The Observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1968-current, May 10, 2019, WEEKEND EDITION, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    LOCAL
❋✧★✩❆❨✱ ✪❆❨ ✫✵✱ ✬✵✫✾
stores, including Whole
Foods Market, a major
grocery store chain that
specializes in natural and
organic foods.
Yount, the marketing di-
rector for wholesaler Spo-
kane Produce, won a major
design award for My Fresh
Basket, a small neighbor-
hood grocery store in Spo-
kane, Washington and one
of his responsibilities with
Market Place Fresh Foods
was to redesign the store.
“The layout of the store
wasn’t good at all,” Yount
told The Observer in No-
vember. “That (design
ÛÜÝÞßà
Continued from Page 1A
coaster — but the Market
Place Fresh Foods man-
agement team is deter-
mined to put the past be-
hind them and start anew.
While Al Adelsberger,
the original and current
developer of the project,
still owns the building,
Snyder said new co-own-
ers, Marco Rennie and Da-
vid Yount, have revamped
the entire business. The
pair also opened a com-
munity grocery store in
Joseph on June 1, 2018,
✝✟✟✂✏✙ ✞ ✙✞✠ ✕✞ ✚✞✆ ✄✁☛ -
ated when the town’s own
Family Foods closed due
to the bankruptcy.
According to a press re-
lease, Rennie and Yount
are striving “to provide a
shopping experience that
‘not only enhances the
health and well-being of
the community, but re-
duces their stress levels by
taking into account peo-
ple’s busy schedules by of-
fering meal solutions that
are healthy and easy.’”
Rennie, who was in-
volved with the operation
of Market Place Family
Foods, has a background
in operating grocery
said she’s had a great time
working there so far.
“I heard it was going to
✒☛ ✏☛✚ ✞✏✌ ✌✂✎☛✁☛✏
✛✞✚✜ ✕✂✏✌☛✁☛✌ ✂ ✞ ✟✂ ✟☛ ✒✂ ✢
✕☛✘ ✚☛✁☛ ☞✎☛✁ -
ing wasn’t unique enough,
or enticing enough, to get
people to come back.”
The new layout is open,
clean and provides the
most accessible shopping
experience for customers,
according to Snyder. The
✣✠✟✡✆✜ ✚✕✞
✤✕☞✠ ✔✕☞✠ ✆ ✞ ✂☞✏ ☞✎☛✁✆ ☞
make meal prep easier by
slicing and dicing produce
however a customer would
like at no extra charge. At
the 4th Street Bistro corner
of the store, shoppers can
pick up ready-to-eat hot
meals and ready-to-cook
recipe bundles, or even
order a glass of refreshing
➜➝➞➟➠➞ ➡➢➤➥➦➧➨➠➩➫➭➯ ➲➳➵➯➸➺➯➸
➻➼➽➾➚➪ ➶➹➼➘➚ ➴➽➚➷➬ ➴➮➮➱➷✃ ❐➬➮❒ ❮➬➮❒ ❰ÏÐ➚➷ ➘Ñ➷➪➮Ò➚➽➷ ➪➬➚ ➮❒➪Ï➮Ó ➪➮ ➬➼Ð➚ ➪➬➚Ï➽ ❒➽➮➱Ñ➘➚
➷➹Ï➘➚➱ ➼Ó➱ ➱Ï➘➚➱ ➼ÓÔ Õ➼Ô ➪➬➚Ô✃
➱ ➹Ï➾➚ Ö ➼Ó➱ ➼➪ Ó➮ ➚×➪➽➼ ➘➮➷➪ Ö Ø➚Ù➮➽➚ ➪➬➚Ô ➹➚➼Ð➚ ➪➬➚ ➷➪➮➽➚Ú
craft beer on tap at the bar.
Upstairs, a vast seating
area spans from an indoor
mezzanine out to the roof,
✚✕✂✄✕ ☞✎☛✁✆ ✞ ✥✂☛✚ ☞✦
✌☞☛✆✏☎ ✕✞✥☛ ✝✆✄✞✟ ✠✁☞✒ -
lems, and Eastern Oregon in gen-
Continued from Page 1A
☛✁✞✟ ✂✆ ✟☛✆✆ ✟✂✍☛✟✘ ☞ ✒☛ ✞✎☛✄ ☛✌ ✒✘
many students wore red to support
the movement.
“We had a great turnout (of
a budget shortfall.
✆ ✞✎ ✞✏✌ ✆ ✡✌☛✏ ✆ ✚☛✞✁✂✏✙ ✁☛✌✜✢ á
said Chelsee Rohan, a counselor
✚✕☞ ✕☛✟✠☛✌ ✟☛✞✌ ✕☛ ☛✎☞✁ ✓
✔ ✡✌☛✏ ✆ ✞✏✌ ✆ ✞✎ ✂✏ ✕☛ â ☞✁ ✕
Powder School District also wore
red on Wednesday in support of
the push to boost funding for
education, said Superintendent
Lance Dixon.
The Union School District was
✁✂☞✁
ã
to the start of the school day, a
support rally for education was
conducted outside. Many held
up signs including ones that
thanked the community for its
support of education and oth-
ers that read: “Honk if you love
Union schools.”
The rally was well received,
said Union School District Dep-
uty Clerk Mendy Clark.
But in Cove, business did oper-
ate as usual as the school district
chose not to participate in “Red
for Ed” activities. Superintendent
Earl Pettit said this is because his
NS
õÛöñßÝ
Continued from Page 1A
that it is being hurt by rising
Public Employees Retirement
System expenses. The cost
that Imbler and all Oregon
school districts must pay into
PERS is scheduled to jump
dramatically in 2019-20. The
Imbler School District’s PERS
cost is expected to be $91,000.
The district had already been
paying at least $30,000 a year
into PERS.
Lakey-Campbell said the
school district has been con-
servative in its spending in
recent years in part because of
anticipated rising PERS costs.
The superintendent said
she is hopeful that Imbler
will not have to draw as much
from its reserve fund as the
budget is proposing. She said
that the budget was built on
the assumption that the Leg-
islature will provide schools
with a budget of $8.97 billion
for the 2019-21 biennium,
and there is a possibility that
school districts will receive
more than this.
The Imbler School Dis-
✁✂✄ ☎✆
✝✆✄✞✟
✠✂✄ ✡✁☛
äå
✚✂✟✟ ✆✞✘ ✕✞ ✌✂✎☛✁☛✏ ✆✄✕☞☞✟
✌✂✆ ✁✂✄ ✆
✕✞✥☛
✥☛✁✘
✌✂✎☛✁☛✏
needs,” he said. “On the other
side of the state, they’re talking
about a lot of local service activi-
ties at the cost of the school that
Eastern Oregon doesn’t do.”
But, Pettit said, “there’s certainly
improvement that could be made
to the school funding system. The
instability of the funding is really
the danger and how it can swing.”
Beyond protesting to raise aware-
ness of the problems in the Oregon
school system, the walkouts were
also demonstrations of support
for a possible solution: House Bill
3427, known as the Student Suc-
cess Act. The legislation would put
✞ ✏☛✚ ✒✡✆✂✏☛✆✆
✞ æ ✂✏ ☛✎☛✄
✕✞
would raise $2 billion each bien-
nium for schools in Oregon.
Chris Panike, the La Grande
School District’s business man-
ager, said the passage of House
Bill 3427 would be very good for
schools. He said schools need the
additional funding because so
much is expected of them.
Senate Bill 1067 would
prohibit school district em-
ployees in many instances
from being covered by the
health insurance of their
spouse. Currently, Imbler
✔✄✕☞☞✟
✖✂✆ ✁✂✄
✆ ✞✎
✗✞✘
choose to be covered by their
spouse’s insurance and are
then given a stipend from
the district. The stipend is
paid because the school dis-
trict saves on money paid for
insurance premiums when
an employee is covered by a
spouse’s insurance.
Should House Bill 3075
pass, repealing SB 1067 and
allowing the current system
to remain in place, the Imbler
School District would save
$84,000 in 2019-20, said
❯❱❲❳❨❩❬
✕☛
train depot and downtown
La Grande. A “Brew Hiker”
will even run up and down
the stairs to deliver beer to
customers sitting in the up-
per level, so there’s no need
for visitors to make multiple
trips down to the bar.
✌✂✆ ✁✂✄
ð
ÜñÞòóàô
✞✟✆☞ ✂✏✥☞✟✥☛✌ ✂✏ ✕☛ ☛✎☞✁ ✓
❚✭✮ ✯✰✲✮✧❱✮✧ ✳ ✺✴
Snyder also said this
area will soon have free
WiFi access for anyone
who wants to bring their
devices to work or play,
but it is especially tailored
toward students of East-
ern Oregon University.
“We’re
going
to
livestream all EOU sport-
ing events,” Snyder said,
pointing to the TV mount-
ed on the wall of the lower
He explained children come
to school today not only to learn,
but to be in a safe place where
some medical service is available,
services promoting their social
well-being are provided, meals are
served and more. He noted that for
many children, their most nutri-
tious meal of the day is the lunch
they receive at school.
Panike supports HB 3427 but
wishes it did not tax businesses
and instead was a sales tax. He
does not like raising taxes on busi-
nesses because he does not believe
this is good for the economy.
He noted that a sales tax would
bring in money from tourists
visiting Oregon.
“We would be taxing people
outside our communities. Why
just tax ourselves (by taxing cor-
✠☞✁✞ ✂☞✏✆✜ çá
✞✏✂✍☛ ✆✞✂✌✓
ã
IMESD Superintendent Mark
Mulvill had a similar sentiment,
saying he wished Oregon’s schools
would be funded through a sales
tax instead of a business tax, but
no matter where the additional
funding comes from, the budget
needs to “contain costs” in PERS
and health insurance.
“To me, the revenue package
Deputy Clerk Teressa Dewey.
Dewey and Lakey-Camp-
bell both said, though, HB
3075 does not appear to have
a good chance of passing.
The Imbler School Dis-
trict’s budget committee
was presented with the pro-
posed budget Tuesday. The
committee will next meet at
6:30 p.m. May 21 in Room
1 of Imbler High School.
The committee may vote at
that meeting to recommend
a 2019-20 budget to the
school board.
The school board will later
vote on the adoption of the
2019-20 budget following a
public hearing. The school
board must adopt a budget
by June 30.
❝❞
❝
❣❤✐❥❦❧♠❦❣❤✐❥
✠☛✁ ✛☞☞✁ ✂✏ ✏✞✥✘ ✞✏✌ ✙☞✟✌
EOU decorations.
“We wanted to consider
the students because this
is a convenient location for
them,” Snyder said.
EOU freshman Patience
Dudley mans the cash
register at the store and
and student success fund is cou-
pled with cost containment in the
future, otherwise those dollars
won’t go where they’re intended,”
he said. “We need additional rev-
enue and we need to contain the
✄☞✆
✆☞ ✚☛ ✄✞✏ ✕✂✁☛
✕☛ ✆ ✞✎
✕☛
public wants for lower class sizes.”
Mulvihill said funding for Or-
egon schools has not been aqedu-
ate since 1991 when state ballot
✗☛✞✆✡✁☛ è ✚☛✏ ✂✏ ☞ ☛✎☛✄ ✢ ✚✕✂✄✕
lowered property taxes and
moved the responsibility of edu-
cation funding from individual
communities to the state at large.
“Overall, we’ve never been
back to the level of funding that
we had before ballot measure 5,”
he said. “We’re in a historic time
in Oregon, when the Legislature
is trying to bring us back to those
✟☛✥☛✟✆ ✦☞✁ ✕☛ ✝✁✆
✂✗☛✓ á
Pettit said if HB 3427 does pass,
his district would probably use the
money it receives to build infra-
structure. He explained that his
district needs better structures for
providing counseling and mental
health services for students. These
services are now housed in aging
modular-like buildings. Pettit said
the services could be delivered
-
vated buildings.
Pettit noted that the Cove School
District is planning to build a dining
hall during the next year, which will
leave its present kitchen and cafete-
ria at the elementary school empty.
The superintendent said this area
could be converted into space for
counseling and mental health of-
✗☞✁☛ ☛✎☛✄ ✂✥☛✟✘ ✂✏ ✏☛✚ ☞✁ ✁☛✏☞
✝✄☛✆ ✚✂ ✕ ✗☞✏☛✘ ✦✁☞✗ éê ëìíî ✓
The educator noted that schools
also would have the option of us-
ing funds from HB 3427 to hire
more teachers to reduce class
sizes. Pettit said large class sizes
are not an issue in Cove or most
other Northeast Oregon School
Districts, so he believes HB 3427
funds would be used more often
in his region for infrastructure.
Pettit’s perspective aligns with
Mulvihill’s, who said while class size
is less of an issue in Northeast Ore-
gon than on the west side of the state,
there are still “pockets of problems”
due to inadequate infrastructure.
“Some of our smaller schools
have low class sizes, but larger
schools don’t have the capacity
to do that,” Mulvihill said. “A lot
of this issue is having adequate
✦✞✄✂✟✂ ✂☛✆ ✞✏✌ ✆ ✞ ï ✏✙✓ á
➣↔↕➙↔ ➛➙➣↔➜➝
➞➟➟➠ ➡➢➤➥➦➢➧
✃❐❒❐❮ ❰ ÏÐÑÒÓÔÕÖ× ØÙ ØÚ ÛÜ ÝÞ ß×ÞàÙÖá âØ ã❮ä❒❐
➨➩➫➭➯ ➲➳➭➵➵
➸➺➺➻ ➼➽➵➺➩➾➫➚➪➩
➶➹➳➭➵➵➘➽➯➫➪➯➴➹➪➽➯➷➬➮➪➩➱
åæâ❰ç è❒é✃êä❐❒ë❒Üãã
ìÑí è❒é✃êãîÜë✃❐❮ã
ïðñòð óòôðõö ÷øðõù õò úûüý þÿï òðõ ✁ òü öòô ✁ ðò ✂ ñòôù ÷ûû ✄ ù ☎
✆✝✞✟✠✡ ☛☞ ☛✝✌ ✍✌✌✎ ✏✌✑✒✓ ☛✝✌ ✔✟✕☞✟ ✖☞✗✟☛✒ ✍✌✌✎ ✖☞✟☛✘☞✙ ✚✌✛✞✘☛✜✌✟☛ ✕✡ ☞✢✢✌✘✕✟✣ ✗✛ ☛☞ ✞ ✤✥✦✦ ✁ ûñ ✧★ ô ✁ ùû ✧ ûðõ
✩✪✫ ✬✫✭✮✬✯✰✱ ✰✪✲✯✪✳✴ ✵✭✭✶✴ ✪✰ ✷✪✳✫ ✸✫✪✸✭✫✬✷✹ ✺✻✯✴ ✯✴ ✮ ✼✽✾✼✽ ✿✪✴✬ ❀✻✮✫✭ ✸✫✪✱✫✮❁ ✩✪✫ ❂✳✮❃✯❄✭✶ ✮✸✸❃✯❅✮✰✬✴❆ ✮✰✶ ✮✸❇
✸❃✯✭✴ ✬✪ ❁✮✰✷ ✶✯✩✩✭✫✭✰✬ ✯✰✬✭✱✫✮✬✭✶ ✵✭✭✶ ❁✮✰✮✱✭❁✭✰✬ ✴✬✫✮✬✭✱✯✭✴✹ ❈✭✭✶✴ ✫✭❂✳✯✫✭✶ ✬✪ ❉✭ ❅✪✰✬✫✪❃❃✭✶ ✯✰ ❊✰✯✪✰ ✿✪✳✰✬✷
✮✫✭ ❃✯✴✬✭✶ ❉✭❃✪✵✹ ❋❃✭✮✴✭ ❅✮❃❃ ✳✴ ✮✬ ✼●❍■❏✽✼■✼❑▲▲❆ ✭❁✮✯❃ ❉❅❃✮✸✸▼✳✰✯✪✰■❅✪✳✰✬✷✹✪✫✱✓ ☞✘ ✣☞ ☛☞ ☞✗✘ ◆✌❖✡✕☛✌ ◆◆◆P
✳✰✯✪✰❅✪✳✰✬✷✵✭✭✶❅✪✰✬✫✪❃✹✪✫✱ ✩✪✫ ✮ ❅✪✴✬ ✴✻✮✫✭ ✮✸✸❃✯❅✮✬✯✪✰ ✮✰✶ ❁✪✫✭ ✯✰✩✪✹
◗❘❙❘❚ ❯❱ ❲❳❚❨❯❩ ❬❙❭❪ ❫ ❴❚❨❵❛❙❘❜❯❩❪ ❯❩ ❝❯❞❜❯❵❪ ❡❚❚❢❪
ÿ ✁ û ❣ òð ❤ û ✐ ñùû ✄ ❥ õøõôõûù ❦ óúøýõû ✁ ✥❧♠ ♥ ♦ ûû ✄ óòðõ ✁ òü ♣ û ✂ û ✁ ýõù q
✥❧♠rst✦ ✉ ò ✂ ñòôù ÷ûû ✄ ù øù ýô ★ üñ ðôñùøð û ✈ ýòüñ ö r ✇✰ ✫✭❅✪✱✰✯✬✯✪✰ ✪✩ ✬✻✭ ✯❁❁✯✰✭✰✬ ✮✰✶ ❅✪✰✬✯✰✳✪✳✴ ✬✻✫✭✮✬ ✬✪
✰✮✬✳✫✮❃ ✫✭✴✪✳✫❅✭✴①✰✪✲✯✪✳✴ ✵✭✭✶✴ ✮✫✭ ✶✭❅❃✮✫✭✶ ✬✪ ❉✭ ✮ ✸✳❉❃✯❅ ✰✳✯✴✮✰❅✭ ✮✰✶ ✴✻✮❃❃ ❉✭ ✶✭✬✭❅✬✭✶❆ ❅✪✰✬✫✪❃❃✭✶ ✮✰✶❆
✵✻✭✫✭ ✩✭✮✴✯❉❃✭❆ ✭✫✮✶✯❅✮✬✭✶ ✪✰ ✮❃❃ ❃✮✰✶✴ ✯✰ ✬✻✯✴ ✴✬✮✬✭✹
❡②❙❘ ❜❪ ❙ ❩❯❞❜❯❵❪ ❭❚❚❢③
④ ✵✭✭✶ ✯✴ ✶✭✴✯✱✰✮✬✭✶ ✰✪✲✯✪✳✴ ✵✻✭✰ ✯✬ ✯✴ ❅✪✰✴✯✶✭✫✭✶ ❉✷ ✮ ✱✪⑤✭✫✰❁✭✰✬✮❃ ✮✱✭✰❅✷ ✬✪ ❉✭ ✯✰⑥✳✫✯✪✳✴ ✬✪ ✸✳❉❃✯❅ ✻✭✮❃✬✻❆
✮✱✫✯❅✳❃✬✳✫✭❆ ✫✭❅✫✭✮✬✯✪✰❆ ✵✯❃✶❃✯✩✭❆ ✪✫ ✸✫✪✸✭✫✬✷ ⑦⑧✫✭✱✪✰ ④✶❁✯✰✯✴✬✫✮✬✯⑤✭ ⑨✮✵ ⑩✽❑■✽✼❶■❍❶✽✽❷✹ ❸✪✴✬ ✰✪✲✯✪✳✴ ✵✭✭✶✴ ✮✫✭
✰✪✰■✰✮✬✯⑤✭ ✸❃✮✰✬✴ ✬✻✮✬ ✮✫✭ ✴✭✫✯✪✳✴ ✸✭✴✬✴ ❅✮✳✴✯✰✱ ✭❅✪✰✪❁✯❅ ❃✪✴✴ ✮✰✶ ✻✮✫❁ ✬✻✭ ✭✰⑤✯✫✪✰❁✭✰✬✹ ❹✪✲✯✪✳✴ ✵✭✭✶✴ ❅✻✪❺✭
✪✳✬ ❅✫✪✸✴❆ ✶✭✴✬✫✪✷ ✫✮✰✱✭ ✮✰✶ ✸✮✴✬✳✫✭ ❃✮✰✶✴❆ ❅❃✪✱ ✵✮✬✭✫✵✮✷✴❆ ✮✩✩✭❅✬ ✻✳❁✮✰ ✮✰✶ ✮✰✯❁✮❃ ✻✭✮❃✬✻❆ ✮✰✶ ✬✻✫✭✮✬✭✰ ✰✮✬✯⑤✭
✸❃✮✰✬ ❅✪❁❁✳✰✯✬✯✭✴✹
❻❚❪❜❨❩❙❘❜❯❩ ❯❱ ❝❯❞❜❯❵❪ ❡❚❚❢❪ ❜❩ ❼❩❜❯❩ ❽❯❵❩❘❾
ó ❿➀❥❥ ➁➀➂ ♦➃➃➄❥
óüøùù ➁➀➂ ✎✌✡✕✣✟✞☛✌✎ ◆✌✌✎ ✕✡ ✞ ✛✘✕☞✘✕☛✒ ✟☞➅✕☞✗✡ ◆✌✌✎ ✎✌✡✕✣✟✞☛✌✎ ❖✒ ☛✝✌ ✔✟✕☞✟ ✖☞✗✟☛✒ ✖☞✜✜✕✡✡✕☞✟✌✘✡ ✞✡ ✞
✬✮✫✱✭✬ ✵✭✭✶ ✴✸✭❅✯✭✴ ✪✰ ✵✻✯❅✻ ✬✻✭ ❈✭✭✶ ✿✪✰✬✫✪❃ ➆✯✴✬✫✯❅✬ ✵✯❃❃ ❅✪❁✸❃✷ ✵✯✬✻ ✮ ✴✬✮✬✭ ✵✯✶✭ ❁✮✰✮✱✭❁✭✰✬ ✸❃✮✰ ✮✰✶✾
✪✫ ✯❁✸❃✭❁✭✰✬ ✮ ❅✪✳✰✬✷ ✵✯✶✭ ✸❃✮✰ ✩✪✫ ✯✰✬✭✰✴✯⑤✭ ❅✪✰✬✫✪❃ ✮✰✶ ❁✪✰✯✬✪✫✯✰✱✹ ④✰ ➇④➈ ✫✮✬✭✶ ✵✭✭✶ ❁✮✷ ✮❃✴✪ ❉✭ ✮ ✵✭✭✶ ✪✩
❺✰✪✵✰ ✭❅✪✰✪❁✯❅ ✯❁✸✪✫✬✮✰❅✭ ✵✻✯❅✻ ✪❅❅✳✫✴ ✯✰ ✴❁✮❃❃ ✭✰✪✳✱✻ ✯✰✩✭✴✬✮✬✯✪✰✴ ✬✪ ❁✮❺✭ ❅✪✰✬✮✯✰❁✭✰✬✾✭✫✮✶✯❅✮✬✯✪✰ ✸✪✴❇
✴✯❉❃✭➉ ✪✫ ✪✰✭ ✬✻✮✬ ✯✴ ✰✪✬ ❺✰✪✵✰ ✬✪ ✪❅❅✳✫ ✻✭✫✭❆ ❉✳✬ ✯✬✴ ✸✫✭✴✭✰❅✭ ✯✰ ✰✭✯✱✻❉✪✫✯✰✱ ❅✪✳✰✬✯✭✴ ❁✮❺✭ ✩✳✬✳✫✭ ✪❅❅✳✫✫✭✰❅✭
✝✌✘✌ ✡✌✌✜ ✕✜✜✕✟✌✟☛P
➜➠➳➨➝❰➝➞➫ ➭➞➡➢➡➝➝➟
Ï➫➞➤➴➝ ➭➞➡➢➡➝➝➟
Ð➓➛➛➣➒ ➻➎➒➐➒➓➓➔
Ñ➠➞➫➘ ➾➫➝➨➨ ❰❰ Ò➭➯➩➝➩➠➥ ➲➡➯➩➭➯➤
➼➻➓ ➱➮➎➏➔➓ ➊➣➏➔➓ ➣➮
Ò➠➧➹ ➵➫➝➝➢ ➟➫➞➯➤➞➴➝➨➺
Ó➓➮➓➏➏➍➎➛ ➑➓➑➑➓➮➒➓➓➔
➱➍➎➏➼ ➐➏➣➼➒➓➓➔
Ô➎➑➎➏➓➌➓ ➐➏➣➼➒➓➓➔
Õ➍↔➎➛➎Ö➎➏ ➐➏➣➼➒➓➓➔
ÕÖ↕➮➍➔ ➣➮ ×➣➻➓↔➍➎➏ ➐➏➣➼➒➓➓➔
Ø➎➏➌Ö ➮➎➙➒➣➮➼
➊➋➌➌➍➎➏ ➐➏➎➑➒➓➓➔
→➣↔↔➣➏ ↕➋➙➛➣➌➌
➜➝➞➟➠➡ ➢➤➞➥➡➝➝➟
➦➝➧➧➠➡ ➨➩➞➫➩➭➯➨➩➧➝ ➲➠➳➩➨➯➟➝ ➩➭➝
➵➠➸➝ ➞➫➝➞➺
➊➋➌➻ ➌➐➓➛➓➼➣➏➒➓➓➔
➽➾➠➩➾➭ ➚➫➠➠➪
➶➝➞➹➘ ➨➥➳➫➴➝ ➲➴➫➝➞➩➝➫ ➩➭➞➤ ➷
↔➍➛➓ ➬➮➣↔ ➼➻➓ ➱➮➎➏➔➓ ➊➣➏➔➓
✃➯➸➝➫➺
❐➍➏➙❒➔➓❮➍➛ ➻➎➒➐➒➓➓➔
➜➝➞➟➠➡ ➭➞➡➢➡➝➝➟
❯❲❭❪❱❫❲❴
✇✇✇❈❉❊❋●❍■❏❑▼◆❖P◗❖◆❑❈❘❊❚
❵❛❛❜
level mezzanine. She add-
ed that EOU coaches will
be stopping by the store
soon to deck out the up-
➵➠➪➪➠➤ ➾➫➳➥➯➤➞
Ù➞➫➧➯➾ ➜➳➨➩➞➫➟
➦➝➧➧➠➡ ➩➠➞➟Ú➞Û
➜➘➫➩➧➝ ➨➥➳➫➴➝ ➲➝Û➾➝➥➩ ➫➝➨➯➟➝➤❒
➩➯➞➧➺
Ü➓➛❮➓➼ ➛➓➎➬
Ý➧➞➾➢ ➭➝➤➚➞➤➝
→➣↔↔➣➏ ➼➎➏➌Ö
➱➍➎➏➼ Þ➣ß➼➎➍➛
➊➎❮➓➏➏➎ ➱➮➎➌➌
Ü➍➑➓➮à➌ ×➋➙➛➣➌➌ ➊➣➌➓ →➎↔➑➍➣➏
➲➝Û➾➝➥➩ ➫➝➨➯➟➝➤➩➯➞➧➺
♣❛qr❝t❤✉❛✈
①③④⑤⑥⑦⑧⑥⑨⑩④
❶③❷❸⑥❶⑤⑧❹❺❻③
❼❽❾❿➀➁➂➃➄ ❼➄➅➃➆❾➇ ➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈ ➉❿➁ ➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➊❼
✄☞✡✟✌
➋➌➁➅➆➍➃➎➏➅➃➆❾➇ ➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈ ➉❿➁ ➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➊❼
also be boosted by the pas-
sage of House Bill 3075. This
/ Page 5A bill would repeal Senate Bill
1067, which the Legislature
passed in 2017 and is set to
➋➏❾ ➐ ➁❿➑➑ ➃➅ ❽➂❿❾ ➒➆❾❿➇ ➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈ ➉❿➁ ➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➊❼
➓➆➔❿➏→➑❿➇ ➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈ ➉❿➁ ➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➊❼
➣➆↔➏➅➃➆❾➇ ➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈➈ ➉➆➌➀ ↕➆➌➁❿➈➈➈ ➙↔➀➆➁➁ ➛➆❽❾
❙☞☞ ✌✍✎ ✏✑✒✓✔✕② ✔✌✖ ✕✖
✶✗✶✗✘ ✙✚ ✥✛✜✢✣✤✦✧★ ✩✪✫✬ ✭✤✢✫✮✬ ✯✣✦✰
✱✲✳✶✴ ✵✵✷✸✗✘✳✵ ✪★ ✦✪✢✢ ✹★✧✧ ✱✺✗✗✴ ✵✺✘✸✗✲✺✻
▲✼✽✾✿✿❀ ✼♦♥❁❂ ✾♥❂ ✼❃❁❄✾❅❁❂ ❢✼❄ ✼❆❁❄ ❡❇ ❀❁✾❄s
ó ❿➀❥❥ ➁î➂ ♦➃➃➄❥
ïðñòò óôõ ö÷øùúûüý÷ö þ÷÷ö ùø ü þ÷÷ö ÿ ÷ ✁ ÿûÿ ✂ ù ✁ ù ✂✄ ÿ ☎ ýüû ✁ ÷ ✆ þ ✝ ù ✁✝ ùø ✞ ÿý ✝ ✟ ÿ ✁ ü ✟✟✠ ü ✞✡ ûöüûý üûö ü ✞✡ ûöüûý ùû û÷ùú ✝✞ ÿ ☎ ùûú ✁ ÿ ✡ ûýù÷ø ☛
Ô➣➍➏➼➓➔ ➙➣➎➼➙➮➎➌➌
á➑➣➼➼➓➔ ➐➏➎➑➒➓➓➔
â➍➬➬➋➌➓ ➐➏➎➑➒➓➓➔
Ð➓➛➛➣➒ ➌➼➎➮➼➻➍➌➼➛➓
ÏÛ➝➘➝ ➟➞➯➨➘ ➲➝Û➾➝➥➩ ➫➝➨➯➟➝➤➩➯➞➧➺
→➎➏➎➔➎ ➼➻➍➌➼➛➓
Ò➯➧➟ ➾➞➫➫➠➩ ã ä➳➝➝➤ å➤➤➝æ➨
➶➞➾➝
➶➝➞➹➘ ➨➥➳➫➴➝ ➲➡➯➩➭➯➤ ➷ ➪➯➧➝ ➠➹
Ù➫➞➤➟➝ ✃➠➤➟➝ ✃➯➸➝➫➺
Ñ➠➞➫➘ ➾➫➝➨➨ ❰❰ Ò➭➯➩➝➩➠➥
ç➞➧➪➞➩➯➞➤ ➩➠➞➟Ú➞Û
Ó➋➮➑➛➓ ➛➣➣➌➓➌➼➮➍➬➓
➽➾➠➩➾➭ ➩➭➯➨➩➧➝
➽➳➧➹➳➫ ➾➯➤è➳➝➹➠➯➧
é➳➤➾➩➳➫➝➸➯➤➝
Õ➣➋➏➔➌➼➣➏➙➋➓
å➫➪➝➤➯➞➤ ➲Ñ➯➪➞➧➞➘➞➤➺ ➚➧➞➾➢❒
↕➓➮➮Ö
➦➝➧➧➠➡ Ú➞➴ ➯➫➯➨
➜➝➟➳➨➞➭➝➞➟ ➫➘➝
ê➝➤➩➝➤➞ ➴➫➞➨➨❰❰ ë➠➫➩➭ å➹➫➯➾➞
➙➮➎➌➌ì í➍➮➓➙➮➎➌➌
➽➞➧➩➾➝➟➞➫
á➒➓➓➼ ×➮➍➎➮ ➊➣➌➓
Ý➯➩➩➝➫➨➡➝➝➩ ë➯➴➭➩➨➭➞➟➝
✞✍☛ ☛✎☛✄ ✂✏ ✑✄ ☞✒☛✁✓
✶✷ ✸✷✹✻✼✻✷✹✻✷✽
✸✷■✿❀❛✷❁✻ ✶❂✻✷❁②
❻❼❼❽ ❾ ❿➀➀➁➂➃➄➅❼➀ ➆➁➇
❼➈➂❼➉➉❼➊➅ ➀❼➇➋➃➂❼ ➌➍➎❿➌➌➏➐
✈✇①③④⑤ ⑥⑦⑧⑨⑤⑩
❃❄❃❄❅ ❇❈ ❉❊● ❍ ❏❑▲▼◆❖ ❊P◗❘
✞✏✌
heard of the great new
owners,” she said, adding
that it’s been fairly busy
at the corner grocery store
since its soft opening on
May 3. “I feel very appre-
ciated and like I’m doing a
great job.”
Market Place Fresh Foods
will feature promotional
pricing through the month
of June as well as host sev-
eral events where custom-
ers can meet local vendors
face-to-face, according to
Snyder. She said she wants
the grocery store to be as
welcoming as possible, and
these events are one way to
show the community Mar-
ket Place Fresh Foods in-
tends to do just that.
“You know when you
feel like you need a glass
of wine just to work up
the courage to go to the
grocery store? Instead of
having the liquid cour-
age to go, you can have a
beer while you’re shopping
here,” she said. “We want
this to be a memorable
customer experience. We
want it to be some place
where people look forward
to coming to.”
➑❼❽➃➂➄➇❼➒ ❿➓➅➁➒ ➔➁→❼
➃➊➀➓➇➄➊➂❼ ➄➊❽ ❿➊➊➓➃➅➃❼➀
❙❯❲❳❩❬❙❳❲❭❪❯
❫♦❴❴ ❵❜❡❡ ❝❞❢❣❣❞❤❢❤❞❝✐❤❥
❦❦❦❧❜❡❡♠❞♥♣qr❜s♣t❡❧♣❡✉
❶⑤❷✇❸ ❹⑤⑤❺