REGION SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 2022 THE OBSERVER — A3 BMCC board postpones decision on faculty layoff s, budget By JOHN TILLMAN East Oregonian PENDLETON — The Blue Mountain Community College Board of Education at its meeting Wednesday, June 1, postponed action on a 2022-23 budget pro- posing faculty layoff s. The board’s reading of state law requiring seven day public notice was responsible for the delay, BMCC President Mark Browning explained. The board plans to reconvene in a special meeting June 6 to consider approval of the budget. The budget committee agreed to the BMCC Faculty Association’s request to resume talks on teacher layoff s June 3. “I don’t ever want to close that door,” Browning said. “We have a plan, but of course (the admin- istration) is willing to listen. The (BMFA) came up with some good ideas before talks broke down.” Before the fi nal decision to delay the budget vote, the faculty union went ahead with its rally outside Pioneer Hall. The demonstration of support for teachers attracted about Kathy Aney/East Oregonian About 100 Blue Mountain Community College faculty, students and community members gather Wednesday, June 1, 2022, on the Pendleton campus to protest the college administration’s budget proposal that would cut several teaching positions. 120 attendees, according to new BMFA President Sascha McKeon. She has been on the union exec- utive team for two years and a biology instructor for 10. “The other faculty and I are grateful for the extraordinary sup- port we have had from our stu- dents, alumni and the community at large,” she read in a statement to the board. “As of this after- noon, our petition to save BMCC faculty has garnered over 1,900 signatures between our Google sheet and Change.org.” The event featured sign-car- rying union supporters in blue T-shirts emblazoned with “Save Former gamer aims to shake up John Day as city manager A new Grant County resident, 29-year-old Corum Ketchum promoted to city manager By ANTONIO SIERRA Oregon Public Broadcasting JOHN DAY — Corum Ketchum graduated from his master’s program and less than a year later is running a city of 1,600 people and managing a 14-person staff . The John Day City Council appointed Ketchum as an interim city manager Tuesday, May 10. Should both Ketchum and the city council remain sat- Ketchum isfi ed with the arrangement, he’ll be made the city’s CEO in six months. For a 29-year-old who once considered a career as a pro gamer, the sudden upswing in his career wasn’t expected. Running John Day wasn’t a part of Ketchum’s original plans. He attended the University of Oregon as an undergrad- uate so he could become a public planner. His career outlook changed after he joined Americorps’ Rural Assis- tance for Rural Environ- ments program. He spent two years in Veneta, a town of 5,000 people west of Eugene, working with the city administrator on economic development projects. Ketchum learned to enjoy working in a smaller community, where trying to get things done wasn’t as diffi cult as it was in larger and more “calcifi ed” cities. “The bureaucracy is always much thicker, where if you spend time in a rural community, you get to meet the couple dozen people who are really excited about investing in their place,” he said. He returned to the Uni- versity of Oregon to get his master’s in public admin- istration but another pas- sion almost took him down another path. Ketchum grew up playing video games and was good enough at games like Overwatch and Team Fortress that he helped form an e-sports team. The team was competitive if not exactly lucrative. “We never really made any money,” he said. “If we placed low on a tourna- ment, we’d get paid like 100 bucks as a team, and then I’d divvy that six ways.” As Ketchum wrapped up his master’s degree in 2021, the University of Oregon was starting its own offi - cial e-sports team and was looking for someone to manage it. He didn’t get Blue Mountain Eagle, File The John Day City Council appointed Corum Ketchum as an interim city manager on Tuesday, May 10, 2022. Should both Ketchum and the city council remain satisfi ed with the arrangement, he’ll be made the CEO in six months. the job after applying, but a university administrator encouraged him to think bigger. It was around this time that Ketchum read a John Day investment plan focused on a project to build a water reclamation facility that would repur- pose the city’s wastewater for other uses like agricul- ture. The city was looking for a community develop- ment director and Ketchum felt like it was a good match for him based on his work in Veneta. “It seemed like a really natural fi t for my skill set and who I really am, and more or less a calling for me to come out here and fi ll that gap,” he said. Ketchum grew up in Eugene but he has family ties to Grant County. His grandfather was a ranger for the U.S. Forest Service and worked in the Prairie City district. During that time, his grandmother taught at Grant Union High School and his father learned to swim at the pool in John Day. His grandfather even- tually transferred to a dif- ferent district, but Ketchum said he still has family in Eastern Oregon. In March, Ketchum started work under City Manager Nick Green, who had built a reputation on introducing novel ideas to John Day, like building 3-D printed houses and the water reclamation project. Ketchum wanted to absorb as much knowledge from Green as possible since Green was already planning his exit. Ketchum had only been working for the city a few months when Green entered his offi ce. Green told him the city could spend thousands of dol- lars on a search fi rm, but he had a feeling they wouldn’t fi nd a better candidate than Ketchum. The city council agreed and gave Ketchum the top job. As the city manager, Ketchum said he wants to continue Green’s initiatives, while also off ering more “short-term wins” for John Day, like more community events, downtown invest- ments and outdoor trails. Housing is also a con- cern. Although Grant County was the only county in the state to lose popu- lation in the 2020 Census, Ketchum said John Day has a less than 1% vacancy rate in its housing market. Anticipating growth fueled by Boise to the east and Bend to the west, Ketchum said the city is working toward making more of its land develop- able for future housing. After decades of stag- nancy, Ketchum said 40 houses will be built this summer and another 70 in the fall. Ketchum brought only a few years of experience to the job by the time he became city manager and he’s now a part of a pro- fession where most of his peers are 40 and older. But Ketchum said his youth is a good match for the town. “I think my youth is a real asset,” he said. “My demographic is the exact kind of person that we want to be seeing more of out here in John Day. People my age going into their 40s, the prime earners, the people that have fam- ilies, the people that start businesses and are really in the rocket years as professionals.” BMCC” in yellow . Public speakers’ comments began at 5 p.m. The fi rst speakers were Roy Barron, Hermiston city coun- cilor and educator, and Enrique Farrera of Clackamas, vice pres- ident of the Oregon Education Association, the union that rep- resents the faculty association. Paul Keefer, Boardman mayor, 1987 BMCC grad and sixth grade teacher, next addressed attendees, followed by Herm- iston educator Tammy Fisher. Umatilla teacher Chris Early, president of Columbia River UniServ, which supports OEA locals in the region, rounded out the list. Speakers sounded themes of unity and solidarity, and empha- sized the value of full-time teachers to students and the com- munity. Two urged administrators to “fi gure it out.” “A budget says a lot,” McKeon added. “Students don’t come for a snazzy website or pretty campus. They come for good faculty. Diversity of courses and quality of instruction will get them where they want to go in life.” Faculty supporters formed up outside the doors of Pioneer Hall, but found them locked. McKeon produced a key, and the crowd marched into the hallway outside the conference room. Part-time philosophy teacher Nicholas Nash led the way. The crowd waited in the hall until invited into the conference room. Faculty supporters opposed to layoff s marched into the room. Rice allowed 30 minutes for public comments of a maximum three minutes each. About 15 community members, present and past BMCC faculty and students spoke. “We recognize that the board has a fi duciary responsibility to pass a balanced budget,” McKeon said as faculty association pres- ident, “but propose you have an equally great responsibility to advocate for the communi- ty’s needs. Well, they are (here), speaking loud and clear — discre- tionary cuts to faculty and student scholarships should come from other line items.” Commuter airline lands new deal By JOHN TILLMAN East Oregonian PENDLETON — The U.S. Department of Trans- portation has increased Boutique Air’s Essential Air Service contract for Pend- leton and renewed it through May 31, 2024. Boutique had asked to renegotiate the terms of its Essential Air Service sub- sidy to serve Pendleton’s Eastern Oregon Regional Airport due to many changes, including the cost of fuel and a work- force crisis. Boutique fi led a form in February requesting to terminate its EAS con- tract beginning Thursday, May 12. The subsidy for the fourth year of its agree- ment was almost $2.69 mil- lion. The DOT then coun- tered, prohibiting Boutique from ending its service and calling for it and other air carriers to issue proposals for the contract. Only Boutique responded, and the fed- Charly Hotchkiss/East Oregonian, File An Eastern Oregon Regional Airport employee helps prepare the afternoon Boutique Air fl ight for takeoff Thursday, April 14, 2022, in Pendleton. The airline won a new two-year contract through May 31, 2024, from the U.S. Department of Transportation to provide air service to Pendleton. eral government accepted its two-year proposal. The new annual subsidy rate for the fi rst year of ser- vice is more than $3.87 mil- lion. The second year of the service will see a subsidy of almost $3.95 million. The contract requires Boutique to provide 21 nonstop, round trips a week to and from Portland International Air- port, using an eight- or nine- seat Pilatus PC-12 aircraft. “I think the increase is absolutely justifi ed,” said John Honemann, air- port manager, “given their unprecedented costs.” Honemann consid- ered the new contract to be not at all out of line com- pared to other EAS sub- sidies. He said he felt the two-year term is warranted, since a longer period might not allow Boutique to keep up with changes in the economy. “I think it’s a great deal,” Honemann continued. “(Air service) is critical infrastructure. Our region needed a tie to Portland and Salem. I’ve been fi ghting and working for it.” ARE YOU A First Time Home Buyer or a Veteran? INQUIRE AT YOUR LOCAL BRANCH OR CALL: Talk to us about a FHA, VA, OR VA, or USDA Home Loan. Raymond Seastone These Loan Programs may offer qualified buyers: Lower Rates, Lower Monthly Payments and/or Less Down Payment. 541-922-2828 Kaitlin Orcutt 541-303-8281 Arletta Arnspiger 509-546-7262 OUR TEAM takes the stress out of Buying Your Home! KAITLIN-NMLS #1043345 RAYMOND-NMLS # 937744 / ARLETTA-NMLS# 508276 / BEO NMLS# 414459 / RATES & TERMS MAY VARY. ALL LOANS SUBJECT TO CREDIT APPROVAL MEMBER FDIC We’re hiring an Infrastructure Analyst . Are you looking for a career with a future? Are you highly motivated? Capable of working with multiple complex and abstract systems? Comfortable navigating an enterprise environment? Work with our Information Technology Team as we advance existing initiatives and create a vision for the future. Help us design, implement, and troubleshoot enterprise grade network, server, storage, and security systems to support Grande Ronde Hospital & Clinics’ patient care goals. grh.org/careers