B5 THE ASTORIAN • SATuRdAy, JuNE 25, 2022 Students build homes in Eastern Oregon By JANET EASTMAN The Oregonian Curt Berger stopped coaching tennis and wres- tling a decade ago, but he never retired his enthusiasm for teaching high school stu- dents about teamwork and goal setting. He just shifted from sports to homebuilding. On Tuesday, Berger will be standing proudly with his students as people walk through a two-story dwell- ing designed, built, deco- rated and landscaped by teenagers. This is the eighth custom house on SW Angus Court in Hermiston completed by members of the Columbia Basin Student Homebuild- ers Program. The group’s logo, drawn by a student, shows a house with a graduation cap as the roof. Students named the 3.25-acre development Fieldstone Crossing, which has 22 homesites on two streets. Berger says many high schools would like to train future tradespeople and educate students about the money-saving bene- fits of do-it-yourself home improvements and repairs. Land to build on and the funds to start a residential construction program are the typical roadblocks, he says. In Oregon, Forest Grove High School’s annual Viking House project started in 1975. Sherwood High School had a homebuild- ing project in 1981, but bud- get cuts shut down the pro- gram for 30 years before it was revived. The first of the new Bowmen Houses sold in 2013. The Columbia Basin Stu- dent Homebuilders Pro- gram, which is open to high school students from Herm- iston, Umatilla and Stan- field, was launched in 2013 with a $372,674 Career and Technical Education grant from the Oregon Depart- ment of Education. The money was used to buy equipment and materi- als to build the first house. Proceeds from the sale of each new home fund the next project. Coach Berger reminds his crew of students that the house they build will stay in the community for a long time. “This is not a term paper you throw away,” Berger said. “We’re under pressure. Winning is completing the house on time.” His says the team works in dust, dirt, cold and heat. Despite the challenges, they show up on time, learn how to do the work and do what they said they would do. Caitlin Anderholm, 18, joined the program as a freshman. Over four years, she graduated from con- struction classes to hands-on building. The loud and heavy cir- cular saw no longer intim- idates her. And when she moves into her first apart- ment this fall to attend Green River College in Washing- ton state, majoring in earth science, she has confidence she can make repairs. She says Berger’s encour- aging teaching style is “Live and learn. You will make mistakes but he’ll always be there to say, ‘Don’t Columbia Basin Student Homebuilders Program Students help build a home in Hermiston. do it again.’ It’s a good environment.” Hundreds of high school students participate in each build, says Berger. Over the school year, students enrolled in computer-as- sisted design, construction and landscaping classes visit the site. With guidance from instructors, architects and engineers, students design the floor plan to fit the lot. Then about a dozen seniors spend two hours each school day working, from digging the foundation to sealing air leaks after the Energy Trust of Oregon’s final inspection. The program receives guidance from craftsmen and suppliers who are mem- bers of the Northeast Oregon Homebuilder’s Association. Advertising students help real estate agent Bennett Christianson of Christian- son Realty Group market the property for sale. None of the original owners of the seven previ- ous homes has moved out and this year’s house sold in January for $499,000, when sheet rock was still visible on the walls. Demand for housing is high in Oregon and “our reputation is good,” says Berger, 60, who has been an educator in the Hermiston School District for 31 years. Before being named the stu- dent homebuilder director, Berger taught vocational classes. He later earned an Oregon contractor’s license. Professionals are hired to install trusses, electricity and plumbing. After gradua- tion, students who help fin- ish the property before the open house are paid. To help out during the pandemic, Gideon Fritz, who graduated from Herm- iston High in 2019, worked afternoons on the house after he completed his online coursework to earn his degree at Oregon State University. He now works as Berger’s assistant. Pandemic supply chain issues didn’t delay the proj- ect, says Berger, but sched- uling already overworked tradespeople created gaps. Instead of taking downtime, the students built sheds. “I told my students, ‘COVID is not going to shut us down,’” he says. “It’s like winning the state title, focus on the goal and put in the work. The past does not guarantee success.” Berger says people attending the first open house were surprised by the quality of the construction. “They thought it would be a shack built sideways with crooked doors,” he says. “Now people know these are the nicest homes in town,” with high-end fea- tures such as a stone entry- way, illuminated crown molding and an outdoor liv- ing space with low-mainte- nance landscaping. “These are Street of Dreams-level homes for under $500,000,” he says. The new two-story house has 2,330 square feet of liv- ing space under a roof with four gables. The temperature of the top floor bonus room is maintained by an ener- gy-efficient electric mini- split system. On the main level, the living room has a stone fire- place wall that rises 22 feet to the ceiling. The primary suite has a vaulted ceiling, walk-in closet and a spa-like bathroom with a tub, shower and walls clad in cultured marble. There are two more bed- rooms, another bathroom and a powder room. A barn door from Noland Door Co. conceals the laundry room, says Berger, adding, “the doors in the house are real knotty alder and they’re just gorgeous. I want to hug every door.” Energy efficient features, built above code standards, include enhanced insula- tion, heating, cooling and ventilation systems, says Berger. The kitchen has a five-burner gas stove, quartz counters and a center island. There is a convenient central vacuum system, SimpliSafe security system and speakers throughout the house. A sliding glass door opens to the barbecue area overlooking the lawn, raised bed planters and a space plumbed for hot tub in the fenced backyard. The three-car garage has a 10-foot-wide bay door to park an RV or boat. The home is ready for a solar sys- tem and electric car charging station. FDA bans Juul e-cigarettes tied to teen vaping surge By MATTHEW PERRONE and TOM MURPHY Associated Press WASHINGTON — U.S. health regulators on Thurs- day ordered Juul to pull its electronic cigarettes from the market, the latest blow to the embattled company widely blamed for spark- ing a national surge in teen vaping. The action is part of a sweeping effort by the Food and Drug Administration to bring scientific scrutiny to the multibillion-dollar vap- ing industry after years of regulatory delays. The FDA said Juul must stop selling its vaping device and its tobacco and menthol flavored cartridges. Those already on the market must be removed. Consumers aren’t restricted from having or using Juul’s products, the agency said. To stay on the mar- ket, companies must show that their e-cigarettes ben- efit public health. In prac- tice, that means proving that adult smokers who use them are likely to quit or reduce their smoking, while teens are unlikely to get hooked on them. The FDA noted that some of the biggest sell- ers like Juul may have played a “disproportionate” role in the rise in teen vap- ing. The agency said Thurs- day that Juul’s application didn’t have enough evidence Brynn Anderson/AP Photo An electronic cigarette from Juul Labs. to show that marketing its products “would be appro- priate for the protection of the public health.” Juul said it disagrees with the FDA’s findings and will seek to put the ban on hold while the company consid- ers its options, including a possible appeal and talking with regulators. In a statement, the FDA said Juul’s application left regulators with significant questions and didn’t include enough information to eval- uate any potential risks. The agency said the company’s research included “insuffi- cient and conflicting data” about things like potentially harmful chemicals leaching from Juul’s cartridges. “Without the data needed to determine relevant health risks, the FDA is issu- ing these marketing denial orders,” Michele Mital, act- ing director of the FDA’s tobacco center, said in the statement. Joe Murillo, Juul’s chief regulatory officer, said in the company’s statement that Juul submitted enough information and data to address all issues raised by regulators. He noted that the company’s application, sub- mitted more than two years ago, included comparisons to combustible cigarettes and other products. He said it also included information on potential harmful effects of the com- pany’s products. Since last fall, the FDA has given the OK to tobac- co-flavored e-cigarettes from R.J. Reynolds, Logic and other companies. But industry players and anti-to- bacco advocates have com- plained that those products account for just a tiny per- cent of the $6 billion vaping market in the U.S.