GRADUATION INSIDE SPECIAL SECTION WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 2019 143rd Year, No. 160 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2018 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Urban renewal funds for Pendleton streets remains issue By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian Staff photo by Kathy Aney Mark Mulvihill stands on a gravel bar formed by McKay Creek. When Mulvihill grew up in the neighborhood, he would have been standing in the creek instead of on a bar with vegetation growing on it. By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian W hen Mark Mulvihill returned to Pendle- ton’s McKay Creek neighborhood three years ago, he con- sulted with the Federal Emergency Management Agency while building his house. After keeping his house and work- shop away from the creek and decid- ing against building a basement at his Southwest Kirk Avenue property, he was assured that nothing like the 1991 McKay Creek fl ood would hap- pen again. The line of dead grass where the creek nipped at his backyard more than a month ago acts as evidence that those assurances weren’t enough. The April fl ooding along McKay Creek that put Community Park underwater and fl ooded area base- ments and yards has long ago dried, but it’s still on the minds of some of its residents. See Water, Page A7 The Pendleton Development Com- mission faces a decision over injecting urban renewal funds into repairing the city’s deteriorating streets. The commission, which consists of the members of the city council, met Tuesday evening to hash out the mat- ter in a work session. Pendleton Mayor John Turner stepped into chair the meeting, starting with city attorney Nancy Kerns’ legal opinion the com- mission could spend money on street repair and maintenance but not on rebuilding. Just what constitutes a street rebuild, however, was another question. No one from the city’s public works depart- ment was present to give input, and councilors did not settle on an answer. Turner asked City Manager Robb Cor- bett, who doubles as the commission’s executive director, if he had an opinion. Corbett’s response: “No.” Corbett has proposed a 10-year plan to get all city streets to good condition. The project comes with a $41 million price tag. Part of his plan includes using $3 million in urban renewal funds. The one-time expenditure would go into the upcoming 2019-20 fi scal year and leave the city with the need to raise a total of $21.4 million over the decade. Throw out the $3 million, Corbett said, and the city has to make up that much more. That also would step the city even deeper into the political minefi eld of raising fees or passing new taxes to cover the project cost, all of which could be part of the city’s big picture for the funding. Councilor Becky Marks urged the rest of the council to read the origi- nal 2003 urban renewal plan. She said one objective of the urban renewal dis- trict was to make Pendleton pedestrian friendly, yet she agreed the plan does not outright prohibit street repairs. Turner pointed out the plan indeed includes street repairs. “But,” Marks countered, “it doesn’t say we can pave all of Byers.” Councilor Paul Chalmers said prop- erties on better streets can have higher tax value, so there is an incentive to invest the funds in the road work. Turner said this comes down to the development commission answering two questions at its next public meet- ing: Does it agree or not it can spend urban renewal money on street repair, and, if so, how much? Graduation quilt pieces together memories of basketball career By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian Cole Smith’s graduation present tells a story. Each square of the king-sized quilt made by his grandmother is made of a different T-shirt or jersey from a different basketball tourna- ment or team. A black square with the Las Vegas logo represents a trip in fourth grade to a tournament in Sin City. Purple squares show off dif- ferent Bulldogs mottos through- out the years. A blue square reads “Best of the West” — a hometown tournament, and one of Smith’s favorites. Now instead of a box of old, too-small T-shirts he has an easy way to take those memories with him wherever he heads off to next. “I liked the idea,” he said. “I thought it would be good to look back on.” The quilt was his mom Cheri Smith’s idea. She got his grand- mother Erin Chowning to do the sewing, and Chowning enlisted the help of longtime friend Shawn Lockwood to help with the quilting part. It was Lockwood who taught Chowning how to quilt. Neither of them had ever tried to do a T-shirt quilt before, but with the skills they already had and some hints from YouTube tutorials they fi gured it out. “It was so much easier than I thought it would be,” Chowning said. The project, with 40 different squares, took about three weeks to complete. Lockwood said she has been quilting her whole life, but this was See Graduation, Page A7 Staff photo by Jade McDowell Shawn Lockwood, left, and Erin Chowning, center, made a quilt for Chowning’s grandson Cole Smith, right, for graduation using his old bas- ketball T-shirts.