The Hood River news. (Hood River, Or.) 1909-current, June 20, 2015, Image 2

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Hood River News, Saturday, June 20, 2015
Sheriff urges caution
at Eagle Creek area
The USDA Forest Service
Columbia River Gorge Na-
tional Scenic Area and the
Hood River County Sheriff ’s
Office would like to remind
visitors to recreate responsi-
bly this summer at Eagle
Creek Recreation Area.
Hood River County Sheriff ’s
Office responds to an aver-
age of 10 search and rescue
calls a year in this area, and
in 2013 the total was 17.
The majority of search
and rescue calls are centered
on visitors jumping of f
Punchbowl Falls, which has
resulted in serious injuries
and fatalities.
In 2011 the Forest Service
enacted a closure order for
jumping or diving off the
falls, which serves a three
hundred dollar fine for viola-
tors. The closure order was
enacted to provide for visitor
safety and to reduce adverse
impacts to the Sheriff ’s Of-
fice and to search and rescue
personnel.
Despite signage and pa-
trols, the closure order con-
tinues to be violated and
recreating visitors are being
seriously injured.
Visitors who have jumped
off the 80-foot waterfall suf-
fer neck and back injuries,
and succumb to dangerous
undercurrents and water
that is shallower than it ap-
pears. While a body of water
is tempting in warm weath-
er, many visitors do not real-
ize how cold the water stays
here year round.
The multiple search and
rescue operations at Eagle
Creek drain valuable re-
sources at the Sheriff ’s Of-
fice and have led to difficulty
getting volunteer searchers
to help. “We want people to
enjoy the numerous outdoor
activities our county has to
offer but that comes with a
level of personal responsibil-
ity,” said Hood River County
Sheriff Matt English. “Too
often, the search and rescues
we respond to are avoidable
and have resulted from reck-
less, irresponsible behav-
ior.” The Sheriff ’s Office
says that it is imperative that
visitors educate themselves
regarding trail restrictions
and closures and abide by
them.
“Jumping from
Punchbowl Falls is prohibit-
ed for good reason,” English
added “Yet we continue to
see tragic, avoidable inci-
dents at that location every
year.”
Both agencies also remind
visitors that dogs at Eagle
Creek trail and parking lot
must be leashed at all times.
Several pet rescues have oc-
curred here in recent years
and these efforts put volun-
teer
rescuers
at
risk. Violators will be cited.
Both agencies are asking
visitors to recreate responsi-
bly in the Eagle Creek Recre-
ation Area by not taking un-
necessary risks and obeying
all closures and regulations.
Visitors should not rely on
electronic GPS devices or
cell phones and always leave
an itinerary with someone.
G ERARDO
that the old dealership
across the street had a space
for rent. It took six months
before Mercado Guadalajara
would open, but “since the
first day it’s been busy,”
Bobadilla said.
He started with six em-
ployees; he now employs 22.
His day starts at 6 .m.
with tortilla deliveries —
yes, he still delivers on his
Gruma route, but now just
in Hood River. From there,
he’s “on the phone all day
long,” talking to suppliers.
He generally gets to the
store by noon and is home
in The Dalles around 10 p.m.
“Without my wife, I’m not
able to do it,” he said. “It’s
50-50 here. She takes care of
the kids, house, paperwork,
bills. What I do is the physi-
cal work, or the ideas.”
The market isn’t quite his
dream store — this one is
3,000 square feet, and he’d
like 10,000 — but it’s filled
with close to 3,000 Mexican
items. He strives to “have
everything in one store for
the Hispanic community,”
but sees a lot of crossover
business.
“Whatever we put out on
the shelf, we sell,” he said.
He’s in the process of a
small expansion, which will
allow him to increase his of-
ferings. More space also
means he can buy in bigger
quantities, which lowers the
price on his end and thus
lowers the price for his cus-
tomers — an important
point for him, because his
customers work hard for
their money, he said.
But his success has come
with a high personal price.
“It’s been hard to put
everything on balance,” he
said. “Where I grew up was
very poor. Part of my suc-
cess, I see where I was when
I was a kid. My father teach
me how to work, how to be
successful.”
He feels lucky to have
been brought to the U.S. by
his parents because, though
they didn’t have a lot beyond
essentials, he did have his
parents “24/7.”
“I changed that history
with my kids,” he said.
“They don’t have me but
they have everything.
They’re not happy — they
want me more. For them, to
have what they have, they
don’t have me at special
times.
“If I had the option to stay
with the kids, I’d stay with
the kids.”
Continued from Page A1
horse expertise.
After a month in high
school (he got tired of daily
discrimination), he quit and
began a five-year rotation of
planting trees for the U.S.
Forest Service a few months
out of the year nationwide,
and then pruning trees and
picking fruit for a local or-
chardist.
It was during one of those
shifts in the orchard that in-
spired him to change course.
“I heard this guy tell me
he didn’t want to see me no
more. He said, ‘That’s not
why you come to the U.S.;
you come for success, to be
somebody. This is the histo-
ry we’re creating — you
guys have to change this.
That’s why I ask you not to
come back again,’” Bobadil-
la said.
Those words stuck with
him. One day, while shop-
ping at The Dalles Safeway
with his wife, Guille, he re-
alized he wanted back in
produce sales. Guille en-
couraged him to apply, but
only checkout clerk posi-
tions were available.
So that’s where he started.
It only took a few weeks be-
fore he was transferred to
produce. His work ethic got
him promoted, and soon he
was offered the produce
manager position.
But he didn’t take it.
There were many reasons
why he didn’t, but ultimate-
ly it came down to remem-
bering what he had been
told by the older man in the
orchard.
He ended up purchasing a
tortilla distribution route
with Gruma (who own Mis-
sion, Guerro and Calidad
brands) in the Gorge, with
help from his family while
still employed at Safeway.
Slowly his profits grew and
he was able to quit his pro-
duce job and concentrate on
his route.
That, too, grew. He moved
his family — he had two
children now, daughter Kim-
berly and son Gheraldy —
from The Dalles to Vancou-
ver, but they were unhappy.
Bobadilla knew how much
his tortillas were sold to
stores, and how much the
stores charged in turn, and
started thinking about open-
ing his own store.
One day, while delivering
tortillas to Rosauers, he saw
Photo by Kirby Neumann-Rea
FISH O RIENTATION
FISH board chair Marianne Durkan leads a tour of the new FISH food bank facility Thursday for about 20 non-profit representatives learn-
ing about the community kitchen/meeting room at the facility on Tucker Road. Durkan stands in front of the facility’s centerpiece, a paint
and mosaic mural depicting the growth, harvest and provision of locally-grown food. The mural was done by Hood River Middle School
students, and fish figures on the wall represent the 600-plus donors to the $1 million project, which opened May 4. Thursday’s orienta-
tion described protocols and requirements for using the space for meetings and nutrition-based outreach. The community is invited today
as the organization celebrates with a ribbon cutting and open house, followed by a dance, from 1 to 4:30 p.m. The site is located at 1130
Tucker Road, across from Orchard Lanes and next to Our Redeemer Lutheran/Asbury United Methodist Church, on land donated by the
church.
Parks-Rec hosts community meeting
June 24 on ballfields development
By KIRBY NEUMANN-REA
News editor
Hood River Valley
Parks and Recreation Dis-
trict hosts a community
meeting Wednesday on
sports field and park de-
velopment, with an em-
phasis on potential acqui-
sition of an 8.29-acre par-
cel located just south of
City Limits near Tucker
Road. An offer has been
made on the property, but
nothing has been signed;
the precise location will
be described at the meet-
ing.
The meeting will be at 6
p.m. at the Port of Hood
River conference room,
1000 E Port Marina Drive
Hood River. Call 541-386-
5720 with any questions.
‘”The district would
like to invite the commu-
nity to come and share
your support, ideas or
concerns about a poten-
tial 8.29 acre spor ts-
field/park development
on property zoned for
light industrial use, and
what amenities are most
needed in our communi-
ty,” said district director
Stirn said.
“We realize it is not an
ideal property but it’s rel-
atively flat, and not high
value farm land,” Stirn
said. She said the District
has a willing seller and
has met with County
Planning to discuss apply-
ing for a conditional use
per mit to develop the
property.
“We’d like to take the el-
ements we had planned at
Barrett Park — a shelter,
fields, perhaps bocce
courts,” Stirn said, refer-
ring to the attempted cre-
ation of ballfields on
property it bought farther
southwest, on Bar rett
Drive at Alameda, on
what was previously
farmland. The District
abandoned the idea of
using the park for ball-
fields after legal chal-
lenges by orchardists in
the area along with Hood
River Valley Residents
Committee.
If the idea new ball-
fields park proposal gains
public support, and the
conditional
per mit
process goes smoothly, the
facility could be ready for
use as early as this fall, ac-
cording to Stirn. “The
goal is develop in phases
without having to go for a
capital bond levy,” she
said.
The projected cost, in-
cluding land acquisition,
is $2 million. The key
funding piece would be
State Parks’ $494,000
“Local
Gover nment
Grant” originally desig-
nated for the Barrett Park
site. The district would
also look at funds from
systems development
charges, which are utility-
related fees used for pub-
lic projects that are
charged for new construc-
tion.
“We would be meeting
part of the match for the
grant through volunteer
labor and donation of ser-
vices,” Stirn said.
T he state g rant re-
quires extensive public
input including a natural
resource review (there is
a small wetland on the
property) and “quite a lot
of legwork” to comply,
Stirn noted.\
Puff Factory buys final property piece
CL Port hands
signs deal with
Jaqueline
Alexander
By PATRICK MULVIHILL
News staff writer
The keys to Puff Factory
are in Jacqueline Alexan-
der’s hands.
The Port of Cascade Locks
has sold off the final piece of
land necessary for Alexan-
der, an Odell Orchardist, to
launch her dream startup
company: Puff Factory.
On Wednesday, Alexander
bought a long vacant 4-acre
plot in the Port’s Business
Park, which will become the
site of Puff Factory, an $8
million freeze-drying plant.
Puff Factory’s mission: to
turn pears and other fruit in
the Hood River Valley into
packaged snacks.
The company has worked
closely with the OSU Food
Innovation Center in Port-
land to develop and test mar-
ket a new fruit drying project
that turns unwanted fruit
from orchards, or “culls,”
into organic “puffs” which
can be packaged and sold to a
wide market.
Operations will start in a
small flex 7,500 square-foot
flex building on Herman
Creek Lane, which Alexan-
der is leasing from the Port.
The Port handed over the
Radio Amateurs plan
annual Field Day
The local “Ham” radio
club, Radio Amateurs Of
The Gorge, invites the com-
munity to its Field Commu-
nication Area at the rear of
the Wal-Mart parking lot
from 11 a.m. June 27 to 11
a.m. June 28.
Operators will be commu-
nicating with amateur radio
operators in all States, Cana-
da and Mexico.
Adults and children are
welcome to try talking to
people in many lands and
even a ship at sea.
Plenty of other hands-on
activities are planned on the
hour, all day June 27.
No license is required to
get on the radio; all volun-
teers will be accepted.
keys to the flex building at a
meeting with Alexander last
week.
As par t of the deal,
Alexander gets free rent for
several months while she
moves into the small build-
ing, as well as free utility in-
stallations, said Paul Koch,
Port of Cascade Locks inter-
im general manager.
“In the contract we have
$100,000 for tenant improve-
ments: water, sewer and elec-
tric. We’re capped out at
that,” said Koch.
Alexander locked down a
10-year lease on the small
light industrial building,
which will serve as her com-
pany’s launchpad.
The proposed plant itself
— a sprawling 26,000-square-
foot structure — will cost $7-
$8 million to build. Construc-
tion is slated for completion
by next summer.
Puff Factory plans to em-
ploy 30-50 people once the
plant kicks into gear.
Koch said the plant likely
won’t be visible from the
highway. It will be accessible
via a new road off Cramblett
Way called East Columbia
Gorge Way.
The property, just north of
Bear Mountain, is at a slight-
ly higher elevation than
downtown Cascade Locks.
“It overlooks the river, has
a great view,” said Koch.
Puff Factory marks the
first large scale startup busi-
ness in Cascade Locks since
the 1980s.
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541-400-0648
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