SPORTS ↕➙➙ ➛➜➝➞ ➟➠➡➢ ➤➜➥➠ ➦➧➦➛ ➨➞➜➥ ➤➜➥➠ ➩➫➭➯➫➲➳ ➵➸➫➺➻➫➼➻➳ EOU falls to Warriors ➽➾➚➪➶➹➘➪➘➾➴➷ ➬➮➱➮✃❐❒❮❰ÏÐ➱ ÑÐÒÓ ÔÕÖÖ× Ø ÙÚÛÜÛÝ ÞßÝàá âãÝÛäå æçæèæ é✃ê❰❮ë❒Ò➮ ì❒Ð➮í ì❒ î✃❒Ðë➮ ïðñòóô õö÷öøùòúûü÷úýûùþÿ ò ✁ ö ✂ öûûöó ó ✄☎ ÷úð ✆ ö ✄ ò ùöþ úûóòûö ✝ ✞✞✞☎ ÷úýûùþÿ ò ✁ ö ✂ öûûöó ó ✄☎ ÷úð ✇①③③①④ ⑤⑥ ①⑦ ⑧⑨⑩ ④⑩❶ MONDAY ❷ ❸❹❺❻❼ ❽❽❾ ❿➀❽➁ ❷ $1.50 Proposed state education spending plan is ‘survival budget’ ➂➃➃➄ ➄➅➆ ➇➃ ➃➈➉ ➊➅➋➈➌➄ ➍➈➎➍➏➉➐➎➌➉ ➑➅➒➌➇ ➓➌➔➅➒➐➏→ ➃➣ ↔➅ ➂➉➅➒➄➌ Dolls bring joy to seniors with dementia ❫ ➦❣❝❞② ♠✐❣✇✐❞➧ ❧♥②♠❥ ✐♥②s♥➨♥ ❞q➩s♥❢➫ ❞q❵ ❥❢✐♥❥❥ sq ❵♥➧♥q❢s❞ ♠❞❢s♥q❢❥ ③➫ ✇s➨sq✇ ❢❧♥➧ ③❞③➫ ❵❣②②❥ ❫ ❴❵❜❝❞❢❣✐❥ ❧❣♠♥ ♣❜q❵sq✇ ①s②② ③♥ ③❣❣❥❢♥❵ ❇ ✌☎✄❦ ✍❛✆✎✂ ❚❤✟ ✠✡☛✟☞✈✟☞ While the proposed $8.8 billion education budget by top lawmakers for the 2019- 21 biennium would allow the La Grande School District to continue operating with- ✏✑✒ ✓✔✕✖✗✘ ✔✗✙ ✚✒✔✛ ✏✜ ✢✜✏✣ gram cuts, the school district would not be able to increase the services it provides stu- dents. “It is a status quo budget,” said La Grande School District Superintendent George Men- doza. “We are very hopeful that ✒✤✥ ✚✒✔✒✥ ✦✖✧✧ ★✗✩ ✓✏✜✥ ✪✑✗✩✖✗✘ for education.” Lance Dixon, superinten- dent of the North Powder School District, echoes the feelings of Mendoza. “We will not be cutting (un- der the proposed budget), which is a great place to start ❈✫✬✭t✮✯✰ ✫✱ ❈✫✲✲✬✳✴t✰ ✵✴✳✶✳✮✯✯ ▲✷✸ ✹✺✻✺✼ ✽✼✺✾✺✿❀✾ ❁ ✼✺✾✷❂✺✿❀ ❁❀ ❲✷❃❂❄♦❅✺✼ ▲♦❂❆✺ ❅✷❀❉ ❁ ✹✺❊♦✼✻ ❋♦❃❃● ❇ ✁r❛✂✄☎✆✄❛ ❇✝✂☎✞✝❡ ❚❤✟ ✠✡☛✟☞✈✟☞ Community Kindness of Eastern Oregon has been helping seniors with dementia by giving them dolls and other comfort- ing items. The new non- profit has donated two dolls to seniors so far and has plans to donate at least two more. Both dolls were given to seniors at Wildflower lodge, but Liz Meyer, president of Com- munity Kindness, said she hopes to place dolls with seniors all over the area. Lifelike baby dolls dressed up in baby clothes and being treated like they are real babies might seem strange, but Meyer said the joy the residents have when they receive one is unique and special. “They light up,” she said. “It sends them back to the nurturing days of being a parent and brings back good memories.” Jenna Wright, assis- tant executive director at Wildflower Lodge, agreed. “It really is absolutely moving,” she said. Wright explained resi- dents with dementia can often feel anxious or de- pressed, and the dolls can help relieve those feel- ings. The residents don’t ⑧⑨ ⑩❶❶ ❷❸❶❹ ❺⑨❻❼❽❾❿ ⑨❾ ⑩⑨ ❹❻➀❸ ➁➂➂❶➀❷❽⑨❾ ❷⑨ ❷❸❽⑩ ➃⑨➄➄ ⑨❼ ❷➁➄➅❽❾❿ ❷⑨ ❷❸❽⑩ ➃⑨➄➄ ➆❽⑩➇ ➈❶❼➉ ⑩➊❶❶❷➋ ➌❷ ⑩⑨⑨❷❸❶⑩ ❷❸❶❹ ➁❾➃ ❹➁➅❶⑩ ❷❸❶❹ ➂❶❶➄ ➄❽➅❶ ❷❸❶➉ ❸➁➈❶ ➁ ❺❻❼❺⑨⑩❶➋➍ ➎ ➏➐➑➑➒➓➔→➣↔↕➙ ➒➛➛→➛↕➒➑↕ ➐➜➐➝⑤↕→➞➐ ➟→➔➐➝↕➠➔ ➒↕ ➓→➡➟➢➠➤➐➔ ➥➠➟➣➐ necessarily believe they are holding a real baby, though. “Just because some- one has dementia doesn’t mean they can’t tell the difference between real- ity and a doll,” she said. “A lot of our ladies and men in the community, where they are in the progression in the dis- ease, they are looking for their children. And if those children are infants in their mind, it can be very comforting to have that feeling of holding a baby and then combining it with the stimulation of soft blankets, the smell of baby powder, those kinds of sensory things.” Wright said often times residents with demen- tia become nonverbal, and a doll can encourage them to speak because they might speak to the baby, or want to show their baby to others. The doll also gives residents a sense of responsibil- ity, which can help fend off feelings of depression and improve their quality of life. Wright said the dolls are a way to help resi- dents with dementia deal with the emotional hard- ships that come with the See Dolls / Page 5A See Budget / Page 5A A new life awaits for the Umatilla Elgin earns Chemical Weapons Depot grant for wastewater system ❫ ➬s❢➫ ❢❣ ✐♥❝♥s➨♥ ➮➱✃❐❒➱❮ sq ♣❜q❵sq✇ ♣❣✐ ❥♥①♥✐ ♠✐❣❰♥❝❢ ❇ ❍■❛✂❏❛ ❑✝☎✆▼r✎❏ ❚❤✟ ✠✡☛✟☞✈✟☞ The City of Elgin received nearly $500,000 in a Com- munity Development Building Grant from Busi- ness Oregon, the state’s economic development agen- cy, for revitalizing the city’s outdated ④⑤⑥⑥⑦ wastewater sys- tem. Business Or- egon announced the award re- cipients, which include Elgin, Willamina, John Day, Dayville and Grant County, on Feb. 28. See Elgin / Page 5A ❇ ◆✎❖✂ P✎✞❛r☎❛✂✂☎ ✠☞✟◗❘❙ ❯✉✡❱❳❨ ❩☞❘❬❭❨❬☛❪❳❙◗ HERMISTON — The giant metal lock is nearly rusted shut on bunker A-903 at the Umatilla Chemical Depot in northeastern Oregon. Once we’re able to pry it loose and open the 10-foot tall concrete door, we’re walking into a lit- eral time capsule. Inside the cavernous room, we find boxes and boxes of sealed U.S. Army biscuits, toilet paper, can openers and potable water. One box dates back to January 1964. A-903 is only one of a thou- sand identical bunkers sprawl- ing in every direction as far as the eye can see at the depot. The rolling hills of the bun- kers can be seen for miles from Interstate 84. The entire site covers nearly 20 square miles; for comparison, that’s about the size of the central Oregon city of Bend. The depot was built in the ramp-up to World War II. For nearly 50 years, 7 million pounds of deadly chemical weapons such as sarin, mus- tard gas and VX nerve agent were stored here. Bill Elfering is a Umatilla County commissioner and member of the Columbia De- velopment Authority, the re- gional board working with the U.S. military to transfer the depot back to local con- trol. He refers to the endless rows of bunkers as “igloos,” a strangely cute name for rooms built to house weapons of war. As we tour the site, Elfering points out how they were built in staggered rows. “There was a concern that one might set the whole thing off and it would be like a string of firecrackers on the Fourth of July,” he said. “All of a sudden it just went ‘pop, pop, pop.’” The staggered design was proven to work in 1944 when one of the igloos did explode, killing six people. At the time, ⑧❸❶❼❶ ➊➁⑩ ➁ ➀⑨❾➀❶❼❾ ❷❸➁❷ ⑨❾❶ ❹❽❿❸❷ ⑩❶❷ ❷❸❶ ➊❸⑨➄❶ ❷❸❽❾❿ ⑨➂➂ ➁❾➃ ❽❷ ➊⑨❻➄➃ ➭❶ ➄❽➅❶ ➁ ⑩❷❼❽❾❿ ⑨➂ ➯❼❶➀❼➁➀➅❶❼⑩ ⑨❾ ❷❸❶ ➲⑨❻❼❷❸ ⑨➂ ➳❻➄➉➋➍ ➎ ➵→➡➡ ➸➡⑥➐➔→➑➣➙ ➺➻➒↕→➡➡➒ ➼➠⑤➑↕⑦ ➝➠➻➻→➛➛→➠➑➐➔ the depot’s administrators were only able to tell who had been killed in the blast by hav- ing everyone on site clock out after the explosion and then tracking which time cards were left. “I think the earth would still be shaking if they were to all go off,” Elfering said. A Time-Consuming Transition It’s been years since weap- ons were actually stored at the Umatilla Chemical Depot. A 1993 United Nations resolu- tion banned all use and stor- age of chemical weapons. In ✩✘✪✫✬ ßàáââãäãåæçççççççèé ßêëãìâçççççççççççíé ßêëëîïãðñçççòó ôåáõ óööñ ççççç÷é øêëåçççççççççççççùé ýþãïãêïççççççççççèó úêððåõñççççççççççççûó ÿþêõðâ çççççççççççç ✼ ó üåìêõæ çççççççççççíó ýöãðîáõãåâççççççíó WEDNESDAY 2004, a massive furnace was built on the property, and all of the weapons were incinerat- ed. The depot officially closed in 2012. The property was supposed to return to local control in 2015, but even today, much of the land remains in the hands of the military. That could be about to change. After years of nego- tiations, locals are cautiously optimistic that much of the de- pot’s land will soon be back in local control. Dr. David Drotzman is the mayor of the nearby town of Hermiston. Hundreds of peo- ple from the neighboring com- munity worked at the depot when it was in operation, and a lot of those jobs are gone. “Were those some good pay- ing jobs? Absolutely,” he said. “And have they been replaced with the same level of jobs? Maybe, maybe not.” He’s eager to see new devel- opment. “Everybody’s wish list is Costco. ‘When can we get a Costco out there?’” he said. “I think any employer that pro- vides an opportunity for good paying — above you know the state average wages.” The plan to redevelop the de- pot has several parts. The first phase, converting a portion of the land to a National Guard training center is already well underway. Portions of the land will also be designated as a See Depot / Page 5A ❲✮✯✰✱✮✴ ✵✉✸✸ ✹✽✾✿❀❁❂❃ ✽❄ ❃❅✿ ❇❁❀❦ ✽✹ ❉ ❂✿❀❃❊✽❄ ❋♦●❏❑▼◆ P◗ ❘❙❯ ❝ ❞❡❢❢❞❣ ❤✐❥❧ ❋❫❴❵❛❜② ❳❩❬❭❪ ♠❞❥♣qr s✐q t❥❥❞❣✈ ÏÐÑ ÒÓÔÕÐÖ×ØÙ ÚÛÐÓ ×ÑÜÝ ÏÕÜÐÞÒ Baker City man arrested after high- speed chase ➽✟☛➾❘➚ ➪✟➶☛ ➹❪❬➘➘ A Baker City man who led police on a high-speed vehicle chase through town Saturday was arrested later while hiding in a garage. Ramon Nunez Jr., 36, of 1221 East St., was ar- rested about 6:21 p.m. at 2539 Ninth ➴⑤➑➐➷ St. Nunez is in cus- tody at the Baker County Jail on charges of attempting to elude police, reckless driv- ing, unlawful use of a motor vehicle, possession of a stolen vehicle, first-degree criminal trespass, two Malheur County warrants charging him with failure to appear and multiple traffic violations, including speeding, running a stop light and careless driving. The brief chase lasted just a few minutes — from about 5:38 p.m. to 5:41 p.m. Satur- day -— Baker City Police Chief Dustin Newman said today. The incident began when police saw Nunez driving about 70 mph in a 40-mph speed zone on Highway 7 north of David Eccles Road, a press release stated. He was driving a 2005 Chevrolet pickup truck pulling a small flatbed trailer. Nunez turned on to Sec- See Chase / Page 5A ✖✗✘✙❆✖✙ ✚✛ ❍❆❱✫ ❆ ✛✙✗❖❨ ✩✪✫❆✭ ✜✢✶✣✤✥✦✣✦✶✥✶ ■ ââîå í ✧ û âåìðãêïâ ✷ ùò þá ★ åâ úá ▲ õáïæå ✷ ýõå ★ êï ❈ ✁✁ ❚✂✄ ☎✆✝✄✞✟✄✞ ✠✄✡✝✞☛☛☞ ✌ ✺✍✎✲✏✑✒✲✒✎✑✎ ☛✞ ✝✄✠✻ ✠ ✄☞ ✓✁ ✌☛ ✠✄✡✝♥✁ ✔✞ ✠✻✄☛✆✝✄✞✟✄✞✳✕☛☞✳ Online at lagrandeobserver.com