CARS TRAPPED OVERNIGHT BY MONSTER TUMBLEWEED PILE IMC WRESTLING: CROOK COUNTY MAKES SHORT WORK OF PENDLETON NORTHWEST, A2 SPORTS, A8 E O AST 144th Year, No. 55 REGONIAN FRIDAY, JANUARY 3, 2020 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2019 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Your Weekend Local leaders look ahead to • FREE FIRST FRIDAY, Tamástslikt Cultural Institute • FREE FIRST SATURDAY, Heri- tage Station Museum • OLDIES NIGHT: MOTOWN, Milton-Freewater FOR TIMES AND LOCATIONS CHECK COMING EVENTS, A6 Weekend Weather FRI SAT SUN 59/41 48/35 47/36 OUR NEW NEIGHBORS Electrical system operator fi nds new terrain Doherty Hansell McGrath Mooney Morgan Mulvihill Murdock Roberts Shafer Turner Offi cials look to continue momentum from 2019 into new year Editor’s Note: This story is part of an annual series by the East Orego- nian called “Our New Neighbors,” which introduces the community to people who have moved here in the past year. By ALEX CASTLE East Oregonian By ALEX CASTLE East Oregonian HERMISTON — Despite spend- ing most of her life in the region, Kathryn Kennington, 54, hadn’t done much more than pass through Pendleton or Hermiston. After working for Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative in Baker City and La Grande since 1989, Kenning- ton needed something new in 2019. She got it in February when she left her longtime home in La Grande to start as a system operator for Umatilla Electric Cooperative in Hermiston. “I just needed a job change,” she says. “That opportunity came up and I was able to take advantage of it.” The work itself is mostly the same, Kennington said. As a system operator, the same position she held MATILLA COUNTY — The new year is a chance for a fresh start. But in Umatilla and Morrow counties, local leaders aren’t as focused on wiping the slate clean as they are building off the momen- tum of previous successes. Coming off his fi rst year in offi ce, Umatilla County Commissioner John Shafer was most proud of contracting management of the county’s vehicle fl eet to Enterprise Fleet Management and making progress on the Central Line Ordnance project. The Central Line Ordnance proj- ect, which is the fi nal pipeline of three that will pump Columbia River water into the region, is especially import- ant, according to Shafer, because it will recharge the basin’s depleted aqui- fer. While Shafer was pleased with the county taking the lead on the project in 2019, he’s aiming for more this year. “I’d love to see pipe in the ground in 2020,” he said. U “WE REPEATEDLY HEAR ABOUT THE URBAN AND RURAL DIVIDE, AND IT’S OFTEN AN UPHILL BATTLE MAKING SURE OUR THOUGHTS AND INTERESTS ARE REPRESENTED ON THIS SIDE OF THE STATE.” George Murdock, Umatilla County commissioner Shafer said the county has recently applied for a $7 million federal grant that they’ll hear back on by the end of January or start of February that could move the project into its next steps. Fellow Umatilla County Commis- sioner George Murdock said his pri- mary duty in 2020 will be maintain- ing stability of the county’s budget and fi nances, while he also takes on a unique role locally and nationally with the 2020 Census. In October, Murdock was one of six county commissioners in the nation to be selected to serve on the census work- ing group for the National Association of Counties. According to Murdock, public entities receive roughly $4,000 per citizen, making the census and its accuracy this year a matter of fi nances for Umatilla County. Other focuses for Murdock in 2020 include helping the East Umatilla County Fire District secure funding for a new fi re station and continuing the expansion of the county’s road dep- uty workforce, which Murdock said has grown from staffi ng seven deputies to 17 in the last fi ve or six years. In Morrow County, commissioner and chair Jim Doherty touted his suc- cessful negotiations in 2019 with Nex- tEra Energy to bring the nation’s fi rst large-scale energy facility that com- bines wind, solar and battery power to the region, and pointed to consolida- tion of the county’s facilities as a goal for 2020. In 2019, Doherty and Murdock were elected to terms as the fi rst president and second vice president, respectively, of the Association of Oregon Coun- See Leaders, Page A7 See Neighbors, Page A7 One of the country’s fi nest teachers has Pendleton roots PHS graduate, Julie Rowell, named Milken Educator of the Year By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian Staff photo by Kathy Aney Julie Rowell, a 1997 graduate of Pendleton High School, is one of only 40 teachers in the country honored with Milken Family Foun- dation Educator Awards. Rowell teaches English to migrant stu- dents at Gresham High School. GRESHAM — One of the nation’s best educators credits two Pendleton High School teachers as her inspiration. Earlier this month, Gresham High School’s Julie Rowell won an award often described as an “Oscar for teaching” during a surprise assembly at the school. The assembly was supposed to be a tutorial on the Student Success Act, an important but dry topic. Rowell’s mind wandered as she stood with her back against the gym’s gray cinder- block wall listening to someone from the Oregon Department of Educa- tion talk to the school’s juniors and seniors about the legislation passed during the 2019 legislative session. Then Greg Gallagher, of the Milken Family Foundation, took the microphone to present a Milken Educator Award — maybe the nation’s most prestigious teaching prize, one that comes with $25,000. Rowell scanned the room, wonder- ing which of her fellow teachers would be recognized. “The Milken Educator of the Year goes to Julie Rowell,” said Gal- lagher, drawing out the last name like a basketball announcer intro- ducing the hometown star. A video shows Rowell’s eyes widening as she mouths, “What?” and the gym erupting in applause. Rowell, who teaches English to migrant students, still shakes her head when she thinks back to that moment. “I felt like I was in a dream,” she said. See Teacher, Page A7