REGION Saturday, May 25, 2019 East Oregonian A3 Texan takes the reins at Wallowa Lake State Park By ELLEN MORRIS BISHOP Wallowa County Chieftain There’s a new manager at Wallowa Lake State Park these days. Mac Freeborn arrived in April, and has picked up the management reins at one of Eastern Oregon’s most pop- ular and revered state parks. The 216-acre reserve serves more than 400,000 day-use visitors per year, and its popularity is growing. It’s currently the 12th most pop- ular place to camp in all of Oregon’s state parks, serv- ing almost 90,000 camp- ers in 2018, up 6% from the previous season. Freeborn hails from Texas, where he worked in and managed a number of parks and recreation areas. Wallowa County Chieftain Photo/Ellen M. Bishop Mac Freeborn, the new manager at Wallowa Lake State Park, inspects the foundation for the park’s new micro hydro pow- er generation plant. Most recently, that included the Guadalupe Mountains National Park, as well as other state and local facil- ities. Most were parks that included water and boating, which makes him a natural for Wallowa Lake. Freeborn is enthusias- tic about his new position LOCAL BRIEFING PHS to celebrate new greenhouse Pendleton High School has a new greenhouse, and the FFA Chapter is celebrat- ing with an open house on Thursday. The public is invited to stop by from 5-7 p.m. at the Green- house Open House and Drive- Through BBQ. Residents can stop by to see the new greenhouse. Dinner is available for $7 and includes hamburgers, bag of chips and potato salad. FFA students will also be selling tomato, dahlia and zinnia starts and pots of succulents. The new greenhouse, which is 24 feet by 48 feet in size, was funded through Measure 98 funds, now called High School Success). Kylee Jensen, an agricul- ture, science and technology teacher and FFA advisor at PHS, said the initial plan for the greenhouse is a spring plant sale, but they hope to eventually expand and focus on fall and winter plants, too. The main classes working in the greenhouse will be the Plant Science class and the Crop and Soil Science class. “Students and FFA mem- bers are really excited to see what we plan to do with this new greenhouse,” she said. “I’ve also talked with several community members and they are excited to see it as well.” DEQ fi nes Pendleton, Lamb Weston for pollution PENDLETON — The city of Pendleton and Lamb Weston Inc., Hermiston, were among the recent entities on the receiving ends of pollution fi nes. The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality announced 16 penalties total- ing $299,249 for various envi- ronmental violations in April. Pendleton was the only city on the list. The DEQ reported the city exceeded the total residual chlorine effl uent limits in its wastewater discharge permit multiple times in 2017, and the violations warrant a civil pen- alty of $10,200. Lamb Weston received a $6,800 fi ne for discharging wastewater on Sept. 21, 2018, from its pipeline at the Herm- iston facility into the Umatilla River. According to the DEQ, Lamb Weston discharge per- mits prohibit releases into the river because its “wastewater contains pollutants in amounts and concentrations that can adversely affect water quality and aquatic life.” The environmental agency allows Pendleton, Lamb Weston and the other 14 enti- ties to pay the fi nes, seek ways to reduce them or appeal. Public can learn about Echo, Stanfi eld and Umatilla housing study STANFIELD — Echo, Stanfi eld and Umatilla announced the second and fi nal open house for the pub- lic to learn about the West County Housing Study. The open house is Friday, 6:30-8 p.m., at the Stafford Hansell Government Center, Hermiston. The consulting team will present the draft of the housing strategies report with recommendations for each city. Staff and the advi- sors from each city will be present to answer questions and record input. Stanfi eld City Man- ager Blair Larsen said in the announcement the study will help set housing and land use policy for the cities for the next 20 years. Tamra Mabbott, Umatilla community develop- ment director, said the results come at a “pivotal time” for her city. Umatilla had 66 new homes in 2018, more than the total for the previous decade. The city will consider pro- grams and measures to main- tain that growth, she said in the announcement. For more information, con- tact city staff from Stanfi eld, Echo or Umatilla and about being in Wallowa County. “It just seems like a place where I belong,” he said. “Everyone has been friendly and helpful. The staff here is really con- nected to this place, and so for now, I’m just listen- ing and learning from them. They are really the ones who know the park and are running it.” Freeborn and the park will be undertaking two major projects in the next year. There is the realign- ment of the Wallowa Riv- er’s channels, which will include re-allocating about 30% of the river’s fl ow to an old and soon-to-be-re- furbished channel that runs through the central portion of the day-use area. That will include construction of new pathways and pedes- trian bridges to cross the stream, establishment of riparian vegetation, some resizing of parking areas, and new interpretive signs, all of which are presently being designed. Freeborn is enthusias- tic about this project. “It’s going to be great to connect our visitors more closely with the kokanee and the river,” he said. Establishing a new “micro-hydro” power plant is another “green” project that has just started at the park and will be completed under Freeborn’s tutelage. Developed in collaboration with Wallowa Resources and Pacifi c Power, the proj- ect will pipe the park’s water from its source higher on Chief Joseph Mountain into a turbine located near the park’s old amphitheater. The turbine will be housed in a small log cabin and will be visi- ble to the public, complete with an interpretive sign that explains its functions. The 150 kilowatts per year that this micro hydro proj- ect produces will save the project’s owner, the Wal- lowa Lake Service Dis- trict, a municipal water and sewer entity managed by Wallowa County, about $15,000 a year in energy costs. Freeborn is looking for- ward to learning more about his park and enhancing its roles in Wallowa County. “We are one of the major attractions here,” he said. “We can help people con- nect better with this incred- ible landscape.” Morrow County Sheriff’s Offi ce nets fl eeing rape suspect in trunk East Oregonian The Morrow County Sheriff’s Offi ce early Thurs- day caught a rape suspect hiding in the trunk of a car. Undersheriff John Bowles in a written state- ment reported the sheriff’s offi ce Tuesday at 6:54 a.m. received a report of a sex- ual assault that occurred at a residence on Meenderinck Farms south of Irrigon. Sgt. Brian Snyder and Sgt. Nathen Braun responded and talked with a 21-year-old woman who reported she was raped by Pedro Lopez-Larios, 34, of Boardman. The sergeants found Lopez-Larios in a bedroom of the residence, but before they could make a move on him, he jumped out of a win- dow, bolted and escaped into a nearby 80-acre fi eld of pop- lar trees. Other Morrow County sheriff’s deputies arrived, set a perimeter and began searching for Lopez-Lar- ios. Deputies from the Uma- tilla County Sheriff’s Offi ce assisted with the use of two drones. After hours of searching, however, law enforcement had not found Lopez-Larios. Snyder and Braun continued the investigation, accord- ing to Bowles, and Snyder caught wind Lopez-Larios was trying to leave Oregon. Morrow County deputies with backup from Hermis- ton police conducted a traffi c stop Thursday at 12:13 a.m. and found Lopez-Larios in the vehicle’s trunk. The sheriff’s offi ce arrested Lopez-Larios, took him to the Umatilla County Jail, Pendleton, and booked him on charges of fi rst-de- gree rape and sexual abuse. The district attorney’s offi ce later Thursday morn- ing brought the preliminary charges against Lopez-Lar- ios, and Circuit Judge Daniel Hill set the bail at $500,000. The case has a probable cause hearing Thursday. Duck Race to make splash in Hermiston A family-fun event offers everything from a giant infl atable obstacle course and Knockerball to bouncy houses and music. Coordinated by Lead- ership Hermiston Class 22, Ducks Race the Rapids offers outdoor fun, while also rais- ing money to support Made to Thrive. The nonprofi t organization aims to stop the cycle of child abuse, neglect and poverty by providing access to adventure activ- ities, sports, music and the arts to vulnerable youth. Ducks Race the Rap- ids is Saturday, June 1 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at River- front Park, Orchard Exten- sion Loop, Hermiston. Peo- ple are encouraged to bring a picnic. Admission to the park is free and tickets for activi- ties will be sold by vendors with a portion of proceeds given to the cause. Ducks are available at participating businesses — Roger’s Toyota, the Hermis- ton Chamber of Commerce, Hermiston Parks & Rec- reation, Atkinson Staffi ng, Columbia Bank, O’Reillys, the city of Umatilla, Smit- ty’s Ace Hardware, Umpqua Bank, Umatilla Electric Cooperative and Delish Bis- tro — for $5, while supplies last. They will be dropped in the river at noon. The per- son whose ticket matches the duck scooped up fi rst at the fi nish line wins $1,000. Five other prizes will be given. Based in Hermiston, Made To Thrive serves more than 200 youths annually. Support is provided by more than 40 volunteers. For more information about the event, contact Fran Rice, Leadership Hermiston facilitator, at 541-571-7977 or rices@eotnet.net. Council to discuss renewal of public transit contract Hermiston will also discuss annexation of property during Tuesday meeting By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian The Hermiston City Council’s regular meeting will take place on a Tues- day next week to avoid Memorial Day. The council will meet at 7 p.m. on Tuesday at city hall, 180 N.E. Second St., to discuss renewal of the city’s contract with Kayak Public Transit and to hold a public hearing on annexation of property for a new subdivision. The annexation would include 9.35 acres at 1290 W. Elm Ave. Accord- ing to a memo in the council’s agenda packet, owner Richard Carpen- ter intends to create a new residential subdivision there with approximately 39 lots. The city has already received three letters tes- tifying against the annex- ation. One is from a neigh- bor who does not want to live next to other houses, one is from a resident who wants to see the property The contract under less densely developed and one is from a repre- consideration would keep sentative of landowners the city’s contribution to who have a nearby piece Kayak at $125,000 for of property for sale, stat- another two years. ing there is “ample prop- erty available already.” Monday’s agenda includes renewal of the city’s contract with Kayak 5/24-5/26 Public Transit. The tran- Cineplex Show Times sit service, owned by the $5 Classic Movie Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Res- Showing Wednesday at 12PM THE JERK ervation, runs Hermis- Aladdin (PG) ton’s free public bus sys- 1:00p* 3:50p* 6:40p 9:30p tem, the HART. John Wick: Chapter 3 Parabellum (R) 1:20p* 4:10p 7:00p 9:50p Avengers: Endgame (PG13) 12:00p* 3:40p* 7:20p 9:10p A Dog's Journey (PG) 11:40a* 2:00p* 4:30p 6:50p 9:40p Pokemon Detective Pikachu (PG) 11:50a* 2:10p* 4:40p 7:10p Godzilla: King of the Monsters (PG13) Thursday, May 30th • 7:00p, 10:00p Rocketman (R) Thursday, May 30th • 7:00p, 9:40p "Wilmon K Schuck Jr "BILL SCHUCK" "Moe" 3/20/56-1/11/19 Celebration of Life • June 1st 1p-3p Pendleton Eagles Please join us for a luncheon to share stories and memories of our brother and his many friends.'' Celebration of Life Potluck Sunday, June 2, 2019 1 o’clock in the afternoon Pendleton, OR I-84 - Exit 216 5/27 Cineplex Show Times $5 Classic Movie Showing Wednesday at 12PM THE JERK Aladdin (PG) 1:00p* 3:50p* 6:40p 9:30p Salvation Army Fellowship Hall 150 SE Emigrant Ave. Pendleton, Oregon For more information or questions call Rose at 541-567-4446 * Matinee Pricing wildhorseresort.com • 541-966-1850 John Wick: Chapter 3 Parabellum (R) 1:20p* 4:10p 7:00p 9:50p Avengers: Endgame (PG13) 12:00p* 3:40p* 7:20p 9:10p Douglas L. Schuck “Doug”, “Dougie” “Elwood” July 8, 1948 - June 26, 2018 3/12/57-5/11/19 Celebration of Life June 1, 1pm-3pm Pendleton Eagles Please join us in a combined celebration for our beloved brothers, Bill and Doug.” A Dog's Journey (PG) 11:40a* 2:00p* 4:30p 6:50p 9:40p Pokemon Detective Pikachu (PG) 11:50a* 2:10p* 4:40p 7:10p Godzilla: King of the Monsters (PG13) Thursday, May 30th • 7:00p, 10:00p Rocketman (R) Thursday, May 30th • 7:00p, 9:40p * Matinee Pricing wildhorseresort.com • 541-966-1850 Pendleton, OR I-84 - Exit 216