OFF PAGE ONE Friday, November 25, 2016 East Oregonian Page 3A HERMISTON: Has been holding community dinners since 1988 Continued from 1A mings — including potatoes, stuffing, mixed vegetables, rolls and fruit salad. Humphreys said the kitchen crew cooked 35, 20-pound turkeys Wednesday night, and carved the birds early Thursday morning. Reser’s Fine Foods, of Pasco, also donated 78 cases of mashed potatoes, some of which will be kept for the Community Fellowship Dinner next month. And for dessert? Ninety pies, including pumpkin, cherry and apricot. “We have never run out of food,” Humphreys said. Hermiston has been holding Community Fellow- ship Dinners since 1988, which Humphreys said have steadily grown in popularity. The last few years have set records for turnout, with more than 800 people on hand. Yet Humphreys said the food somehow always manages to stretch. “It all just seems to work out,” she said. “The volunteers just show up, and the food always seems to be enough.” Behind the serving line, 9-year-old Brady Flanagan of Hermiston was a first-time volunteer, helping his brother and grandmother dish up slices of pie. His job was to be in charge of the whipped cream, dolloping a generous spoonful for anyone who asked. Eunice Flanagan, Brady’s grandmother, said she’s been serving at the dinner for eight or nine years now, always dishing up pies. It was the Staff photo by E.J. Harris Staff photo by E.J. Harris Volunteers plate meals on the serving line Thanksgiving day during the Hermiston Community Fellowship Thanksgiving Dinner on Thursday at the Hermiston Senior Center. Kitchen volunteers Sally Thomas, Richard Correa and Jan Cassens use wooden dowels to empty a bag of mashed potatoes into a bowl during the Hermiston Community Fellowship Thanksgiving Dinner on Thursday at the Hermiston Senior Center. Staff photo by E.J. Harris Staff photo by E.J. Harris Volunteers on the serving line plate meals at the Herm- iston Community Fellowship Thanksgiving Dinner on Thursday at the Hermiston Senior Center. Volunteers spent the last two days preparing 35 turkeys and 73 cases of mashed potatoes for this year’s dinner. Volunteer Sophia Helfer, 9, serves a plate of food to Larry Zumwalt at the Hermiston Community Fellowship Thanksgiving Dinner on Thursday at the Hermiston Senior Center. only job open when she started, and she’s stuck with it ever since. “I really liked doing it,” she said. “Then, I started adding the grandkids.” Rodney Walley, 48, decided to attend the dinner with his cousin, Albert Smith. Both men live in Hermiston, with Walley coming to Oregon from Florida approx- imately two years ago to be with family. Walley said he doesn’t have a wife or kids of his own, and saw the fellowship dinner as a perfect oppor- tunity to try and meet some new faces in his new home. “When I first came to Hermiston, I felt a little out of place. I was lonely a little bit,” he said. “This makes me feel a little better about the situation.” Humphreys said the people she meets at the fellowship dinners don’t fit into any one group. They are families, individuals, people of all ages and backgrounds, seeking a little camaraderie and friendship for the holi- days. To keep the community fellowship tradition alive for nearly three decades speaks a lot about what kind of town Hermiston is, she said. “We have an awesome group of volunteers,” she said. “This town is willing to draw together, and we help each other out.” ——— Contact George Plaven at gplaven@eastoregonian. com or 541-966-0825. BUSINESS: 2015 Saturday shoppers spent $16.2B at small business Continued from 1A special discounts or give- aways for customers who come in on Saturday. In Echo, Debbie Schef- field of Gathered Over Time said her shop has joined with The Vintage Shops at Echo Station for a Christmas Open House on Small Business Saturday to draw people in “that wouldn’t have thought of us otherwise.” “We’re participating because we know darn well that small businesses — really, micro-businesses like ours — provide the backbone of small-town America,” she said. The open house will run from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. with a chance to “mingle and jingle” with drinks and treats from 6-7:30 p.m. The open house will include discounts, door prizes and product giveaways. Scheffield, who mostly runs Gathered Over Time by herself with some help from her husband, said she is looking forward to being a part of something bigger in the business community. In Hermiston, Mayor David Drotzmann officially encouraged residents to shop on Small Business Saturday with a proclamation read during the Nov. 14 city council meeting. The proc- lamation noted economists have estimated that for every $100 spent at a small business, $68 remains in the community. Two96Main, a pop-up home decor store at 296 Main Street, is usually only open on Thursdays but will be open on Small Business Saturday. For purchases of $100 or more, Andee’s Boutique will be offering a $20 discount on Friday and Saturday. Lucky Endz Gifts, Bloomz, Indulge and other Main Street busi- nesses will also be offering a variety of deals. Hermiston Drug & Gift is offering 25 percent off all gifts and jewelry on Black Friday and 10 percent off on Saturday. “It’s just a thank-you for our customers for shopping with us,” bookkeeper Linda Thompson said. Some Pendleton busi- nesses will also be offering deals on Small Business Saturday. Hamley & Co. Western store will be offering hot cocoa and cookies in addi- tion to discounts such as 75 percent off clearance items. Pendleton Art + Frame will have 20 percent off drawing and paint kits. MaySon’s Old-Fashioned General Store is offering 10 percent off. Information is provided on the Pendleton Chamber of Commerce’s website about special deals at a total of 11 small businesses. According to Fortune Magazine, in 2012 Americans spent $5.5 billion at small retailers on Small Business Saturday. As the idea spread, that number grew, and in 2015 shoppers spent $16.2 billion at small businesses the Saturday after Thanksgiving. RETIREMENT: Lower-income households are making less than a decade ago Continued from 1A amount is $73,200. That’s about 15 months of the median household’s income. One group doesn’t have to worry as much: the richest 10 percent of households. They typically have more than $413,000 in a retirement account, according to the analysis of the Fed’s latest data, which is from 2013. The rest of us look a lot more like Nancy Harvey, a 54-year-old child-care center owner in Oakland, California, who has less than $2,000 saved. Her plan, as of now, is to continue with real-estate classes in hopes that it can provide a second job. “I have to work and pray and hope my health continues to remain good so that I can continue to work,” she says. “I still have a mort- gage and all the insurance that goes along with that, and I have to pay payroll for my employees, which is really important to me. I can honestly say I’m frightened about the future.” Harvey isn’t alone, as the gap widens between the few households who don’t have to worry about a comfortable retirement and everyone else. The anxiety even stretches across political affiliations. Nearly equivalent percent- ages of Democrats and Republicans say they’re not managing very well in retirement planning, a recent survey from Lincoln Finan- cial found. The looming crisis is the result of a system that’s increasingly put workers in charge of saving for and managing their own retirement. Because the U.S. households at the top have reaped most of the income gains over the last decade — and because they have disproportionately more access to retirement plans to begin with — experts say the gap in retirement savings is only growing wider. They’re expecting to see more elderly Americans working longer, moving in with their kids and tapping assistance programs. THE INCOME DIVIDE It’s easier to save when you’re making more money, and the vast majority of the income gains have gone to the top in recent years. The top 10 percent of U.S. households made more than $162,180 last year, up 6 percent from a decade earlier after adjusting for inflation. For middle-income Amer- LOTTERY Wednesday, Nov. 23 Megabucks 05-07-14-18-31-34 Estimated jackpot: $6.7 million Powerball 07-32-41-47-61 Powerball: 3 Power Play: 2 Estimated jackpot: $359 million Win for Life 50-60-61-72 Lucky Lines 01-05-10-14-FREE-20-23-28-29 Estimated jackpot: $32,000 Pick 4 1 p.m.: 4-8-4-7 4 p.m.: 7-3-3-0 7 p.m.: 8-3-2-9 10 p.m.: 5-0-0-2 Thursday, Nov. 24 Pick 4 1 p.m.: 6-6-6-5 icans, incomes have barely stayed ahead of inflation. Lower-income households are making less than a decade ago. The benefit of making more money goes beyond having more to save. High- er-income households also get a bigger after-tax benefit from putting money into a 401(k) or another tax-advan- taged account. ACCESS TO PLANS The death of the tradi- tional pension means the burden is on us to save, and that’s why access to 401(k) and other retirement plans is so important. Most lower-income households will save when they have access to a retire- ment plan. The problem is that most don’t get the opportunity. Eighty percent of high-in- come working households have access to a 401(k) or similar defined-contribution plan, according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office. For low-income working households, it’s just 35 percent. POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS To help close the gap, states are trying their own measures. California recently passed a law requiring employers to automatically enroll their workers in a state-run program and deduct money from each paycheck. Experts prefer a broader fix from the federal govern- ment but call the state programs an encouraging step. In the meantime, many workers are simply working longer. David Tucker is 74 and still waking at 1:15 each morning to get to his job as a skycap at Reagan National Airport outside Washington, D.C. He says he may consider retiring next year or cutting down to a few days per week. And what would he look forward to in retirement? “I would like to feel what it’s like to wake up and not go to work,” he says. “For a while, that’s all I would like to do. I wouldn’t worry about anything else.” AP Photo/Hadi Mizban Iranian civil defense personnel search for survivors in the rubble, at the scene of a car bomb attack near the city of Hilla, Iraq, Thursday. IRAQ: Troops drove IS from three neighborhoods in Mosul Continued from 1A Minister Hassan Qashqavi was quoted by the semi-of- ficial Tasnim news agency as saying that 80 people were killed, including 40 Iranians. Conflicting death tolls are common in the aftermath of large attacks. The Islamic State group claimed the attack in a brief statement carried by its Aamaq news agency, saying it was a suicide truck bomb. The Iraqi officials said the target of the attack appears to have been a bus carrying Iranian pilgrims heading home after taking part in a major Shiite religious observance in the holy city of Karbala. The blast left the bus and some dozen cars charred. The Shiite observance marks the 40th day after the death anniversary of a much revered, 7th century imam. It routinely attracts hundreds of thousands of pilgrims, including many Iranians who travel overland into Iraq for the occasion. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media. Thursday’s attack came a day after several small- scale bombings in and around Baghdad killed 31 people and wounded more than a 100, a particularly bloody day even by the standards of the Iraqi capital, which has for more than a decade endured near-daily violence blamed on IS or its forerunner, al-Qaida in Iraq. In northern Iraq, mean- while, troops drove IS militants from three more neighborhoods in Mosul, the country’s second largest city, where U.S.- backed offensive has been underway for more than six weeks. Brig. Gen. Haider Fadhil of the special forces told The Associated Press his men have retaken the neighborhoods of Amn, Qahira and Green Apart- ments and were expanding their foothold in the densely populated district of Zohour. The neighborhoods are all east of the Tigris River, where most of the fighting has taken place. A U.S.-led coalition is carrying out airstrikes to support the troops. PENDLETON CENTER for the ARTS Roberta Lavadour Executice Director tele:541-278-9201 214 North Main, Pendleton, OR 97801 email: Director@pendletonarts.org Www.facebook.com/pendletoncenterforthearts Classes & Events: www.pendletonarts.org