A8 OFF PAGE ONE East Oregonian Friday, May 31, 2019 Railroad Church: Congregation sells historic church and moves out Continued from Page A1 Continued from Page A1 395, to provide furloughed UP employees with infor- mation about what resources will be available to them. On Tuesday, city man- ager Byron Smith also told the Hermiston City Coun- cil that the city, Greater Hermiston Area Cham- ber of Commerce, Oregon Employment Department and CAPECO are planning to partner on a job fair on June 10. The details are still being planned, he said, but the idea is to have poten- tial employers from the area on hand to discuss job and training opportunities with anyone looking for a employment. “We anticipate opening it up to everyone, but it will specifically target (former UP employees),” he said. Councilors expressed concern for the impact the situation was having on families. Some of the area’s larger employers who struggle to stay fully staffed have already been taking advan- tage of the surge in inter- est by advertising openings at places such as Two Riv- ers Correctional Institution. The Port of Morrow cre- ated a flier showing 62 dif- ferent job openings at port businesses. Not all jobs are created equal when it comes to pay and benefits, however. Guy Haight of Pendle- ton saw his last day on the job Saturday. He and his wife Susan Haight said they were worried about what kind of work might be avail- able locally for a 56-year-old machinist. “We have a mortgage and kids at home,” Susan said. Guy said he didn’t even find out he had lost his job directly from UP — he saw information about the lay- offs online on his day off. Scores of layoffs over the past six months were rough, he said, but with 19 years seniority he hadn’t expected to be one of them. “We didn’t think it would go this far,” he said. “We didn’t think they would actually shut down the shop.” He said he enjoyed work- ing at Hinkle and would miss his coworkers there. “There are a lot of good people out there,” Susan added. “They don’t deserve this.” A flyer being passed around Pendleton recently raised eyebrows, as it adver- tised a Union Pacific event June 7 to “hear how you can build a future with Union Pacific Railroad.” Tim McMahan, UP spokesman, said the event was for tribal members in partnership with the Con- federated Tribes of the Uma- tilla Indian Reservation, and is “an outreach effort that discusses career paths and best practices for those seek- ing career opportunities.” extremely difficult decision to make, but we realize this church is an albatross. It’s a beautiful albatross, don’t get me wrong, but it’s still an albatross.” A Portland real estate investment company named Calibrated Valu- ation LLC has put down escrow money, said head trustee John Taylor. He expects the sale to close in the next week. Time will tell whether the church will be renovated or razed. The final service on Sun- day seemed ordinary on the face of it. All the elements seemed familiar — hymns, scripture, prayers and a sermon. But things felt far from ordinary. Hearts were breaking. “This is a difficult thing we’re doing today,” Pastor Jim Pierce prayed to God in his soft Arkansas drawl. “We need your help.” The 35 people in the pews said, “Amen,” then sang ”Gather Us In” as organ- ist Judy Jenner accompa- nied on the church’s origi- nal 1906 pipe organ. The service brought a series of lasts at the old church. The last time 11-year-old Talan Anderson would light the candles. The last recitation of The Lord’s Prayer. The last benedic- tion. The last time the wor- shipers would be wrapped in the rich reverberations of the vintage organ. Pierce took time to define “the church” as not the building, but the believers who gather there. Staff photo by Kathy Aney Church windows glow Sunday during the final service at the Pendleton United Methodist Church. During the last hymn, Thompson and a few others were too overcome to sing. Tears glistened around the sanctuary. The worshipers stayed after the last amen as Judy Jenner played one last piece, “All Creatures of our God and King.” When she finished, cheers erupted. Jenner took a bow. Jenner will continue to accompany the services, but on a portable keyboard at Pendleton City Hall, where the group will meet until another spot can be secured. Jenner will miss the old organ. “The clarity of pipes is awesome,” she said. “I’ve played pipe organs at other churches, but this is proba- bly the clearest tone.” The church with its dis- tinctive bell tower has dom- inated the block since the cornerstone was laid in 1906 on land purchased for $4,000. Stones quar- ried near Baker cost $1,500 and bricks from the Weston Brickyard were $90. The church survived sev- eral fires: The first started during a church dinner in 1954 and an arsonist started four separate fires in 1977. Pierce said the con- gregation plans to put the money from the sale in the bank and wait a while before making any dra- matic moves. Proceeds of a recent moving sale will also be squirreled away. The congregation also will soon have to say good- bye to Pierce and his wife Lisa, who have been reas- signed to a Methodist church in Philomath. Pas- tor Patty Nance will start on July 1, shepherding both Pendleton and Hermiston congregations. Pierce said his little flock is in emotional pain at the moment, but trying to focus on God. In the past weeks, he said, “they just sat in the sanctuary and looked at the stained glass and the organ like they are planning a funeral.” John Taylor said he and other members know they made the right decision. “Change is really an opportunity. We’re trying to look at it that way. But it’s a bitter pill to swallow.” Thompson, who was baptized at the church, couldn’t deny her distress. “There was a part of the service where I was sob- bing,” she said. “I can’t imagine not being here.” ——— Contact Kathy Aney at kaney@eastoregonian.com or 541-966-0810. Budget: General fund seeing 25% increase in PERS costs Continued from Page A1 Capital projects While Hermiston will continue its investment into new capital improvement projects over the next year, many of the projects slated for 2019-20 will be less vis- ible than recent undertak- ings such as the new senior center. The city plans to upgrade the computer sys- tem that runs its water and sewer system, improve a well and a lift station, replace underground stor- age tanks and expand the Geer Road water line. The biggest water-re- lated project continuing into 2019-20 is construction of the city’s new 1 million-gal- lon water tank on Punkin Center, which will boost the city’s storage capacity and open up hundreds of acres for development. On the street side, funds are being put toward an overlay of West Hermiston Avenue, East Theater Lane paving, and design work on the planned realignment of the confusing three-way intersection between Geer, Harper and Umatilla River roads. Police department Changes to the Herm- iston Police Department budget signal changes to how officers complete their work. The department is fol- lowing a previous move by the rest of the city to lease vehicles from Enter- prise instead of purchas- ing them outright. Edmis- ton said part of that change will be to increase the num- ber of patrol cars — giv- ing each patrol officer their own vehicle to park at home instead of coming to the police station and using a shared vehicle during their shift. The new take-home pol- icy will mean fewer marked cars in the police station lot and more parked on streets around the city, where they might inspire people to slow down or think twice about causing trouble in that neighborhood. “There’s going to be enhanced visibility,” Edmiston said. He said the new approach will keep the department from needing to expand its parking lot. In the past the depart- ment has budgeted $94,000 a year to purchase two new vehicles and “upfit” them with the needed equip- ment. The lease on 10 addi- tional vehicles will come in at $93,700 a year for now, and Edmiston said they will start saving substantially on that lease five years from now when the department builds up and then uses a reserve account to upfit vehicles instead of folding it into the cost of the lease. Maintenance costs are also included in the agreement with Enterprise. Capt. Travis Eynon said studies have shown that maintenance costs go down and cars are taken better care of when each patrol officer is assigned their own vehicle. “People tend to take a little more ownership with the take-home vehicles,” he said. The department is also switching to department-is- sued cellphones. Instead of sitting in their patrol car entering notes on an in-car computer, then returning to the station to hand over a sim card full of photos for the records department to upload, officers will be able to input reports and upload photos directly from their phone on an app called iRIMS. When incidents happen late at night, administrators will be able to log onto the system from anywhere to see reports, GPS locations of all on-duty personnel and other information. “We can see in real time what’s going on instead of having to come in,” Edmis- ton said. The app came at a one- time cost of $10,000 and the phones will cost the department about $2,000 a year, but will take away the need for $4,000 computers installed in each of the 10 new vehicles. Parks and recreation Hermiston’s most high-profile parks project in 2019-20 will be the rebuild- ing of Funland Park, which burned down earlier this month. Parks and recre- ation director Larry Fetter said the park was not actu- ally included in the budget the council will look at in two weeks due to timing. Instead, the city will vote on a supplemental budget later. “Unfortunately we don’t know what the cost will be to replace it, we don’t know what the insurance payment will be and we don’t know what the gap will be between fundrais- ing and what’s needed,” he said. The biggest parks proj- ect included in the budget is a skate park, which will be built on North First Street across from the police and fire stations in spring 2020 if the city secures a grant from the state that uses lot- tery dollars for public parks projects. The skate park will be Phase I of a “teen adventure park.” Phase II, planned for 2021, will add a park- our area, a BMX bike track, rock climbing and other features. The total cost of the two phases will run about $1.2 million, but grants are expected to cover about three-fourths of that cost. The full city budget, which will go before the city council on June 10, can be found online at hermis- ton.or.us/finance/budget. Extension: Phil Hamm stepping down after 29 years at the Hermiston center Continued from Page A1 age that one pretty well. “And then along came beet leafhopper transmitted virulescent agent. I remem- ber when we first knew we had a problem ...,” Hamm said. “So, I asked potato grow- ers to come and meet in our conference room and we tried to find out if there was something that some of them did that others didn’t do that helped them get by, and we found that those who treated for another insect in late May/early June had no prob- lems, whereas those who did not, did have problems. “That was a case where growers came together to help other growers,” Hamm said. “Then there were things like silver scurf,” Hamm said. “We didn’t know any- thing about it, and then we found it is seed borne, and we learned how to manage that one.” “Corn smut was a real interesting thing,” Hamm said. “I can remember the Mitch Lies/For the East Oregonian /Capital Press Phil Hamm outside the Hermiston Research and Extension Center, where he has served as first field I found corn smut in. It was a half-circle of sweet corn and I thought it was a novelty. Well, that novelty became a major issue. “George Clough, the sta- tion’s research horticultur- ist at the time, and I started doing a variety trial and we identified super sweet jubi- lee and jubilee as being highly susceptible, while some of the newer variet- ies were not,” Hamm said. “At the time many of the 100,000 acres of sweet corn grown in the basin were planted to those two variet- ies. I can tell you that none of that is being grown now.” Part of the legacy Hamm leaves behind at the center are the field days that today are a regular feature of the center. When Hamm started as director in 2005, there were no field days. Since then, the center has held three to four each year. The field days pro- vide researchers with an invaluable opportunity to share their findings with growers and field men, Hamm said, and exemplify what Hamm is all about, according to Scott Reed, director of the OSU Exten- sion Service. “Phil never forgets the E in HAREC (the Hermiston Agricultural Research and Extension Center),” Reed said. “And it is a capital E, because to generate new knowledge is one thing, but you need to put knowledge to work.” “Field days or anything we do here is about the growers,” Hamm said. “It is not about us. We exist to provide them the informa- tion they need to be more successful. “And it is not like we are sitting here like the May- tag repairman in that old commercial with our feet up on the desk waiting for a phone call. There is always something. There is always a need.” Hamm leaves behind a center equipped with state- of-the-art laboratories and other facilities that he said were made possible largely because of contributions from the local community. “Because of so many people that have helped over the last 10 years, this station is situated to move forward in a very positive way,” Hamm said. Hamm said he will miss interacting with growers, attending field days and see- ing the center’s staff on a day-to-day basis. “I am certainly going to miss the day-to-day oppor- tunities I have to interact with staff here and the stake- holders that are so much a part of what we serve,” Hamm said. He added that he and his wife, Linda, plan to con- tinue to reside in Hermis- ton and be an active part of the community. There will be more fishing and hunting involved, however, and less work in his future, he said.