SUSAN KLEIN OF PENDLETON WILDFIRE ERUPTS IN BAKER CO. RECORDS/5A Visit Antiques and Art on Main in Pendleton for a vintage cookie cutter and $10 coupon REGION/3A GENE WILDER DIES AT AGE 83 82/54 TUESDAY, AUGUST 30, 2016 140th Year, No. 227 One dollar WINNER OF THE 2016 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD PENDLETON McKay water fountains over lead limit Sunridge Middle School faucets pass all tests By GEORGE PLAVEN East Oregonian Two schools in Pendleton have water sources that tested above the Environmental Protection Agency’s acceptable limit for lead, including 10 drinking fountains at McKay Creek Elementary School. Lab results also found elevated levels of lead in two sinks in the gold gym girls’ locker room at Pendleton High School. District Superintendent Andy Kovach said Commercial drones about to take off all of the fi xtures will be replaced and re-tested. One drinking fountain at McKay School registered 95 parts per billion of lead, which is nearly fi ve times higher than the EPA limit before action must be taken. Kovach said each of the fountains will be replaced before kids return to school after the Pendleton Round-Up. He did not know exactly how old the fountains are. “The Pendleton School District is working hard to comply with Oregon state guidelines and to address each site with elevated lead levels,” Kovach said in a statement Monday. “The district will continue to work diligently on this until all issues are resolved and all water levels are within acceptable limits.” Results were also released Monday for Sunridge Middle School, which detected no elevated lead levels in that building. Testing was done at Table Rock Analytical Lab in Pendleton. Kovach said the two sinks at PHS See LEAD/10A Hermiston second fastest growing school district in state FAA forecasts 600,000 drones in the skies within the year By JOAN LOWY Associated Press WASHINGTON — There will be 600,000 commercial drone aircraft operating in the U.S. within the year as the result of new safety rules that opened the skies to them on Monday, according to a Federal Aviation Administration estimate. The rules governing the operation of small commercial drones were designed to protect safety without stifl ing “With these innovation, FAA Administrator rules, we have Michael Huerta created an told a news conference. environment in Commercial o p e r a t o r s which emerging i n i t i a l l y technology can complained that the new be rapidly rules would be too rigid. introduced while The agency protecting the responded by creating a safety of the system to grant world’s busiest, exemptions to some of the rules most complex for companies that show they airspace.” can operate — Michael Huerta, safely, Huerta FAA Administrator said. On the fi rst day the rules were in effect the FAA had already granted 76 exemptions, most of them to companies that want to fl y drones at night, Huerta said. “With these rules, we have created an environment in which emerging technology can be rapidly introduced while protecting the safety of the world’s busiest, most complex airspace,” he said. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said people are “captivated by the limitless possibilities unmanned aircraft offer.” The few thousand commercial drones that had been granted waivers to operate before Monday have been used to monitor crops, inspect See DRONES/10A Staff photo by E.J. Harris Fifth-grade teacher Daylee Lathim helps a student navigate a tablet while teaching in one of the modular classroom units on the fi rst day of school Monday at Rocky Heights Elementary School in Hermiston. Growing pains Rocky Heights facilities stretch to keep up with enrollment By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian Staff photo by E.J. Harris Fifth-grade teacher Daylee Lathim helps a student navi- gate a tablet while teaching in one of the modular class- room units on the fi rst day of school Monday at Rocky Heights Elementary School in Hermiston. Jerad Farley doesn’t have to look far to fi nd signs of his school’s issues. As the second year principal of Rocky Heights Elementary School speaks about some of his school’s challenges in his offi ce, an electric fan buzzes in the background, a whirring reminder of some of the measures the oldest school in the Hermiston School District takes to continue operating. Farley had already fi elded some comments on the school’s heating and cooling system on the fi rst day of school Monday, which frequently renders class- rooms too hot or too cold. Farley estimates the school’s heaters and air conditioners aren’t func- tioning properly 60 percent of the time. See SCHOOL/10A PENDLETON 18-year-old dies after suffering severe burns By GEORGE PLAVEN East Oregonian Staff photo by E.J. Harris Pendleton fi refi ghters and police respond to a reported fi re at 521 S.W. 19th Street on Monday in Pendleton. An 18-year-old Pendleton man died Monday morning after he was severely burned outside a home at 521 S.W. 19th St. Police and fi re crews were called out shortly before 10 a.m. to a fi re in the side yard of the house. Assistant fi re chief Shawn Penninger said they put out a small fi re, but could not provide any further details. Medics treated the man at the scene and took him to St. Anthony Hospital, where he was later pronounced dead. The victim has not been identifi ed, nor has the cause of death. The Pendleton Police Department is investigating what happened, in coop- eration with the Oregon State Police Arson Unit and Oregon State Medical Examiner’s Offi ce. Offi cers cordoned off an area consisting of several blocks around Southwest Goodwin Place and Southwest 19th, though the roads were reopened by early afternoon. Amber Sullivan, a neighbor, said she was alerted by her 8-year-old son that there was a person on fi re across the road. The boy had seen smoke, Sullivan said, and when he went to look, he saw the victim’s leg and could hear moaning. Pendleton Police Chief Stuart Roberts said there is no prosecutable criminal act at this time, and no ongoing threat to the public. He did not release any other infor- mation. ——— Contact George Plaven at gplaven@ eastoregonian.com or 541-966-0825.