INSIDE SPRING IN THE NORTHWEST: CRAPPIE, MORELS AND WHISTLER PIGS | May 22, 2021 OUTDOORS & REC, 1B WEEKEND EDITION Foster care $1.50 Graduating with tradition Open homes and hearts Up all night for a chance at a Soul Area families talk about their experiences with fostering children By LISA BRITTON EO Media Group Editor’s Note This is the second of a three- part series on foster care needs in Baker, Union and Wallowa coun- ties. Next in the series: Learn more about Every Child and CASA of Eastern Oregon. LA GRANDE — Rebecca and Ken Foster were set to be mission- aries in China with their children, ages 3 and 1. They were going to focus on orphan care. “Plans suddenly changed,” Rebecca said. They found themselves in La Grande, but the couple still wanted to do something to help children. Rebecca said she remembers thinking, “Surely there are children here we can take care of.” She brought up foster care to Ken, who agreed. That was in October 2003, and two months later they had their fi rst foster placement. Their initial experience as a foster family was hard. “We were amateurs,” Ken said. “We didn’t know anything about trauma,” Rebecca added. After that, she wasn’t sure they could continue as a foster family. Then she got a call about a 12-week-old baby boy. “We prayed about it,” Ken said. They said yes. “That’s our son Mykail. Who is now 17 years old,” Rebecca said. “I’m so grateful we said yes.” This is their 17th year as a foster family. They’ve fostered more than 50 children — some long-term, and some for just a few hours for emergency care. “We never did make it to China,” Rebecca said with a smile. Her advice to anyone consid- ering foster care is this: “You’ve got to set aside everything you think you know about parenting. It’s not going to work with a 5-year-old who is traumatized and scared.” “You’ve got to be willing to change and adapt,” Ken said. Their entire family is involved. When a call comes from the Oregon Department of Human Services about a foster child, they call a family meeting. “Our whole family is on board,” Rebecca said. Mykail, the boy who came to them at just 12 weeks old as a foster child, shrugs when asked about his family. Organizer aims for big graduation party for La Grande High seniors By ALEX WITTWER The Observer with their families in a pageantry-fi lled atmosphere. Baxter said the drive-thru graduation went so well he anticipated many of this year’s seniors would request a similar one. “I totally expected it,” Baxter said. Instead, the school’s seniors opted for tradition. One reason may be their desire to be in one place at the same time. Baxter said some seniors noted they have never all been together at any point of the 2020-21 school year. About 150 students will be graduating, and each will be allotted fi ve tickets they can give to family and friends. Only those with tickets can attend. Cove, Elgin, Imbler, Powder Valley and Union high schools also will have more LA GRANDE — With graduation only a short few weeks ahead, the La Grande High School graduation party is looking to off set some fears and leave grads feeling hopeful, safe and possibly in a car. “It’s making this pretty special,” said Geoff rey Robinson, a La Grande High School parent and one of the lead organizers of the event to be held at the Union County Fairgrounds. The 2011 Kia Soul, which Legacy Chrysler Jeep Dodge Ram of Island City donated, comes on the heels of dozens of other donations from businesses, organi- zations and individuals for the graduation party. Robinson said graduation is a huge mile- stone for seniors, and this can make youths take chances and do risky things, such as drinking and driving. The graduation party is one way to help prevent that. “Under the current circumstances, one of the worst things that could happen would be a tragedy on graduation night,” Robinson said. “We’ve got enough on our plates. We should give an opportunity to these kids to be safe.” Robinson referred to a statistic that shows car crashes as the leading cause of death among 15- to 19-year-old Americans. It’s a statistic he said he hopes to avoid on graduation night. In doing so, he pledged to throw the big- gest graduation party he could for the class of 2021. Geoff rey, who was tapped for plan- ning the party due to his daughter earning valedictorian, said he hopes he has achieved just that. “The booster club and the school district have both pitched in to take care of the facil- ities and the food, and we also had the Safe See, Familiar/Page 5A See, Party/Page 5A The Observer, File While onlookers at Cove High School’s graduation Saturday morning, May 30, 2020, hold to social distanc- ing measures, seniors hold to the tradition of tossing their caps into the air. Graduations for the class of 2021 will look more traditional as the coronavirus pandemic ebbs. Ceremonies may look familiar Elgin High School’s graduation on May 26 is first in the county BY DICK MASON The Observer UNION COUNTY — The poll results surprised La Grande High School Principal Brett Baxter. The school surveyed seniors about what type of graduation ceremony they would like. The vast majority indicated they wanted a traditional one in their gym, Baxter said. The students’ wishes will be granted June 5 at at 10 a.m. when a traditional grad- uation ceremony will start in the LHS gym. The commencement ceremony will be pos- sible because of Union County’s falling COVID-19 infection rates, which now has the county in the lower risk category, meaning small crowds can gather indoors. Holding a commencement ceremony a year ago in a gym was off limits. Union County had a higher infection rate and like other counties was operating under more stringent state COVID-19 safety restric- tions. This forced all Union County high schools to conduct vehicle-centric grad- uation ceremonies. La Grande High held a drive-thru commencement where stu- dents received their diplomas in vehicles HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATIONS IN UNION COUNTY Elgin High School: May 26, 7-8:15 p.m., school football fi eld. Imbler High School: May 28, 5 p.m., school gym. Cove High School: May 29, 11 a.m., school football fi eld. Union: June 5, 10 a.m., school football fi eld. La Grande: June 5, 10 a.m., high school gym. Powder Valley: June 5, 1 p.m., high school’s old gym. ‘He said he was going to kill me’ La Grande man recounts terror at deadly end of a sawed-off shotgun By PHIL WRIGHT The Observer See, Foster/Page 5A LA GRANDE — Gary Hatch said he was just turning off his outside light Wednesday night, May 19, when he heard a tapping at the door. He lives on the 1700 block of Claire Street, a neigh- borhood on La Grande’s east side that he said tends to be quiet. What he said happened next shat- tered any solace. He opened the door, and a man with a sawed-off shotgun burst through. “When he came here, he just busted the barrel against my fore- hand and then lowered the barrel to my chest,” Hatch recalled. “He said he was going to kill me.” Hatch, 59, said he has a gun, but it was in his bedroom, and nothing prepared him for this encounter. INDEX Classified ...............2B Comics ....................5B Community...........3A Crossword .............2B Phil Wright/The Observer Gary Hatch of La Grande on Thursday, May 20, 2021, shows the bruise on his forehead he said he received the night before when Travis James Sprague, 24, of Baker County, jammed the barrel of a sawed-off shotgun against him. “It had to be one of the scar- iest moments of my life,” Hatch said. “A sawed-off shotgun. And I still have the bruise on my forehead.” The purple semicircle on Hatch’s forehead was evident WEATHER Dear Abby .............6B Horoscope .............4B Lottery ....................3A Obituaries ..............3A TUESDAY Opinion ..................4A Outdoors ...............1B Sports .....................6A Sudoku ...................5B the afternoon of May 20. Hatch also said the man at the trigger end of that shotgun was the same man police had arrested a few hours before in connection to a May 19 shooting and break-in just a block over on East Glacier Street. Police identifi ed that sus- pect as Travis James Sprague, 24, of Baker County, who now is in custody in the Baker County Jail, Baker City. La Grande police reported Sprague had a Baker County warrant for his arrest on numerous felonies, including burglary and attempted kidnapping. Hatch said Sprague wanted the keys to the car in his vehicle port. But that car belongs to a neighbor, Hatch said, so he didn’t have any keys to give. “It was bad, yeah,” he said. Hatch said he saw Sprague’s hand tremble as he held the pistol grip of the shotgun, and he feared one shaky fi nger could end everything for him. So he talked to the man holding his life in the balance. “I don’t know how I did it,” Full forecast on the back of B section Tonight Sunday 38 LOW 64/41 Partly cloudy A shower; warmer LA GRANDE WEIGHS HOUSING SOLUTIONS Hatch said, “but I talked him down.” Sprague took off , he said, hus- tled to the house next door and dumped the shotgun in a trash container. Local police began looking for Sprague after a 911 call May 19 at 8:56 p.m., according to a press release from La Grande Police, when a person in the 1700 block of East Glacier Street reported being shot at while standing in front of their residence. While offi cers were responding, an additional 911 call came from a separate residence in the same block on Glacier. The second caller reported the suspect entered their residence and held them at gunpoint while demanding keys to their vehicle. La Grande police offi cers arrived within moments and con- tacted the callers. Police named Sprague as the suspect and said neither 911 caller knew him. “A multi-agency, comprehen- sive search commenced imme- diately,” the press release stated. See, Terror/Page 5A CONTACT US 541-963-3161 Issue 59 3 sections, 44 pages La Grande, Oregon Email story ideas to news@lagrande observer.com. More contact info on Page 4A. Online at lagrandeobserver.com