timbre Drive, lane closure though kets will be open. Front Street is closed to n Liquor stores: State-run liquor through traffic from 13th Avenue Sept. 15.

Road report

Parma Road. A free field day, tour and fruit tasting event presented by the University of Idaho Extension Pomology Program and College of Agricultural and Life Sciences. No registration required. Call 722-6701 ext. 228 or 7226701 Ext. 225 if you have questions. EAGLE — Baldapalooza, 4-10 p.m. Merrill Park, 637 E. Shore Dr. A family friendly music festival benefitting Camp Rainbow Gold. Featuring country artist Ashley Monroe, Fictionist, We are the Strike, Mimi Knowles, Waking Jordan, Desirae Bronson and more. $20 admission.

International speaker, Elise Moore of Nashville, Tennessee, has been chaplain to homeless, organized adult literacy programs and after school program for minority youth, been in Christian healing ministry since 1985.

.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..

Until September 30, we are offering Kids shatter resistant Trivex lenses with no-glare coating and sun darkening Transitions for $149.00. That's over a $300.00 Value. Advanced Eyecare also offers a 1yr. Warranty on lenses and frames. Dr. Watson is accepting new patients. Make an appointent today.

. . . (PG) . . . (PG) . (PG-13) . (PG-13) . (PG-13) . (PG-13) . (PG-13) . . . . (R) . . . . (R) . . . . (R)

Some insurance restrictions may apply.

LIVE STAND-UP COMEDY Friday, September 5th 7pm & 9pm

www.northernlightsCINEMAGRILL.com hotline: 208-475-2999

Weekdays – 6 a.m. to 6 p.m., Saturday & holidays – 6:30 a.m. to noon, Sunday – 6:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Delivery schedule: 6 a.m. weekdays, 7 a.m. weekends and holidays

IPT Newsroom

News Hotline & corrections: 465-8124 • Fax 467-9562 • newsroom@idahopress.com Editor: Scott McIntosh, 465-8110, smcintosh@idahopress.com Sports Editor: John Wustrow • 465-8154 • sports@idahopress.com Sports scores: 465-8111 • sports@idahopress.com Community: Jordan Gray, 465-8158, community@idahopress.com Obituaries: 465-8128 (weekdays), 465-8124 (weekends) Letters to the editor: 465-8115 • op-ed@idahopress.com

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© 2014 Vol. 35, No. 62, 26 pages

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For A

Maleficent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . How to Train Your Dragon 2 . . . . Step Up All In . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Transformers: Age of Extinction. And So It Goes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Edge of Tomorrow . . . . . . . . . . Sex Tape. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tammy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Jersey Boys. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Jump Street. . . . . . . . . . . . .

Healings of

Saturday

Kids Back To School Specials

KETS JUST TIC

Sunday, September 7, 2014 at 3pm Hampton Inn & Suites Next to the Idaho Center 5750 E. Franklin Rd, Nampa, Id

ABOUT

NAMPA — Nampa High Class of 1959 Reunion. Call Pat at 442-9330 or Claretta at 466-2583 for information.

NAMPA — Pet Haven annual fundraiser, 4-8 p.m., Nampa Civic Center Garden, 311 Third St. n Musical entertainment from Freestyle, silent auction, raffle and a variety of concessions and will be available. Admission is $5 or $15 for a family. Tickets may be purchased at the door or in advance at the Pet Haven Shelter, 333 W. Orchard Ave., Nampa, or at the Pet Haven 1136071 Thrift Store, 619 Main St., ® Caldwell. MIDDLETON — Middleton www.reeltheatre.com 377-2620 2104 Caldwell Blvd High School Class of NEWLY NEWL YREMODELED REMODELED ‘57 Potluck, 11 a.m. to 5 DOLBY® 7.1 SOUND, DIGITAL CINEMA p.m. Middleton Park. All LEATHER SEATING, 100+ SODA FLAVORS YOUR BEST VALUE IN Middleton students, family, FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT spouses, and friends are

By Elise Moore

HEAR

Friday-Saturday

1152922

466-9251

1141884

invited. Lunch at noon at the Middleton Park. For details, contact Lanetta at 585-6668, Jewel at 466-3849; or Darlyne at (541) 447-7386. Everyone is welcome. CALDWELL — Caldwell Gun Show, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. O’Connor Field House, 2207 Blaine St. Tickets $6. Information at gunsmokegunshows.com. GREENLEAF — Tractor Pull and Harvest Festival, 11 a.m., Greenleaf Air Ranch, Peckham Road Description: Tractor Pull and Harvest Festival. This is a familyfriendly, no-alcohol event. There will be cars, planes and tractors on display. Bring your chair and sit under canopies and enjoy a great day in Greenleaf. NAMPA — Colin Muldoon, 6 p.m., Artistblue Gallery in Karcher Mall, 1509 Caldwell Blvd. Colin Muldoon travels all over Idaho. He plays all the favorites: classic country, rock and original Americana music. Free. NAMPA — “The Art Chautauqua Variety Show,” 8 p.m., Artistblue Gallery in Karcher Mall, 1509 Caldwell Blvd. Starring Emmanuel Vera IV and Dustin Chalifoux as Chalivera. They bring the humor with musical stylings and poetry. Hosted by Joey Maxey, there will be short films from the Boise film underground and even belly dancing.

Sunday CALDWELL — Caldwell Gun Show, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. O’Connor Field House, 2207 Blaine St. Tickets $6. Information at gunsmokegunshows.com.

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President & Publisher: Matt Davison • 465-8101 • mdavison@idahopress.com Finance Director: Rhonda McMurtrie • 465-8170 • rmcmurtrie@idahopress.com Circulation/Production Director: Roger Stowell • 475-2400 • rstowell@idahopress.com IT Director: Joe Hansen • 465-8171 • jhansen@idahopress.com Commercial Print Coordinator: Victor Kunkel • 465-8195 • cprinting@idahopress.com

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LOCAL/REGIONAL NEWS

Idaho Press-Tribune • Monday, September 1, 2014

A3

Feds want nuclear waste train, but nowhere to go Interim test storage site planned for 2021, long-term depository for 2048 By RAY HENRY The Associated Press

ATLANTA — The U.S. government is looking for trains to haul radioactive waste from nuclear power plants to disposal sites. Too bad those trains have nowhere to go. Putting the cart before the horse, the U.S. Department of Energy recently asked companies for ideas on how the government should get the rail cars needed to haul 150-ton casks filled with used, radioactive nuclear fuel. They won’t be moving anytime soon. The latest

government plans call for having an interim test storage site in 2021 and a longterm geologic depository in 2048. No one knows where those sites will be, but the Obama administration is already thinking about contracts to develop, test and certify the necessary rail equipment. U.S. Energy Department officials did not return messages seeking detailed comment. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission and Department of Transportation share responsibility for regulating shipments. “We know we’re going to have to do it, so you might as well do it,” said James Conca, senior scientist at the geoscience and environmental

consulting firm UFA Ventures Inc. He has monitored a nuclear waste disposal site, helped design another and worked on cleanup efforts. In a public solicitation, the Energy Department asked for opinions on whether it should buy or lease the rail cars. It expects the cars could last 30 years, run at standard speeds on regular tracks, accommodate the heavy protective casks and be used up to eight times annually. Besides a car to carry the cask, the trains would have buffer cars to maintain a safe distance between the crew and the radioactive cargo. The U.S. military already sends fuel by rail from its reactors on Navy ships to federal labs for

storage. The civilian power industry hauled more than 2,300 tons by rail from 1979 to 2007, averaging just over nine trips annually, according to NRC data. Nuclear fuel is extremely hot and radioactive when it is removed from a reactor. Utilities first cool spent fuel in a water-filled pool, then can transfer it to massive casks that sit on land. Neither option is supposed to be final. By law, the federal government is responsible for nuclear fuel disposal and once charged electric customers to fund its work. After a lawsuit, the Energy Department quit collecting that fee this year. No one is certain what comes next.

AP Photo/Idaho National Laboratory

In this undated photo released by the Idaho National Laboratory, rail cars carry spent nuclear fuel headed to a federal laboratory in Idaho. The U.S. Department of Energy recently asked for suggestions on getting rail cars to haul used, radioactive fuel from civilian nuclear power reactors to a final depository. However, the U.S. government hasn’t decided where that used fuel will ultimately go.

A COMMUNITY UNITED

American Heritage Wildlife Foundation ‘keeping North Idaho wild’ Nonprofit helps rehab injured, orphaned animals By IDAHO PRESS-TRIBUNE STAFF newsroom@idahopress.com

Environmentalist Baba Dioum said, “In the end, we will conserve only what we love; we will love only what we understand. We will understand only what we are taught.” For the American Heritage Wildlife Foundation, that love is animals. From ducklings and geese to pine squirrels, raccoons and more, the foundation works to preserve northern Idaho wildlife species by rehabilitating injured or orphaned animals. The Idaho Press-Tribune found out more about how the nonprofit organization operates. Idaho Press-Tribune: What is your mission or goal and how do you accomplish it? American Heritage Wildlife Foundation: Our mission is to preserve local wildlife species through rehabilitation of the injured or orphaned, and community education. We have rehabilitation permits from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service-Migratory Bird Department for all species of birds. We also have Idaho State Fish

Nampa mom accused of DUI with kids in car

NAMPA — Nampa Police say a 33-year-old woman is accused of excessive DUI and two counts of injury to a child after she was stopped attempting to leave the parking lot of a Nampa

DUI report The following people were sentenced the week of Aug. 18 in 3rd District Court for misdemeanor driving under the influence: Frances Jane Urresti, 35 (second offense) Jonathan M. Schrenk, 31 (second offense, withheld) Mike Edward Neal, 44 Heather Ashley Holmes, 29 (withheld) Mark D. Tatum, 55 (withheld) Samantha Rae Solberg, 43 (second offense) Armando Mendoza Jr., 53 Robert Eugene Halbert, 55 Deneen Carol Longley, 50 Wayne Earl Modin, 44 (withheld) Hilario Robles Rodriguez Jr., 29 (excessive) Chance J. Kateley, 19 (under age 21) Joya G. Sales, 40 (withheld) Jason Collins, 41 Marco Arriaga, 21 Casey Joe Reed, 38

Felonies: Octavio R. Gonzalez, 27, was found guilty of felony driving under the influence (second or subsequent excessive offense) and sentenced to four years in prison with one year fixed by Judge Molly J. Huskey. Huskey suspended the sentence in favor of 180 days in jail. Driver’s license suspended for three years. Three years supervised C M Y K

and Game permits to provide rehabilitative care for small mammals and birds. We have verbal permission to respond to large game species, but we need to construct additional enclosures to gain the permit. Our lead wildlife specialist has over 20 years (of) experience working with domestic, exotic and wild animals at shelters, ranches and zoos. IPT: What is the history of your organization? AHWF: The idea for American Heritage Wildlife Foundation began in the early 1990s when a zookeeper moved to the area and wanted to find work.

The only animal facility was the newly formed animal shelter. There was nowhere to call for wild animal information. The 501(c)3 organization and Idaho State nonprofit incorporation paperwork for AHWF was filed and approved in 2001. The goal of constructing the first nature center of North Idaho, as important as it is, has had to be sidelined due to the increased demand on helping the injured orphaned wildlife patients. Each year the numbers increase, and despite having paying jobs, hundreds of hours must be given to help the animals in need. This year alone, AHWF has responded to almost 200 phone calls. The number of animals taken in is 66. Each animal requires anywhere from two hours to round the clock care daily. The cost is $200 or more per animal to provide proper medical attention, heat, shelter, food and water. IPT: How do you raise money? How do you use that money? AHWF: AHWF is supported solely with community support. We do not receive federal, state or local government funding. We rely on our community to provide financial and volunteer support. Annually, our volunteers contribute

business with her two small children in the car. Lisa Pollock of Nampa admitted to Lisa Pollock drinking before driving, police said, and she failed all field sobriety tests that were offered at the scene on

12th Avenue Road. A later breathalyzer test showed that Pollock was more than four times over the legal limit to drive, police said. According to police, Pollock was booked into the Canyon County Jail for excessive DUI and two counts of injury to a child, and her children were placed in protective custody.

UPCOMING EVENTS TO SUPPORT AHWF On Sept. 1, we will have a drawing for a truckload of firewood. The tickets are $5 each or five for $20. The almost oneand-a-half cord of firewood is mostly buckskin red fir already split and will be delivered to the winners home for free, within a 20-mile radius of Clark Fork. On Sept. 13, we will have a benefit dinner at Clark Fork’s Squeeze Inn. American Heritage Wildlife Foundation will receive 10 percent. A local musician has volunteered to entertain with his acoustic guitar.

around 2,000 hours. We have no paid staff. We gain additional financial support by writing grants. As a nonprofit, we watch our budget closely and, to maintain the confidence of our public, we do not spend more than 49 percent of our entire budget on fundraising or marketing efforts. That number has been established by the ‘bulldog agencies’ that keep watch on all nonprofits. Our animal care and education costs on average require 70 to 80 percent of our budget. The remaining 20 to 30 percent pays for the website, phone book listing and public booth space rent. Several programs are implemented in an effort to raise funds. Through our website, ahwf.org, you can click on the variety of links or simply review details about them all. Examples are the Yokes Fresh Market or Fred Meyers Community Rewards Card program, subscriptions to Birdwatchers Digest and other popular magazines, direct

online donation buttons such as Network for Good and JustGive, downloading tool bars like Goodsearch, signing up for online shopping programs like iGive, merchandise through CafePress and five children’s stories specially written and illustrated for AHWF. We are a membership supported organization, with eight different categories; the forms can be downloaded. Additionally at our public awareness booths we often have hand crafted merchandise available. A local photographer has donated several of his copyrighted images of wildlife. Some of these images are framed and are available for a reasonable donation. We have just started our ‘one foot’ campaign. We want to purchase the land we are leasing. The two acres is 80,000 square feet. The selling price is $80,000. Different categories have been established, and the donors will be recognized by placing a wild animal

footprint with their name on the nature walk. Details are found on our Razoo page. So far funding for almost 500 square feet has been raised. This property is a certified wildlife habitat. It has a residence which will be converted into a nature center with classrooms. The land also is ideal to have a winding nature walk through the diverse habitat. IPT: What can local residents do to help? AHWF: Residents can help American Heritage Wildlife Foundation by contributing treasure or talent. Simple things like saving and delivering old newspapers to us, recycling aluminum cans and donating the proceeds, liking our Facebook page, following us on Twitter, reading our blog, pinning our photos on Pinterest, joining our LinkedIn group and watching and sharing our Vimeo or Youtube videos all contribute to our important mission of keeping North Idaho wild.

Local Crime Stoppers Most Wanted Do you have information that could lead to an arrest? If you have any info about these crimes or any of the people involved, you are urged to call Crime Stoppers at 343-COPS or submit a tip at www.343cops.com. You will remain anonymous. Crime Stoppers will pay a cash reward of up to $1,000 if the information leads to an arrest and charges are filed. Do not attempt to apprehend any of these people. Call 911 in an emergency.

Jacob Ray Palmer, 23 WARRANTS: $10,000 CRIMINAL HISTORY: Burglary, petit theft DESCRIPTION: Male, 5 feet 10, 175 pounds, blonde hair, blue eyes

Onecimo Canedo Pulido, 28 ALIAS: Pulido Canedo Onecimo WARRANTS: $100,000 CRIMINAL HISTORY: Excessive DUI, failure to purchase a driver’s license DESCRIPTION: Male, 5 feet 4, 155 pounds, black hair, brown eyes probation. Fined $585.50. Ilario Hehoyos Fuentez, 41, was found guilty of felony driving under the influence (third or subsequent offense) and sentenced to 10 years in prison with two years fixed by Judge Thomas J. Ryan. Driver’s license suspended for three years. Fined $635.50.

Daniel Clinton Adams, was found guilty on felony driving under the influence (third or subsequent offense) and sentenced to eight years in prison with three years fixed by Judge George A. Southworth. Driver’s license suspended for three years. Four years supervised probation. Fined $875.

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LOCAL/REGIONAL NEWS

Idaho Press-Tribune • Monday, September 1, 2014

Muslim cemetery proposed for Kuna creates stir KUNA — The Islamic Community of Bosniaks in Boise submitted a proposal for a license to use land outside Kuna as a cemetery. The proposal was appealed, and a public meeting will be held to comments about the appeal and the proposed cemetery. The ICBB applied to build a 10-acre cemetery and a chapel on 36 acres at 15000 Cloverdale Road. Due to Islamic burial practices, a Kuna resident sent a letter issuing concerns about to the sanitation and appearance of the cemetery. According to the Islamic beliefs, bodies are not embalmed and not buried in coffins. The body is sheathed in white cotton or linen cloth, and according the ICBB, buried at least half the height of the deceased. The proposal from ICBB said the Islamic traditions for burial would not violate any of Idaho’s regulations regarding cemeteries. The letter from the concerned Kuna resident presented three concerns with the cemetery. The resident’s letter said burying the dead in only a cloth would leave the

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bodies susceptible to animals digging up a corpse, which could spread diseases. Bodies being dug up would cost the city community money, the letter said. Finally, the resident said the cemetery would hurt the esthetic value of Kuna. The public meeting will be held at 6 p.m. Sept. 10 in the Commissioners Main Hearing Room 1235 at 200 West Front street in Boise.

Nampa Christian boasts record enrollment NAMPA — Nampa Christian Schools announced Friday that 685 students are enrolled in its early childhood through 12th-grade classes — a steady increase in the school’s post-recession enrollment with an increase of 15 percent over last year. “We are grateful for the families who have put their faith in Nampa Christian schools again and again and for those who have joined our family this year,” said Superintendent Greg Wiles. Several new initiatives have taken place to encourage enrollment at the schools, including a total of 10 classes available for concurrent credits at the high school. This allows students to graduate with as many as 20 college credits already completed. Two new sports have also been added at

Nampa Christian Middle School — cheerleading and cross-country.

Marketing expert comes to Caldwell CALDWELL — Roger Brooks is coming to Caldwell Wednesday and Thursday, and the public is invited to meet him. Brooks, an internationally known community marketing expert, will conduct a branding and marketing program with local leaders, after being hired by Destination Caldwell and Downtown Caldwell organizations. Over 50 Caldwell businesses and individuals raised money to bring Brooks in. He will meet with city officials, local businesses and individuals to determine how to assist with redevelopment and economic growth. The public is invited to a workshop presented by Brooks, called “The Art of Community Building.” The workshop will take place at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Langroise Performing Art Center on the College of Idaho campus. The workshop will introduce the step-by-step process by taking the community through a series of case histories, videos and stories to ensure the audience understands the branding process and why it’s important.

GOT A STORY IDEA? The Idaho Press-Tribune welcomes readers’ story ideas. If you have an idea to share, call our News Hot Line at 465-8124. Press releases and other news items may be emailed to newsroom@idahopress.com or faxed to 467-9562.

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U.S. trained Alaskans as secret ‘stay-behind agents’ FBI director Hoover feared Russian invasion in north By ROBERT BURNS

AP National Security Writer

WASHINGTON — Fearing a Russian invasion and occupation of Alaska, the U.S. government in the early Cold War years recruited and trained fishermen, bush pilots, trappers and other private citizens across Alaska for a covert network to feed wartime intelligence to the military, newly declassified Air Force and FBI documents show. Invasion of Alaska? Yes. It seemed like a real possibility in 1950. “The military believes that it would be an airborne invasion involving bombing and the dropping of paratroopers,” one FBI memo said. The most likely targets were thought to be Nome, Fairbanks, Anchorage and Seward. So FBI director J. Edgar Hoover teamed up on a highly classified project, code-named “Washtub,” with the newly created Air Force Office of Special Investigations, headed by Hoover protege and former FBI official Joseph F. Carroll. The secret plan was to have citizen-agents in key locations in Alaska ready to hide from the invaders of what was then only a U.S. territory. The citizen-agents would find their way to survival caches of food, coldweather gear, message-coding material and radios. In hiding they would transmit word of enemy movements. This was not civil defense of the sort that became common later in the Cold War as Americans built their own bomb shelters. This was an extraordinary enlistment of civilians as intelligence operatives on U.S. soil. This account of the “Washtub” project is based on hundreds of pages of formerly secret documents. The heavily censored records were provided to The Associated Press by the Government Attic, a website that publishes government documents it obtained through the Freedom of Information Act. The Russians never invaded, of course. So the covert cadre of “stay-behind agents,” as they were known, was never activated to collect and report wartime information from backwoods bunkers. It was an assignment that federal officials acknowledged (to each other, if not to the new agents) was highly dangerous, given that the Soviet Union’s military doctrine called for the elimination of local resistance in occupied territory. To compensate for expected casualties, a reserve pool of agents was to be held outside of Alaska and inserted by air later as short-term replacements. This assignment was seen as an easier sell to potential recruits because “some agents might not be too enthusiastic about being left behind in enemy-occupied areas for an indefinite period of time,” one planning document noted dryly. “Washtub” was not, however, a washout. It operated from 195159, according to Deborah Kidwell, official historian of the Air Force Office of Special Investigations, or OSI. “While war with the Soviet Union did not come to Alaska, OSI trained 89 SBA (stay-behind agents), and the survival caches served peacetime purposes for many years to come,” she wrote in an OSI magazine last year. With the benefit of hindsight, it would be easy to dismiss “Washtub” as a harebrained scheme born of paranoia. In fact it reflected genuine worry about Soviet intentions and a sense of U.S. vulnerability in a turbulent post-World War II period. As the plan was being shaped in 1950, Sovietbacked North Korea invaded South Korea, trigger-

AP Photo, File

This May 11, 1943 file photo shows American invasion troops of the 7th Infantry Division approaching a landing area code-named Beach Red in the western arm of Holtz Bay, on Japanese-occupied Attu island. Attu, the largest and westernmost of the Aleutian islands in relation to Alaska was then only a U.S. Territory. In the early Cold War years after WWII, the United States feared a Russian invasion and occupation of Alaska. ing a war on the peninsula that some in the Pentagon saw as a deliberate move by Moscow to distract Washington before invading Europe. The previous summer the Soviets stunned the world by exploding their first atomic bomb. Also in 1949, the U.S. locked arms with Western Europe to form the NATO alliance, and Mao Zedong’s revolutionaries declared victory in China, adding to American fear that communism was on the march. “Washtub” was known inside the government by several other codenames, including Corpuscle, Stigmatic and Catboat, according to an official Air Force history of the OSI, which called it one of OSI’s “most extensive and long-running Cold War projects.” The FBI had its own code word for the project: STAGE. “Washtub” had two phases. The first and more urgent was the stay-behind agent program. The second was a parallel effort to create a standby pool of civilian operatives in Alaska trained to clandestinely arrange for the evacuation of downed military air crews in danger of being captured by Soviet forces. This “evasion and escape” plan was coordinated with the CIA. Among those listed as a stay-behind agent was Dyton Abb Gilliland of Cooper Landing, a community on the Kenai Peninsula south of Anchorage. A well-known bush pilot, Gilliland died in a plane crash on Montague Island in Prince William Sound in May 1955 at age 45. FBI records say he spent 12 days in Washington D.C., in June-July 1951 undergoing a range of specialized training, including in the use of parachutes. The agents also got extensive training in coding and decoding messages, but this apparently did not always go well. Learning these techniques was “an almost impossible task for backwoodsmen to master in 15 hours of training,” one document said. Details in the document were blacked out. Many agent names in the OSI and FBI documents also were removed before being declassified. None of the indigenous population was included. The program founders believed that agents from the “Eskimo, Indian and Aleut groups in the Territory should be avoided in view of their propensities to drink to excess and their fundamental indifference to constituted governments and political philosophies. It is pointed out that their prime concern is with survival and their allegiance would easily shift to any power in control.” Recruiters pitched patriotism and were to offer retainer fees of up to $3,000 a year (nearly $30,000 in 2014 dollars). That sum was to be doubled “after an invasion has commenced,” according to one planning document. The records do not say how much was actually

paid during the course of the program. At least some recruits were fingerprinted and all were secretly screened by the FBI for signs of disloyalty. The FBI linked one candidate, a resident of Stony River, to a list of names in a 1943 bureau file on “Communist Party activities, Alaska” that tracked U.S. subscribers to a magazine called “Soviet Russia Today.” Another candidate was flagged — falsely, it turned out — as a likely communist sympathizer based on an FBI informant’s tip about membership in the “Tom Paine Club, Communist Party, Spokane, Washington.” One was described in a May 1952 OSI memo to the FBI office in Anchorage as the postmaster in Kiana, Alaska; another was manager of a hotel in Valdez. One agent candidate worked for a tin-mining company at Lost River on the Seward Peninsula, one of the higher-priority areas for placing “Washtub” staybehind agents. The peninsula is named after Secretary of State William H. Seward, the primary negotiator in the 1867 purchase of the Alaska territory for $7.2 million from czarist Russia. The FBI tapped its local contacts, including federal judges, the head of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Anchorage, an Anchorage physician and others for names of reliable Alaskans to be approached. “Washtub’ was crafted in painstaking detail. But just as the first trained agents were to be put in place in September 1951, Hoover pulled out, leaving it in OSI’s hands, even though one month earlier his top lieutenants had advised him the FBI was “in these programs neck deep,” with an “obvious and inescapable” duty to proceed. Hoover worried that when the shooting in Alaska started the FBI would be “left holding the bag.” “If a crisis arose we would be in the midst of another ‘Pearl Harbor’ and get part of the blame,” Hoover wrote in the margin of a Sept. 6, 1951, memo from an aide, to whom Hoover added one final order: “Get out at once.” Three years later, Hoover was pulled back in, briefly. In October 1954, an envelope and a typewritten letter containing a coded message were turned over to the FBI by a woman in Anchorage. It had been misaddressed by the anonymous sender in Fairbanks. Espionage was suspected, triggering flurries of FBI internal memos. Hoover was informed that bureau code breakers were urgently trying to decipher the message. They never broke the code but eventually declared the crisis over. The mystery message, they determined, was not from an enemy spy. It was a “practice message” sent errantly by one of the “Washtub” agents. C M Y K


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Idaho Press-Tribune • Monday, September 1, 2014

Obituaries Also send, view personalized notes online All obituaries must be placed by your mortuary or at selfserve.idahopress.com. The deadline is 3 p.m. for publication the next day. Visit legacy.com/idahopress to send condolences and view guest books or create a personalized website where friends and family can contribute memories, video, photos, music and much more. If you have questions please call 208-465-8124.

Deaths Norman Adams, 97, of Nam- Ray J. James, 86, of Nampa, died pa, Idaho, died Saturday, August 30, 2014. Arrangements are under the direction of the Cremation Society of Idaho.

Saturday, August 30, 2014, at a local care facility. Arrangements have been entrusted to Alsip and Persons Funeral Chapel, Nampa. (208) 466-3545

Robert “Bob” Brown,

Mardi B. Keen, 93, of Parma, died Saturday, August 30, 2014, at a local care facility of natural causes. Services are pending under the direction of Dakan Funeral Chapel, Caldwell. 459-3629

67, of Caldwell, died Monday, August 25, 2014, at his home. A recitation of the Rosary will be held at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2014, at the Nampa Funeral Home, Yraguen Chapel. Mass of Christian burial will be celebrated at 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, September 3, 2014, at St. Paul’s Catholic Church, Nampa. Burial with military honors will be held at the Idaho State Veterans Cemetery following the mass at 3 p.m. An online guest book is available at www. nampafuneralhome.com

Richard Cowdery,

86, of Caldwell, Idaho, died Saturday, August 30, 2014. Arrangements are under the direction of the Cremation Society of Idaho.

Wayne Mai, 70, of Nampa, died

Saturday, August 30, 2014, near McCall, Idaho. Arrangements have been entrusted to Alsip and Persons Funeral Chapel, Nampa. (208) 466-3545

Ruby N. Reese, 93, of Nampa, formerly of Parma, died on Saturday, August 30, 2014, at home of natural causes. Arrangements are under the care of Flahiff Funeral Chapel, Caldwell. 459-0833

California wildfires show slower growth

any injury to the state from keeping the status quo. He noted the state health secretary says she won’t prosecute doctors while their HAPPY CAMP, Calif. hospital applications are (AP) — The U.S. Forest Ser- still undecided. vice says cloudy skies and lower temperatures have slowed the spread of two forest wildfires that are threatening as many as 250 homes in far Northern California. SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. The Forest Service re- (AP) — Celebrity chef Todd ported Sunday that the fires English, who has opened had burned 98 square miles restaurants around the in the Klamath National country and written mulForest by Sunday. That was tiple cook8 square miles more than a books, was arday earlier, but represented rested Sunday a significant reduction in on a charge of the growth of the blazes driving while that had picked up steam i ntox icated, as humidity declined and a u t h o r i t i e s winds increased late last said. week. Police in Todd English The two wildfires are the Sout ha mplargest among 17 that were ton said English was arsparked by lightning in rested Sunday morning on the forest on Aug. 11. They a county road on Long Isremained 15 percent conland. He made a court aptained. pearance later in the day, More than 2,100 fireand authorities said he fighters and 19 helicopters are taking advantage of posted $1,500 bail. The circumstances of the better weather by laythe arrest were unavailable. ing hoses, constructing fire lines and clearing brush An email to English’s repfrom around evacuated resentative and a call to his attorney were not immedicommunities. ately returned. The chef, whose full name is William Todd English, is the creative force behind a number of restaurants around the country, including Olives, BATON ROUGE, La. Figs and Fish Club. He also (AP) — A federal judge has has been a regular on teletemporarily blocked en- vision programs including forcement of Louisiana’s re- “Iron Chef USA.” strictive new abortion law. But lawyers disagree about whether his order covers doctors at all five of the state’s clinics or only two doctors and three clinics. District Judge John deERIE, Colo. (AP) — All Gravelles says the law can still take effect Monday. But five people aboard a small he says officials cannot pe- plane that crashed near nalize the doctors and clin- an airport north of Denver ics that sued for breaking have died, a spokesman for it until after a hearing on a the National Transportation Board said. broader pretrial order. The law requires docThe Piper PA-46 airtors who perform abortions plane crashed near the Erie to have admitting privi- Municipal Airport about leges to a nearby hospital. 11:50 a.m., NTSB spokesA lawsuit claims that likely man Peter Knudson said would close all five abor- Sunday afternoon. Shortly tion clinics. after the crash, three peoDeGravelles says the ple were declared dead at doctors’ risk of fines and the scene and two were losing licenses outweighs taken to hospitals.

Celebrity chef charged with intoxicated driving

Judge blocks enforcement of new abortion law

Official: 5 killed in plane crash north of Denver

OBITUARIES

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Chefs, breeders pair up to produce tastier fruits, veggies Producers look at more varieties for consumers By M.L. JOHNSON The Associated Press

VERONA, Wis. — There’s a good chance that many of the suddenly trendy fruits vegetables that foodies latch on to in the next decade will benefit from research at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. While plant breeders at many public universities focus on improving field corn, soybeans and other crops used in food manufacturing or livestock feed, those in Madison want to produce better-tasting vegetables. The university has long had ties to the vegetable processing industry, as Wisconsin is among the top two or three states in producing canned or frozen sweet corn, green beans and peas. But vegetable breeders say the local food movement has created additional opportunities with a boom in organic farms, farmers markets and farmto-table restaurants. The challenge is coming up with varieties consumers like, even if they can’t always articulate what makes one ear of corn better than another. “Apples are almost the only fruit or vegetable that when you go to the grocery store, you see 30 different apples all by name,” said Bill Tracy, a sweet corn breeder who chairs the university’s Department of Agronomy. “We could do the same thing for corn, and I’m not saying we need 30, but we could have a corn that’s perfect for roasting, or soup use.” Horticulture professor Julie Dawson is leading a project in which vegetable breeders work with local farmers and chefs to figure

AP Photo/M.L. Johnson

A visitor to the University of Wisconsin research farm samples tomatoes Wednesday in Verona, Wisconsin. University plant breeders are working with chefs and farmers to develop better-tasting vegetables. out what makes vegetables taste great and then produce easy-to-grow varieties with outstanding flavor. Participating chefs receive weekly deliveries of produce that they evaluate on a 5-point scale for qualities like sweetness and texture. Dan Bonanno, the chef at A Pig in a Fur Coat, estimated he’s tasted 80 varieties of tomatoes — “I never knew there were so many different tomatoes” — since mid-July. For him, the big find has been a sweet corn bred to have a less sugary taste and firmer texture than most popular varieties. “I ripped open the husk, took a bite, and it was like eating a pear,” Bonanno said. “It was so juicy ... I’m like, wow, you can make a very nice sauce or gelato with it because it’s already naturally sweet and buttery and it had so much water.” Very sweet corn, which most Americans have become accustomed to, becomes mushy when stirred into a dish like risotto, Tra-

cy said, and the sugary taste may conflict with other ingredients. “If we understand what chefs want, we can produce it,” he said. And, Tracy is confident chefs will be able to sell those new varieties to the public, given how they have popularized ramps, broccolini and other onceobscure fruits and vegetables. On Wednesday, chefs, farmers and members of the public sampled and rated Tracy’s corn, along with multiple varieties of tomatoes, peppers and melon at a university farm in Verona. Dawson will use the information to see how closely the chefs’ opinions match that of regular eaters and develop an evaluation system that can be used early in the breeding process to select the best-tasting prospects from hundreds of cultivars. “The flavor is much harder to fix at the end,” she said. “If you have the flavor, the other things are easier to fix.”

That’s where farmers come in. Mark Voss has been testing five varieties of tomatoes at his urban farm, which supplies Madison restaurants. He looks for resistance to disease and good production, but taste and aesthetics are important, too. The varieties include a few big tomatoes with bold flavor as well as some smaller, cocktail tomatoes that he’s “not so passionate about” because they “take a long time to pick.” He prefers bigger fruit with thin skins and a lot of flesh — characteristics that make tomatoes more likely to bruise during shipping but aren’t a problem when he’s selling locally. “I think there’s an inverse relationship between bruise-ability and flavor,” Voss said. That’s the kind of feedback Dawson is seeking. “Because really,” she said, “it has to work for farmers as well as chefs.”

Tesla Motors dealing as states play factory poker By JUSTIN PRITCHARD The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — From the start, little has been typical about Tesla Motors’ plan for a $5 billion factory to make batteries for a new generation of electric cars. It’s not just the project’s massive scale, the cuttingedge technology, or even the bonanza of 6,500 goodpaying jobs. It’s how Tesla is deciding where to build. Through a series of unusual plays, Tesla has five states bidding up subsidy packages to land the coveted plant. The winner is expected to offer the luxury car-maker publicly financed incentives exceeding a halfbillion dollars. Tesla signaled this would be no ordinary competition last fall, when it gathered economic development officials from seven Western states and unveiled its vision for a “gigafactory.” (“Giga” refers to the large amount of power that batteries produced at the plant will store.) This spring, CEO Elon Musk announced Tesla would take the extremely unusual step Original of CMYKspending inks millions to prepare sites in two states — or perhaps even three — before the finalist was chosen. Then, over the summer, Musk said the winning state would pitch in about 10 percent of the cost, effectively signaling a minimum bid of $500 million.

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In this June 10 file photo, Texas Gov. Rick Perry walks over to talk to reporters after driving up in a Tesla Motors Type S electric car in Sacramento, Calif. Texas and California are two of five states where Tesla Motors is considering building a $5 billion factory to make batteries for a new model of electric car. “We don’t usually see companies setting a floor at which states will be considered,” said Leigh McIlvaine of the research group Good Jobs First, which tracks large subsidy packages by states. For all the public anticipation Musk has created, much about the process remains secret. While an industrial park in the desert outside Reno, Nevada, is one known site, the other — or others — remains a mystery. Tesla has asked states not to discuss their offers, and states aren’t talking. The effect is a game of high-stakes poker, with the states as players and Tesla dealing. “You can’t see any cards at all. Do you stay in or not, push more chips onto the

table or fold?” said Kim Hill, who studies incentives at the nonprofit Center for Automotive Research in Michigan. The factory promises something that every state wants but rarely gets these days: thousands of goodpaying factory jobs and all the residual economic benefits they bring. So far, Nevada, California, Texas, Arizona and New Mexico remain contenders. They have passed tax breaks, promised workertraining funds or proposed shelving environmental regulations that could slow the factory’s construction. There is talk of special legislative sessions to sweeten the bids. When The Associated Press filed public records

act requests for documents about the competition with each of the five finalist states, none released much useful information and most refused to release anything at all, citing the competitive need to keep their offers secret. In one glimpse behind the curtain of confidentiality, California provided an email from a Tesla official to the governor’s senior adviser for jobs and economic development. It contained a newspaper story speculating on a possible site and said, simply: “This is unhelpful.” What might be unhelpful was unclear, and the governor’s office of business and economic development refused repeated requests to discuss its pursuit of the factory. Tesla needs the factory to make cheaper batteries for its Model 3, a mass-market electric car the company hopes to sell by 2017 for around $35,000. Currently Tesla only offers the Model S sedan, which starts at $70,000. The tight production timeframe compels Tesla to prepare at least two sites, said spokesman Simon Sproule, who likened the approach to “an insurance policy.” Tesla will pay about half of the factory’s cost; the other major investor is Panasonic, which will manufacture the lithium-ion battery cells and invest in equipment.

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A10

NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL NEWS

Idaho Press-Tribune • Monday, September 1, 2014

idahopress.com

House, Senate intel chiefs flag Islamic State risk Intelligence committee leaders pressure Obama to take decisive action By PHILIP ELLIOTT The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Leaders of the House and Senate intelligence committees on Sunday prodded President Barack Obama to take decisive action against what they say are growing threats from Islamic State militants on U.S. soil. The lawmakers, one Republican and one Democratic, offered bipartisan pressure on the White House to turn back the hazard of Islamist fighters who have taken control of vast swaths of Syria and Iraq. Those militants now are looking toward the United States or Western Europe for its next targets, lawmakers said. Without offering specifics on any threats or suggestions how to confront them, the lawmakers said Obama soon needs to develop a comprehensive strategy to crush the fighters. “His foreign policy is in absolute free-fall,” said Rep. Mike Rogers, a Michigan Republican who heads the House Intelligence Committee.

Fairbanks spent $7k defending mayor’s $37 fine FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) — The city of Fairbanks, Alaska, has so far spent about $7,000 appealing a $37.50 electionlaw fine leveled on the mayor. The Alaska Public Offices Commission ordered City Mayor John Eberhart to pay the $37.50 fine in May after concluding he broke a state law in the October 2013 election by sending an email on his city council email account, The Fairbanks Dai-

AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

This March 25 file photo shows House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers, R-Mich., leaving a press conference on Capitol Hill in Washington. The chairs of both the House and Senate intelligence committees prodded President Barack Obama on Sunday, Aug. 31, 2014, to take decisive action against the growing threats from Islamic State militants on U.S. soil. “His foreign policy is in absolute free-fall,” Rogers said of President Barack Obama. In another TV interview, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the California Democrat who leads the Senate intelligence panel, said Obama is perhaps “too cautious” in his approach to combatting the Islamic State group. “This is a group of people who are extraordinarily dangerous,” Feinstein said. “And they’ll kill with abandon.” The pair of lawmakers, who have access to some of the nation’s most sensitive secrets and receive regular

and detailed briefings from the nation’s spy agencies, offered dire predictions of an attack on the United States or its European allies if the militants are not confronted. “They have announced that they don’t intend to stop,” Feinstein said. “They have announced that they will come after us if they can, that they will, quote, ‘spill our blood.’” The threat, Rogers said, could include Americans who have trained with Is-

ly News-Miner reports. peal strategy earlier this In that email, Eberhart, month. then a city council memThe city government ber, asked city staff to is paying for Eberhart’s research resolutions and appeal costs because it’s ordinances sponsored by obligated, in most cases, Eberhart and his mayoral to defend public officials opponent Vivian Stiver. In who are sued as part of the eyes of the commis- their official duties under sion, the records request the city’s indemnification equaled an illegal use of law, the newspaper remunicipal resources to in- ported. fluence an election. Eberhart’s attorney, Fairbanks has paid Michael Walleri, accuses about $7,000 during ap- the elections body of overpeals, city attorney Paul stepping its power. The Ewers said. The funding ruling sets a precedent comes out of the city’s that would broadly paint claims budget. The Fair- legitimate information rebanks City Council held a quests as illegal electionclosed-door executive ses- eering, he told the newsAug,about 31, Sept and apSept paper 3 sion the 1city’s on Friday.

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export violence. “It is extremely urgent, but you don’t just rush in,” he said. It was a view shared by Rep. Adam Smith, a Washington state Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee: “We can’t simply bomb first and ask questions later.” Sen. John McCain, an Arizona Republican who serves on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, urged fast action and said Islamic State fighters “must be defeated, not contained,” because they represent a direct threat to the U.S. Added Homeland Security Committee member Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y.: “The longer we wait, the more dangerous” the group becomes. Feinstein said she has seen nothing that compares to the viciousness of the militants who have overrun large portions of Iraq, killed civilians and beheaded American journalist James Foley. The Islamic State group has financing, military structure and weapons unlike any other militants, she said. Obama said Thursday he did not yet have a strategy for dealing with the Islamic State organization,

a remark that brought criticism from Democrats and Republicans. In an interview published early this year by The New Yorker, the president appeared to minimize the group by comparing it to a junior varsity basketball team. The White House said he was speaking about a different threat posed by a range of extremists across the world. Feinstein said she thought the basketball analogy was wrong — “I think it’s a major varsity team” — but would not say whether she thought Obama projected weakness by admitting he had no strategy. “I think I’ve learned one thing about this president, and that is he’s very cautious,” she said. “Maybe in this instance, too cautious. I do know that the military, I know that the State Department, I know that others have been putting plans together. And so hopefully, those plans will coalesce into a strategy.” Feinstein spoke to NBC’s “Meet the Press.” Rogers appeared on “Fox News Sunday.” Ruppersberger was on CNN’s “State of the Union.” McCain, Smith and King were interviewed on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

Ukraine: Rebels fire on border guard vessel By JIM HEINTZ

The Associated Press

KIEV, Ukraine — Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday called on Ukraine to immediately start talks on a political solution to the crisis in eastern Ukraine. Hours later, Ukraine said a border guard vessel operating in the Azov Sea was attacked by land-based forces. Pro-Russian rebels have recently opened a new offensive along the seacoast. Putin’s comment, made to national TV network Channel 1, said Ukraine should “hold substantive, meaningful talks, not about technical issues but about the question of the political organization of society and statehood in southeast Ukraine, with the goal of safeguarding the legitimate interests of those people who live there.” Despite the use of the word “statehood,” Putin did not envision sovereignty for the two separatist eastern regions that style themselves as “Novorossiya” (New Russia ), his spokesman Dmitry Peskov said later, according

Islamist militia now guards U.S. Embassy in Libya TRIPOLI, Libya (AP) — An Islamist-allied militia group in control of Libya’s capital now guards the U.S. Embassy and its residential compound, a commander said Sunday, as onlook-

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to a Russian news report. Putin’s comments came a day after leaders of the European Union decided to put off any new sanctions against Russia for at least a week. On Sunday, a spokesman for Ukraine’s offensive against Russia-backed rebels said a border guard vessel has been fired on with artillery — apparently the first incident at sea in the fighting. The spokesman, Oleksiy Dmitrashkovsky, said the attack occurred Sunday afternoon but he had no further information, including how many people were aboard the boat. The attack took place amid heightened concern that the rebels are trying to seize a land bridge between Russia and the Crimean Peninsula, which Russia annexed in March. Meanwhile, two prominent U.S. senators said Sunday that the Obama administration should not only push for tougher sanctions on Russia, but should also send weapons to help

Ukraine defend itself. “We should be providing the Ukrainians with the type of defensive weapons that will impose a cost on Putin for further aggression,” Democratic Sen. Robert Menendez, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” Menendez, speaking from the Ukrainian capital Kiev, added, “This is no longer the question of some rebel separatists, this is a direct invasion by Russia. And we must recognize it as that.” He said the issue of supplying weapons to Ukraine “may be very well on the table right now” for the Obama administration considering “these are changed circumstances.” Sen. John McCain said that if unchecked in Ukraine, Russia could begin to threaten other nations in Eastern Europe, including Moldova and the Baltic states, former Soviet republics. McCain denied that providing weapons to Ukraine could make things worse.

ers toured the abandoned homes of diplomats who fled the country more than a month ago. An Associated Press journalist saw holes left by small-arms and rocket fire dotting the residential compound, reminders of weeks of violence between rival militias over control of Tripoli that sparked the

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lamic State fighters. He said there are hundreds of Islamic State-trained Americans who can return to the U.S. with their American passports. “I’m very concerned because we don’t know every single person that has an American passport that has gone and trained and learned how to fight,” Rogers said. Rogers said U.S. intelligence agencies were tracking the Americans who are known to have traveled to the region. If they helped Islamic State fighters, he said, they should be charged under laws that prohibit Americans from aiding terrorists. “ISIL would like to have a Western-style attack to continue this notion that they are the leading jihadist group in the world,” Rogers said, using another name for the group. The top Democrat on his intelligence panel, Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger of Maryland, was more skeptical. He said more needs to be known before judging whether they plan to commit terrorist acts in the U.S. any time soon. The group’s priority now seems to be to hold on to territory it has gained rather than

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NEWS

Wilderness Continued from A1

But mountain bikes and snowmobiles more efficient in steeper terrain have developed new recreational followings in those years, building even more opposition to restrictive wilderness rules in prized backcountry destinations. Adjustments were made in boundaries for Panhandle wilderness recommendations to accommodate those constituencies. The Forest Service can recommend and protect roadless areas that have all the qualities suitable for wilderness, but official designation requires Congressional approval. The only official wilderness managed by the Idaho Panhandle National Forests actually is in Washington — the 9,900acre sliver of the Salmo-Priest Wilderness that laps across the boundary of the Colville National Forest to the Idaho state line. The revised plan recommends a total of 18,600 acres in the Salmo-Priest extending into Idaho. In a compromise worked out among conservation and recreation groups, the recommended wilderness boundary was adjusted so that mountain biking would be allowed on the trail along the Upper Priest River. Three other areas recommended for wilderness are: n Scotchman Peaks, 25,900 acres — northeast of Lake Pend Oreille. n Selkirk Mountains,

36,700 acres — the crest from Long Canyon south to Harrison Peak, excluding the upper Pack River area. n Mallard-Larkins, 80,200 acres — the St. Joe River roadless area upstream to St. Joe Lake plus areas to the west in the Little North Fork Clearwater drainage, including Mallard Peak and Larkins Lake. On the adjacent Clearwater National Forest, a massive Great Burn Wilderness Area is being negotiated by a group of varied stakeholders called the Clearwater Collaborative. The Scotchman Peaks wilderness recommendation has generated the most consensus in the Idaho Panhandle. Conservation groups promoting a wilderness proposal have garnered widespread approval in Bonner County and beyond. The 88,000-acre roadless area between the Clark Fork and Bull rivers includes about 20,000 acres in the Panhandle National Forest with the rest in Montana managed by the Kootenai National Forest. Despite spanning jurisdictions of two forests, two states and three counties, the Friends of the Scotchman Peaks Wilderness over more than five years has garnered support across the boundaries for wilderness designation. The group has support from local, state and national politicians. All they lack is a member of the congressional delegation

to pick up the torch in Washington, D.C. The Mallard-Larkins and Selkirks recommendations are the most contentious of the Panhandle wilderness candidates, with neither environmental groups nor motorized users getting all they want in the recommendations. Motorized groups, including all-terrain vehicle enthusiasts, have felt pinched out of Panhandle forest areas even though no official wilderness has been designated. National forest managers often must rule out motorized vehicle access to areas because of court-mandated access restrictions dealing with grizzly bears, woodland caribou and other species protected under the Endangered Species Act. Road access has been reduced since 1987 as the Forest Service has closed roads that were causing watershed damage that impacted fisheries, including threatened bull trout. In some cases road systems have been consolidated to save money. Access issues, whether it’s a lock gate or full-fledged wilderness designation, spark the most interest and controversy in terms of recreation, said Jason Kirchner, Idaho Panhandle National Forests public information officer.

Rich Landers is the Outdoors editor for The Spokesman-Review in Spokane. n

Idaho Press-Tribune • Monday, September 1, 2014

Railroad Continued from A1

The agency anticipates that up to 3,500 evaluations will be needed to determine if work done the last decade and a half meets the updated criteria. “Given the linear nature of these rights of way, we would anticipate applications for comparable uses for such things as pipelines and fiber optics,” said Bureau of Land Management spokeswoman Celia Boddington, who is based in Washington, D.C. It’s not clear what might already be in place in the rights of way, said Jennifer Whyte, a realty specialist for the bureau who is also based in Washington, D.C. “We don’t know exactly what’s in those because we haven’t been involved in any of that because of the 1989 solicitor’s opinion,” she said. In a new opinion in 2011, the Solicitor’s Office said the 1989 opinion’s “interpretation of the 1875 Act is inconsistent with the Act itself.” It’s also not consistent with U.S. Supreme Court rulings, the 2011 opinion said. The General Railroad Right-ofWay Act of 1875 replaced earlier rights of way acts that started in the 1850s and followed Congressional policy by providing grants of land from the public domain to spur railroads to build rail lines in the West. But giving away land to railroads fell out of favor, causing lawmakers to create the more limited 1875 Act that kept the land under federal ownership but still encouraged westward expansion by granting rights of way.

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Federal agencies aren’t sure how many miles of rights of way remain in use today from the 1875 Act. One of the rights of way belongs to the Arizona and California Railroad Company. In 2009, federal officials relying on the 1989 opinion determined the company didn’t need federal authorization or analysis to put a water pipeline within the rights of way. A third-party company wants to bury the pipeline to move groundwater from under the Mojave Desert to southern California. Several other railroad companies said they would need to review operations to get a better understanding on whether any of their projects could be affected by the change. “We are in the process of analyzing the new guidelines now,” said Aaron Hunt, a spokesman for Union Pacific Railroad. Burlington Northern Santa Fe spokesman Gus Melonas said the part of the company that dealt with land issues would have to examine the change before commenting. Boddington said the next step in the process is for the Bureau of Land Management to enter into the Federal Register, the repository for federal regulations, a notice of the change. “We’re drafting the notice right now, which will likely be published next year after internal review,” she said. Once published, Boddington said, railroad companies will have 180 days to provide information to the Bureau of Land Management. If the work falls outside of normal railroad operations, the bureau will work with the railroads and third parties to determine what additional authorization, if any, is needed. “It’s all going to be on an individual, case-by-case evaluation and determination,” Whyte said.


OPINION

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Until they all come home

Monday, September 1, 2014

Idaho Press-Tribune

Cheers & Jeers Cheers to all of our police officers who put their life on the line every day when they go to work to keep us safe. Bless you all!

HOT-BUTTON ISSUES

This is a short list of some hot-button issues. Because of the controversy surrounding them, we will accept only signed letters to the editor — not Jeers to Idaho for thinking it a good cheers or jeers — on the following issues: idea to do construction on literally evn English vs. Spanish language ery road they possibly could think of, n Governmental agency decisions and after destroying the road, deciding n Planning and zoning issues to start a mile down the road somen Immigration issues where else. Thanks, Idaho! n Charter schools Cheers to the St. Luke’s staff that den Elections livered my baby boy, Milo, via C-section n Personnel issues in Ketchum, then flew him to Boise to n Gay marriage the NICU where their awesome staff n Political issues are looking after the little guy and my wife. And cheers to the Ronald McDonald House where they are going to let us stay. He’s going to be just fine, just some breathing problems.

Karcher Road (Highway 55). You wait to make a left turn for five minutes, then when the light finally turns green, Jeers to Pennsylvania for not being it lasts four seconds and only three cars can get through. Then you have Idaho. to wait another five minutes before it Cheers to the Thunder Mountain turns green again. The left turn signals Railroad for reopening the line between need to stay green for longer than four Smith’s Ferry and Cascade this year. We seconds. I don’t want to spend 15 minenjoyed a relaxing, scenic ride on The utes at that intersection. Payette River Flyer train. Highlights Cheers and more cheers to Channel were: going through the rock tunnel, going under the Rainbow Bridge, seeing 12 for showing the Homedale rodeo. wildlife, seeing the Payette River where My husband and I used to love to go to it. My husband is gone now and I am the road does not go, hearing some history, and watching the many rafters disabled, and I love seeing a lot of the cowboys and cowgirls ride again. It floating by. If you have not done this trip, you should put it on your calendar! was a great show. Thank you, Channel 12. You brought back a lot of memories It is a great outing, close to home. for this old lady. Jeers to theater production groups Cheers and thank-you to Joel and that have to resort to “bathroom his beautiful family. You made our day humor” because they think it will and lunch at Taco Time a very special enhance the dialogue. This is an offensive attempt to amuse the audience, occasion. Two great grandmas, Betty and it makes me leave the theater. Per- and Katie. haps they should consider editing the Cheers for the new Dollar Tree store scripts so that it can be called family in Caldwell across from the Older entertainment. This makes me embar- Albertson’s on 5th and Clevelend. Now rassed for the parents of children who we just need one on the other end of attend and will go home and emulate Caldwell on the corner of Ustick and what they saw. the Boulevard. It would be a wonderful Cheers: On Sunday, Aug. 24, I went to and convenient shopping addition to the Cracker Barrel to have dinner, and the community for the people who live on the southeastern outskirts of town. when I went to pay for it, I was told it had already been paid for. I was so surJeers to the paramedics who reprised, and they said they didn’t know sponded to the auto accident I witwho it was, because I wanted to thank nessed and was rendering aid at. I am them. What a nice person. Thank you a trained medical professional and am so much. You made a senior citizen well aware of the risks involved with very happy. a patient who has a suspected neck or spinal injury. I am amazed that Jeers to the Idaho Press-Tribune without assessing the victim at all you for the poor quality of the electronic dismissed that we were stabilizing her (online) version of the newspaper, particularly on Sunday. On Aug. 17, the neck and told me it was unnecessary. Her airbags didn’t deploy, she was comics section included comics we complaining of dizziness, neck pain have not seen for years (Wizard of Id, and a headache. All three medics on Hagar, For Better or Worse) and omitted Tundra, among others. On Aug. 24, site seemed uninterested and rather condescending toward the patient. the entire comic section was omitMaybe you all need to find new jobs. ted. But we had the entire Albertson’s advertising insert. In the past, the Jeers to people who leave shopParade section was omitted. You are ping carts in parking places reserved paying good money to have that serfor handicapped drivers. Today at vice provided to your customers, but Walmart another customer and I you apparently have no quality control moved three shopping carts blockover what is delivered. ing access to parking and returned Editor’s Note: We are working to them to the store. If I, who have been improve our online version of the paper. disabled for over 15 years, was able to Continue to let us know when there are do this, what is their excuse? problems. Jeers to parents who let their chilJeers to fast food restaurants that dren play games (hide and seek, tag?) do not deal with their fly infestation. or whatever, running through stores, Creates a loss of appetite when you jumping out at each other, etc. There see patrons going in to eat carrying fly is a very real danger they will run swatters. It is bad! into someone, knocking them down with major injuries, including broken Jeers to the traffic signal on the intersection of the Boulevard and bones.

—‑—‑—

Would you like to hand out a Cheers or Jeers? Send it to P.O. Box 9399, Nampa, ID 83652; fax it to 467-9562; email it to op-ed@idahopress.com; or call 465-8115. We'll include your name if you'd like, but it is not mandatory. We reserve the right to refuse or edit jeers that don't meet our standards. Doonesbury

The need for equal rights for women in Idaho

Business tax breaks should be transparent

“Idaho is heading for an employment crisis” is the opening line of a recent Idaho Press-Tribune article by Torrie Cope and Kelcie Moseley. The pair reported that Idaho needs 100,000 jobs filled by 2018, with two-thirds requiring post-secondary training. The hardest positions to fill will require bachelor’s degrees in computer science and technology, business and economics, engineering, health science or communications. I hope the article encourages young people to go on to college. For me, it opened an old wound. You see, about 20 years ago my younger child moved back to JUDY FERRO Idaho with a brand-new engineering degree and an EIT certification — the engineering version of the accountants’ CPA. Trus-Joist and Morrison-Knudsen offered interviews for positions in Colorado and Saudi Arabia, but no company offered a position in Idaho. Many were dismissive and rude. One Caldwell employer said that the California version of the EIT must be a lot easier than Idaho’s. Hard to believe? Maybe easier if you know that this bright young engineer was my daughter? When I worked for a Seattle company in the 1970s, a woman civil engineer submitted a resume. The managers handed the papers around like they were a clever joke, marveled that this day had come, and never considered actually interviewing the woman. As equal rights became an issue, some companies felt pressured to hire women in higher positions. A friend job-hunting with an electrical engineering degree found companies interviewing women engineers for jobs — like inventorying wires — that had formerly been done by clerks. Finding that things were no better in Idaho 20 years later depressed me. What had we accomplished if my daughters didn’t have more opportunities than women of my generation? Well, in the long run Toni did, but not in Idaho, She became a project manager for Intel in Oregon. Will my four granddaughters have better opportunities here? The Cope-Moseley article suggests they will. Other indicators are not so positive. For one thing, the middle class as a whole is shrinking. A recent study indicates that the number of Idaho households earning less than $25,000 will increase by 2019 while those earning over $50,000 will actually shrink. For another, women may face open harassment at whatever level they work. This last week a blogger who exposed video games that showed women abused and raped went into hiding after repeated death threats against her and her family. And a U.S. senator from Maine revealed comments that indicate even senators purposely put women down or are clueless on how to relate to them. “Don’t lose too much weight. I like my women pudgy.” Two-thirds of today’s minimum wage earners are women. A number of major organizations, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers, continue to fight against the equal pay act. A recent study by the financial website WalletHub indicates that the United States as a whole has fallen to 23rd place in fairness and equality for women. And Idaho ranks 48th among the states. (Mississippi is 35th). We rank 49th in “workplace environment” and “education and health,” but rise to 48th in “executive positions gap.” Surprisingly, Idaho is 28th in “political empowerment” because one out of four of our congressional and legislative delegations is a woman. Yes, with a rate just half of what equal representation would be, Idaho ranks better than 22 other states. That’s not exactly good news. Soon my younger daughter will be clutching another tech degree — this one a doctorate. I’d love for her to get hired here in Idaho, but I’m not holding my breath.

Imagine what might happen if officials from the Internal Revenue Service met secretly to decide how big or little your tax liability should be. Picture IRS honchos huddling with colleagues, casting judgment on the value of your kids, your home, your job, said value being subject to the fluid thinking of government officials. That pretty much sums up the latest iteration of tax policy in Idaho, with a new law that lets businesses receive a credit of up to 30 percent against their tax liability. Under the legislation passed last winter, the businessWAYNE HOFFMAN es must add a certain number of jobs — 20 in rural areas and 50 in urban areas — to claim the credit. State Department of Commerce officials meet privately with the Economic Advisory Council to decide how big a tax cut to award. On Tuesday, the council and the department conducted such a meeting to review an application from a company looking to move to or expand in Idaho. The company, whose name wasn’t disclosed, plans to add 50 jobs in Boise, expanding to 100 jobs during a 12-year period. The department suggested a 25 percent tax break, and the Economic Advisory Council responded favorably to that recommendation. But it made me wonder: Why 25 percent? Why not 30? Or 20? Or 10? Department of Commerce Director Jeff Sayer said the department has developed a “scoring matrix” to help guide those decisions. “This is a tool we don’t want to have on the street for everyone to look at,” he told me. He said the scoring matrix, developed with the help of the state Tax Commission and a CPA firm, will take some time to “really get it locked down.” That process will occur as other tax credit applications are considered. Sayer said other companies have applied for tax breaks, with one penciling out to a maximum 30 percent tax credit and another possibly between 10 and 15 percent. The former involves 500 highpaying jobs; the latter, five dozen at the county’s average wage “in a community that’s desperate for jobs,” he said. To his credit, Sayer offered to give the scoring matrix to me, but he said the scoring criteria is subject to change as the agency works with it and prospective businesses. I like Sayer a lot. I think he’s genuine and he’s sincere when he says he’s trying to be a good steward of the unprecedented amount of power the Legislature has given him and his department. He wants to do the right thing. And I am heartened by his decision to provide the information he considers sensitive, without hassle, when I asked for it. But government’s ability to tax and spend, to punish and reward is not something that should be considered lightly, and it seems increasingly that this tax credit is very subjective. I believed the Legislature and Gov. Butch Otter erred when they approved this tax credit because it gives breaks to big businesses at the expense of smaller companies. It manipulates the free market and keeps marginal tax rates higher for everyone else. And now it seems the process for evaluating projects makes a bad concept worse. The public should be able to understand quickly and easily why a business expansion is more or less deserving of special tax consideration than another. Businesses applying for special tax consideration should be able to know what kinds of economic activities the state is willing to smile upon and why. And those parameters should not bend like wheat in the wind.

Judy Ferro is state committeewoman for Canyon County Democrats. Email her at idadem@yahoo.com. n

Mallard Fillmore

By Garry Trudeau

WEB: IDAHOPRESS.COM

n

Wayne Hoffman is the executive director of the Idaho Freedom Foundation. Email him at wayne@idahofreedom. net. n

By Bruce Tinsley

OPINION PAGE EDITOR: PHIL BRIDGES, 465-8115, OP-ED@IDAHOPRESS.COM C M Y K


idahopress.com

AVID Continued from A1

AVID is a national college readiness program with a stated goal of closing the achievement gap in America. The nonprofit organization focuses on training educators to use research-based strategies and curriculum to elementary, secondary and higher education classrooms. That includes academic success, support, a positive peer group, and “a sense of hope for personal achievement gained through hard work and determination.” Zubizarreta is the boisterous voice of that message through seven sections of the elective each day with freshmen, sophomores, juniors and seniors. He introduced several of his successful seniors to new freshmen on Wednesday and emphasized their hard work. One of those was Maria Villagomez, who said English was not her first language when she started in school, but she worked her way up to taking Advanced Placement English the past two years. Students who elect to take AVID are required to take one AP course per year, said Vallivue Assistant Superintendent Gary Johnston. Villagomez told the new AVID students that the class has helped her with organizational skills and time management, and

A person is placed on unsupervised probation if the court simply wants to ensure they stay trouble-free for a set time. Blaine Cannon, Cassia County’s magistrate judge, disagreed that the system favors the affluent. Other options to probation, he said, are jail time and fines. And while a $1,000 fine will be more of a sacrifice or challenge to someone with less money, everyone must be held accountable for a crime they commit. “In the old days, if you couldn’t pay the fine, you just went to jail,” Cannon said. A person sentenced to supervised probation in Mini-Cassia has to pay $60 a month, plus the costs for any drug tests. “I don’t like having to drug test,” said Francisco Tarin, 22, of Rupert. “I think it’s pretty ridiculous to be put on supervised probation for such a small charge.” Tarin violated his probation on misdemeanor charges of failure to present identification to officers for liquor and obstruction. He was placed on supervised probation for a year in March for resisting to identify himself to police when they responded to a family dispute. Tarin said probation costs him about $80 a month, plus the cost of gas to drive to Burley each time he checks in at the probation office. “It is a hardship. That $80 could go towards a fridge,” he said. Tarin said he changed his work shift from days to swing shift to accommodate the probation requirements. The probation office’s random testing uses a colorcoded system, and probationers are required to call the office each morning between 5 and 7 a.m. to see if they have to drug test that day. “After 7 a.m., they take the recording off, so I have to drive to Burley to see if it’s my day to test,” Tarin said. He said he’s grateful he has a good job, and he feels bad for families struggling on minimum wage who must pay the extra fees. “I’ll be staying out of trouble after this,” Tarin said.

MARIA VILLAGOMEZ Vallivue High School student though AP English was tough, she encourages others to take the challenge, as well. “I’ve heard people say ‘AP classes are for smart people,’ and I say, ‘No they’re not, they’re for people who want to work hard.’” Molli Thompson is another senior who spoke to the freshmen. She said she was on the brink of failing her classes before AVID and had given up on school, thinking it didn’t matter. Thompson also said she had to work through a stutter and a fear of public speaking. Zubizarreta helped turn her grades and confidence around to the point where she started her own studying group and gave a beginning of the year speech to 800 faculty and staff within Vallivue School District. She said the atmosphere of the AVID class was one of her favorite parts.

between the court and the defendant. A judge orders the terms. Bollar said defendants who don’t have a great deal to lose occasionally opt out of probation. “Under certain circumstances, the realities of life may be that they don’t have a car, a driver’s license or a job, and incarceration seems like a good alternative to them,” he said. The costs of the supervision and drug fees are set by the Minidoka County and Cassia County joint-powers board, said George Warrell, Cassia County undersheriff. The Fifth Judicial District allows counties to charge up to $75 per month for supervised probation. In Mini-Cassia, it runs $60 a month. Linda Wright, trial court administrator for the 5th Judicial District, said drug tests in the district cost $10 to $11. In Mini-Cassia, they range from $12 to $15. The Mini-Cassia office has 550 people on misdemeanor probation, and 1,000 drug tests are performed at the office each month, including tests for felony probation, Drug Court and Health and Welfare, Warrell said. When a urinalysis shows a positive result, the sample is sent to another lab for confirmation testing, said Amber Prewitt, director at the Mini-Cassia Misdemeanor Probation Office. A judge determines if the person will be drug tested, but a person’s behavior determines how often they’ll be tested, Bollar said. Multiple tests mean shelling out a lot more money, and drug tests have to be paid when taken. If someone doesn’t have the money, the office will allow them to wait until payday but then asks them to pay for one test in advance to prevent recurrence, Prewitt said.

MULTIPLE FACTORS PLAY INTO SENTENCING

Cannon said the type of crime determines what level of probation a judge will order, but other factors are considered. “We also look at their criminal history, the circumstances of the crime and if drug or alcohol abuse may have been a facBREAKING THE tor leading to the crime,” RULES CAN BE COSTLY Cannon said. “You’d be Probation is a set of surprised how many misterms used in lieu of in- demeanor crimes are comcarceration, an agreement mitted by someone with a C M Y K

A13

Idaho Press-Tribune • Monday, September 1, 2014

I’ve heard people say ‘AP classes are for smart people,’ and I say, ‘No they’re not, they’re for people who want to work hard.’”

Probation Continued from A1

NEWS

Photos by Greg Kreller/IPT

Above: Achievement Via Individual Determination teacher Jon Zubizarreta teaches the freshman AVID class Wednesday afternoon at Vallivue High School in Caldwell. Right: Maddie Benoit, a freshman at Vallivue High School, talks about the positive impacts of the program. “There was this lovely sense of family,” Thompson said. Johnston said the program is well loved by teachers and students alike so far, and the district made the decision to extend it to the elementary level as part of the curriculum for fourth- and fifthgraders. “I think that college and career readiness really begins in elementary,” Johnston said. “We really want

to increase the number of our students going on to post-secondary education, whether that’s a fouryear program or technical school.” That doesn’t mean fourth-grade students are choosing their dream schools and filling out FAFSA applications, however. Instead, children at Central Canyon Elementary spent Wednesday organizing their binders with math, English and geogra-

meth problem.” The judge said a person sometimes will bring up a drug problem in court because they want help. Other times, the defense attorney mentions it or the prosecutor may have dealt with the person in the past and knows their history of substance abuse. Someone with a criminal history or drug or alcohol issues won’t likely be put on unsupervised probation even if they can pay their fines and fees immediately, Cannon said. “Someone who has no driver’s license, because they simply forgot to renew it, is going to be dealt with differently than someone who has a history of driving without a license,” he said. Bollar said probation is used to ensure court compliance but also helps set up structure in the person’s life. “They are required to get a job and meet certain requirements,” said Bollar.

to perform community service, which is applied to their outstanding costs at a rate of $10 per hour, minus a deduction for worker’s compensation insurance. The community service cannot be applied toward restitution costs or drug testing fees, however. “Judges have a lot of discretion in what they do in their courtroom,” Bollar said.

GETTING CREATIVE IN THE COURTROOM Probationers have to fulfill their obligations, including paying fines and fees before they go on unsupervised probation, Prewitt said. She sees many given several weeks by the courts to pay their fines before they have to sign up for probation, meaning the courts are granting them time to pay. Cannon sometimes gives people 45 days to pay court costs before they have to sign up for probation, and if it is paid on time, they sometimes get no probation at all. “We try to get creative,” he said. Bollar and Cannon also use structure review hearings, in which an offender can return to court to report on their status rather than going on probation. “I have the luxury of doing that because I have a calendar that allows it,” Bollar said. Smaller jurisdictions can accommodate more court hearings, he said. Bollar said if an offender pays outstanding costs, they may not even have to attend the structure review hearing. Prewitt said the probation office works with people who are “truly” indigent to get them back to court so the judge can waive fees. Cannon said he’ll waive fees and costs for someone who has a disability and cannot work or to make sure a victim receives restitution. “I’d rather see the victim receive that restitution,” he said. Bollar also allows offenders who can’t pay costs

phy sections, planning out their calendars and learning how to ask questions. “It encourages students not only to be brave enough to ask questions,

but also to come up with their own,” said Erin Bassham, who is beginning her first year at Central Canyon. “The kids are really pumped about it.”

AP Photo/Twin Falls Times-News, Drew Nash

In this Aug. 21 photo, Deputy Probation Officer Angel Barboza, right, n Information from: The Times-News, conducts an entrance interview with a woman signing up for supervised probation at the Mini-Cassia probation office in Burley. magicvalley.com

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SPORTS idahopress.com/sports Monday, September 1, 2014

Idaho Press-Tribune

Section B

Kahne takes Atlanta shootout By CHARLES ODUM AP Sports Writer

HAMPTON, Ga. — Kasey Kahne’s “downer” year received an important boost when he overcame his struggles with restarts with a big power move when he needed it the most. Kahne charged past Matt Kenseth and Denny Hamlin in a two-lap shootout to win the NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Sunday night. Kahne’s first win of the season earned him a spot in the Chase for the Sprint Cup. “I struggle with restarts a lot and that’s big,” Kahne said. “That’s one of the things you have to be good at. It worked really well tonight.” Kahne took his third career win in Atlanta and his first win of

the season. “We’ve had kind of a downer year at times,” Kahne said. Kenseth, who finished second, also qualified for the Chase on points. He began the second restart in first place, but couldn’t stop the charge from Kahne. “I was able to get alongside him and get a good run down the back stretch,” Kenseth said. “... I got back to the gas as soon as I could. I just didn’t have enough muscle to clear him.” Hamlin was third, followed by Jimmie Johnson, Carl Edwards and Danica Patrick. With only two laps remaining and Kahne holding a solid lead over Kevin Harvick, Martin Truex Jr. and Kyle Busch collided, forcing a caution flag and the first shootout. Harvick, who led 195 laps, had contact with Joey

Logano in heavy traffic and hit the wall on the restart, bringing another caution flag and a second shootout. Kahne, who had four fresh tires, started behind Kenseth and Hamlin on the final restart. “I felt better about the first restart because the outside lane was really slick and I hardly spun the tires,” Kenseth said. “I felt really good about that. The second one I didn’t feel nearly as good about. (Kahne) was behind me. They had so much speed. They drove right up between me and Denny.” Harvick, who also won the Nationwide Series race on Saturday night, started from the pole and led the first 80 laps, but was denied his attempt for a weekend sweep.

AP Photo/Brynn Anderson

Tony Stewart’s car is loaded into the team hauler after hitting the wall in a NASCAR Sprint Cup race Sunday at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Ga. Stewart hit the wall for the second time after his right front tire blew out on lap 172, ending his night. Stewart drove his battered car to the garage and then exited without speaking to reporters. Stewart skipped three NASCAR Sprint Cup races after his car struck and killed a fellow driver in a dirt-track race in upstate New York. He decided to return this week, needing to win either at Atlanta or the next race at Richmond to claim a spot in the Chase.

BOISE STATE FOOTBALL

LOOKING FOR A BOUNCE BACK

U.S. finishes strong to stay unbeaten American overcomes rare halftime deficit to beat Turkey and move to 2-0 By BRIAN MAHONEY AP Basketball Writer

BILBAO, Spain — They figured it would be simple, that they would just beat up on Turkey like they did Finland a night earlier. Instead, the Americans were the ones on the ropes for nearly three quarters. “I guess we felt like last night’s game was pretty easy and tonight was going to be the same way, but Turkey came out and they gave us their punch from the beginning,” forward James Harden said. “We took it and we were sluggish. That second half we played a lot better.” Kenneth Faried scored 22 points, Anthony Davis all of his 19 in the second half, and the U.S. rebounded from a rare deficit at halftime to beat Turkey 98-77 on Sunday in the Basketball World Cup. A night after crushing Finland by 59 in its biggest rout ever while using NBA players in the former world championship, the Americans couldn’t take control against Turkey until early in the fourth quarter after compiling a 17-1 run. “I think we didn’t come ready to play in the first half and we can’t afford to do that if we want to win a gold medal,” Davis said. “So we’ve got to come out ready to play no matter who we’re playing against.” The Americans trailed 40-35 at halftime and Turkey led by six early in the third before the Americans could finally get the game into the quicker tempo they prefer and pull away to win the rematch of the 2010 gold-medal game in Istanbul. But it was a much tougher one than expected after the Americans hammered Finland 114-55 while Turkey was being outplayed for most of its opener by New Zealand before pulling out the victory. Harden added 14 points for the U.S. and Kyrie Irving added 13, playing extended minutes in the second half while struggling Derrick Rose sat. It was tied at 59 with 3:10 left in the third before the Americans closed the period with a 7-1 burst to lead 66-60 after Faried’s basket. The U.S. then ran off 10 in a row to open the fourth and open a 76-60 cushion.

Please see USA., B3 AP Photo/John Bazemore

Boise State quarterback Grant Hedrick (9) scrambles against Mississippi in the first half Thursday in Atlanta.

Hedrick had four interceptions in season-opening loss for BSU By B.J. RAINS

to go in the film room and learn from this game. I don’t think we’ll see another game © 2014 Idaho Press-Tribune like this from Grant. I’m excited for what Boise State running back Jay Ajayi has he’s going to do this season. no doubt that quarterback “I feel like next week he’s Grant Hedrick’s worst game really going to show up.” of the season is already beHedrick threw five inhind him. terceptions in 242 pass atHedrick threw four intertempts last season, but the ceptions Thursday in a 35-13 redshirt senior had four on COLORADO STATE (1-0) loss against Ole Miss in the his first 31 throws Thursday. season opener at the GeorThe first was arguably the AT BOISE STATE (0-1) gia Dome and struggled most costly, as he threw a WHEN: Saturday, 8:15 p.m. with his decision-making on ball into double coverage in WHERE: Albertsons Stadium several plays. the end zone with the game TV: ESPN2 (Cable One, ch. 25; Dish “I trust Grant,” Ajayi said. scoreless in the first quarter. Network, ch. 144; DirecTV, ch. 209) “He’s a great quarterback RADIO: KBOI 670 AM and I know that he’s going Please see BSU, B3 bjrains@idahopress.com

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AP Photo/Alvaro Barrientos

The United States’s James Harden, right, duels for the ball with Turkey’s Kerem Gonlum during their Group C FIBA World Cup match Sunday in Bilbao, Spain.


PAGE TWO MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2014 | idahopress.com

SPORTS DEPARTMENT/REPORT RESULTS: (208) 465-8111, sports@idahopress.com; SPORTS EDITOR: JOHN WUSTROW (208) 465-8154, jwustrow@idahopress.com

GAME PLANNER

BOISE HAWKS BASEBALL

boisehawks.com

TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY TODAY Hillsboro Hillsboro Hillsboro Salem-Keizer (Playoffs) (Playoffs) 5:45 p.m. 6:45 p.m. (Playoffs) 7:05 p.m. 7:05 p.m.

BOISE STATE FOOTBALL SATURDAY Colorado St. 8:15 p.m.

SEPT. 13 UConn 10 a.m.

SEPT. 20 LouisianaLafayette 8:30 p.m.

broncosports.com

SEPT. 27 Air Force 5 p.m.

OCT. 4 Nevada 8:30 p.m.

IDAHO FOOTBALL SATURDAY LouisianaMonroe 5 p.m.

SEPT. 13 Western Michigan 3 p.m.

SEPT. 20 Ohio TBA

OCT. 17 Fresno St. 6 p.m.

govandals.com SEPT. 27 South Alabama 3 p.m.

OCT. 4 OCT. 11 Texas State Georgia S. TBA 5 p.m.

IDAHO STATE FOOTBALL

isubengals.com

OCT. 4 SATURDAY SEPT. 13 SEPT. 27 OCT. 11 OCT. 18 Eastern Simon Utah State Chadron St. Sacramento Washington Fraser S. Utah State 6 p.m. 2:35 p.m. 2:35 p.m. 2:35 p.m. 2:05 p.m. TBA

COLLEGE OF IDAHO FOOTBALL SEPT. 13 Montana Western 1 p.m.

SATURDAY Pacific 1 p.m.

SEPT. 20 Southern Oregon 1 p.m.

yoteathletics.com OCT. 4 Eastern Oregon 6 p.m.

SEPT. 27 Montana Tech 1 p.m.

OCT. 11 Montana St.Northern 1 p.m.

Home game

TODAY’S MENU COLLEGE SOCCER: Men — College of Idaho at Westminster, 11 a.m.

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In the NFL, imitation is often a form of flattery

NAMES IN THE NEWS

NFL

By BARRY WILNER

ADAM DUNN

AP Pro Football Writer

NEW YORK — Troy Vincent pounds his fists on a conference room table and smiles. “We are a copycat league, you bet,” he says. “If Peyton and Philip and Brees and Brady are doing something that’s good, then go out and try to do the same thing.” Easier said than done if you don’t have such star quarterbacks, but Vincent’s point is well taken. The NFL’s head of football operations, a star player for 15 pro seasons and former president of the players’ union, recognizes that trends always will be a part of the sport. Some burst on the scene and then fade quickly: the wildcat or alternating QBs, for example. Others — the zone blitz, the nickel back — have staying power. In 2014, there will be plenty of plagiarism between the lines, on the sidelines, in the coaching boxes and even in the marketing departments. NO HUDDLES: The no-huddle offense has been a part of pro football since John Unitas pretty much invented the two-minute drill. It normally was reserved for late portions of halves and games. It’s running rampant through the league now, its popularity buoyed by the record-smashing seasons Peyton Manning and Tom Brady recently put together. Super Bowl-winning quarterback Phil Simms, now an analyst for CBS, says it’s here to stay. “Faster offense will be a part of the NFL,” Simms says. “What was a talented offense from 10 years ago is so much less so now because it is harder to run the ball.” Simms believes teams will pass more than ever, combining that with the nohuddle. “We’ll be seeing out of these offenses all these screens, trying to tire out key defensive players,” he explains. “That’s a matchup the offenses can win, and it is almost a must by an NFL offense to have.”

AP Photo/Ben Margo

Denver Broncos quarterback Peyton Manning has mastered the art of the no-huddle offense, leading the charge into faster-paced NFL games. Simms says offenses need to do something different because, “you won’t win 17-13 anymore in the playoffs. “And what’s unique? Well, go as fast as you can.” PLAY CALLING: Rich Gannon, the NFL’s 2002 MVP while leading the Raiders to the Super Bowl, thinks the faster pace will affect the ones calling plays. The traditional system of relaying a play or formations from the coordinators to the quarterbacks or defensive leaders is endangered, Gannon predicts. So is a quarterback calling just one play. “Years ago, offensive coordinators were trying to guess right,” says Gannon, now an analyst for SiriusXM NFL Radio and for CBS. “They would find a set of plays based on preparation during the week and on their knowledge of the percentage defenses did certain things.” That’s changed, he says, and modern offenses need a quarterback who can adjust on the line. Denver, New England, New Orleans, Green Bay, a few others — they don’t have to worry. Other teams will continue searching for a quarterback who has a great arm and the intelligence to make the right

call while the play clock is ticking. “We’ll be seeing quarterbacks calling multiple plays in the huddle. When they get to the line, they use the play that fits,” Gannon says. “It’s not an audible, but it’s the quarterbacks being given the freedom they need to get into the right play.” TECHNOLOGY: “There is only so much you can do differently on the field,” Vincent reasons. “So who gets the edge might depend on who is willing to let technology become a positive.” While the league is allowing teams to use tablets on the sideline for everything from play calling to reviewing what just happened, not everyone is readily embracing it. He senses that some coaches entrenched in the past might not make a smooth switch. Until, that is, they recognize that an opponent is getting a competitive advantage from the technology. “We’ve seen things copied through the years, from traditional lineups to the runand-shoot to the zone blitz to the wildcat,” Vincent says. “Now it will be in technology, sorting through information quicker, using it for practices, schedules, scouting.”

One more shot at the playoffs for Adam Dunn before he says he’s probably done. The slugger with 460 career home runs but zero at-bats in the postseason was traded by the Chicago White Sox to Oakland on Sunday, possibly giving the contending A’s the power boost they need for the stretch. The White Sox also sent cash to Oakland while acquiring minor league pitcher Nolan Sanburn. Because the deal was made before Sept. 1, Dunn will be eligible for the postseason if the suddenly sluggish Athletics make the playoffs. The 34-year-old Dunn has played more games — 1,976 — without reaching the postseason than any active major leaguer. This is his 14th season and, with a contract set to expire, said he’s planning to retire after this year. Dunn waived his no-trade clause and approved the deal. Dunn is hitting .220 with 20 homers and 54 RBIs. Earlier in his career, he played for Cincinnati, Arizona and Washington.

RAY MCDONALD San Francisco 49ers defensive tackle Ray McDonald was arrested early Sunday on felony domestic violence charges after officers responded to a home in an upscale neighborhood, San Jose police said. Sgt. Heather Randol, a police spokeswoman, declined to discuss the circumstances that led to McDonald’s arrest, saying only that officers had probable cause to take him into custody. McDonald, 29, was later released from Santa Clara County Jail after posting $25,000 bail. He wouldn’t discuss what happened with television news reporters who approached him after he posted bail. NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell announced tougher penalties this past week for players accused of domestic violence. The move followed scrutiny over Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice’s two-game penalty stemming from his arrest on an assault charge in February.

— AP

Henley takes a 1-shot lead at Deutsche Bank GOLF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Russell Henley made five birdies in a seven-hole stretch Sunday on his way to a 6-under 65, giving him a one-shot lead in the Deutsche Bank Championship going into a Labor Day finish loaded with possibilities. And that includes Rory McIlroy. Coming off a week that was pedestrian by his standards, McIlroy got right back into the mix at the TPC Boston with his power and great iron play for a 64, leaving him just two shots behind on a crowded leaderboard. “I’ve been in this position quite a lot recently,” McIlroy said. “So I know how it’s going to feel tomorrow.” It feels a lot like the FedEx Cup playoff opener a week ago at The Barclays, with more than a dozen players having a reasonable chance going into the final round. Ten players were separated by four shots at the Deutsche Bank Championship, and six of them already have won this season. Henley was at 12-under 201. He will play in the final group with Billy Horschel, who birdied his last three holes for a 67. Chris Kirk went toe-to-toe with McIlroy in the third round and matched his 64, coming within inches of an eagle on the final hole. They will play together again on Monday. Jason Day, who started Sunday tied with Ryan Palmer, reached 12 under with a short birdie putt on the 13th hole. But he missed a short par putt on

the 14th and hooked his tee shot into high grass and had to pitch out, leading to another bogey on the 15th. Day also failed to birdie the par-5 18th and shot 69. Palmer took bogey on two of the par 5s and shot 71 to fall four shots behind. McIlroy won the British Open, a World Golf Championship and the PGA Championship to assert himself at No. 1 in the world. He had a chance to win early in the season until a late collapse in the Honda Classic, where Henley won the four-man playoff. Henley can look as good as anyone, and then he can disappear. He has missed eight cuts and has only two finishes in the top 20 since winning the Honda Classic. Now he is one round away at securing his spot in the Tour Championship, and perhaps giving U.S. captain Tom Watson one more person to consider for a Ryder Cup picks. But that one round seems far away considering the leaderboard, especially with McIlroy. “He’s obviously a tough guy to beat,” Henley said. “But like I said, there’s a lot of tough guys to beat. Rory has had a heck of a run and I’m sure he’ll continue that.” LPGA TOUR: Austin Ernst won the LPGA Tour’s Portland Classic with a par on the first hole of a playoff against South Korea’s I.K. Kim. It was the first professional victory for the 22-year-old Ernst, who shot a 5-under 67 in the final round to get to 14 under at Columbia Edgewater. Kim,

the first- and second-round leader, carded a 68. Kim missed an eight-foot par putt in the playoff that handed the win to the American. Ernst pulled into contention with a 5-under 31 on the front nine, highlighted by a chip-in eagle at the par-5 fifth. Kim made four birdies and no bogeys. CHAMPIONS TOUR: Fred Couples won the Champions Tour’s Shaw Charity Classic, chipping in for eagle for a course-record 9-under 61 and beating Billy Andrade with a tap-in birdie on the first hole of a playoff. The 54-year-old Couples also eagled the par-5 11th and had five birdies in his third straight bogey-free round at Canyon Meadows. Andrade closed with a 62, making a short eagle putt on the par-5 18th to match Couples at 15-under 195. In the playoff on No. 18, Andrade went for the green in two and pulled his approach right of the green and into the grandstand. Couples laid up and hit his third within a foot. After taking a drop, Andrade left his chip 30 feet short and missed his birdie putt. WEBCOM TOUR FINALS: Bud Cauley won the Hotel Fitness Championship to regain his PGA Tour card, earning $180,000 in the Web.com Tour Finals opener. Cauley closed with a bogey-free AP Photo/Michael Dwyer 7-under 65 at Sycamore Hills for a onestroke victory over Colt Knost. The Russell Henley holds up his ball after putting on the 16th hole dur24-year-old former Alabama player ing the third round of the Deutsche Bank Championship Sunday in won his first professional title. Norton, Mass. C M Y K


idahopress.com

SPORTS

Idaho Press-Tribune • Monday, September 1, 2014

B3

Trout, Shoemaker help Angels finish off sweep BASEBALL ROUNDUP

HAWKS FALL IN 10TH INNING

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Mike Trout hit his career-high 31st homer and drove in three runs, rookie Matt Shoemaker pitched seven shutout innings of five-hit ball, and the Los Angeles Angels finished off a fourgame sweep, beating the Oakland Athletics 8-1 Sunday. ORIOLES 12, TWINS 8: J.J. Hardy hit his fourth career grand slam during a seven-run sixth inning, Nelson Cruz connected for his major league-leading 35th home run and Ryan Flaherty also homered, leading Baltimore over Minnesota. WHITE SOX 6, TIGERS 2: Jose Quintana allowed two runs over seven innings to earn his first win in more than a month, and the Chicago White Sox beat Detroit after trading Adam Dunn. BLUE JAYS 4, YANKEES 3: Jose Bautista homered for the fifth straight game and the Toronto Blue Jays erased a three-run deficit to beat the New York Yankees. RAYS 3, RED SOX 0: Clay Buchholz threw a three-hitter to stop his string of seven starts without a win, leading the Boston Red Sox over Tampa Bay. ASTROS 3, RANGERS 2: Matt Dominguez hit a tying homer and Jose Al-

Brett Kay scored on a wild pitch in the top of the tenth inning to break a tie, lifting Salem-Keizer past Boise, 4-3, at Memorial Stadium. The Volcanoes trailed 3-2 in the ninth, but Hunter Cole led off with a double, moved to third on a wild pitch and scored just ahead of Kevin Brown’s throw from left on a Jonathan Jones sacrifice fly to tie the score. In the tenth, Kay walked, stole second, moved to third when Justin Marra’s throw went into center field, and scored on Trey Lang’s third wild pitch of the night. tuve’s fourth hit drove in the go-ahead run as the Houston Astros rallied in the eighth inning to beat Texas.

NATIONAL LEAGUE BRAVES 1, MARLINS 0: Alex Wood struck out 12 in eight dominant innings and Evan Gattis homered to help Atlanta beat Miami. GIANTS 15, BREWERS 5: Pablo Sandoval hit a two-run homer among his three RBIs and finished a double shy of the cycle, powering San Francisco past Milwaukee to match a season high with its sixth straight win. CARDINALS 9, CUBS 6: Matt Holliday

hit his third home run in two games and broke an eighth-inning tie with a two-run single, rallying St. Louis past Chicago. DODGERS 7, PADRES 1: Hyun-Jin Ryu came off the disabled list to pitch fourhit ball over seven innings, and Matt Kemp singled in the go-ahead run as Los Angeles avoided a three-game sweep in San Diego. DIAMONDBACKS 6, ROCKIES 2: Chase Anderson pitched six strong innings in Arizona’s victory over Colorado. REDS 3, PIRATES 2: Chris Heisey hit two home runs, including a tiebreaking shot in the ninth inning, and Johnny Cueto overcame an early jolt to earn his 16th win as Cincinnati beat Pittsburgh. METS 6, PHILLIES 5: Anthony Recker snapped a sixth-inning tie with a three-run homer in a rare start, and New York held off Philadelphia to avoid dropping into last place.

INTERLEAGUE MARINERS 5, NATIONALS 3: Dustin Ackley homered and drove in four runs and the Seattle Mariners averted a three-game sweep, overcoming a pair of home runs by Bryce Harper to beat Washington.

Wozniacki outlasts Sharapova U.S. OPEN

By RACHEL COHEN AP Sports Writer

NEW YORK — Caroline Wozniacki trusts her stamina so much that she plans to return to New York in two months to run a marathon. Maria Sharapova, usually the one wearing down opponents in the third set, sure couldn’t keep up on a steamy Sunday at the U.S. Open. Wozniacki won 6-4, 2-6, 6-2 in 2 hours, 37 minutes to get back to her first Grand Slam quarterfinal in more than two years — and get back in the headlines for reasons other than her personal life. “The season for me has been a little bit up and down,” she said in quite an understatement, “and it’s so nice to kind of start feeling like I’m playing the way I want to.” Because of the heat, the players received a 10-minute break before the final set; Sharapo-

va returned to the court late, arguing with the chair umpire after receiving a time violation warning. Perhaps sensing that she was fresher than the five-time major champion, Wozniacki later complained that Sharapova was dawdling between points. Her tardiness seemed to swing the Arthur Ashe Stadium crowd’s support squarely in Wozniacki’s favor. When the 10th-seeded Dane broke Sharapova at love to go up 3-1 in the final set, she got a standing ovation from the fans and waved her arms to egg them on. Sharapova had appeared to hit a winner three times on that game’s final point only for Wozniacki to somehow chase down the ball. Finally, Sharapova put a volley into the net. Wozniacki mixed in just enough aggression with her signature defense to keep the pressure on Sharapova in the final set. The fifth-seeded Sharapova’s loss leaves No. 1 Serena Williams as the only woman remaining of the top six.

AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill

The Los Angeles Angels’ Josh Hamilton, left, and Mike Trout celebrate after the defeated the Oakland Athletics 8-1 Sunday in Anaheim, Calif.

Yote men take 1-0 win in Utah LOCAL ROUNDUP

Joe Bolin scored a second half goal, the College of Idaho defense dominated as the Yotes men’s soccer team beat Dakota Wesleyan 1-0 Sunday in Salt Lake City’s Westminster Labor Day Classic to improve to 2-0 for the first time since 2004. The College of Idaho limited the Tigers to two shots — neither of them on net — before Bolin broke away in the 80th minute and scored the game-winner. The Yotes wrap up the tournament by playing hosts Westminster at 11 a.m. today. PILGRIMS OPEN SEASON WITH WIN IN MONTANA: Chase Bowen led New Plymouth’s running attack with 250 yards on 250 carries and Tyler Powell had an interception late in the game

Vols defense shuts down Chuckie BSU Keeton to beat Utah State 38-7

to seal a 30-26 win for the Pilgrims football team Saturday in their season opener against Ronan, Montana in the University of Montana’s Washington-Grizzly Stadium. New Plymouth (1-0) had 367 rushing yards as a team, led by Bowen, whose 2-yard touchdown run with 4:39 remaining put the Pilgrims ahead for the first time in the game. Pilgrims quarterback Kyler Harris had 134 yards on 12-of-25 passing to go with 90 rushing yards. BRONCOS ESCAPE WITH TIE ON THE ROAD: Kelli Drobney scored her first goal of the season in the 86th minute to help the Boise State soccer team salvage a 1-1 tie Sunday against Utah Valley in Orem, Utah. The Broncos outshot the Wolverines 13-6, including a 7-2 advantage in shots on goal, but Utah Valley led until the late stages.

Continued from B1

COLLEGE FOOTBALL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Justin Worley threw for 273 yards and three touchdowns to help Tennessee beat Utah State 38-7 on Sunday night in a game matching two quarterbacks returning from injuries that ended their 2013 seasons prematurely. Worley completed his first 13 passes of the second half in his first appearance since missing Tennessee’s final four games last season with an injured right thumb. He was 27 of 38 overall, connecting with 10 different receivers. Worley threw touchdown passes to Brendan Downs, Von Pearson and Jalen Hurd, and his 27 completions were a career high. Worley outperformed Utah State star Chuckie Keeton, who was playing for the first time since tearing the anterior cruciate and medial collateral ligaments in his left knee last October. Keeton went 18 of 35 for 144 yards and a touchdown with two interceptions. Tennessee is relying heavily on a heralded recruiting class as it attempts to end a string of four straight losing seasons, and those newcomers wasted no time making an impact. By the midway point of the first quarter, Tennessee already had played 16 true freshmen, the most ever used by the Vols in a season opener. Two of Worley’s three TD passes went to newcomers; Hurd is a freshman and Pearson a junior-college

USA Continued from B1

The Americans haven’t lost since the semifinals of the 2006 world championship and outside of their victories over Spain in the last two Olympic goldmedal games, haven’t been in danger much since then. But they needed a long time to start looking like the team that is so considered the tournament C M Y K

AP Photo/Knoxville News Sentinel, Amy Smotherman Burgess

Utah State quarterback Chuckie Keeton (16) tries to get away from a Tennessee defender during their NCAA college football game at Neyland Stadium, Sunday, Aug. 31, 2014 in Knoxville, Tenn. transfer. Todd Kelly Jr., another freshman, had a fumble recovery that set up a touchdown. Tennessee opened the scoring by getting two touchdowns in a span of 14 seconds six minutes into the game. NO. 10 BAYLOR 45, SMU 0: Bryce Petty threw for two touchdowns and ran for another score, helping No. 10 Baylor open its riverfront campus stadium with a victory over former Southwest Conference rival SMU. Petty played two quarters because of a bruise to his lower back after taking an early shot. He threw for 161 yards while moving gingerly

favorite by so many. “Before the game we talked about we trying to keep the tempo low, in fact slow down the game and we did it very well first half. I think actually three quarters we did it very well,” Turkey’s Ender Arslan said. “But after, physically United States team is great, they played 40 minutes ... so we get a little bit tired after third quarter and they still played at the same level.” The U.S. beat Turkey 81-64 four years ago to win

at times and often grabbing at his back. Big 12 champion Baylor (1-0) led 24-0 after one quarter. It had a 6-yard TD drive after an SMU fumble and a 4-yard drive after Levi Norwood’s 45-yard punt return. The Bears sacked SMU’s three quarterbacks a combined eight times and held the Mustangs (0-1) to 67 total yards. On the day a statue of Robert Griffin III was dedicated, Petty extended his streak with at least one touchdown pass to a school-record 14 games, breaking a tie with Baylor’s only Heisman Trophy winner.

gold, and though the Turks have eight players remaining from that team, they no longer have their best player, Hedo Turkoglu, or fellow NBA veteran Ersan Ilyasova. Cenk Akyol led Turkey with 12 points. The Americans had to break from their pregame warmups to retake the official team picture that every team took Saturday before their opening games, because they were still wearing sweats instead of their uniforms.

They soon had bigger problems than a fashion faux pas. It was 16-all after one, and Turkey controlled the tempo in the second quarter, getting to the foul line as the Americans showed moments of frustration with the pace and some calls that went against them. Baris Hersek and Emir Preldzic made consecutive 3-pointers late in the half to give Turkey a 38-32 lead.

With the Broncos inside the 10 yard line and likely to at least get a field goal to take an early lead, Hedrick scrambled and made an ill-advised heave that was picked off to keep the game scoreless. “Four interceptions is something that’s not going to be a standard around here, that’s for sure,” said offensive coordinator Mike Sanford. “One of the four was a tipped ball, kind of a fluke play, but we’ve got to do a better job getting hands down. “The one in the red zone was a bonehead decision by him, and he knows that. It was early on in the game, we had some momentum going and had a chance to make a statement on that drive. Just cut your losses. Very disappointing.” Hedrick completed 36 of 46 passes for 264 yards and a late touchdown pass to Ajayi. But the four interceptions are the headliner, including three in the first half while the Boise State defense did everything it could to keep the Broncos in the game. Despite the struggles offensively, Boise State trailed just 7-6 at the half — but Hedrick threw another interception and was sacked three times in the second half to slow any chance at a comeback. The third sack came on third down and four in the fourth quarter, when Boise State likely would have gone for it on fourth down. Instead of throwing the ball away, Hedrick was sacked for a 15-yard loss that forced the Broncos to punt. “There were a couple decisions I’d like to get back,” Hedrick said. “You see some things and you try to force it and that’s really what happened. I tried to force a few things and as soon as you let the ball go you’re like ‘Crap, I shouldn’t have thrown that one.’ “Obviously you’re not

going to win too many games throwing four picks. But you have to have a short memory, bounce back and realize you have a game next week. We have a lot more football this season, which is great.” Hedrick took over midway through last season when Joe Southwick suffered a broken ankle vs. Nevada. Hedrick was the Broncos’ primary quarterback for the final seven games of his junior season, and he finished with 1,825 passing yards and 16 touchdowns. But the turnovers aren’t new. He tossed five interceptions and lost four fumbles in the final seven games in leading Boise State to a 8-5 record. The Broncos stressed ball security during the summer and fall and hoped it would be better leading into Thursday. But with the unwanted poor performance in his rear-view mirror, Hedrick and the Broncos have turned their attention towards their ultimate goal — winning the Mountain West Conference. The Broncos open conference play on Saturday night against a tough Colorado State team at 8:15 p.m. in the home opener at Albertsons Stadium. The game will be televised on ESPN2. “Grant did some really good things,” Sanford said. “He came back and led a touchdown drive and did some really good things. I think even within the game, he responded to adversity. The biggest thing is we can’t take for granted the ball security part. “I’m not worried about his psyche — we’ve just got to take better care of the football. He was very efficient. If you take away, honestly, two of those decisions, we probably win the football game, or at least we’re right there to compete for it at the very end.” Said head coach Bryan Harsin: “He wasn’t perfect, but I thought he played well. … We’ll go back and look at it and clean those things up.”


B4

SPORTS

Idaho Press-Tribune • Monday, September 1, 2014

AUTO RACING NASCAR Sprint Cup-Oral-B USA 500

Sunday At Atlanta Motor Speedway Hampton, Ga. Lap length: 1.54 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (10) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 335 laps, 105.2 rating, 47 points.; 2. (5) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 335, 118.6, 43.; 3. (17) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 335, 114.9, 42.; 4. (16) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 335, 105.7, 40.; 5. (11) Carl Edwards, Ford, 335, 101.3, 39.; 6. (27) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 335, 81.3, 38.; 7. (4) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 335, 94.2, 37.; 8. (3) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 335, 91.1, 36.; 9. (7) Aric Almirola, Ford, 335, 83.8, 35.; 10. (18) Greg Biffle, Ford, 335, 83.7, 34. 11. (20) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 335, 83.8, 33.; 12. (15) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 335, 76.2, 32.; 13. (22) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 335, 91.9, 32.; 14. (14) Joey Logano, Ford, 335, 105.2, 30.; 15. (19) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 335, 92.3, 29.; 16. (8) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 335, 68.7, 28.; 17. (9) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 335, 111.4, 27.; 18. (33) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 335, 79.6, 26.; 19. (1) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 335, 132.4, 27.; 20. (26) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 334, 62.9, 24. 21. (25) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 334, 59.2, 23.; 22. (24) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 334, 51, 22.; 23. (6) Martin Truex Jr., Chevrolet, 334, 71.2, 21.; 24. (13) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 334, 62.9, 20.; 25. (29) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 332, 55.6, 0.; 26. (31) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 332, 53.4, 18.; 27. (38) David Ragan, Ford, 331, 49.6, 17.; 28. (37) David Gilliland, Ford, 330, 48.5, 16.; 29. (43) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 330, 41, 15.; 30. (40) Cole Whitt, Toyota, 329, 41.7, 14. 31. (42) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 329, 36.2, 0.; 32. (41) J.J. Yeley, Ford, 328, 32.9, 0.; 33. (36) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, 328, 37.6, 11.; 34. (35) Brett Moffitt, Toyota, 327, 33.7, 10.; 35. (30) Alex Bowman, Toyota, 326, 38.6, 9.; 36. (39) Ryan Truex, Toyota, 326, 32.5, 8.; 37. (34) Joe Nemechek, Ford, 324, 27.3, 0.; 38. (21) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 314, 60.2, 6.; 39. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, accident, 296, 91.4, 6.; 40. (23) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, vibration, 258, 51.4, 4. 41. (12) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, accident, 170, 68, 3.; 42. (32) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, engine, 122, 46.9, 2.; 43. (28) Mike Bliss, Chevrolet, vibration, 23, 27.6, 0. Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 131.512 mph. Time of Race: 3 hours, 55 minutes, 24 seconds. Margin of Victory: 0.574 seconds. Caution Flags: 10 for 56 laps. Lead Changes: 21 among 6 drivers. Lap Leaders: K.Harvick 1-80; D.Hamlin 81-84; K.Harvick 85; D.Hamlin 86-107; K.Harvick 108-118; D.Hamlin 119-122; M.Kenseth 123-135; Ku.Busch 136-157; M.Kenseth 158-164; K.Harvick 165-170; B.Keselowski 171-173; D.Hamlin 174; M.Kenseth 175-182; K.Harvick 183-210; M.Kenseth 211-227; K.Harvick 228-258; D.Hamlin 259-260; K.Harvick 261-298; D.Hamlin 299-302; K.Kahne 303-325; M.Kenseth 326-333; K.Kahne 334-335. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): K.Harvick, 7 times for 195 laps; M.Kenseth, 5 times for 53 laps; D.Hamlin, 6 times for 37 laps; K.Kahne, 2 times for 25 laps; Ku.Busch, 1 time for 22 laps; B.Keselowski, 1 time for 3 laps. Wins: D.Earnhardt Jr., 3; J.Gordon, 3; J.Johnson, 3; B.Keselowski, 3; J.Logano, 3; C.Edwards, 2; K.Harvick, 2; A.Allmendinger, 1; A.Almirola, 1; Ku.Busch, 1; Ky.Busch, 1; D.Hamlin, 1; K.Kahne, 1. Top 12 in Points: 1. J.Gordon, 872; 2. D.Earnhardt Jr., 851; 3. M.Kenseth, 794; 4. J.Logano, 791; 5. B.Keselowski, 782; 6. J.Johnson, 766; 7. C.Edwards, 755; 8. K.Harvick, 748; 9. R.Newman, 747; 10. G.Biffle, 728; 11. K.Kahne, 708; 12. C.Bowyer, 705.

BASEBALL American League

East Division W L Pct GB Baltimore 79 56 .585 — New York 70 65 .519 9 Toronto 69 67 .507 10½ Tampa Bay 66 71 .482 14 Boston 60 76 .441 19½ Central Division W L Pct GB Kansas City 74 61 .548 — Detroit 74 62 .544 ½ Cleveland 70 64 .522 3½ Chicago 62 75 .453 13 Minnesota 59 77 .434 15½ West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 83 53 .610 — Oakland 78 58 .574 5 Seattle 73 62 .541 9½ Houston 59 79 .428 25 Texas 53 83 .390 30 Sunday’s Games Toronto 4, N.Y. Yankees 3 Baltimore 12, Minnesota 8 Boston 3, Tampa Bay 0 Chicago White Sox 6, Detroit 2 Houston 3, Texas 2 L.A. Angels 8, Oakland 1 Seattle 5, Washington 3 Cleveland 4, Kansas City 2, 10th innings, susp., rain Today’s Games Boston (R.De La Rosa 4-5) at Tampa Bay (Smyly 9-10), 11:10 a.m. Minnesota (P.Hughes 14-9) at Baltimore (Gausman 7-6), 11:35 a.m. Detroit (Price 12-10) at Cleveland (Kluber 13-8), 2:05 p.m. Seattle (C.Young 12-6) at Oakland (Hammel 1-5), 2:05 p.m. Texas (Lewis 9-11) at Kansas City (Ventura 10-9), 6:10 p.m.

National League East Division Washington Atlanta Miami

W 77 72 66

L Pct GB 58 .570 — 65 .526 6 69 .489 11

New York 64 73 .467 14 Philadelphia 62 74 .456 15½ Central Division W L Pct GB Milwaukee 73 63 .537 — St. Louis 73 63 .537 — Pittsburgh 71 65 .522 2 Cincinnati 66 71 .482 7½ Chicago 61 76 .445 12½ West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 77 60 .562 — San Francisco 74 62 .544 2½ San Diego 64 71 .474 12 Arizona 57 79 .419 19½ Colorado 54 82 .397 22½ Sunday’s Games N.Y. Mets 6, Philadelphia 5 Cincinnati 3, Pittsburgh 2 St. Louis 9, Chicago Cubs 6 San Francisco 15, Milwaukee 5 Arizona 6, Colorado 2 L.A. Dodgers 7, San Diego 1 Atlanta 1, Miami 0 Today’s Games N.Y. Mets (Za.Wheeler 9-9) at Miami (H.Alvarez 10-6), 11:10 a.m. Philadelphia (Hamels 7-6) at Atlanta (Teheran 13-9), 11:10 a.m. Pittsburgh (Cole 7-4) at St. Louis (Lynn 14-8), 12:15 p.m. Milwaukee (J.Nelson 2-5) at Chicago Cubs (Ja.Turner 4-8), 12:20 p.m. Colorado 2, San Francisco 2, tie, 6 innings, comp. of susp. game, 2:10 p.m. Arizona (Cahill 3-9) at San Diego (T.Ross 12-12), 2:10 p.m. San Francisco (Hudson 9-9) at Colorado (F.Morales 5-7), 2:10 p.m. Washington (G.Gonzalez 6-9) at L.A. Dodgers (R.Hernandez 8-9), 6:10 p.m.

Northwest League

North Division W L Vancouver (Blue Jays) 20 17 Tri-City (Rockies) 18 19 Everett (Mariners) 17 20 x-Spokane (Rangers) 15 22 South Division W L x-Hillsboro (Diamondbacks) 25 12 Salem-Keizer (Giants) 20 17 Boise (Cubs) 18 19 Eugene (Padres) 15 22 x-clinched first half Sunday’s Games Vancouver 5, Spokane 3 Hillsboro 7, Eugene 1 Salem-Keizer 4, Boise 3, 10 innings Everett 3, Tri-City 1 Today’s Games Spokane at Vancouver, 2:05 p.m. Salem-Keizer at Boise, 5:45 p.m. Eugene at Hillsboro, 8:05 p.m. Everett at Tri-City, 8:15 p.m.

Pct. .541 .486 .459 .405 Pct. .676 .541 .486 .405

GB — 2 3 5 GB — 5 7 10

VOLCANOES 4, HAWKS 3, 10 INNINGS S-K AB R H BI BOISE AB R H BI Fargas, cf 5 0 0 0 White, cf 2 1 1 0 Kay, 2b 4 1 0 0 Burks, rf 4 0 1 0 Relaford, ss 3 0 0 0 Brown, lf 5 0 2 2 Jones, 3b 5 1 1 0 Marra, c 4 1 1 0 Cole, lf 3 1 1 0 Tomasovich, 1b 5 0 1 0 McCall, rf 5 1 2 1 Vosler, 3b 4 0 1 0 Rojas, dh 3 0 0 0 Torres, ss 4 0 0 0 Jones, 1b 2 0 0 1 Flete, 2b 4 0 1 1 Pujadas. c 4 0 1 0 Malave, dh 4 1 1 0 Totals 34 4 5 2 36 3 9 3 SALEM-KEIZER 000 100 101 1 — 4 BOISE 001 010 010 0 — 3 E–Marra 2. LOB–Salem-Keizer 8, Boise 10. 2B–Cole, McCall, Malave. SH–White, Burks, Vosler. SF–Jones. SB–Kay, Relaford, Torres. SALEM-KEIZER IP H R ER BB SO Beede 3 3 1 1 2 5 Leenhouts 3 2 1 1 1 4 McVey 1 1-3 3 1 1 1 1 Encinosa 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 McCaslandd W, 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 0 Sanchez S, 14 1 0 0 0 0 2 BOISE IP H R ER BB SO Clifton 5 3 1 1 2 4 McNeil 2 1 1 0 1 1 Davis 1 0 0 0 0 1 Lang L, 2-1 2 1 2 1 4 2 WP–McNeil 2, Lang 3 T–3:16. A–2,516.

BOWLING Caldwell Bowl

Aug. 20-29 Scores Men’s City: Chase Bedient 238-618; Jedd Stanwood 226602; Lonny Hestead 601; Don Burns 256-637; Don Penner 244-633; Lalo Gonzalez 241-626; Kevin Erskine 246-632; Gregg Dunlap 238 Wednesday Night Ladies: Brandy Schuler 213; Natalie Wilhite 503; Wendy Cossins 209-550; Maggie Stewart 502 Ladies Thursday Night: Candie Elkington 543; Kim Davenport 510; Tammy Fox 530 Friday Night Mixed: Tanner Loon 225; Louise Fuqua 509 Sun. Nite Mixed: Delbert Sturm 233-235-659; Kaylyn Tollman 214-610; Bill Lobb 225-615; James Burger 256; Eric Saunders 629; Pancho Garibay 611 Monday Mixmasters: Shari Greenwalt 204-229-593; Rob Sykes 234-633; Carl Wilson 244-239-655; Ashlee Ford 513; Sonny Davidson 234; Brian Rapp 231 Tuesday Early Bird: Annerose Hernandez 211-522; Nikki Matney 206-503; Kim Davenport 202-554; Megan Hashagen 202-541; Lori Kora 530; Tammy Fox 212-246-654; Kaylyn

Tollman 203-546 After Lunch Bunch: Bud Becker 215-522; Michelle Caddy 508; Alex Brown 545; Kim Davenport 213; Ray Horrace 520; Dale Eis 532; Dale Morgan 557; Rich Day 203-576; Dan Martz 507; John Kelso 201-504 Men’s City: Jeff Dale 225; Kevin Erskine 243; Alan Oyama 245-646; Terry Fisher 246-244-695; Bill Lobb 241-611; Scott Campbell 632; Lalo Gonzalez 264-604; Robert Black 235; Tom Gordon 246 Wednesday Night Ladies: Wendy Cossins 531; Kimberly Erskine 201-514 Ladies Thursday Night: Becky Bly 202-534; Michelle Klemish 219-565; Cindy Hastriter 539; Annerose Hernandez 518; Kathy Abel 539; Debbie Sturm 502; Candie Elkington 513; Rose Martin 508 Friday Night Mixed: Colt Loon 233; Charlie Waidley 257232-679; Kevin Erskine 246-642

FOOTBALL College Football

Sunday SOUTH Tennessee 38, Utah St. 7 SOUTHWEST Baylor 45, SMU 0 Today SOUTH Miami at Louisville, 8 p.m. Thursday SOUTHWEST Arizona at UTSA, 6 p.m. Friday EAST Pittsburgh at Boston College, 5 p.m. FAR WEST Washington St. at Nevada, 8:30 p.m. Saturday EAST Buffalo at Army, 10 a.m. Akron at Penn St., 10 a.m. Howard at Rutgers, 10 a.m. Stony Brook at UConn, 10 a.m. Navy at Temple, 11 a.m. Colorado at UMass, 1 p.m. Towson at West Virginia, 5:30 p.m. SOUTH FAU at Alabama, 10 a.m. Arkansas St. at Tennessee, 10 a.m. SC State at Clemson, 10:30 a.m. New Mexico St. at Georgia St., Noon UAB at Mississippi St., Noon Ohio at Kentucky, 1:30 p.m. Maryland at South Florida, 1:30 p.m. Richmond at Virginia, 1:30 p.m. E. Michigan at Florida, 2 p.m. Georgia Tech at Tulane, 2 p.m. Mississippi at Vanderbilt, 2:30 p.m. Campbell at Appalachian St., 4 p.m. Wagner at FIU, 4 p.m. Old Dominion at NC State, 4 p.m. Gardner-Webb at Wake Forest, 4:30 p.m. San Jose St. at Auburn, 5 p.m. Louisiana Tech at Louisiana, 5 p.m. Idaho at Louisiana-Monroe, 5 p.m. Murray St. at Louisville, 5 p.m. Rhode Island at Marshall, 5 p.m. Florida A&M at Miami, 5 p.m. East Carolina at South Carolina, 5 p.m. Alcorn St. at Southern Miss., 5 p.m. Duke at Troy, 5 p.m. The Citadel at Florida St., 5:30 p.m. Sam Houston St. at LSU, 5:30 p.m. San Diego St. at North Carolina, 6 p.m. MIDWEST W. Kentucky at Illinois, 10 a.m. Kansas St. at Iowa St., 10 a.m. McNeese St. at Nebraska, 10 a.m. Cent. Michigan at Purdue, 10 a.m. Missouri at Toledo, 10 a.m. W. Illinois at Wisconsin, 10 a.m. South Alabama at Kent St., Noon VMI at Bowling Green, 1:30 p.m. Ball St. at Iowa, 1:30 p.m. E. Kentucky at Miami (Ohio), 1:30 p.m. Middle Tennessee at Minnesota, 1:30 p.m. N. Illinois at Northwestern, 1:30 p.m. SE Missouri at Kansas, 5 p.m. Cal Poly at S. Dakota St., 5 p.m. Michigan at Notre Dame, 5:30 p.m. Virginia Tech at Ohio St., 6 p.m. SOUTHWEST SMU at North Texas, 10 a.m. Oklahoma at Tulsa, 10 a.m. Missouri St. at Oklahoma St., 1:30 p.m. Nicholls St. at Arkansas, 2 p.m. N. Arizona at Abilene Christian, 5 p.m. Northwestern St. at Baylor, 5:30 p.m. BYU at Texas, 5:30 p.m. Lamar at Texas A&M, 5:30 p.m. Grambling St. at Houston, 6 p.m. Texas Tech at UTEP, 9 p.m. FAR WEST Sacramento St. at California, 1 p.m. Fresno St. at Utah, 1 p.m. E. Washington at Washington, 1 p.m. Southern Cal at Stanford, 1:30 p.m. Cent. Washington at Montana, 3:30 p.m. Michigan St. at Oregon, 4:30 p.m. Arizona St. at New Mexico, 5 p.m. Idaho St. at Utah St., 6 p.m. N. Dakota St. at Weber St., 6 p.m.

idahopress.com

W. New Mexico at San Diego, 7 p.m. Fort Lewis at UC Davis, 7 p.m. Black Hills St. at Montana St., 7:05 p.m. Memphis at UCLA, 8 p.m. N. Colorado at UNLV, 8 p.m. Colorado St. at Boise St., 8:15 p.m. W. Oregon at Portland St., 8:15 p.m. Air Force at Wyoming, 8:15 p.m. Oregon St. at Hawaii, 8:30 p.m.

National Football League

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Buffalo 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Miami 0 0 0 .000 0 0 New England 0 0 0 .000 0 0 N.Y. Jets 0 0 0 .000 0 0 South W L T Pct PF PA Houston 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Indianapolis 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Jacksonville 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Tennessee 0 0 0 .000 0 0 North W L T Pct PF PA Baltimore 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Cincinnati 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Cleveland 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Pittsburgh 0 0 0 .000 0 0 West W L T Pct PF PA Denver 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Kansas City 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Oakland 0 0 0 .000 0 0 San Diego 0 0 0 .000 0 0 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Dallas 0 0 0 .000 0 0 N.Y. Giants 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Philadelphia 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Washington 0 0 0 .000 0 0 South W L T Pct PF PA Atlanta 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Carolina 0 0 0 .000 0 0 New Orleans 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Tampa Bay 0 0 0 .000 0 0 North W L T Pct PF PA Chicago 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Detroit 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Green Bay 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Minnesota 0 0 0 .000 0 0 West W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 0 0 0 .000 0 0 San Francisco 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Seattle 0 0 0 .000 0 0 St. Louis 0 0 0 .000 0 0 Thursday’s Game Green Bay at Seattle, 6:30 p.m. Sunday’s Games Minnesota at St. Louis, 11 a.m. Buffalo at Chicago, 11 a.m. Washington at Houston, 11 a.m. Tennessee at Kansas City, 11 a.m. New Orleans at Atlanta, 11 a.m. Cleveland at Pittsburgh, 11 a.m. Jacksonville at Philadelphia, 11 a.m. Oakland at N.Y. Jets, 11 a.m. Cincinnati at Baltimore, 11 a.m. New England at Miami, 11 a.m. San Francisco at Dallas, 2:25 p.m. Carolina at Tampa Bay, 2:25 p.m. Indianapolis at Denver, 6:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 8 N.Y. Giants at Detroit, 5:10 p.m. San Diego at Arizona, 8:20 p.m.

GOLF Deutsche Bank Championship Scores Sunday At TPC Boston Norton, Mass. Purse: $8 million Yardage: 7,216; Par 71 Third Round Russell Henley Billy Horschel Chris Kirk Rory McIlroy Jason Day Webb Simpson Kevin Streelman Seung-Yul Noh Keegan Bradley Ryan Palmer Geoff Ogilvy Chesson Hadley Rickie Fowler Jordan Spieth Bill Haas John Senden Robert Streb Jim Furyk Martin Kaymer Ben Crane Brian Stuard Kevin Stadler Jimmy Walker Gonzalo Fdez-Castano Russell Knox Matt Kuchar Michael Putnam Adam Scott Morgan Hoffmann Kevin Chappell Carl Pettersson Vijay Singh

70-66-65 69-66-67 73-66-64 70-69-64 66-68-69 66-70-68 73-67-65 69-68-68 65-71-69 63-71-71 70-71-65 66-73-67 70-69-67 67-70-69 67-69-70 69-71-67 73-67-67 72-66-69 71-66-70 69-68-70 72-71-65 71-70-67 70-70-68 71-69-68 67-70-71 69-66-73 71-70-68 73-68-68 72-69-68 68-73-68 67-73-69 72-68-69

— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —

201 202 203 203 203 204 205 205 205 205 206 206 206 206 206 207 207 207 207 207 208 208 208 208 208 208 209 209 209 209 209 209

Zach Johnson Will MacKenzie Hideki Matsuyama Jason Kokrak Jason Bohn Ian Poulter Chris Stroud Daniel Summerhays Graham DeLaet Charl Schwartzel Andrew Svoboda Stewart Cink Bubba Watson Bo Van Pelt K.J. Choi Charles Howell III Danny Lee J.B. Holmes Scott Langley Billy Hurley III George McNeill Camilo Villegas Henrik Stenson Brendan Steele Shawn Stefani Gary Woodland Jerry Kelly Phil Mickelson William McGirt Cameron Tringale John Huh Scott Stallings David Hearn Ernie Els Marc Leishman Steven Bowditch Hunter Mahan Luke Donald Ryan Moore Jeff Overton Brian Harman

71-68-70 70-73-67 73-69-68 68-72-70 74-68-69 67-73-71 69-69-73 74-71-67 71-74-67 72-72-68 71-72-69 71-72-69 72-71-69 70-73-69 72-70-70 68-73-71 74-65-73 70-75-68 71-72-70 68-74-71 73-68-72 72-69-72 70-70-73 74-71-69 69-74-71 71-70-73 71-74-70 74-69-72 71-74-71 72-73-71 70-75-71 70-74-72 70-74-72 72-71-73 73-72-72 77-68-72 73-71-73 69-74-74 72-71-74 73-69-75 72-70-75

— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —

209 210 210 210 211 211 211 212 212 212 212 212 212 212 212 212 212 213 213 213 213 213 213 214 214 214 215 215 216 216 216 216 216 216 217 217 217 217 217 217 217

Web.com Tour-Hotel Fitness Championship Sunday At Sycamore Hills Golf Club Fort Wayne, Ind. Purse: $1 million Yardage: 7,360; Par 72 Final Bud Cauley, $180,000 Colt Knost, $108,000 Greg Owen, $68,000 David Lingmerth, $41,333 Tom Gillis, $41,333 Sam Saunders, $41,333 Dicky Pride, $32,250 Tyrone Van Aswegen, $32,250 Derek Fathauer, $27,000 Nick Taylor, $27,000 Matt Weibring, $27,000 James Driscoll, $19,600 Scott Gardiner, $19,600 John Peterson, $19,600 Martin Piller, $19,600 Andrew Putnam, $19,600 Chad Campbell, $15,500 Kevin Tway, $15,500 Daniel Berger, $11,700 Tony Finau, $11,700 Rod Pampling, $11,700 Carlos Sainz Jr, $11,700 Roland Thatcher, $11,700 Will Wilcox, $11,700 Ryan Blaum, $7,298 Andres Gonzales, $7,298 Scott Pinckney, $7,298 Justin Thomas, $7,298 Peter Tomasulo, $7,298 Steve Wheatcroft, $7,298 Chase Wright, $7,298 Jamie Lovemark, $7,298 Tag Ridings, $7,298 Richard H. Lee, $5,107 Wes Roach, $5,107 Steve Allan, $5,107 Jason Allred, $5,107 Alex Cejka, $5,107 Alex Prugh, $5,107 Vaughn Taylor, $5,107 Steven Alker, $3,800 Roberto Castro, $3,800 Jason Gore, $3,800 Doug LaBelle II, $3,800 Y.E. Yang, $3,800 Eric Axley, $3,050 James Nitties, $3,050 Henrik Norlander, $3,050 Josh Teater, $3,050 Jim Herman, $2,850 Bronson La’Cassie, $2,850 Spencer Levin, $2,850

66-70-67-65 67-67-67-68 67-67-68-70 67-72-71-64 69-69-70-66 66-66-70-72 66-69-71-69 68-67-69-71 66-68-72-70 71-68-71-66 70-71-71-64 74-68-68-67 69-70-68-70 70-69-64-74 68-67-72-70 70-73-67-67 69-69-67-73 71-64-72-71 72-71-66-70 66-73-70-70 71-70-71-67 67-71-69-72 67-73-68-71 69-73-69-68 64-74-73-69 68-69-72-71 72-69-69-70 69-65-76-70 69-72-70-69 69-70-73-68 68-71-68-73 71-69-66-74 69-69-68-74 68-74-73-66 70-73-71-67 70-69-72-70 72-71-69-69 67-72-71-71 68-70-70-73 67-71-71-72 71-70-72-69 67-72-74-69 71-72-68-71 73-67-73-69 71-70-71-70 72-71-70-70 75-67-73-68 72-70-73-68 70-69-70-74 70-68-69-77 70-70-73-71 72-70-72-70

— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —

268 269 272 274 274 274 275 275 276 276 276 277 277 277 277 277 278 278 279 279 279 279 279 279 280 280 280 280 280 280 280 280 280 281 281 281 281 281 281 281 282 282 282 282 282 283 283 283 283 284 284 284

LPGA Tour-Portland Classic

Sunday At Columbia Edgewater Country Club Portland, Ore. Purse: $1.3 million Yardage: 6,476; Par 72 Final a-denotes amateur; x-won on first hole of playoff x-Austin Ernst, $195,000 69-69-69-67 — 274 I.K. Kim, $118,921 65-67-74-68 — 274 Chella Choi, $76,502 68-70-70-68 — 276 So Yeon Ryu, $76,502 70-66-70-70 — 276 Karine Icher, $41,670 68-71-72-66 — 277

Na Yeon Choi, $41,670 Eun-Hee Ji, $41,670 Line Vedel, $41,670 Ilhee Lee, $23,262 Paula Reto, $23,262 Lizette Salas, $23,262 Laura Diaz, $23,262 Mariajo Uribe, $23,262 Xi Yu Lin, $23,262 Mi Jung Hur, $23,262 Tiffany Joh, $16,972 Carlota Ciganda, $16,972 Suzann Pettersen, $16,972 Moriya Jutanugarn, $14,194 Anna Nordqvist, $14,194 Hee Young Park, $14,194 Morgan Pressel, $14,194 Jacqui Concolino, $14,194 Mina Harigae, $14,194 Kim Kaufman, $11,752 Yani Tseng, $11,752 Brittany Lang, $11,752 Jennifer Rosales, $11,752 Sun Young Yoo, $9,831 Jane Rah, $9,831 Jennifer Song, $9,831 Jaye Marie Green, $9,831 Juli Inkster, $9,831

70-69-70-68 71-69-67-70 69-69-69-70 71-72-67-68 67-69-74-68 69-72-68-69 67-68-72-71 69-72-66-71 68-68-70-72 70-65-70-73 71-67-72-69 70-65-70-74 71-67-67-74 72-72-69-67 67-71-73-69 75-70-65-70 73-67-70-70 68-71-70-71 67-69-72-72 75-69-70-67 70-71-73-67 71-71-71-68 70-70-73-68 74-70-70-68 71-71-70-70 66-74-72-70 72-66-72-72 68-70-72-72

— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —

277 277 277 278 278 278 278 278 278 278 279 279 279 280 280 280 280 280 280 281 281 281 281 282 282 282 282 282

Champions Tour-Shaw Charity Classic

Sunday At Canyon Meadows Golf & Country Club Calgary, Alberta Purse: $2.25 million Yardage: 7,086; Par 70 Final x-won on first hole of playoff x-Fred Couples (338), $337,500 68-66-61 — Billy Andrade (198), $198,000 67-66-62 — Joe Daley (148), $147,938 64-66-67 — Steve Lowery (148), $147,938 66-67-64 — Wes Short, Jr. (107), $106,875 69-65-64 — Woody Austin (90), $90,000 65-67-67 — Bart Bryant (77), $76,500 62-71-67 — Paul Goydos (77), $76,500 67-66-67 — Steve Elkington (52), $52,125 65-69-67 — David Frost (52), $52,125 63-68-70 — Doug Garwood (52), $52,125 66-66-69 — Mark Mouland (52), $52,125 69-64-68 — Tom Pernice Jr. (52), $52,125 62-70-69 — Kevin Sutherland (52), $52,125 66-68-67 — Gary Hallberg (0), $37,125 66-65-71 — Mark McNulty (0), $37,125 65-66-71 — Corey Pavin (0), $37,125 66-69-67 — Duffy Waldorf (0), $37,125 71-65-66 —

195 195 197 197 198 199 200 200 201 201 201 201 201 201 202 202 202 202

TENNIS U.S. Open Results

Sunday At The USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center New York Purse: $38.3 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Third Round Gilles Simon (26), France, def. David Ferrer (4), Spain, 6-3, 3-6, 6-1, 6-3.; Marin Cilic (14), Croatia, def. Kevin Anderson (18), South Africa, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4.; Tomas Berdych (6), Czech Republic, def. Teymuraz Gabashvili, Russia, 6-3, 6-2, 6-4.; Roger Federer (2), Switzerland, def. Marcel Granollers, Spain, 4-6, 6-1, 6-1, 6-1.; Dominic Thiem, Austria, def. Feliciano Lopez (19), Spain, 6-4, 6-2, 6-3.; Roberto Bautista Agut (17), Spain, def. Adrian Mannarino, France, 7-5, 6-2, 6-3.; Gael Monfils (20), France, def. Richard Gasquet (12), France, 6-4, 6-2, 6-2.; Grigor Dimitrov (7), Bulgaria, def. David Goffin, Belgium, 0-6, 6-3, 6-4, 6-1. Women Fourth Round Sara Errani (13), Italy, def. Mirjana Lucic-Baroni, Croatia, 6-3, 2-6, 6-0.; CarolineWozniacki (10), Denmark, def. Maria Sharapova (5), Russia, 6-4, 2-6, 6-2.; Peng Shuai, China, def. Lucie Safarova (14), Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-4.; Belinda Bencic, Switzerland, def. Jelena Jankovic (9), Serbia, 7-6 (6), 6-3. Doubles Men Third Round Eric Butorac, United States, and Raven Klaasen (12), South Africa, def. Guillermo Garcia-Lopez, Spain, and Philipp Oswald, Austria, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4.; Ivan Dodig, Croatia, and Marcelo Melo (4), Brazil, def. Mariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski, Poland, 6-4, 6-4.; Scott Lipsky and Rajeev Ram, United States, def. Daniel Nestor, Canada, and Nenad Zimonjic (3), Serbia, 6-3, 6-4. Women Third Round Serena and Venus Williams, United States, def. Garbine Muguruza and Carla Suarez Navarro (12), Spain, 6-1, 6-0.; Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina (4), Russia, def. Vania King and Lisa Raymond, United States, 6-3, 6-7 (4), 6-2.’ Zarina Diyas, Kazakhstan, and Xu Yi-Fan, China, def. Lucie Hradecka, Czech Republic, and Michaella Krajicek (11), Netherlands, 7-6 (3), 6-2. Mixed Second Round Taylor Townsend and Donald Young, United States, def. Andrea Hlavackova, Czech Republic, and Alexander Peya (2), Austria, 6-3, 6-3.; Ashleigh Barty and John Peers, Australia, def. Chan Hao-ching, Taiwan, and Max Mirnyi, Belarus, 6-3, 6-2.; Katarina Srebotnik, Slovenia, and Rohan Bopanna (6), India, def. Anabel Medina Garrigues, Spain, and Raven Klaasen, South Africa, 6-3, 6-4.; Kveta Peschke, Czech Republic, and Marcin Matkowski, Poland, def. Christina McHale and Stefan Kozlov, United States, 5-7, 6-2, 10-8.

COMMUNITY CORNER BASKETBALL IDAHO FLASH TRYOUTS: Idaho Flash Girls Basketball tryouts are Saturday at the Boise State Rec Center gym. Tryouts are free and open to girls grades 5th-11th interested in playing on an Idaho Flash basketball team. Tryouts for girls in grades 5-8 are from 3-4 p.m. and 9th-11th grade tryouts are

from 4-5 p.m. Arrive 30 minutes early to complete the sign in process. Preregister at www.idahoflash.com. Choose the Idaho Flash basketball on the left and the registration link in the middle of the page. A make up tryouts is on Sept. 14th at Nampa Christian High School. Grades 5th-8th are from 3-4 p.m. and grades 9th-11th from 4-5 p.m.

FOOTBALL ADULT FLAG FOOTBALL: Caldwell Recreation is taking registrations for adult flag football. This is a limited contact league. Each team will play 8 games and will play in a single elimination playoff at the end of the season. Games are played MondayThursday nights. The fee is $300 per team with no player fees.

Deadline to register Sept 12th. Call 455-3060 for more info. CO-ED NO CONTACT LEAGUE: Caldwell Recreation will offer a co-ed no contact/passing only flag football league for the first time. Each team will play 6 regular season games and play in a single elimination playoff at the end of the season. Games will be weeknights opposite of the men’s

league so men can play in both leagues. Team fees will be $250 per team with no player fees. Deadline to register is Sept 12th. Call 4553060 for more info.

ICE SKATING LEARN TO SKATE: Idaho Ice World is hosting an eight-week skating session beginning

Tuesday. Children will learn to skate from professional instructors. Cost is $89, including skates. Classes are open to boys and girls and meet for 30 minutes. For more information, visit www.idahoiceworld.com or call (208) 608-7716.

BLUE TURF STATS F VIDEOS H STORIES F STANDINGS ROSTERS H SCHEDULES F BRONCO BANTER BEST BOISE STATE SPORTS COVERAGE.

PERIOD. 9

17

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11 C M Y K


ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Husband’s statement doesn’t justify affairs, C2

ASK DOCTOR K

Simple steps to lower cancer risk, C2

COMMUNITY Monday, September 1, 2014

Idaho Press-Tribune

Section C

Best of the rest Each day, Idaho Press-Tribune photographers go out and capture hundreds of images from each assignment. Only a small handful of those images make it into our print product. Here is a look at a few of our favorite images that didn’t make it into the daily pages of the IPT this past week. You can find more images, photo galleries, video and audio at idahopress.com/multimedia.

Counterclockwise from top: College of Idaho defensive tackle (96) celebrates after making a big hit in the Aug. 25 Purple and Gold scrimmage at Simplot Stadium in Caldwell. Purple won the game 26-23. (Greg Kreller/IPT) Leroy Moses, of Boise, pauses on the track before single point regular races begin Aug. 22 at the BMX Championships in Caldwell. (Adam Eschbach/IPT) A Labrador retriever looks at a tennis ball just out of reach during Nampa’s 7th annual Pooch Party Stroll and Splash Aug. 23 at Lakeview Park. (Adam Eschbach/IPT) College of Idaho defender David Juarez, right, pulls down tight end Hank Boeger, left, in the Aug. 25 Purple and Gold scrimmage at Simplot Stadium in Caldwell. (Greg Kreller/IPT) Spike Ericson and Dave Skipper, of the Wild Hares, perform bluegrass country music at the Canyon Acoustic Music Festival Aug. 23 at Memorial Park in Caldwell. In its first year, local singers and songwriters performed folk, country and bluegrass and Americana music at the festival. (Adam Eschbach/IPT)

WEB: IDAHOPRESS.COM n COMMUNITY EDITOR: JORDAN GRAY, 465-8158, COMMUNITY@IDAHOPRESS.COM

n

ENTERTAINMENT: AE@IDAHOPRESS.COM C M Y K


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COMMUNITY

Idaho Press-Tribune • Monday, September 1, 2014

idahopress.com

Husband’s statement doesn’t justify affairs DEAR ANNIE: I have been married for 40 years to a man who had a few affairs in the past that I recently found out about. We are both seeing counselors, privately and together. At this point in time, I am tired of dealing with this, and our marriage could well end in divorce. But I am puzzled by what my husband told me. He said he learned in his psychology classes in college that “men are not designed for monogamy.” I have never heard him say anything of the sort in our entire 40 years together. Is this simply an excuse for me to forgive his affairs? Or is the statement true? He tells me he is done with other women, but now I’m not so sure. Should I trust him again? — California DEAR CALIFORNIA: There is some support for your husband’s statement, but it does not justify affairs. Your husband is not some uncivilized animal with no concern for his partner. We assume he is an adult and capable of selfcontrol. But we can’t promise he will never have another affair, and he probably cannot promise that, either, even if his intentions are good. Only you can decide whether it’s worth the risk after 40 years of marriage. DEAR ANNIE: I work in an office with six women, and they all have cubicles. I have my own office. My problem is they do not associate with me. One woman in

ANNIE’S MAILBOX Advice

particular seems to run the show. I’ve tried to be friendly and converse with them, but I am snubbed. I’ve been in the office for seven years. I always feel terrible when I hear them talking and laughing about family and things they did. But I’m never included in the conversation unless it has to do with work. — Feeling Lonely DEAR LONELY: If you have your own office, your status must be higher than that of your co-workers. It is hardly unusual for staff members to associate mainly with those at a similar level of employment. For your own peace of mind, please find friends elsewhere and keep the office a place of professionalism. DEAR ANNIE: I must disagree with the advice you gave to the “Fed-Up Grandma in Chicago” about the behavior of two children in church. Your last sentence gave the impression that she should have been “kind enough to engage the children in some quiet activity and give the parents a break.” These kids were in church, not

at the playground. They are old enough to be able to sit still for an hour. Behavior that is inappropriate at age 8 is going to be a major problem at age 16. There are situations in which kids can be active and have fun, but church is a solemn place where children should be taught proper behavior. — H. DEAR H.: Many readers agree with you, but we don’t. Staring daggers at the parents has little effect, and yelling at the children is not your place. Of course the parents should teach their children proper decorum in a place of worship, but many do not. If the parents have a passel of children and seem frazzled, how much kinder it would be to help, distract or smile rather than seethe in silence and castigate them to everyone within earshot after they have left. Annie’s Snippet for Labor Day (credit author Douglas Pagels): Sometimes it’s important to work for that pot of gold. But other times it’s essential to take time off and to make sure that your most important decision in the day simply consists of choosing which color to slide down on the rainbow.

Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. n

Taking simple steps can lower cancer risk

DEAR DOCTOR K: Is it possible to prevent, or at least reduce, your risk of cancer? DEAR READER: Absolutely, it is. It is possible both to reduce the risk that your cells will turn cancerous, and to catch cancer early and prevent it from causing suffering. But first let’s define some terms. What does it mean to say that a “cell turns cancerous”? Cancer is uncontrolled cell growth. Most cells “grow” not by becoming larger, but from dividing. (An exception: Fat cells grow not only by dividing, but also by becoming larger.) One cell becomes two, two become four, four become eight, and so on. Most cells should periodically divide, but in a controlled fash-

ion. For example, as old cells die, they need to be replaced. But that process of replacing old cells is carefully controlled. When a cell turns cancerous, growth is not controlled. In most cancers, the uncontrolled growth first causes a mass of cells — a tumor. (With cancers of blood cells, there is no tumor mass because blood cells don’t stick together.) The cells in the tumor then can spread, typically through the blood, to other parts of the body. You can reduce the risk of cells turning cancerous with lifestyle changes. STOP SMOKING. Exposure to tobacco smoke (including secondhand smoke) — from cigarettes, cigars and other tobacco products — increases the risk of

Today in history Today is Monday, September 1, the 244th day of 2014. There are 121 days left in the year. This is Labor Day. Today’s Birthdays: Former Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird is 92. Actor George Maharis is 86. Conductor Seiji Ozawa is 79. Attorney and law professor Alan Dershowitz is 76. Comedian-actress Lily Tomlin is 75. Actor Don Stroud is 71. Conductor Leonard Slatkin is 70. Singer Archie Bell is 70. Singer Barry Gibb is 68. Rock musician Greg Errico is 66. Talk show host Dr. Phil McGraw is 64. Singer Gloria Estefan is 57. Former White House Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers is 53. Jazz musician Boney James is 53. Singer-musician Grant Lee Phillips (Grant Lee Buffalo) is 51. Country singersongwriter Charlie Robison is 50. Retired NBA All-Star Tim Hardaway is 48. Rap DJ Spigg Nice (Lost Boyz) is 44. Actor Ricardo Antonio Chavira is 43. Rock singer JD Fortune is 41. Actor Scott Speedman is 39. Country singer Angaleena Presley (Pistol Annies) is 38. Rock musician Joe Trohman is 30. Actress Aisling (ASH-ling) Loftus (TV: “Mr. Selfridge”) 1990 is 24. Today’s Highlight in History: On September 1, 1939, World War II began as Nazi Germany invaded Poland. On this date: In 1159, Pope Adrian IV, the only English pope, died. In 1807, former Vice President Aaron Burr was found not guilty of treason. (Burr was then tried on a misdemeanor charge, but was again acquitted.) In 1894, the Great Hinckley Fire destroyed Hinckley, Minnesota, and five other communities, killing more than 400 people. In 1914, the last passenger pigeon in captivity, “Martha,” died at the Cincinnati Zoo. In 1923, the Japanese cities of Tokyo and Yokohama were devastated by an earthquake that claimed some 140,000 lives. In 1932, New York City Mayor James J. “Gentleman Jimmy” Walker resigned following charges of graft and cor-

lung cancer. Smoking also boosts your chances of developing cancer of the mouth, throat, esophagus and colon. If you smoke, ask your doctor about quit-smoking programs. MAINTAIN A HEALTHY WEIGHT. Overweight and obesity increase the risk for many types of cancer. These include breast cancer (in postmenopausal women) and cancers of the colon, rectum, endometrium, esophagus, pancreas and kidneys. A healthy diet and regular exercise can help you maintain a healthy weight. EAT A HEALTHY DIET. People who eat diets rich in fruits and vegetables (particularly broccoli, kale, cabbage, cauliflower and tomatoes) have lower rates of cancer. So do people who eat

relatively little meat (particularly processed and cured meats, such as bacon, sausage and cold cuts). That said, don’t focus on any single food or group of foods. It’s an overall healthy diet that counts. EXERCISE REGULARLY. Exercise is yet another way to reduce your cancer risk. Aim for at least 30 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise, most days of the week. PROTECT YOURSELF FROM THE SUN. Skin cancer is one of the most common cancers. To reduce your risk, stay out of the sun when it is strongest (from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.). Apply plenty of sunscreen with an SPF of at least 15, and reapply it every two hours. Wear sunglasses and widebrimmed hats.

GET SCREENED. Screening DOCTOR K tests can’t prevent canHealth cer. But they can catch cancer early, before symptoms appear, and when chances of survival are at their best. (On my website, AskDoctorK.com, I’ve put a list of cancer screening tests, along with when and how often to get them.) Discuss screening tests with your doctor. He or she can help you tailor the recommendations based on your individual risks and preferences.

Dr. Komaroff is a physician and professor at Harvard Medical School. Go to his website to send questions and get more info: AskDoctorK.com. n

ruption in his administration. In 1942, U.S. District Court Judge Martin I. Welsh, ruling from Sacramento, California, upheld the wartime detention of Japanese-Americans and Japanese nationals. In 1951, the United States, Australia and New Zealand signed a mutual defense pact, the ANZUS treaty. In 1969, a coup in Libya brought Moammar Gadhafi to power. In 1976, U.S. Rep. Wayne L. Hays, D-Ohio, resigned in the wake of a scandal in which he admitted having an affair with “secretary” Elizabeth Ray. In 1983, 269 people were killed when a Korean Air Lines Boeing 747 was shot down by a Soviet jet fighter after the airliner entered Soviet airspace. Ten years ago: More than 1,000 people were taken hostage by heavily armed Chechen militants at a school in Beslan in southern Russia; more than 330 people, more than half of them children, were killed in the three-day ordeal. Militants in Iraq freed seven employees of a Kuwaiti trucking firm after their employer paid half a million dollars in ransom. The criminal case against Kobe Bryant collapsed as prosecutors in Colorado dropped a sexual assault charge against the NBA star, saying they had no choice because the accuser no longer wanted to participate. Five years ago: Vermont’s law allowing same-sex marriage went into effect. Poland held ceremonies marking the 70th anniversary of the start of World War II. Death claimed award-winning conductor Erich Kunzel at age 74 and Wycliffe Johnson, a major figure in Jamaican music, at age 47. One year ago: Syria derided President Barack Obama’s decision to hold off on punitive military strikes, while the Obama administration countered that its case for military action against the regime of President Bashar Assad was getting stronger, saying it had evidence that the nerve agent sarin was used in a deadly August attack. Former South African President Nelson Mandela left a hospital after nearly three months of treatment there. Former heavyweight boxing champion Tommy Morrison, 44, died at a Nebraska hospital. C M Y K


THE GRIZZWELLS

BEETLE BAILEY

By Bill Schorr

Stone Soup

By Mort Walker GARFIELD

By Jan Eliot BETTY

By Jim Davis BLONDIE

By Charles Schulz THE BORN LOSER

Gary Delainey, Gerry Rasmussen BABY BLUES By Rick Kirkman and Jerry Scott PICKLES

By Dean Young & Stan Drake PEANUTS

DILBERT

By Brian Crane ARLO & JANIS

By Art & Chip Sansom

By Jimmy Johnson Pearls Before Swine

By Scott Adams B.C.

By Stephan Pastis

By Johnny Hart

Rhymes with Orange

MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM

By Hilary Price Dustin

By Mike Peters ZITS

By Steve Kelley and Jeff Parker Tundra

By Jerry Scott & Jim Borgman MUTTS

SUDOKU

By Chad Carpenter Home and Away

By Patrick McDonnell

By Steve Sicula Lola

By Todd Clark

idahopress.com

COMMUNITY Idaho Press-Tribune • Monday, September 1, 2014

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CLASSIFIED/LEGAL NOTICES

Idaho Press-Tribune • Monday, September 1, 2014

idahopress.com

Canyon County Classifieds.com Garage Sales

CALDWELL 2421 HIRD On Canyon Hill, across from Cemetery Fri-Sat-Sun-Mon 8-? Furniture, bar stools, stereo, lamps, TV stand, converter box, 2 coffee tables & 2 end tables, Microwave, adult walker, Lawn furniture, leaf blower, lawn knick knacks,refrigerator, tables & chairs, 3 dressers, loungers, 2 tents, fishing poles & cooler, dog kennel, guns, tires, trailer hitches, tools, & lots of miscellaneous.

COME ON DOWN!!

www.idahopress.com CALDWELL 524 Cleveland Blvd. Starts on 8/19, 10am-7pm Complete liquidation of all 5 Honk's stores at Caldwell location. 20-70% off everything. Fixtures, office equipment, computers. Cash only! CALDWELL On Crown Street Friday, Saturday, & Monday 9-?? HUGE YARD SALE! Years of accumulation, 3 round oak tables, 10 guns, old & newer, collectables, old tools, several saddles, $25 and up, arc welder, and much more!! North end of the Caldwell airport, behind flying J, come out Aviation to Crown Street.

ADVERTISE HERE If you are reading this, so are your potential customers! CanyonCountyClassifieds.com

Merchandise

Real Estate/Rentals

NAMPA 4401 Jordan Valley Avenue Happy Valley Mobile Park Saturday, Sunday, & Monday 9am-4pm Some Estate items!!

Employment

MOUNTAIN BIKE for $100. Please call 724-6967.

PREMIUM Fruitwood $220/cord. Free same day local delivery. Cedric 899-5246 or 454-8804

CLASSIFIED DEADLINES

AFFORDABLE!

Piano, Guitar, Violin, Fiddle or Ukulele lessons. All ages & levels. Private & fun! Call 467-6244. COLEMAN Cooler, 150 quarts, keeps ice-for-5-days! $60/Cash 454-6506 HANGING chandelier 24� across, brown w/frosted cups. $50/best offer. 455-9898

Boulevard Guns & Pawn

CALL 454-1532.

NOW YOUR CLASSIFIED 7+ day ad will hit 11,000 more homes!

Red Hot Garage Sale Packages rting at

Save Now! Sta

29

$

Turn Your Old Stuff into CASH! day! Call To1077975

95

Call 467-7296

WE WANT TO MAKE YOU A LOAN! $100-$3000

240 GALLON Steel Fuel Tank, Free, You Pick-up SOLD!!!

SHOWBIZ Kidz taking

registration for September classes. Introduction to music, including keyboard, theory, technique, singing, and community performance. Ages 3-8

Call 283-5750

Includes: t :BSE 4BMF 4JHOT t 1SJDJOH 4UJDLFST t 0OMJOF .BQQJOH t %BZT JO UIF *EBIP 1SFTT 5SJCVOF

208-467-9253

idahopress.com

S. NAMPA X-clean 1 bedroom. No pets/smoking. $455/month, $455 deposit. 250-6820 NAMPA 1 bedroom with appliances & more. No pets. Call 466-5022.

CLASSIFIED DEADLINES

Deadline to get your Classified ads in for the following day is 2:30pm. It is 4:00pm on Friday to get your ad in on Sunday and and 4:30pm on Friday to get your ad in for Monday. Please call us if you have questions 467-9251.

Serving Nampa/Caldwell

466-4888

205 Caldwell Blvd, Nampa

COUCH, Very Clean, Medium size, $40, 599-2970 OAK TABLE & 4 chairs, 48� w/leaf, $150 Or/best/offer 442-7373 TIFFANY style floor lamp. Art deco style-white w/black. $50. 208-465-1784

ROCKING CRADLE Wooden, walnut. Also other baby things. $10.00. 585-3137

MAGNAVOX 20� COLOR TV wall mount. DirectTV. $25. 459-7574

HOME FOR SALE IN 55+ SENIOR PARK 1994 Nashua Doublewide. Brand new carpet & flooring. Clean, quiet, safe neighborhood. $19,950. Move-in incentives. Make offer. 541-889-9579

Service Directory

CALDWELL CONDO, 2 large bedrooms, 2 BATH, vaulted ceilings, very nice unit in good location. Water/sewer/trash paid. $700/month + deposit. 454-1759.

CALDWELL 2 bedroom. AC, dishwasher, storage, Fenced yard. Wa/se/tr paid. $575 + deposit. Call 466-0770.

NOTE: The following advertisers have certified that these properties meet the standards set by the Fair Housing Act of 1968; amended on 1989, and therefore qualify as “Housing for the Elderly,� and may be advertised as such.

WE BUY GUNS. Top prices paid.

BUYING CLEAN USED FURNITURE AND ANTIQUES.

FOUND football helmet on Ohio Street, Nampa near stop sign. Call to identify, 208-853-6426

Transportation

1907 A J Aubrey Double 12 32� twist barrels. Manufactured by Meriden Firearms Company & 1928 Model 12 pump. 888-6447 or 841-1602

To place an ad call

Classifieds 467-9253

Agriculture/Auctions

WOOD Stove, good shape, $80 Or best offer 463-6375

Deadline to get your Classified ads in for the following day is 2:30pm. It is 4:00pm on Friday to get your ad in on Sunday and and 4:30pm on Friday to get your ad in for Monday. Please call us if you have questions 467-9251.

TO ADVERTISE CALL 208-467-9253 M-F 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. OR ONLINE 24/7 CanyonCountyClassifieds.com

FREE: Kitten to a loving home. 2 months old. Litter box trained. Comes with litter, litter box & food. Please call 250-7982. PUBLISHER'S NOTICE: All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.� This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1-800669-9777. Hearing impaired call 1-800-927-9275

1-2-3 Bedroom Units $300-$900 www.qmtrust.com RCE-401

HAPPY VALLEY PARK Double/singlewide lots available. 5 months free with approved house. Quick freeway access.

465-5353

TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD SIMPLY LOG ON TO CanyonCountyClassifieds.com AFFORDABLE HOUSING Sandlewood & Nottingshire Apts. Caldwell.

Call 459-4434. Equal Housing Opportunity

Legal Notices

CanyonCountyClassifieds.com

TO ADVERTISE CALL 208-467-9251 | M-F 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. OR EMAIL 24/7 legals@idahopress.com LEGAL NOTICE Notice of Trustee's Sale Idaho Code 45-1506 Today's date: July 24, 2014 File No.: 7037.101440 Sale date and time (local time): December 1, 2014 at 11:00 AM Sale location: in the lobby of the Canyon County Courthouse, 1115 Albany Street, Caldwell, Idaho Property address: 6912 Leisure Lane Nampa, ID 83687 Successor Trustee: Northwest Trustee Services, Inc., an Idaho Corporation P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009 (425) 586-1900 Deed of Trust information Original grantor: Ronald Rea & Kristie Rea, husband & wife Original trustee: Pioneer Title Company of Caldwell Original beneficiary: First Horizon Home Loan Corporation Recording date: 07/30/2004 Recorder's instrument number: 200441574 County: Canyon Sum owing on the obligation: as of July 24, 2014: $96,161.65 Because of interest, late charges, and other charges that may vary from day to day, the amount due on the day you pay may be greater. Hence, if you pay the amount shown above, an adjustment may be necessary after we receive your check. For further information write or call the Successor Trustee at the address or telephone number provided above. Basis of default: failure to make payments when due. Please take notice that the Successor Trustee will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for certified funds or equivalent the property described above. The property address is identified to comply with IC 60-113 but is not warranted to be correct. The property's legal description is: Lot 18, Block 2, Leisure Heights Subdivision, Canyon County, Idaho, according to the plat filed in Book 11 of Plats, Page 26, records of said County. The sale is subject to conditions, rules and procedures as described at the sale and which can be reviewed at www.northwesttrustee.com or USA-Foreclosure.com. The sale is made without represent tion, warranty or covenant of a

p tation, warranty or covenant of any kind. (TS# 7037.101440) 1002.250076-File No. August 18, 25, 2014 September 1, 8, 2014 1143924

Looking For A Job? CanyonCountyClassifieds.com LEGAL NOTICE Notice of Re-Scheduled Trustee's Sale Idaho Code 451506A Today's date: August 18, 2014 File No.: 7303.24648 Sale date and time (local time): September 26, 2014 at 11:00 AM Sale location: in the lobby of the Canyon County Courthouse, 1115 Albany Street, Caldwell, Idaho Property address: 26521 Powers Rd Parma, ID 83660 Successor Trustee: Northwest Trustee Services, Inc., an Idaho Corporation P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009 (425) 5861900 Deed of Trust information Original grantor: Gregory M. Lampert, an unmarried man and Corrina Vanoski, an unmarried woman Original trustee: Land America Transnation Original beneficiary: Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for Taylor, Bean & Whitaker Mortgage Corp. Recording date: January 16, 2008 Recorder's instrument number: 2008002960 County: Canyon Sum owing on the obligation: as of August 18, 2014: $203,463.68 Because of interest, late charges, and other charges that may vary from day to day, the amount due on the day you pay may be greater. Hence, if you pay the amount shown above, an adjustment may be necessary after we receive your check. For further information write or call the Successor Trustee at the address or telephone number provided above. Basis of default: failure to make payments when due. Please take notice that the Successor Trustee will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for certified funds or equivalent the property described above. The propet ddress is identified to c

y p p erty address is identified to comply with IC 60-113 but is not warranted to be correct. The property's legal description is: A portion of the Northwest Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of Section 24, Township 5 North, Range 5 West, Boise Meridian, Canyon County, Idaho, more particularly described as follows: Commencing at the Northeast corner of the Northwest quarter of the Southwest quarter of Section 24, Township 5 North, Range 5 West, Boise Meridian, Canyon County, Idaho; thence North 89 degrees 58'19" West, a distance of 344.21 feet (of record West) along the North line of said Northwest quarter of the Southwest quarter to the True Point of Beginning marked by a found 1/2 inc iron pin; thence South 12 degrees 41'25" West, a distance of 30.75 feet to a set 1/2 inch iron pin with plastic cap stamped PLS 6552; thence North 89 degrees 58'19" West, a distance of 148.42 feet to a set 1/2 inch iron pin with plastic cap stamped PLS 6552; thence South 34 degrees 30'00" West, a distance of 58.14 feet to a set 1/2 inch iron pin with plastic cap stamped PLS 6552; thence South 33 degrees 44'42" East, a distance of 160.66 feet to a set 1/2 inch iron pin with plastic cap stamped PLS 6552; thence South 12 degrees 41'25" West, a distance of 159.87 feet to a set 1/2 inch iron pin with plastic cap stamped PLS 6552 on the Northerly right-of-way line of Highway 20-26; thence North 54 degrees 25'19" West, 632.02 feet (of record North 54 degrees 28'45" East) along said Northerly right-of-way line to a found 1/2 inch iron pin on the North line of said Northwest quarter of the Southwest quarter; thence South 89 degree 58'19" East, a distance of 648.02 feet (of record West 648.10 feet) along the said North line to the True Point of Beginning. The sale is subject to conditions, rules and procedures as described at the sale and which can be reviewed at w

www.northwesttrustee.com or USA-Foreclosure.com. The sale is made without representation, warranty or covenant of any kind. (TS# 7303.24648) 1002.262019-File No. August 25, 2014 September 1, 8, 2014 1151734 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF LETTING Sealed proposals will be received by the IDAHO TRANSPORTATION BOARD only at the office of the IDAHO TRANSPORTATION DEPARTMENT, 3311 WEST STATE STREET, BOISE, IDAHO 83703, ATTN: CONTRACTING SERVICES until two o'clock p.m., on September 16, 2014, for the work of constructing flashing beacons, splitter islands and painted median islands on six (6) major road approaches; Local, Intersection Improvements, Canyon HD #4, known as Idaho Federal Aid Project No. A013(489), in Canyon County, Key No. 13489. [ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT: RESIDENT ENGINEER ***TODD BARTOLOME*** (LHTAC) AT (208) 344-0565] Plans, specifications, form of contract, proposal forms, and other information may be obtained from the Idaho Transportation Department website at http://www.itd.idaho.gov/design/

contractors/contrinfo.htm.

Dated August 20, 2014 JAMES “JIM� F. CARPENTER, P.E. Chief Operations Officer August 25, 2014 September 1, 2014

1151001

LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE b

On the 16th day of Decem-

y ber, 2014, at the hour of 10:00 a.m. of this day (recognized local time), in the office of TitleOne, 5660 E. Franklin Rd., Ste 101, Nampa, ID 83687, in the County of Canyon, State of Idaho, TitleOne Corporation, an Idaho corporation, as Trustee, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check (cash equivalent), in lawful money of the United States, all payable at the time of sale in compliance with Section 45-1506(9) Idaho Code, the following described real property, situated in Canyon County, State of Idaho, and described as follows to wit: The East 100 feet of a tract of land located in the Northeast corner of the Northwest quarter of the Northwest quarter of Section 3, Township 2 North, Range 2 West, Boise Meridian, Canyon County, Idaho, lying North of the Partridge Irrigation Lateral.Except a parcel of land located in the Northwest quarter of the Northwest quarter of Section 3, Township 2 North, Range 2 West, Boise Meridian, Canyon County, Idaho, more particularly described as follows:The North 40.00 feet of the East 100 feet of a tract of land located in the Northeast corner of the Northwest quarter of the Northwest quarter of Section 3, Township 2 North, Range 2 West, Boise Meridian, Canyon County, Idaho, lying North of the Partridge Irrigation Lateral.

The Trustee has no knowledge of a more particular description of the above referenced real property, but for purposes of compliance with Section 60-113, Idaho Code, the Trustee has been informed that according to the County Assessor's office, the address of 409 E Greenhurst Rd, Nampa, ID 83686, is sometimes associated with said real property.

Said sale will be made without covenant or warranty regarding title, possession, or encumbrances to satisfy the obligation secured by and pursuant to the power of sale conferred in the Deed of Trust executed by Marco Murillo , as Grantor(s), to TitleOne Corporation, an Idaho corporation, as Trustee, and Blue Hippo Investments, LLC, an Idaho limited liability company, as Beneficiary, recorded June 10, 2009, as Instrument No. 2009029038, in the records of Canyon County, Idaho. THE ABOVE GRANTORS ARE NAMED TO COMPLY WITH SECTION (45-1506)(4) (A), IDAHO CODE. NO REPRESENTATION IS MADE THAT THEY ARE, OR ARE NOT, PRESENTLY RESPONSIBLE FOR THIS OBLIGATION. The default for which this sale is to be made is the failure to pay when due, under the Deed of Trust Note, monthly payments of $1,199.10, due per month for the months of April and May, 2011. The balance of principal and interest as of May 13, 2011 was $190,674.15 which amount is now due, together with, trustee's fees, attorney's fees, costs and advances made to protect the security associated with this foreclosure. Said amounts are due until the date of the sale, no interest is accruing thereon. Therefore, the beneficiary elects to sell or cause the trust property to be sold to satisfy said obligation. Dated: 08/15/2014 TITLEONE CORPORATION Trustee By: Amy Wilcoxson Trust Officer August 25, 2014 September 1, 8, 15, 2014 1151740

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55+ Senior Park

Beautifully kept park. 5 months free with move-in. RV sites available. Call 541-889-9579.

MIDWAY PARK Quiet Country Park 2 spaces available. 4 months free with approved house. 465-5353

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DRIVER TRUCK DRIVER WANTED, Caldwell area, Hauling Molasses. Home Daily. Class A CDL endorsement for tankers & doubles, Must be over 23, 2 years experience, Immediate opening. Email resume & driving abstract to randy46@charter.net or fax to 208-459-3382 GENERAL MAKE A DIFFERENCE BY Providing your customer experience feedback. Visit local stores while trying out beauty, electronic, and auto products. Register: www.Shop.BestMark.com or call 800-969-8477. HEALTHCARE

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Local Delivery Driver, Deliver documents in Canyon County. Weekdays. No nights or weekends. FT or PT. No heavy lifting. Weekly Salary + Gas Allowance. You must have: neat appearance/Clean background/Economy vehicle. Insurance and GPS, 505-8986

Balewagons:

NH pull-type & self propelled models/parts/tires. Buy/Sell/Trade/Finance 880-2889 anytime Jim www.balewagon.com

BLACKBERRIES & RASPBERRIES picked & PYO now. SWEET CORN available for canning & freezing. Call for time & availability. 208-466-3860, The Berry Ranch

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Trinity Mission Health & Rehab of Midland

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Greg Granden Custom Haystacking & Retrieving 20+ Years Experience Hay, Grass & Straw For sale 4 Ton Minimum HIGH Quality Grass hay, Weed free, small bales, easy access, will help load, $7 per bale, Emmett, Call Sue 365-7399 MOSTLY Grass hay, good horse hay, large bales, not rained on, 100 bales, $10 per bale, NO Saturday calls, (208)896-9982

HORSE SALE th

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TRANSITIONS IN LIFE, LLC TREASURE VALLEY'S PREMIER EXTENDED SERVICE COMPANY Residential and Commercial Cleaning Move IN/Move Out Clean Windows/Carpets Lawn Mowing & Garden Care Professional NON Medical Personal Assistant Over 30 years experience Honest & Reliable Affordable Rates Senior Discount FREE ESTIMATES! CALL NOW! (208)899-3775

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C M Y K

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NOW YOUR CLASSIFIED 7+ day ad will hit 11,000 more homes!

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Call Derek (208)906-7187 Our Customers ensure our success!! Plumbing

Mike's Plumbing

Licensed & Insured. 18 years experience. 585-2301 or 991-6261

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ask for Mike.

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Call 703-6991

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1998 S&S Camper

8.5 ft. Excellent condition. $5,000. 208-459-1925

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2005 Chevy Extended cab, 4x4, new tires & set of studs. Has camper shell. 54,000 miles. $15,300. Call 365-3636

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NIGERIAN Dwarf Male Goat, $65 Call 249-4711

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C6

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Idaho Press-Tribune • Monday, September 1, 2014

idahopress.com

OPEN SUNDAY & LABOR DAY

IN WEISER, IDAHO

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PRE-OWNED SALE. PRICED TO PUBLIC AT OR BELOW KELLEY BLUE BOOK TRADE-IN 2013 LEXUS GS350 AWD

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208-549-3310 • 1-800-658-5080 All new include $500 Military Rebate. Chrysler 200 includes Loyalty Rebate of $1,000 and must have a current Chrysler group vehicle. Photos for illustration only, subject to prior sale. Plus tax, title and dealer admin. fee of $289.08. Expires 09/01/2014.

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idahopress.com

sion or encumbrance to satisfy the obligation secured by and pursuant to the power of sale conferred in the Deed of Trust executed by DAVID A. THOMPSON AND LISA M. THOMPSON, HUSBAND AND WIFE, as original grantor(s), to FIRST AMERICAN TITLE COMPANY, as original trustee, for the benefit and security of OPTION ONE MORTGAGE CORPORATION, A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION, as original beneficiary, dated as of January 25, 2007, and recorded February 12, 2007, as Instrument No. 2007010371 in the Official Records of the Office of the Recorder of Canyon County, Idaho. Please Note: The above grantor(s) are named to comply with section 45-1506 (4)(A), Idaho Code, No representation is made that they are, or are not, presently responsible for this obligation set forth herein. The current beneficiary is: Wells Fargo Bank, National Association as Trustee for Option One Mortgage Loan Trust 2007-5, Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2007-5, (the "Beneficiary"). Said sale will be made without covenant or warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances, to pay the remaining unpaid balance of the obligations secured by and pursuant to the power of sale contained in that certain Deed of Trust. In addition to cash, the Trustee will accept a cashier's check drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings association or savings bank specified in the Idaho Financial Code and authorized to do business in Idaho, or other such funds as may be acceptable to the trustee. The default(s) for which this sale is to be made under Deed of Trust and Note dated January 25, 2007 are: Failed to pay the monthly payments of $1,040.11 due from July 1, 2013, together with all subsequent payments; together with late charges due; together with other fees and expenses incurred by the Beneficiary; The principal balance owing as of this date on the obligation secured by said Deed of Trust is $149,039.53, plus accrued interest at the rate of 5.00000% per annum from June 1, 2013. All delinquent amounts are now due, together with accruing late charges, and interest, unpaid and accruing taxes, assessments, trustee's fees, attorney's fees, and any amounts advanced to protect the security associated with this foreclosure and that the beneficiary elects to sell or cause the trust property to be sold to satisfy said obligation. Dated: July 31,2014 Fidelity National Title Insurance Company, Trustee 11000 Olson Drive, Suite 101 Rancho Cordova, CA 95670 916-636-0114 Megan Curtis, Authorized Signature SALE INFORMATION CAN BE OBTAINED ON LINE AT www.servicelinkasap.com FOR AUTOMATED SALES INFORMATION please call 714-730-2727 A-4477607 08/18/2014, 08/25/2014, 09/01/2014, 09/08/2014

including installments of principal, interest, impounds, adInformation regarding the vances, plus any charges law- proposed rate increase may fully due under the note se- be obtained at Melba City Hall, cured by the aforementioned 401 Carrie Rex Ave., Melba, Idaho during regular business Deed of Trust, Deed ofLEGAL Trust NOTICES and as allowed under Idaho hours. Law. The sum owing on the All citizens are invited to atobligation secured by said Deed of Trust is $136,815.65, tend the public hearing and to including interest, costs and provide comment on the proexpenses actually incurred in posed fee increase. Written enforcing the obligation there- comments may be mailed to under or in this sale, and Melba City Hall, P.O. Box 209, trustee's fees and/or reason- Melba, Idaho 83641 or email able attorney's fees as autho- to cityclerk@cityofmelba.org. rized in the Note, Deed of Written comments must be reTrust or as allowed under Ida- ceived by 3:00 pm, Friday, ho Law. All delinquent September 5, 2014. amounts are now due, together with accruing late charges, Accommodations are availinterest, unpaid and accruing able for persons with disabilitaxes, assessments, trustee's ties upon request. Please confees, attorney fees and any tact Melba City Hall at 495amounts advanced to protect 2722 at least seventy-two (72) the security associated with hours prior to the Public Hearthe Deed of Trust described ing to make arrangements. herein as provided under the Note, Deed of Trust and as alDated this 20th day of Aulowed under Idaho Law. DAT- gust 2014 ED: 8/8/14 Noni Stapleton, City Clerk City of Melba August 25, 2014 September 1, 8, 15, 2014 1148630 August 25, 2014 September 1, 2014 LEGAL NOTICE 1151707

Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE

T.S. No. 003054-ID Parcel No. R3176-000-0 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE On 12/8/2014 at 2:00 PM (recognized local time), in the Auction.com Room, at the Best Western Plus Caldwell Inn & Suites, 908 Specht Avenue, Caldwell, ID 83605, in the County of Canyon, State of Idaho, ELISA MAGNUSON, ESQ., a member of the State Bar of Idaho, of PITE DUNCAN, LLP., as trustee, will sell at public auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, in lawful money of the United States, all payable at the time of sale, the following described real property, situated in the County of Canyon, State of Idaho, and described as follows, to wit: LOT 8, BLOCK 2, MEADOW VIEW ADDITION, CALDWELL, CANYON COUNTY, IDAHO, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT FILED IN BOOK 5 OF PLATS, PAGE 4, RECORDS OF SAID COUNTY. The Trustee has no knowledge of a more particular description of the above referenced real property, but for purposes of compliance with Idaho Code Section 60-113, the Trustee has been informed that the address of: 1920 LANSING AVENUE, CALDWELL, ID 83605, is commonly associated with said real property. Said sale will be made without covenant or warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances to satisfy the obligation secured by and pursuant to the power of sale conferred in the Deed of Trust executed by MELCHOR DELGADO, A SINGLE MAN, as Grantor, to FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, as Trustee, for the benefit and security of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR MORTGAGE MARKET, INC. AN OREGON CORPORATION., ITS SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS, as Beneficiary, dated 1/31/2002, recorded 2/1/2002, as Instrument No. 200205262, official records of Canyon County, Idaho. Please note: The above named Grantors are named to comply with Idaho Code Section 45-1506(4)(a); no representation is made that they are, or are not, presently responsible for the obligation. The default for which this sale is to be made is the failure to make monthly payments when due from 2/1/2013 and all subsequent monthly payments thereafter, including installments of principal, interest, impounds, advances, plus any charges lawfully due under the note secured by the aforementioned Deed of Trust, Deed of Trust and as allowed under Idaho Law. The sum owing on the obligation secured by said Deed of Trust is $91,210.50, including interest, costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation thereunder or in this sale, and trustee¡Çs fees and/or reasonable attorney¡Çs fees as authorized in the Note, Deed of Trust or as allowed under Idaho Law. All delinquent amounts are now due, together with accruing late charges, interest, unpaid and accruing taxes, assessments, trustee's fees, attorney fees and any amounts advanced to protect the security associated with the Deed of Trust described herein as provided under the Note, Deed of Trust and as allowed under Idaho Law. DATED: 7/28/14 August 18, 25, 2014 September 1, 8, 2014 1143914

CanyonCountyClassifieds.com LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE Loan No.: 7141815253 T.S. No.: 13-00958-5 On December 9, 2014 01:00 PM, Main lobby of the Canyon County Courthouse, 1115 Albany St, Caldwell, ID 83605 in the County of Canyon, State of Idaho, Fidelity National Title Insurance Company, as Trustee, on behalf of Wells Fargo Bank, National Association as Trustee for Option One Mortgage Loan Trust 2007¬5, Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2007-5, the current Beneficiary, will sell at public auction, to the highest bidder, in lawful money of the United States, all payable at the time of sale, the following described real property, situated in the County of Canyon, State of Idaho, and described as follows: Lot 2 in Block 1 of Midland Manor Subdivision, according to the official plat thereof, filed in Book 7 of Plats at Page 13, records of Canyon County, Idaho. The Trustee has no knowledge of a more particular description of the above referenced real property, but for purposes of compliance with Section 60-113 Idaho Code, the Trustee has been informed that the address of: 919 MEADOWVIEW DR , NAMPA, ID, is sometimes associated with said real property. Said sale will be made without covenant or warranty regarding title, possession or encumbrance to satisfy the obligation secured by and pursuant to the power of sale conferred in the Deed of Trust executed by DAVID A. THOMPSON AND LISA M. THOMPSON, HUSBAND AND WIFE, as original grantor(s), to FIRST AMERICAN TITLE COMPANY, as original trustee, for the benefit and security of OPTION ONE MORTGAGE CORPORATION, A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION, as original beneficiary, dated as of January 25, 2007, and recorded February 12, 2007, as Instrument No. 2007010371 in the Official Records of the Office of the C M Y K

August 18, 25, 2014 September 1, 8, 2014 1145486 LEGAL NOTICE T.S. No. 016407-ID Parcel No. R10444519 0 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE On 12/22/2014 at 2:00 PM (recognized local time), Auction.com Room, Best Western Plus Caldwell Inn & Suites, 908 Specht Avenue, Caldwell, ID 83605, in the County of Canyon, CASPER J. RANKIN, ESQ., a member of the State Bar of Idaho, of PITE DUNCAN, LLP, as trustee, will sell at public auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, in lawful money of the United States, all payable at the time of sale, the following described real property, situated in the County of Canyon, State of Idaho, and described as follows, to wit: LOT 20 IN BLOCK 1 OF KINGSGATE SUBDIVISION, ACCORDING TO THE OFFICIAL PLAT THEREOF, FILED IN BOOK 21 OF PLATS AT PAGE(S) 34, RECORDS OF CANYON COUNTY, IDAHO. The Trustee has no knowledge of a more particular description of the above referenced real property, but for purposes of compliance with Idaho Code Section 60-113, the Trustee has been informed that the address of: 3008 SUGAR CANE DRIVE, NAMPA, ID 83687, is commonly associated with said real property. Said sale will be made without covenant or warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances to satisfy the obligation secured by and pursuant to the power of sale conferred in the Deed of Trust executed by THOMAS VILLA AND CORINA VILLA, HUSBAND AND WIFE as Grantor, to PIONEER TITLE COMPANY as Trustee, for the benefit and security of WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. as Beneficiary, dated 3/24/2008, recorded 3/28/2008, as Instrument No. 2008017191, official records of Canyon County, Idaho. Please note: The above named Grantors are named to comply with Idaho Code Section 451506(4)(a); no representation is made that they are, or are not, presently responsible for the obligation. The default for which this sale is to be made is the failure to make monthly payments when due from 11/1/2012 and all subsequent monthly payments thereafter, including installments of principal, interest, impounds, advances, plus any charges lawfully due under the note secured by the aforementioned Deed of Trust, Deed of Trust and as allowed under Idaho Law. The sum owing on the obligation secured by said Deed of Trust is $136,815.65, including interest, costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation thereunder or in this sale, and trustee's fees and/or reasonable attorney's fees as authorized in the Note, Deed of Trust or as allowed under Idaho Law. All delinquent amounts are now due, togeth-

LEGAL NOTICE

CASE NO. CV-2014-8630-C

NOTICE OF HEARING ON NAME CHANGE (Adult)

IN THE MATTTER OF GUARDIANSHIP AND CONSERVATORSHIP OF: Rodney Turnboo, An Incapacitated Person. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Diane Miles has filed herein a Petition for Appointment of Guardian and Conservator, a copy of which is on file at the Canyon County Courthouse. Hearing has been set upon Petition on the 10 day of September, 2014, at the hour of 9:30 o'clock a.m., at the Courtroom of the above named Court located at 222 12th Ave, City of Caldwell, Canyon County, State of Idaho. DATED this day of 20 Aug., 2014.

Case No. CV-14-8326 IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR THE THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT FOR THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CANYON IN RE: Leroy William Blickfeldt Legal Name A Petition to change the name of Leroy William Blickfeldt, now residing in the City of Caldwell, State of Idaho, has been filed in the District Court in Canyon County, Idaho. The name will change to Kat William Blickfeldt. The reason for the change in name is: personal. A hearing on the petition is scheduled for 9:30 o'clock a.m. on (date) September 30th, 2014 at the Canyon County Courthouse. Objections may be filed by any person who can show the court a good reason against the name change.

By /s/ Diane C Miles

Date: Aug. 12, 2014

August 25, 2014 September 1, 8, 2014 1151758

CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT By: /s/ Deputy Clerk

LEGAL NOTICE Pursuant to Idaho Code 252301, the State Brand Inspector is holding one Low line black belted bull, 600-650 lbs, found on Deer Flat Rd in Kuna. He will sell at Treasure Valley Livestock Auction on Friday 9/5/14. May be claimed with proof of ownership and paying all expenses. 459-4231 August 25, 2014 September 1, 2014

1151635

LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF ELECTION Notice is hereby given that on Tuesday, November 4, 2014, an Election will be held in the Black Canyon Irrigation District for the purpose of electing a Director for Division #1, currently held by Kevin Glenn, for a three year term. Polling places are designated as follows: Black Canyon Irrigation District Office 474 Elgin Ave, Notus, ID. Parma Fire Department 1245 Anderson Corner Rd, Parma, ID. Purple Sage Golf Course 15192 Purple Sage Rd., Caldwell, ID. Polls will be open from 1:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. on the 4th day of November, 2014. No persons shall be entitled to vote at said election unless he or she possesses all the qualifications of electors under the general laws of the State, and owns land within the Black Canyon Irrigation District. Written nominations must be filed with the Secretary of the District no more than 40 days and not less than 60 days prior to the election. Catherine Skidmore District Secretary August 25, 2014 September 1, 2014

1151624

LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Melba City Council INTENT TO INCREASE WATER USER FEES WHICH WILL EXCEED 5% OF THE AMOUNT OF THE LAST FEE COLLECTED. Pursuant to Idaho Code 631311A The City of Melba will receive public comment at a Public Hearing, Monday September 8, 2014 at 7:00 pm at Melba Valley Senior Center, 115 Baseline Rd. Melba, Idaho, 83641, regarding the Council's intent to enact a proposed increase to the monthly user fees which will exceed 5% of the amount of the last fee collected. The purpose of the increase is to provide sufficient funds with which to pay for the improvements, upgrades, betterment and operation and maintenance of the Municipal Drinking Water System of the City of Melba. Proposed increases will begin October 1, 2014. Information regarding the proposed rate increase may be obtained at Melba City Hall, 401 Carrie Rex Ave., Melba, Idaho during regular business hours. All citizens are invited to attend the public hearing and to provide comment on the proposed fee increase. Written comments may be mailed to Melba City Hall, P.O. Box 209, Melba, Idaho 83641 or email to cityclerk@cityofmelba.org. Written comments must be received by 3:00 pm, Friday, September 5, 2014.

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NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed Personal Representative of the above named estates. All persons having claims against the said deceased are required to present their claims within four (4) months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or said claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented or delivered to JANICE MARIE SAUER, Personal Representative of the estate, at 1303 12th Avenue Road, P.O. Box 65, Nampa, Idaho 83653-0065, and filed with the Court pursuant to Idaho Code Section 15-3-804.

CanyonCountyClassifieds.com

NOTICE OF HEARING

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE 3rd JUDICIAL DISTRICT IN AND FOR THE STATE OF IDAHO, COUNTY OF CANYON

LEONA JOAN CAYLER, also known as LEONA J. CAYLER, also known as JOAN CAYLER, husband and wife. Idaho Press-Tribune • Monday, September 1, 2014 Deceased.

August 18, 25, 2014 September 01, 08, 2014 1147290 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF ELECTION FILING DEADLINE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: That an election is pending in the Pioneer Irrigation District on the 4th day of November, 2014 for the purpose of electing a Director from precinct #3, currently held by Director Robert Greenfield. This is a three-year term, beginning January 1, 2015. Electors who satisfy the criteria of the election laws of the State of Idaho may vote in the election. The statutory criteria require that each elector must: Be 18 years of age or older; and Be a United States Citizen; and Own land within the District; and Be a resident of the county in which the District, or a portion thereof, is located for at least thirty (30) days before the election (either Ada or Canyon counties) Polls will open at 8:00 a.m. and close at 8:00 p.m. at the District office at 3804 Lake Avenue, Caldwell, Idaho. Written nominations must be filed with the Secretary of the District no more than 60 days (September 6) and no less than 40 days (September 25) prior to the Election For questions regarding the election, please call the District office at 459-3617 or see our website at http://www.pioneerirrigation.com/election.html. Dated this 21st day of August, 2014. Erica F. Slayton, Secretary, Pioneer Irrigation District September 1, 8, 2014 1152448 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF LETTING Sealed proposals will be received by the IDAHO TRANSPORTATION BOARD only at the office of the IDAHO TRANSPORTATION DEPARTMENT, 3311 WEST STATE STREET, BOISE, IDAHO 83703, ATTN: CONTRACTING SERVICES until two o'clock p.m., on September 23, 2014, for the work of constructing a traffic signal at the intersection of Middleton Rd and Flamingo Ave; STP8213, INT Middleton Rd & Flamingo Ave, Nampa, known as Idaho Federal Aid Project No. A013(502), in Canyon County, Key No. 13502. [ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT: RESIDENT ENGINEER ***TODD BARTOLOME*** (LHTAC) AT (208) 344-0565] Plans, specifications, form of contract, proposal forms, and other information may be obtained from the Idaho Transportation Department website at http://www.itd.idaho.gov/design/contractors/contrinfo.htm. Dated August 27, 2014 JAMES “JIM” F. CARPENTER, P.E. Chief Operations Officer September 01, 08, 2014 1155380

LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE On December 23, 2014, at the hour of 11:00 o'clock AM of said day, at Pioneer Title Company, 610 South Kimball Avenue, Caldwell, Idaho, JUST LAW, INC., as Successor Trustee, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, in lawful money of the United States, all payable at the time of sale, the following described real property, situated in the County of Canyon, State of Idaho, and described as follows to wit: Lot 10 in Block 3 of Karcher Acres Subdivision, Canyon County, Idaho, according to the official plat thereof, filed in Book 9 of Plats at Page 1, records of said County. The Trustee has no knowledge of a more particular description of the above referenced real property, but for purposes of compliance with Section 60-113 Idaho Code, the Trustee has been informed the address of 11435 Hunt Ave., Nampa, ID, is sometimes associated with the said real property. This Trustee's Sale is subject to a bankruptcy filing, a payoff, a reinstatement or any other conditions of which the Trustee is not aware that would cause the cancellation of this sale. Further, if any of these conditions exist, this sale may be null and void, the successful bidder's funds shall be returned, and the Trustee and the Beneficiary shall not be liable to the successful bidder for any damages. Said sale will be made without covenant or warranty regarding title, possessions or encumbrances to satisfy the obligation secured by and pursuant to the power of sale conferred in the Deed of Trust executed by David J. Martineau and Brenda R. Martineau, husband and wife, as Grantor(s) with MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. (MERS) is a separate corporation that is acting solely as a nominee for Lender and Lender's successors and assigns Lender: Mortgage Lenders Network USA, Inc. as the Beneficiary, under the Deed of Trust recorded August 29, 2006, as Instrument No. 200670405, in the records of Canyon County, Idaho. The Beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust was subsequently assigned to Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as Trustee for the Certificatesholders of the SASCO 2007-MLN1, recorded October 26, 2011, as Instrument No. 2011042190, in the records of said County. THE ABOVE GRANTORS ARE NAMED TO COMPLY WITH SECTION 45-1506(4) (a), IDAHO CODE. NO REPRESENTATION IS MADE THAT THEY ARE, OR ARE NOT, PRESENTLY RESPONSIBLE FOR THIS OBLIGATION. The default for which this sale is to be made is the failure to pay the amount due under the certain Promissory Note and Deed of Trust, in the amounts called for thereunder as follows: Monthly payments in the amount of $1,328.00 for the months of July 2013 through and including to the date of sale, together with late charges and monthly payments accruing. The sum owing on the obligation secured by said Deed of Trust is $133,782.58 as principal, plus service charges, attorney's fees, costs of this foreclosure, any and all funds expended by Beneficiary to protect their security interest, and interest accruing at the rate of 10.40% from June 1, 2013, together with delinquent taxes plus penalties and interest to the date of sale. The Beneficiary elects to sell or cause the trust property to be sold to satisfy said obligation. Dated this 18th day of August, 2014. Tammie Harris Trust Officer for Just Law, Inc. August 25, 2014 September 1, 8, 15, 2014 1151617 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS Case No. CV 2014-8718- C IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CANYON MAGISTRATE DIVISION In the Matter of the Estate of LEONA JOAN CAYLER, also known as LEONA J. CAYLER, also known as JOAN CAYLER, husband and wife. Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed Personal Representative of the above named estates. All persons having claims against the said deceased are required to present their claims within four (4) months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or said claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented or delivered to JANICE

Dated this 19th day of August, 2014. /s/ JANICE MARIE SAUER --Personal Representative-AARON L. SEABLE HAMILTON, MICHAELSON & HILTY, LLP Attorneys at Law 1303 12th Avenue Road P.O. Box 65 Nampa, ID 83653-0065 Phone (208) 467-4479 Fax (208) 467-3058 ISB No. 7191 Attorneys for Petitioner September 01, 08, 15, 2014 1155772

www.idahopress.com LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS Case No. CV 2014-8719- C IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO, IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CANYON MAGISTRATE DIVISION In the Matter of the Estate of VIOLA MAY WARREN MONROE, also known as VIOLA MAY MONROE, and MARVIN GORDON MONROE, husband and wife. Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed Personal Representative of the above named estates. All persons having claims against the said deceased are required to present their claims within four (4) months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or said claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented or delivered to DANIEL NATHAN MONROE, Personal Representative of the estate, at 1303 12th Avenue Road, P.O. Box 65, Nampa, Idaho 83653-0065, and filed with the Court pursuant to Idaho Code Section 15-3-804. Dated this 21st day of August, 2014. /s/ DANIEL NATHAN MONROE --Personal Representative-AARON L. SEABLE HAMILTON, MICHAELSON & HILTY, LLP Attorneys at Law 1303 12th Avenue Road P.O. Box 65 Nampa, ID 83653-0065 Phone (208) 467-4479 Fax (208) 467-3058 aseable@nampalaw.com ISB No. 7191 Attorneys for Petitioner September 01, 08, 15, 2014 1156097 LEGAL NOTICE STATE OF IDAHO NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the State Board of Land Commissioners of the State of Idaho, has received application and is considering leasing land for oil and gas in Canyon, Cassia, Gem, and Owyhee Counties. The Idaho Department of Lands will accept written comments until September 10, 2014 and hold a public hearing on Wednesday, September 10, 2014 from 6:00 PM until 8:00 PM in the Garnet West Conference Room of the Idaho Department of Lands, 300 N. 6th Street, Suite 103, Boise, Idaho, 83702. To submit comments in writing, email them to

publichearingcomments@idl.idaho.gov

Subject: Oil & Gas or send them to the Idaho Department of Lands, P.O. Box 83720, Boise, Idaho 83720-0050. Tract descriptions covering the sites considered for leasing, as well as additional information concerning oil and gas lease auctions, can be obtained by writing the Idaho Department of Lands, P.O. Box 83720, Boise, Idaho 837200050, telephoning (208) 3340200, or on our website at www.idl.idaho.gov. August 25, 2014 September 1, 2014

1151679

LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE THE CANYON COUNTY PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSION LEGAL NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Canyon County Planning & Zoning Commission is scheduled to hold a Public Hearing on Thursday, September 18, 2014, beginning at 6:30 p.m. in the 1st Floor Public Meeting Room of the Canyon County Administrative Building, 111 North 11th Ave, Caldwell, Idaho, as follows: Verizon Wireless is requesting a conditional use permit for a 100 foot monopole telecommunications site to be located at 21260 Lower Pleasant


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Idaho Press-Tribune • Monday, September 1, 2014 q g , , ing a conditional use permit for The subject property is further a 100 foot monopole telecom- described as a portion of the munications site to be located southeast quarter of Section at 21260 Lower Pleasant 21, Township 4N, Range 4W, Ridge Road, Greenleaf, Idaho. Boise Meridian, Canyon Count Idaho. T

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,

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LEGAL NOTICES

idahopress.com

g p ty, Idaho. mony concerning these matters. Written testimony should All interested citizens are in- be submitted to Development vited to attend this Public Services at least 5 days prior Meeting and present oral testi- to the hearing for considerat m LEGAL NOTICE

g tion by the Commission. For language translation or assistance for the physically challenged, please call (208) 4547458 at least five (5) days prio

or to the hearing so that arrangements can be made. September 01, 2014 1156123

RESOLUTION 31-2014

AN AMENDED ESTIMATE OF EXPENSES AND REVENUES OF THE CITY OF NAMPA, IDAHO FOR THE FISCAL PERIOD BEGINNING OCTOBER 1, 2013 TO AND INCLUSIVE OF SEPTEMBER 30, 2014, AND NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON THE PROPOSED AMENDED BUDGET BY THE CITY COUNCIL WHEREAS, Section 50-1002 Idaho Code, requires the City Council, prior to passing the annual appropriation ordinance, to estimate the probable amount of money necessary for all purposes during the fiscal year end and; WHEREAS, a proposed amendment to the budget has been prepared that includes an estimate of expenses and revenues for the fiscal year October 1, 2013 through and including September 30, 2014; THEREFORE, it is hereby ordered by the City Council that this classification and estimate be entered into the minutes of the Council of the City of Nampa and the City Clerk be directed to cause the same to be published in the Idaho Press Tribune, a newspaper published in said City and having a general circulation therein. ESTIMATED EXPENDITURES GENERAL FUND City Clerk Code Enforcement Economic Development Engineering Facilities Development Finance Fire General Government Transfer to Family Justice Center Transfer to Civic Center Transfer to Idaho Center Transfer to Parks & Rec Transfer to Building Safety Human Resource Information Systems Legal Mayor/City Council Parks & Rec Admin Planning & Zoning Police Public Works Fleet Management SUBTOTAL

255,529 507,825 722,495 1,548,307 843,159 704,754 12,253,002 818,789 222,670 397,295 1,546,905 553,401 119,000 298,918 1,133,983 1,100,000 528,807 314,842 601,874 18,524,900 566,610 900,487 $44,463,552

GRANT FUNDS FAA Federal DOT Federal HUD Other Federal Grants State of Idaho & Local Grants Private Grants SUBTOTAL

$ 108,000 435,259 1,231,504 460,168 11,566,000 138,500 $13,939,431

348,595 1,366,905

$44,234,852 $

-

CAPITAL & DEBT SERVICE FUNDS Capital Projects Library Major Capital Campaign Development Impact Fees GO Bond Debt Service SUBTOTAL GRAND TOTAL

1,353,642 622,985 309,534 974,360 1,496,817 562,144 260,480 5,064,898 2,025,548 3,282,663 3,044,185 2,296,356 7,743,668 8,775,859 913,000 14,061,670 11,003,924 45,610 $63,837,343 $

613,985 925,660 517,144 4,884,898

$63,554,643

735,516 750,000 1,880,000 2,744,131 $6,109,647

$128,349,973

$

695,516

$

6,069,647

$127,687,573

11,563,000 $13,828,431

ESTIMATED REVENUES PROPERTY TAXES Real Property Taxes Exempt Property Taxes (GO Bond) SUBTOTAL

$32,492,889 2,744,131 $35,237,020

STATE REVENUE SHARING Sales Tax State Liquor Highway Users Road & Bridge SUBTOTAL

4,402,306 4, 719,442 2,763,894 2,342,931 $10,228,573

CHARGES FOR SERVICES Airport Cemetery Civic Center Development Services General Government Golf Courses Idaho Center Local Grants P&R Library Nampa Recreation Center Parks & Recreation Sanitation/Trash Collection Street & Traffic Utility Billing Wastewater Water SUBTOTAL

366,047 76,849 508,500 5,521 2,402,744 2,025,368 3,405,872 0 18,000 2,793,319 376,365 7,743,668 79,120 972,874 11,997,539 7,895,980 $40,667,766

$0

848,400 815,000 1,663,400

765,000 1,613,400

FRANCHISE FEES Electric Franchise Gas Franchise SUBTOTAL

ENTERPRISE & SPECIAL REVENUE FUNDS 911 Fees $ Airport Cemetery Civic Center Development Services Electric Franchise Fees Family Justice Center Idaho Center Library Nampa Recreation Center Parks & Recreation Ridgecrest & Centennial Golf Clubs Sanitation/Trash Collection Street & Traffic Utility Billing Wastewater Water Workers Comp Fund SUBTOTAL

OTHER FEES 911 Fees Impact Fee Licenses & Permits SUBTOTAL 4,272,306 670,742 $10,049,873

887,995 0 1,356,575 2,244,570

GRANTS & DONATIONS Donations FAA Grants Federal Grants Private Grant/Contributions State Grants Local Grants SUBTOTAL

0

913,341 108,000 2,126,931 88,500 10,732,000 884,000 14,852,772

FINES & FORFEITURES General Airport Library SUBTOTAL TRANSFERS & FUND BALANCE Transfers In Fund Balance SUBTOTAL

10,729,000 14,741,772

797,600 1,000 48,000 846,600

-

$10,777,585 11,253,133 22,030,718

$10,548,885 11,159,133 $21,708,018

98,272 480,282 578,554

$0

$128,349,973

$127,687,573

MISCELLANEOUS Interest Earnings Miscellaneous SUBTOTAL GRAND TOTAL

-

$0

CITY OF NAMPA, IDAHO FISCAL YEAR 2014 AMENDED BUDGET

FUND GENERAL FUND City Clerk Code Enforcement Economic Development Engineering Facilities Development Finance Fire General Government Human Resource Information Technology Legal Mayor & Council Parks & Rec Admin Planning & Zoning Police Public Works Fleet Management SUBTOTAL

2012 Actual Expenses

2012 Actual Revenue*

AMENDED 2013 Budget Expenses

AMENDED 2013 Budget Revenue*

PROPOSED 2014 Budget Expenses

PROPOSED 2014 Budget Revenue*

245,052 606,747 682,682 1,401,009 776,928 726,646 11,424,537 3,195,711 292,269 1,146,682 960,358 475,903 289,895 579,593 17,931,320 304,610 784,238 $41,824,180.

$41,824,180

255,529 507,825 722,495 1,548,307 843,159 704,754 12,253,002 3,658,060 298,918 1,133,983 1,100,000 528,807 314,842 601,874 18,524,900 566,610 900,487 $44,463,552

$44,463,552

832,163 553,166 309,282 1,013,398 1,041,561 712,005 257,339 4,713,039 2,115,768 3,659,440 3,064,753 2,617,792 7,380,500

832,163 553,166 309,282 1,013,398 1,041,561 712,005 257,339 4,713,039 2,115,768 3,659,440 3,064,753 2,617,792 7,380,500

1,353,642 622,985 309,534 974,360 1,496,817 562,144 260,480 5,064,898 2,025,548 3,282,663 3,044,185 2,296,356 7,743,668

1,353,642 622,985 309,534 974,360 1,496,817 562,144 260,480 5,064,898 2,025,548 3,282,663 3,044,185 2,296,356 7,743,668

220,411 466,539 604,669 1,295,130 696,278 727,939 11,389,306 4,576,627 294,456 1,054,840 973,724 475,433 285,961 446,339 18,049,326 295,395 739,908 $42,592,281

$42,981,860.

1,565,226 351,638 244,409 1,121,197 1,165,699 638,089 280,758 4,644,016 1,962,302 5,754,260 2,872,673 2,885,830 2,010,174 7,620,772 703,122 5,101,217 992,583 8,833,456 7,826,220 1,102,849 57,676,490

810,253 524,615 270,496 1,113,499 1,626,675 250,984 307,228 4,655,682 2,014,518 3,317,704 3,043,522 2,939,395 2,232,164 7,620,772 703,122 6,138,733 320,110 10,647,739 7,493,966 866,581 56,897,758

GRANTS & DONATIONS FAA Grants Federal DHS-Homeland Security Federal DHHS Federal DOE Federal DOI Federal DOJ Grants Federal DOT Grants Federal EPA Grants Federal Corporation For National & Community Service Federal HUD Grants Federal USDA Federal Dept of Education Federal National Endowment Institute of Museums & Library Private Grant/Contributions State Grants Local Municipalities Grants SUBTOTAL

508,321 29,500 2,276 280,344 3,300 505,345 91,002 9,419 748,445 (485) 2,500 19,618 967,740 247,713 3,415,038

508,321 29,500 2,276 280,344 3,300 510,210 91,002 9,419 748,445 (485) 2,500 99,940 967,740 247,713 3,500,225

135,000 1,000 416,853 549,374 20,000 5,568 981,789 10,342 48,269 9,961,860 393,194 12,523,249

1,000 416,853 549,374 20,000 5,568 981,789 10,342 48,269 9,961,860 393,194 12,523,249

CAPITAL PROJECTS & DEBT SERVICE FUNDS Capital Projects Library Major Capital Campaign Development Impact Fees GO Bond Debt Service SUBTOTAL

442,658 1,377,488 2,744,006 4,564,152

576,068 1,158,348 2,809,299 4,543,715

696,500 65,000 1,265,709 2,789,756 4,816,965

696,500 65,000 1,265,709 2,789,756 4,816,965

$107,923,558 $ 37,913,866

117,710,093 $

ENTERPRISE & SPECIAL REVENUE FUNDS 911 Fees Airport Cemetery Civic Center Development Services Downtown Electric Franchise Family Justice Center Idaho Center Library Nampa Development Corp Nampa Recreation Center Parks & Recreation Golf Sanitation Collection Stormwater Utility Street & Traffic Utility Billing Wastewater Water Workers Comp SUBTOTAL

TOTAL *Amount from property tax

$108,247,961

-

9,692,682 908,110 10,783,759 8,846,712 44,231 $58,545,699

-

-

9,692,682 908,110 10,783,759 8,846,712 44,231 58,545,699

-

135,000

117,710,093 34,419,871

$ $ $ $

8,775,859 913,000 14,061,670 11,003,924 45,610 63,837,343

8,775,859 913,000 14,061,670 11,003,924 45,610 63,837,343

108,000 2,486 4,650 445,917 435,259 1,250 1,231,504 4,865 1,000 138,500 10,682,000 884,000 13,939,431

108,000 2,486 4,650 445,917 435,259 1,250 1,231,504 4,865 1,000 138,500 10,682,000 884,000 13,939,431

735,516 750,000 1,880,000 2,744,131 6,109,647

$

735,516 $750,000 1,880,000 2,744,131 6,109,647

$128,349,973

$

128,349,973 35,237,020

-

I, Deborah L. Bishop, City Clerk of the City of Nampa, Idaho do hereby certify that this is a true and correct statement of the amended expenditures and revenues for the fiscal year 2013-2014. Citizens are invited to attend the budget hearing on September 2, 2014 at 7:30 p.m. and have the right to provide written or oral comments concerning the entire City Budget. A copy of the proposed City amended budget in detail is available in the Nampa Finance Office at City Hall for inspection during regular office hours, Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Passed by the Council and approved by the Mayor this 18th day of August 2014. Bob Henry, Mayor Attest: Deborah L. Bishop, City Clerk August 25, 2014 September 1, 2014

1149980 C M Y K


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