ROBERT STEAGALL OF LEXINGTON BMCC SEASON PREVIEW TRUMP IN TRANSITION MODE Visit Bloomz Coffee Bar for a free pumpkin spiced latté. NATION/7A 46/30 BASKETBALL/1B THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2016 141st Year, No. 23 One dollar WINNER OF THE 2016 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD HERMISTON Oregon job growth slows New home, new energy By ANDREW SELSKY Associated Press Staff photo by Kathy Aney The third house built by the Columbia Basin Student Home Building Program glows in the late afternoon sun just south of Hermiston High School. Students in the program are from Hermiston, Umatilla and Stanfi eld. Student builders learn a lesson in effi ciency and quality especially important to get the insulation there right the fi rst time, before installation. ▪ Different parts of the house call for different types of insulation, caulk or other strategies, which students will start using as they move from putting up studs to putting up walls and ceilings. ▪ It is important to make sure insulation around electrical outlets, light switches and other breaks in the drywall is trimmed as precisely as possible around the hole so that air does not escape around the edges. ▪ If the fl oor is not properly insulated cold air will rise from the crawl space into the home, possibly carrying mold and other contami- nates with it. ▪ Ducts need to be sealed at every joint and other penetration area so that the air the furnace worked to heat is not escaping before ever reaching the people inside the home. In the spring, Energy Trust of Oregon will be back to give the completed home an energy perfor- mance score that potential buyers can use to compare with other homes and see what type of savings they might see on a lower energy bill. The process includes a blower door test in which a fan machine is temporarily installed into an exterior door frame and used to pull air out of the house. Sensors then measure how much air See HOUSE/8A By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian Students in the Columbia Basin Student Homebuilders Program got a lesson Wednesday in the impor- tance of energy effi ciency. The program, which is in its third year, produces a high-end house each year built by high school students from Hermiston, Stanfi eld and Umatilla under the mentorship of various local contractors and experts. One of those partnerships is with the Energy Trust of Oregon, a nonprofi t dedicated to helping utility customers save money through energy effi ciency. The houses the students build have a much better energy effi ciency rating than the average Oregon home of the same size, something teacher Curt Berger said was important to the Hermiston School District. “We’re trying to give the students the best experience we can,” he said. “The higher quality the home they’re building, the more they learn, and these are really nice homes.” He said he wanted to give students, who may not have grown up in such a high-end home them- selves, a “vision of what’s out there” and teach them ways to make their own future homes more energy-effi - cient. The high energy performance score is also a draw for homebuyers who will save signifi cant money on Staff photo by Kathy Aney Kyle Kent, of the Energy Trust of Oregon, talks to Columbia Basin Student Home Building Program students from Hermiston, Stan- fi eld and Umatilla about energy effi ciency. their utility bills. “There’s no reason not to build energy-effi cient homes,” Berger said. “I just think it’s the right thing to do.” On Wednesday, Energy Trust of Oregon employees visiting the class encouraged students to visualize creating a six-sided “thermal boundary” that keeps air from moving in and out of a house. If heated or cooled air is escaping through the attic, ducts in the fl oor or nail holes in the wall, then the home’s HVAC system is working harder than it needs to, raising the homeowner’s energy bill and adding wear and tear to the system. Students learned: ▪ Heat rises, which means the insulation with the highest “R value,” or resistance to heat, should be used in the attic area. ▪ Amenities like showers and fi replaces often block future access to the walls behind them, so it’s Voters give health district new life Health district expands 82 Umatilla 730 84 Hermiston Stanfield Wash. Milton- Ore. Freewater 11 37 Echo Um 12 Wash. Ore. R Co l u m b i a Area in detail Ore. New health district boundary Old health district boundary r Once in danger of disap- pearing completely, the East Umatilla County Health District is now on the verge of expanding. On Nov. 8, east Umatilla County residents voted to dissolve the old health district and create a new one with new borders and a higher tax rate. The roots of such a signifi cant change start with the district’s creation in 1988. Health district offi ce manager Donna Grimes said the district’s founders proposed a rate of 14 cents per $1,000 assessed value to make it palatable to voters, and with the intention of raising it. But the trio of tax-curbing state measures passed in the 1990s meant the tax rate stayed stuck at 14 cents, even as operational costs rose. Additionally, the health district’s boundaries only encompassed those of the Athena-Weston School District, even as its response area ran past the school district boundaries and covered most of the eastern part of the county between Pendleton and Milton-Free- water, including Athena, Weston, Adams, Helix and Tollgate. Stagnant revenue streams combined with the resig- nation the district’s only paramedic culminated in an intergovernmental agree- ment with Pendleton in 2014 to help provide emergency services while the district See HEALTH/8A ive By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian Athena Pendleton atill a R i v er 207 204 Pilot Rock UMATILLA 84 MORROW 82 74 La Grande 244 395 10 miles Ukiah Sources: East Umatilla County Health District, Athena-Weston School District UNION 84 Alan Kenaga/EO Media Group SALEM — Oregon’s job growth has cooled down, and as a consequence growth in personal income taxes the state collects has also slowed, the state said Wednesday in its economic and revenue forecast. Even if the job growth had continued at its former red-hot pace, Oregon would have faced a large budget shortfall. And that’s what Gov. Kate Brown focused on in her response to the revenue forecast. “On the positive side, job growth is higher and unemployment is lower than the national average and Oregon’s economy remains stable overall,” Brown said. “However, our obligations to fund important services such as public education and health care still exceed avail- able revenues, and, looking ahead, there will be some very tough budget choices to make.” Brown’s communications director, Kristen Grainger, said the governor will propose a balanced budget on Dec. 1, and that it will accommodate the revenue See BUDGET/8A ODA facing backlog of food safety inspections Audit fi nds 2,841 companies past due By GEORGE PLAVEN East Oregonian The Oregon Department of Agriculture is struggling to keep up with routine food safety inspections, with nearly a quarter of licensed businesses at least three months overdue, according to a state audit released Tuesday. There are 12,000 estab- lishments — including grocery stores, bakeries, processing plants, breweries and dairies — that require regular inspections through the ODA Food Safety Program, of which the audit reports 2,841 are currently backlogged. The audit, prepared by the Secretary of State’s offi ce, identifi ed a number of issues within the program that have contributed to falling behind on inspections, such as increased staff workload and high turnover. Inspectors are also spending more time on things like offi ce work and trainings that have taken time away from completing inspections. ODA has 38 food safety inspectors statewide, and just two in Eastern Oregon. Melissa Ney is the lone specialist based in Herm- iston, responsible for roughly See BACKLOG/8A