SOFTBALL: Bucks ready for state playoffs | SPORTS, PAGE A9 E O AST 143rd Year, No. 155 Stanfi eld passes school bond INSIDE REGONIAN WEDNESDAY, MAY 22, 2019 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2018 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD HERMISTON UNION PACIFIC ANNOUNCES HINKLE LAYOFFS — AGAIN Unoffi cial election results on page A8 By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian Stanfi eld schools are getting an upgrade. Voters appeared to have approved an $18 million school bond on Tuesday night, with 65% voting in favor of the bond as of 8 p.m. Passage of the bond will also secure a $4 million matching grant from Oregon School Capital Improvement Fund. “It’s really exciting,” Stan- fi eld School District Superinten- dent Beth Burton said. “I think this will be good for our whole community, but it will be really good for our students.” The bond will pay for a number of projects, most nota- bly a new middle school wing to be built on to Stanfi eld Sec- ondary School. Currently, mid- dle school grades are hosted in a modular not attached to the main building. “The new middle school is defi nitely the focus, and the largest cost, of the bond,” Bur- ton said. Having the new middle school wing will improve safety, she said, as it will force visitors to come past the main offi ce before accessing classrooms. The bond will also help pay for other safety upgrades, including a remodel of the entryway and front offi ce of both the second- ary and elementary schools to improve safety. External safety cameras monitoring the parking lot and grounds will be added, and internal surveillance sys- tems will be upgraded. Windows will be added to the secondary school, which has no natural lighting in its class- rooms. The parking lot for the elementary school will be recon- fi gured, kitchens will be reno- vated, asbestos will be removed, the career and technical educa- tion spaces will be expanded, and the school district plans to purchase the land the elemen- tary school is built on, which it is currently leasing from Union Pacifi c. Burton said she is excited that the district gets to take advan- tage of the $4 million state grant, which Stanfi eld was eligible for after winning a lottery draw for it. If the bond had not passed Staff photo by E.J. Harris A Union Pacifi c locomotive sits idling on a rail line east of the Hinkle Rail Yard on Tuesday outside of Stanfi eld. Union Pacifi c announced a new round of layoff s at the rail yard. After fall, winter layoff s, UP announces 195 permanent layoff s by July 19 By JADE MCDOWELL AND PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian he railroad looms large in Herm- iston’s past, but it will likely play a much smaller role in the city’s future. Union Pacifi c Railroad fi led notice with the state on Tuesday that it will lay off up to 195 employees at the Hinkle Rail Yard in Hermiston and close the yard’s supply warehouse and mechan- ical shop. It stated the 195 layoffs would be completed by July 19 and are expected to be permanent. The bulk layoff is an escala- T tion of the scores of layoffs that have hap- pened incrementally at the rail yard since October 2018. Hermiston Mayor David Drotzmann said his conversation on Tuesday with UP spokesman Aaron Hunt was a diffi cult one. The city of Hermiston’s June 2018 fi nan- cial report listed Union Pacifi c as one of the city’s largest employers at the time, esti- mating the company employed about 500 people at Hinkle. Drotzmann said it was his understanding the latest layoffs will leave between 40 and 45 employees. “It was both a conversation of frustra- tion and sadness to realize an organization that has made such an impact on the com- munity over the last 25 years is reducing to one-eighth of what it was,” he said. He said the loss of so many jobs in the community will have an economic impact as families move away or cut back their spending signifi cantly while facing unem- ployment. But he said he was more con- cerned about the effects on the individuals who lost their jobs. “Those were good-paying jobs with great benefi ts,” he said. After Union Pacifi c laid off more than 80 employees during the fall of 2018 and winter 2019, UP spokesman Tim McMahan declined to share how many employees Hin- kle had, but said UP had 1,506 employees throughout Oregon. On Tuesday, he again declined to answer most questions submit- ted by the East Oregonian about the num- ber of employees who will remain at Hinkle or what operations will continue there, but stated the company would move some of Hinkle’s operations to yards in Portland, Spokane, Ogden, Utah, Pocatello, Idaho and Nampa, Idaho. “The workforce reduction is the result See Layoffs, Page A8 “Those were good-paying jobs with great benefits” David Drotzman — Mayor of Hemiston See Election, Page A8 CTUIR agrees to buy Pendleton Country Club By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian In the near future, any game of golf in the Pendleton area will be played on a course owned by the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. The tribes announced Tues- day that the CTUIR Board of Trustees had approved the pur- chase of the Pendleton Country Club, which is more than 8 miles south of town on Highway 395. In a press release, the tribes state that the members of the country club approved selling the property after the CTUIR made an offer in March. The 248-acre property is aboriginal territory for the CTUIR and the Birch Creek Valley land was also appealing to the tribes for conservation and water rights purposes. Wildhorse Resort and Casino, which has operated its own golf course on the Umatilla Indian Reservation since 1997, has already assumed maintenance supervision over the coun- try club’s 18-hole golf course. The country club property also includes a dining room, bar, pro shop, fi tness center, outdoor pool, and recreational vehicle parking spaces. Wildhorse intends to inte- grate the country club golf course into its daily operations, and a team led by Wildhorse CEO Gary George will develop See The Tribes, Page A8 Staff photo by E.J. Harris A golf cart drives down a fairway recently at the Pendleton Country Club south of Pendleton. The Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Res- ervation announced Tuesday that it was buying the 248-acre property south of Pendleton.