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Harmony Of The Gorge Singing Valentines Are Back

Harmony of the Gorge Chorus is once again taking orders for their Singing Valentines.  It’s the biggest fundraiser of the year for the area’s Sweet Adelines organization.  Harmony of the Gorge’s Judy Galloway says they have a quartet ready to go around the region on Valentine’s Day to sing to those you love.  They will go to locations in the Gorge and sing two songs to anyone you like, plus give them a card and a rose.  The chorus will also call, email, or use Facebook to send a gift of song anywhere in the country.  To place an order, call 541-490-2481 or visit harmonyofthegorge.com.

 

February 3-4 Prep Sports Roundup

Boys Basketball

Crook County 70, The Dalles 46

Hood River Valley 65, Centennial 59

King’s Way Christian 66, Columbia 56

Seton Catholic 59, Stevenson 55

Mannahouse Academy 70, Stevenson 53

Horizon Christian 61, Trout Lake 35

South Wasco 67, Horizon Christian 52

South Wasco 61, Dufur 45

Dufur 70, Lyle-Wishram 47

Lyle-Wishram 63, Klickitat-Glenwood 56

Klickitat-Glenwood 59, Trout Lake 55

Sherman 59, Condon 37

Goldendale 56, Kittitas 33

 

Girls Basketball

Columbia 62, Castle Rock 31

Stevenson 46, Mannahouse Academy 41

Trout Lake 72, Horizon Christian 16

Trout Lake 56, Klickitat-Glenwood 28

South Wasco 64, Dufur 38

South Wasco 52, Horizon Christian 27

Sherman 42, Condon 26

Dufur 53, Lyle-Wishram 24

Klickitat-Glenwood 79, Lyle-Wishram 12

Goldendale 41, Kittitas 31

 

Girls Wrestling

Lauraine Smith won her weight class while Natalia Solorio Campos finished third to also qualify for state for Hood River Valley at the Class 6A/5A regional girls wrestling tournament at Century.  Smith won all four of her matches at 155 pounds by fall, winning the final in 3:16 over Isabel Herring of Cleveland.  Campos won three out of four to advance, topping Ava McNichol of Reynolds by fall 2:27 into the third place match.  The state tournament is in three weeks in Portland.

 

Columbia’s Jessica Polkinghorn won the 155 pound division at a girls’ sub-regional tournament in Washougal, while Madison Kiemele and Kali Watson of Goldendale had second place finishes at another sub-regional in Quincy.

 

Boys Wrestling

Hood River Valley finished third and The Dalles eighth in the Hood River Memorial Tournament at Vannet Court.  HRV’s Connor Farlow won the 113 pound division.  Forest  Grove won the team title.

 

Columbia had two individual champions and Stevenson one at the Trico League Championships in Stevenson.  For the Bruins, Sawyer Muehlbauer won at 170 pounds and Matthias Posini was first at 285.  Solomon Mahoney won the 132 pound division for the Bulldogs.  Columbia finished third as a team and Stevenson fourth, as Castle Rock won the team title.

 

Goldendale’s Matthew Gray finished second at 140 pounds to lead the Timberwolves’ effort at EWAC Districts at Granger.

Alpine Skiing

Emily Teets of Hood River Valley won for the fourth straight week, winning the girls’ Mt. Hood League giant slalom at Ski Bowl West.  HRV’s Zoe Mortenson was fifth and Ella Smith of The Dalles was eighth.  Trout Lake’s Rowan Shuman won the boys’ race, with HRV’s Lars Welch was fifth, Grey Roetscioneder of The Dalles was eighth and the Riverhawks’ Cooper Klindt was tenth.

February 2 Prep Basketball Roundup

Boys Basketball

Hood River Valley 62, Centennial 41:  Zak Poole scored 14 of his 22 points in the fourth quarter as HRV was finally able to pull away for the win.  The Eagles moved even with Canby for fourth in the Northwest Oregon Conference with the win.

Kittitas 53, Goldendale 48

 

Girls Basketball

Crook County 36, The Dalles 24:  The Cowgirls dropped the Riverhawks out of the logjam for third in the Tri-Valley Conference.

Hood River Valley 52, Mountain View (Vancouver) 36:  Marina Castaneda scored ten straight points to end the first quarter and give the Eagles the lead for good in the non-league contest.  Castaneda finished with 16 points on the game.

King’s Way Christian 49, Columbia 39

Seton Catholic 59, Stevenson 39

Goldendale 41, Kittitas 31

 

 

Man Taken Into Custody After Police Standoff Identified

The man who remained in a Hood River home for several hours before surrendering to police Thursday night has been identified.

Hood River Police Chief Neal Holste says 42-year-old Simeon Hill was taken to a medical facility after giving himself up following an hours-long standoff.

Police spokesman Don Cheli says Hill was not wounded or injured in the incident.

Holste says officers responded to a call from Hill’s father shortly after noon on Thursday, and he explained his son was a combat veteran with access to multiple firearms, and had fired a gun in his residence at 2510 Viento Lane shortly before police arrived.

When officers moved toward the residence, they reported hearing several more shots being fired from the residence over their head in the direction of nearby businesses.

Holste says nearby businesses and residences were evacuated.

After several hours of negotiating, at around 9:30 p.m. Hill emerged from the residence and surrendered.

Several firearms and ammunition were seized from the townhouse.

Holste says the case will be reviewed by the Hood River County District Attorney’s office for charges including unlawful use of a weapon, reckless endangering, and disorderly conduct.

Update: Hood River Police Take Suspect Into Custody

The Hood River Police Department says they have taken the individual involved in a shooting incident in Hood River early this afternoon into custody.
A statement on social media from the HRPD at 9:40 p.m. said the male suspect was taken into custody safely with the help of multiple surrounding law enforcement agencies to bring this incident to a close.
The person’s name and other details have not yet been released.

The HRPD said residents who live in the affected area and were asked to evacuate can return home.

Police responded at around noon to a call about a dangerous situation at a private residence near Viento Lane and Clearwater Lane.
When officers tried to make contact, an individual in the house fired multiple shots.
Police were able to contain the person in the house, and evacuated surrounding businesses and residences, while schools in the lower Hood River Valley were placed on secure status for a time.
A Special Weapons and Tactics team from Clackamas County was brought in, with loud distraction devices and tear gas deployed to attempt to bring the man out of the home.

State Bar Professional Responsibility Board Dismisses Complaint

The Oregon State Bar’s State Professional Responsibility Board has found former Wasco County District Attorney Eric Nisley and former Deputy District Attorney Leslie Wolf did not violate state’s Rules of Professional Conduct.  Current Wasco County District Attorney Matthew Ellis had filed a complaint against Nisley and Wolf, alleging the pair hid evidence that former The Dalles Police Department officer Jeffrey Kienlen had been found to be untruthful by the department, after Ellis in 2021 found a notice of Kienlen’s demotion from sergeant to police officer in February 2011 in a desk drawer shortly after taking office.  But the board wrote in its decision that it could not find clear and convincing evidence either Nisley or Wolf violated any ethics rules.  Ellis, a former defense attorney, claimed Nisley and Wolf should have provided that document to defense counsels in various prosecutions after the notice, and did in 2022 conduct a hearing that determine Kienlen would be disqualified as a witness in Wasco County prosecutions.

Newhouse Introduces Forest Stewardship Bill

Republican Washington Fourth District Congressman Dan Newhouse has joined with Democrat Representative Scott Peters of California, Republican Senator Steve Daines of Montana, and Democrat Senator Dianne Feinstein of California to introduce a bill to provide the Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management a clear statutory tool to efficiently treat forests and empower collaborative processes.  The Root & Stem Act would authorize the Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management to propose and enter into stewardship contracts and agreements prior to the completion of environmental review.  It also allows the preparation of the environmental analysis to be paid for with timber receipts, provided the environmental analysis would be completed by an independent third party and the agency retains final decision authority for both the environmental analysis and the project.

 

Smoke Plan Subject Of Virtual Listening Session

Oregon State University Extension will hold a virtual listening session Friday on a community response plan for wildfire smoke.  The plan has been developed over the past year, with OSU Extension taking a lead role with a grant from the Department of Environmental Quality.  Extension’s Lauren Kraemer says the session will get people up to date on where the draft of the plan stands.  The session will run from noon to 1:30 on Friday on Zoom.  To sign up, go to the OSU Extension Office Facebook pages for Hood River or Wasco counties.

           

January 31 Prep Basketball Roundup

Boys Basketball

Canby 96, Hood River Valley 94 (OT):  The Eagles came back from 20 points down, capped by Zak Poole’s three-quarters court shot at the buzzer, to force overtime, but the Cougars regrouped to win in extra time.  Poole and Sam Fauth scored 21 points apiece to lead Hood River, while Jaxon Lawson and Connor Gensman led the Cougars with 24.  Canby moved a half-game in front of HRV for fourth in the Northwest Oregon Conference.

The Dalles 67, Molalla 53:  The Riverhawks took firm control of second place in the Tri-Valley Conference at the midway mark of the season, one game behind Crook County, who will visit The Dalles on Friday.

Spray-Mitchell-Wheeler 65, Sherman 46

Irrigon 75, Trout Lake 36

Mabton 60, Goldendale 52

 

Girls Basketball

Canby 62, Hood River Valley 50:  A third quarter run was the difference as the Cougars finally pulled away from the Eagles, who were led by a 30-point effort by Megan Griggs.  McKenna Kraft topped Canby with 17 points.

Molalla 48, The Dalles 37:  Molalla nudged in front of the Riverhawks for third place in the TVC.

Columbia 49, LaCenter 29:  The Bruins clinched third place in the Trico League with the win.

Stevenson 49, Castle Rock 37

Sherman 39, Spray-Mitchell-Wheeler 31

Trout Lake 48, Irrigon 31

Mabton 47, Goldendale 33

 

Four Day Closure Planned For Hood River Bridge In May

The Hood River-White Salmon Interstate Bridge will be closed to all traffic for four consecutive days in May, beginning at 12:01 a.m. the morning of May 19 through 11:59 p.m. the night of May 22.  During that time, crews from Hamilton Construction will remove and replace and adjust the tension in the wire ropes of the bridge that support the counterweights.  The work will include complete replacement and adjustment of the counterweight ropes.  The work is not weather dependent and will be underway continuously round the clock during the entire closure.  This work requires access to the roadway surface as well as other areas on the bridge and therefore the bridge will be closed to all vehicular traffic.  The bridge will not be operational for marine traffic when the ropes are being replaced.  The new ropes have a service life of at least 30 years.  During the months of March and April, there will be intermittent, single-lane closures of the bridge primarily during nighttime hours as Hamilton Construction crews work to prepare for the closure.  The Port accepted a bid from Hamilton Construction in the amount of $1,119,250 for the project in October of 2022.     

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