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State Opens Investigation of Deschutes D.A.

Criminal investigation of Patrick Flaherty is underway.

Embattled District Attorney Patrick Flaherty got more bad news this week in the form of a formal criminal investigation into allegations that he abused the grand jury process and wrongfully terminated a long-time investigator in his office.
Flaherty announced via press release on Monday evening that Oregon State Police are investigating his office at the behest of Attorney General John Kroger. According to Flaherty, OSP is looking into the grand jury proceeding that Flaherty called last year during a dispute with county attorney Mark Pilliod whom Flaherty had accused of leaking sensitive material to the media. The matter was eventually settled when Pilliod agreed to issue a statement of apology.
The issue was one of several flashpoints between Flaherty and Deschutes County brass who have fought Flaherty's attempts to assert more independent control of the district attorney’s office. The issue came to a head early in Flaherty's tenure when employees in his office sought the county's help in forming a union after Flaherty made known his intention to dismiss nearly half a dozen of Dugan's former staffers.

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County Green Lights New Resort Map

Stage set for future resorts.

Given the dismal housing market, it could be years before the next destination resort breaks ground in Central Oregon. However, Deschutes County commissioners have set the stage for the next wave of construction if it ever arrives.
Meeting before the Thanksgiving holiday, commissioners voted to pare down the total number of acres available to prospective resort developers, trimming the county's official resort map from 112,000 acres to a little more than 20,000 acres.
The original map, which dates back more than two decades, determines which lands are eligible for resort development and which are off-limits. Commissioners had sought to adopt a map that more closely reflected which lands were actually viable for development.

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Slings of Crap

Not one to mince words, Reynvaan delves into her locker of inspiration.

Unique by experience or pursuit, the drive we gain from what we do and why we do it will continue to challenge us, mold us, and define who we are. There’s a line that gets swaggered by many as they choose to only dabble in what they love. Then there are those who willingly let a personal drive within, guide what they do, and who they become. I distinctly remember walking out of Smith Rock state park two years ago and knowing that my life would never be the same – I found something I truly loved. The earth shifted just slightly and over the line I went, crashing violently into an obsession that I now proudly call my passion. We all fall over the line for different reasons, it’s more what motivates and inspires us to keep going that is the most noteworthy.

Almost Two Years ago on my first project – Vomit Launch 5.11b Photo: Matthew Battarbee

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Our Own Scoop Lewis is on Facebook!

Our ace reporter got on Facebook.

Readers of our paper know longtime contributor Scoop Lewis, who returned to the paper this year to take over the Upfront page.
What you might not know about Scoop is that he’s presently living in our garage (actually, he splits time between the garage and the basement, which he refers to as his “vacation home) and that he has a recent fascination with technology.

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Burning For You: Forget nuclear power, torching trees might just be the answer to our energy needs

Shelved biomass project means finding energy from other sources.

It's been a tough year for renewable energy.
In May, the Bonneville Power Administration curtailed wind power producers in Oregon and Washington to protect BPA's own power sales. Just a few months later, renewable giant Iberdrola announced that it was shelving plans for a $100 million biomass-to-electricity plant in rural Lakeview that had been held up as a model of sustainability. And just last week, a Washington wind-power developer announced that it was abandoning plans for two wind farms near Steens Mountain. Against this backdrop, the cash-strapped Oregon Legislature whittled away at its most generous incentives for renewable energy development.
One of the few bright spots, though, is a technology that is more Christmas Valley than Silicon Valley, so-called biomass thermal energy, which is a fancy way of saying the good ol' practice of burning wood for heat, which after several millennia remains one of the most effective ways of warming our hands and our homes.

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