Oregon skeptical of Idaho Power line
Executives' loose bar chatter undercuts the utility's credibility in its effort to build a transmission project.JOHN DAY, Ore. - Signs declaring "United Against Hate" hang in the windows of nearly every business on the Main Street in this isolated timber and ranching town nestled in the Blue Mountains of eastern Oregon.
The signs went up earlier this year when Aryan Nations national director Paul Mullet came to the John Day River Valley, looking for a national headquarters.
"The community just came together and said 'We don't want you here,'" says Grant County Commissioner Boyd Britton.
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So when the next threat came to the valley - a proposed transmission line of 190-foot-high towers that would run through their ranches and obscure their scenic views on its way to the Columbia River - folks here knew that words mattered.
That was a lesson Idaho Power executives had to learn the hard way.
After a March 2 public meeting to talk about the power line, company executives and contractors went to John Day's Outpost Pizza, Pub & Grill for drinks and dinner. They loudly made fun of how local people talked, expressed disdain for the locals' complaints and said that in the end they would simply take their land through the utility's power of eminent domain.
Word quickly got around about how the company officials viewed the community and the process, and residents complained to the company that the hearings were a "ruse."
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http://www.idahostatesman.com/2010/04/04/1140802/oregon-skeptical-of-idaho-power.html#ixzz0k9Y6TKYh