DICTIONARIES PUT TO GOOD USE IN SCHOOL HERMISTON/3A 58/37 HERMISTON BOYS ADVANCE Man charged in Milton-Freewater drive-by murder BASKETBALL/1B REGION/6A THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 2016 140th Year, No. 99 WINNER OF THE 2015 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD One dollar UMATILLA Council considers homeless camp Mayor calls for collaboration to provide services, space By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian The city of Umatilla’s ban on living in tents effectively pushed the homeless popula- tion outside city limits. But city leaders said they are willing to spearhead the effort to help the transient community now living near the Umatilla River. On Tuesday Mayor David Trott said he wanted to put together a workshop between cities, county representatives and state agencies to come up with a comprehensive plan for addressing problems caused by homeless camps. That plan could include a designated transient camping area with toilets, dumpsters DQG¿UHSLWV “We need to discuss what we can do and what we prob- ably ought to do,” Trott said. “We need to have a game plan.” After several homeless camps were cleared out in Umatilla and Hermiston last fall, a group of former occu- pants moved to a spot along the Umatilla River between the two cities. Rising water levels have recently pushed the camp to a more visible location along Old River Road, generating complaints to the city and Umatilla County. The camp is in the county’s jurisdiction, and an email from county code HQIRUFHPHQW RI¿FHU *LQD Miller indicated the plan was to have someone from the sheriff’s department inform the campers they were tres- passing and needed to move, then make arrangements with County Corrections to clean up the waste left behind. Trott said that approach was “kicking the can down the road.” “I’m going to say it straight out: I’m very frustrated with the county’s position,” he said. One solution the city See HOMELESS/8A Staff photo by E.J. Harris Douglas Robertson, of Umatilla, unzipped the front of a tent in February at his campsite along Old River Road south of Umatilla. PENDLETON ‘One of the guys’ %HUHQWVHQ¿UVWFDUHHUZRPDQ KLUHGE\¿UHGHSDUWPHQW By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian hirty-nine years ago, Seattle Superior Court Judge David Soukup listened to both sides of a case involving a 3-year-old girl named Sarah. Doctors at Seattle’s Harborview Medical Center had noticed a suspicious pattern of bruises on her body. Her mom said she’d fallen off a slide. “I had to make a decision about this case,” he recalled decades later in a video. “Was I going to take her away from the only home and the only parent she’d known all her life? What kind of emotional trauma would that cause for her?” 7KHFDVHZDVDPRQJ6RXNXS¶V¿UVWLQMXYHQLOHFRXUW after years of deciding civil cases. He awoke at 4 the next morning re-analyzing his decisions that day. He would have many more restless nights in the following years as the fate of hundreds of abused and neglected children rested in his hands. It was, Soukup realized, a heavy load. The judge created Court Appointed Special Advocates — volunteers who get to know foster children and advocate for them in the court system. Starting with 50 It’s not unusual for family and friends to pack city council chambers for a public honor or promotion, but attendees were also treated to a small piece of Pendleton history at a meeting Tuesday. After Fire Chief Mike Ciraulo pinned a paramedic badge on Jaclyn Berentsen, PDNLQJKHUWKH¿UVWZRPDQWRKROGDFDUHHU SRVLWLRQ LQ WKH ¿UH department, she faced a supportive crowd of Pendleton and Herm- LVWRQ ¿UH¿JKWHUV DQG paramedics waiting to shake her hand. “I know it’s supposed to be a big deal,” Berentsen said after responding to all the congratulations Berentsen outside council cham- bers. “But I just want to be one of the guys.” Ciraulo, who was hired in September 2015, said he was surprised that Berent- VHQ¶VKLUHZDVD¿UVWIRUWKHFLW\&LUDXOR VDLGKHKDVQHYHUZRUNHGDWD¿UHGHSDUW ment that didn’t have a full-time female ¿UH¿JKWHU RU SDUDPHGLF &LUDXOR VDLG %HUHQWVHQZDVWKHPRVWTXDOL¿HGSHUVRQ for the job “irrespective of sex.” Berentsen grew up in Portland before moving to Pendleton when she was 16. She caught the emergency services bug as a Pendleton High School student when VKHGLGDULGHDORQJZLWKWKH¿UHGHSDUW ment. After completing a resident internship with Hermiston Fire & Emergency Services, Berentsen enrolled at Portland See CASA/8A See BERENTSEN/8A Staff photo by E.J. Harris Jeanette Herron is the only Pendleton-based Court Appointed Special Advocates volunteer. CASA volunteers advocate in the judicial system on behalf of neglected or abused children. A voice in the T courtroom for children By KATHY ANEY Ƈ East Oregonian &RXUW$SSRLQWHG6SHFLDO$GYRFDWHV¿OOYRLG in kids’ lives as they navigate the courts Senate passes renewable energy bill By HILLARY BORRUD Capital Press SALEM — A contro- versial bill that requires Oregon’s two largest utilities to get 50 percent of their elec- tricity from sources such as wind and solar by 2040 is on LWVZD\WR*RY.DWH%URZQ¶V desk for a signature, after the state Senate voted 17-12 to pass the measure Wednesday. Brown has suggested that See ENERGY/8A Hoops on the horizon Kevin Her- nandez, with the Pendleton Convention Center, and Kyle Stanfi eld, OSAA assistant exec- utive director, hang sponsor banners under a basket Wednes- day at the con- vention center. The OSAA 2A state basketball championships begin Thursday at 1:30 p.m. in Pendleton. For tournament preview and schedule, see Page 1B. Staff photo by E.J. Harris