Quilts on display DAWGS MEET BUCKS IN QUARTERFINALS 61/46 GIRLS BASKETBALL/1B REGION/3A WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 2015 139th Year, No. 104 WINNER OF THE 2013 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD PENDLETON One dollar BOARDMAN Round-Up ends property tax challenge Port offers which currently has an assessed value of $5.2 million and tax burden of $82,122. George Murdock, chairman The Pendleton Round-Up Association will no longer chal- of the Umatilla County Board lenge its 2014-2015 property tax of Commissioners and board of property tax appeals, said the assessment. The Round-Up Association withdrawal means the Round- ¿OHG DSSHDOV WR 8PDWLOOD Up Association’s tax burden for County in late December, ask- 2014-15 “is what it is.” That’s about $107,000 in all, ing the county to list its property as having no value. That would according to county property include the Round-Up Grounds, tax records. Jolene Meadows, By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian clerk for the tax appeals board, DOVR FRQ¿UPHG WKH 5RXQG8S¶V withdrawal from the tax board’s March 12 hearing. Murdock said the Round-Up discussed its property tax val- ue with the county “for a year or better.” Round-Up President Bill Quesenberry said the asso- ciation pulled back in order to reassess the situation. He said the Round-Up plans to bring in an independent and unbi- ased assessor, preferably someone with knowledge of event sites, to value the properties. That will take a while, he said, and the Round- Up board wants the assessment complete before it moves forward. Quesenberry also said the Round-Up is considering how more organizations and events could use its facilities to gener- ate revenue. See ROUND-UP/8A PENDLETON The Port of Morrow has offered to buy a chunk of land on the Umatilla Chemical Depot in order to convince the Army to transfer more than 9,000-plus of the for- mer weapons base to a local development group. $UP\RI¿FLDOVKDGLQWHQGHGWRJLYHWKH property to the Columbia Development Authority free of charge, but began back- tracking in January. Now, the port says it will pay $1 million for approximately 640 acres to keep the deal on track. The authority — which consists of the ports of Morrow and Umatilla, Umatilla and Morrow counties and the Confederat- ed Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reserva- tion — plans to use different areas of the depot to lure industry and agriculture, with 5,600 acres set aside for a wildlife pre- serve. Another 7,500 acres would go to the 71 seniors didn’t graduate from PHS in 4 years By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian See GRADUATION/8A Port of Morrow would pay $1 million for 640 acres By GEORGE PLAVEN East Oregonian District delves into grad rate After promising to “put faces” to the 77 seniors that failed to graduate from the Pendleton School District last year, the resulting report de- livered by Superintendent Jon Peterson revealed a mixed message. On one hand, a reporting error on the numbers deliv- ered to the Oregon Depart- ment of Education meant that only 71 seniors didn’t grad- uate, boosting the district’s overall graduation rate from 72 percent to 73 percent. On the other hand, roughly half of those 71 seniors were dropouts and are no longer continuing their education. The district superintendent shared the report at a Pend- leton School Board meeting Monday. Peterson said district staff worked hard to try to keep the 36 dropouts in the school sys- tem, to no avail. Many times, outside factors led to their dropped enrollment. “Some of them don’t nec- essarily have the best sup- port system,” he said. “It’s hard to get them to go to school. Some of them are in a different place — working a full-time job, have kids, sup- porting a family, providing daycare opportunities. The things that make you kind of scratch your head. They’re infuriating, but that’s the re- ality.” In other instances, aca- demically struggling students come from smaller districts to to purchase portion of depot land See PORT/8A Head Start program gets $780K grant By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian Staff photo by E.J. Harris Horseshoes and shamrocks The Jackson Sundown dress-up artists have struck again, casting the historical bronze in a Saint Patrick’s Day motif on Tuesday in Pendleton. Traditional textbooks becoming old school Electronic texts easier, cheaper for students By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian Kevin Hawman’s backpack is a little lighter these days. Hawman, a Blue Mountain Community College student, discovered he wouldn’t need to drop $200 on a textbook for his business marketing class. His instructor, Velda Arnaud, had informed her students that read- ings were available free online. That was a relief for the soph- omore. Open-source textbooks are free or low-cost electronic texts that have been placed in the public domain. Instructors may rearrange materials to best suit their courses, mixing and matching and attaching videos. Students download required readings to their laptops. They can use a virtual highlighter to mark text. Not all of his instructors use open-source textbooks, but Hawman can envision the day when students won’t need to lug heavy books. Even better, they won’t have to empty their bank accounts to buy them. “Some textbooks are pretty See BOOKS/7A An extra 50 children in Eastern Ore- gon will receive Early Head Start services thanks to a $780,000 annual grant from the federal government The grant, awarded to Umatilla Mor- row Head Start by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, will also help increase the quality of care available for all children in the region. “This is a really exciting venture,” UMHS executive director Maureen Mc- Grath said. “There was so much competi- tion. This is quite a coup to receive a grant of this size and merit.” The grant will pay to forge new partner- ships between Head Start and local child- care providers. Instead of adding new slots to its own classrooms, UMHS will train and certify daycare providers as Early Head Start teachers. It will then pay them to take on children in poverty who qualify for Early Head Start services but haven’t been able to get a spot in a UMHS classroom. Children served under that contract will also have See HEAD START/8A BMCC student Kevin Hawman studies busi- ness marketing from his open- source text- book which he downloaded to his laptop for free. As the cost of traditional textbooks and tuition esca- lates, open education re- sources (OERs) help keep the cost of educa- tion down. Staff photo by Kathy Aney