A8 OFF PAGE ONE East Oregonian Friday, November 29, 2019 UEC: Industrial development feeds Umatilla Electric Cooperative growth Continued from Page A1 growth is likely driven by new Amazon data centers springing up around Uma- tilla and Morrow counties, as well as a few other major industrial projects such as the new Lamb Weston expansion in Hermiston. In its 2008 annual report, UEC reported that industrial customers made up 24.7% of its revenue. In 2018, that number was up to 64.2%. Echenrode said resi- dential sales in the past eight years have increased 2.5%. Irrigation sales have increased 19%, small com- mercial sales are up 27%, and large commercial/indus- trial sales are up 500%. Such a large increase in industrial use to UEC’s sys- tem naturally brings up ques- tions about who is paying for that growth. Echenrode said while many coopera- tives build some money for growth into everyone’s fees, UEC’s philosophy is that if it needs to build new lines or other infrastructure to accommodate a specific cus- tomer, it is that customer that should foot the bill instead of all UEC’s customers. “Those who trigger the growth, pay for the growth,” he said. Power costs While equipment, infra- structure and personnel to serve customers are a part of UEC’s costs, purchasing electricity from suppliers takes up most of the coopera- tive’s budget. In 2018, 76.6% of UEC’s expenditures were for wholesale power. Much of that power comes from the federally owned Bonneville Power Administration, which sells electricity from 31 dams, a nuclear power plant and sev- eral small nonfederal power plants. EO file photo A substation technician installs a ground wire on a riser structure in December 2017 at a new Umatilla Electric Cooperative substation on East Elm Avenue in Hermiston. In 2011, UEC signed a 20-year purchasing con- tract with BPA, after BPA changed its rate structure. Demand for BPA’s power was outstripping supply, and so BPA calculated a “high water mark” for utilities. The complicated formula used the amount of power BPA was able to produce in its lowest-performing years (when dry weather meant low stream flows through hydroelectric dams) and the utilities’ usage in recent years. Each utility was then assigned an amount of power it could purchase from BPA at “Tier 1” rates, which BPA would set at cost. Any power the utility needed beyond that amount would be con- sidered “Tier 2” power, to be purchased at market rates. In high-water years, BPA would sell its excess power into the market and use the profits to keep Tier 1 prices low. “The assumption at the time was that power costs were going up,” Echenrode said. Power costs in the mar- ket didn’t go up, however. Instead they dropped, due to a confluence of factors that included fracking causing natural gas to drop to a frac- tion of its previous price. Rapid growth in Herm- iston and surrounding areas has pushed UEC well into needing Tier 2 power for its newer customers each year, but Echenrode said it so far hasn’t hurt them — the mar- ket price is actually lower than BPA’s Tier 1 prices. “Nobody would have ever thought of that when the con- tracts were signed in (2011),” he said. UEC’s contract with BPA is up in 2028, but Echenrode said that he expected they would be purchasing power from BPA well beyond that. “They’ve been very good to us, and very good to our customers,” he said. Renewable energy Echenrode said it was hard to know what market rates for power would do in the future, particularly as more states enact laws around renewable energy and cap and trade. Oregon Democrats are trying to pass cap-and-trade legislation of their own, which Echenrode said will “likely have a cost.” In 2016 the legisla- ture passed a law requir- ing investor-owned utili- ties to get at least 50% of their power from renew- able sources by 2040, and consumer-owned utilities such as UEC to must get to at least 25%. The law does not include existing hydropower from dams as a renewable source, because lawmakers stated the intent was to encourage creation of new renewable energy sources. Echenrode said the mar- ket “may demonstrate renewables are less expen- sive over time,” or the law may force UEC to purchase more expensive electricity. Compliance is shown through Renewable Energy Certificates, and Echenrode said UEC has been build- ing those up now to protect it from spikes in the market. Despite some uncer- tainty about the future of the market, Echenrode said UEC is bound to serve all customers in its service area, and he believes that overall the area’s growth is good for residents. The growth, for example, has helped pay for new equip- ment to serve customers, and enabled improvements such as UEC burying miles of lines on Weston Moun- tain to decrease fire hazards. After BPA recently announced an increase in its prices, UEC will be adjusting its rates by about 2% in 2020, Echenrode said — something the util- ity will send more informa- tion to customers about in December. For customers worried about their personal or busi- ness electric bill, he said, UEC works hard to help people increase their energy efficiency through free home energy audits, low- cost loans, cash rebates, weatherization and more. Information about those programs can be found at www.umatillaelectric.com/ energy-efficiency. “The cheapest kilowatt hour is the kilowatt hour you save,” Echenrode said. Delivered: Volunteers spent the day delivering dinner to people’s doorsteps Continued from Page A1 Staff photo by Kathy Aney Donated pies sit ready for Thursday’s Thanksgiving dinner at the Salvation Army in Pend- leton. Chance: ‘This is a perfect moment’ Continued from Page A1 Breshears family: Karma, 13, Layton, 11, Savan- nah, 7, Drake, 8, and their mother Danielle. Danielle said 8-year-old Drake was the reason she suggested volunteering at the dinner to her four children. “Drake has a huge heart for the homeless,” she said. “He’s been beg- ging to work at the warm- ing station. He also wants to make hot chocolate and give it out to them.” As she spoke, Drake walked by with a plate of turkey and all the trim- mings. She smiled. “This time of year is about giving,” she said. “Kids get in the mode of receiving so much. It’s nice for them to have a chance to give.” Drake wasn’t quite as big picture as his mom. “I take people’s plates and serve food to them,” he said. “They seem happy. I like it.” Drake’s older sis- ter Karma said she was enjoying the opportunity now that she was here. Her mother, she said, had taken them by surprise. “But we’re up for it,” Karma said. “I was a little scared at first that I’d drop a plate, but I’m over that.” Danielle served up plates, stealing glances at her progeny as they expe- rienced the joy of giving to others. It doesn’t get much better as far as teaching life lessons. “This is a perfect moment,” she said. ——— Contact Kathy Aney at kaney@eastoregonian. com or 541-966-0810. United States. “Oh, I’ve been all over,” he said. The pair met in Denver, Colorado, when Robert — originally from Kansas — would deliver equipment to the railroad company where Terri-Lynn worked at the time. Together, they moved back to Terri-Lynn’s home- town of Hermiston to care for her aging parents. For years, Terri-Lynn was working at the Union Pacific Railroad in Herm- iston, but due to recent lay- offs, she retired unexpect- edly early last month after more than 27 years in the industry. “But you have to look at it in a positive light,” she said. “Now we have more time to do volunteering like this.” Their goal is to bring food and a little celebratory spirit to people who might not be able to make it out of the house to attend the free Community Fellow- ship Dinner, which is held at Hermiston High School each Thanksgiving after- noon and open to everyone in the community. Some- times, they’ll give rides to and from the high school for people hoping to get out of the house for the holiday. The pair also volunteer to deliver meals on Christ- Staff photo by Kathy Aney Volunteers dish up dinners to go during Thursday’s Commu- nity Thanksgiving Dinner at Hermiston High School. mas. One year, they remem- ber delivering meals to a local motel. The woman who answered the door was grateful, and explained that the food was all her family had in the way of celebra- tion that year. “You don’t know what someone’s circumstance is. We’re so blessed, it’s nice to be able to bless others,” said Terri-Lynn. “Put a smile on someone’s face.” They always seem to be smiling too. Before heading back to the high school to load their car up for round two of deliveries, the pair swung by a residence on Hermis- ton’s west side. Robert ran out to make the delivery. The woman inside used to volunteer at the Thanksgiving dinner and had two dogs — includ- ing a dachshund. “That dog was a dog- and-a-half long,” he joked. Back at the high school, tables in the main com- mons were filled with fami- lies chowing down, a flower bouquet at every table. According to Makayla Humphreys, who was checking in volunteers, there were some last minute no-shows Thursday morn- ing due to illness. “Flu season is here,” she said. “But in the end, it always works out that we have enough people.” The nonprofit didn’t have exact totals for how many people were served Thurs- day, but according to board chair Gary Humphreys, the Thanksgiving dinner fed over 700 people last year. Measure 49: Local governments, landowners don’t appear eager to take advantage Continued from Page A1 To mitigate the risks from such home-building, DLCD enacted rules in 2014 under which landown- ers in farm and forest zones can transfer their develop- ment rights to rural resi- dential zones or areas that have already been largely subdivided. Since then, however, not one county government has implemented an ordinance that would allow landown- ers to transfer these devel- opment credits, Marvin said. That’s likely because county officials have lim- ited time and resources to create such programs. “They’d have to compete with other things on their agenda to get this in,” she said. If landowners were excited about transferring their development rights, they’d probably demand that county officials make that option available — something that clearly hasn’t happened, said Jim Johnson, land use special- ist with the Oregon Depart- ment of Agriculture. “There’s not, in my opin- ion, a real demand for it,” Johnson said. “If nobody is asking for it, the county has other things to do.” While the develop- ment credit transfer system should be a “win-win for everybody,” it’s likely that Oregon’s program is too restrictive to be enticing to landowners, said Dave Hunnicutt, president of the Oregon Property Owners Association. Landowners are unlikely to want to jump through the program’s regulatory hur- dles without an incentive, Hunnicutt said. “There’d better be something valu- able at the end of that.” Currently, development credits can only be trans- ferred within the same county, which is a geo- graphical limitation that probably discourages land- owners, he said. Those in remote rural counties would be more interested in the program if they could transfer the development credits to more urbanized areas, Hun- nicutt said. Allowing more flexibil- ity makes sense, since geo- graphical restrictions won’t prevent property develop- ment under Measure 49. “Those are going to happen and there’s noth- ing anyone can do to stop them,” Hunnicutt said. Another possibility could be to allow additional dwellings to be built with the development credits if they’re transferred from farm and forest land into rural residential zones, said Rep. Brian Clem, D-Sa- lem, who chairs the House Agriculture and Land Use Committee. “I feel like we need to sweeten the pot somehow,” Clem said.