WEEKEND EDITION THE WEEK IN PHOTOS COUNTY ANNOUNCES VACCINE CLINIC SCHEDULE THROUGH APRIL REGION, A3 TIMBERWOLVES READY FOR SEASONS TO GET STARTED THE BACK PAGE, A10 SPORTS, B1 FEBRUARY 20-21, 2021 145th Year, No. 54 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2020 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD UMATILLA RIVER FLOODING: ONE YEAR LATER WINTER STORMS Flooding not in sight after recent storms Snowpack levels in the Blues nearing normal for this time of the year By BRYCE DOLE East Oregonian Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian, File PENDLETON — After last week’s winter storms covered Umatilla County in snow, followed by sunshine and warmer temperatures early in the week, many resi- dents rightfully grew wary wondering if fl oods could once again be on the horizon. So far, however, conditions look sturdy, safe and residents can rest assured, accord- ing to Umatilla County offi cials. “We’ll see small rises in the rivers and the streams,” Marilyn Lohman, a hydrologist for the National Weather Service in Pend- leton, said of the upcoming snowmelt. “But they aren’t expected to be anywhere near any fl ood stages at this time.” Floodwater inundates the Riverview Mobile Home Estates in the Riverside neighborhood in Pendleton on the evening of Feb. 7, 2020. See Storms, Page A9 VACCINATIONS Communities are using experiences from 2020 flood to improve flood prevention procedures By ANTONIO SIERRA, JADE MCDOWELL and BRYCE DOLE East Oregonian P ENDLETON — Helicopters buzzed overhead as Pendle- ton City Manager Robb Corbett helped the sandbagging effort at Riverview Mobile Home Estates on Feb. 6, 2020. Corbett later realized that the helicopters, which were en route to rescue efforts further up the Umatilla River, were an indication that the situation was about to be much worse than the river runoff city staff were preparing for. Overall, Corbett said he was pleased by the way the city responded to the fl oods. But a year after Pendleton’s Riverside neighbor- hood was briefl y subsumed into the swell- ing waters of the Umatilla, Corbett said his staff continue to meet on how the city can improve its fl ood prevention procedures. One of the key talking points is the city’s changing climate. Corbett said people could call it what they want, but the region’s weather patterns are changing. 2020 marked the second year in a row that Pendleton had weathered a signifi cant fl ood, following the McKay Creek fl oods of 2019. Two years later, Corbett said the city was still working on mitigation efforts for McKay. “We are planning for the worst — there are new weather patterns that we are now dealing with — and hoping for the best,” he said. Corbett said these events used to be considered anomalous, but Umatilla’s water level was 30% higher than any levels in the city’s recorded history. Should they get too much higher, Corbett said the water risked fl owing over the Pendleton River Parkway, threatening the thousands of people who live in the fl ats. City offi cials may not have been able to prevent the fl ood, but they would have been able to react to it earlier if they had checked water gauges upstream from Pend- leton. Corbett said the city is now tracking a wider variety of sources to anticipate any future fl ooding. The city is also encouraging more resi- dents to sign up for AlertSense, the city’s electronic notifi cation service that sends out texts and emails during emergencies. The fl ood not only destroyed homes and displaced dozens of Pendletonians, it also breached one levee and seeped through another, eroded roads and exposed sewer lines. Public Works Director Bob Patterson said most of infrastructure damage has been repaired, but it will likely take years to fi nish updating their mitigation efforts. One of those long processes is updating the fl oodplain map. Corbett said both fl oods revealed areas that were outside the fl ood- plain that ended up underwater. Watching the snow as it fell on the after- noon of Thursday, Feb. 11, Corbett said he now looks at precipitation with a sense of wariness. “I can’t think of a rainstorm or snow- storm again and not be nervous,” he said. Umatilla County faces delays as vaccine rates fall By BRYCE DOLE East Oregonian While fl ooding was less severe on the west side of Umatilla County, it highlighted needs that some communities are trying to fi x. In Echo, the city and property owners abutting the Umatilla River have been work- ing to identify opportunities for physical mitigation, such as berms, in an effort to redirect high water away from homes and farms that got hit in February 2020. They have formed the Mid Umatilla River Coali- tion to work together in lobbying state and federal agencies for permission to complete projects, and are searching for funding opportunities. Umatilla School District Superintendent Heidi Sipe said the damage to the school PENDLETON — Vaccine efforts in Umatilla County are on standby after a shipment of doses was canceled earlier this week due to inclement weather. The delays forced health offi cials to postpone a drive- thru clinic in Pendleton as the county fell to the second lowest in Oregon for COVID-19 vaccinations per capita. Now, as eligibility expands to Oregon seniors over the age of 75 on Monday, Feb. 22, making thousands of additional county residents able to receive the vaccine, health offi cials are eagerly anticipating further shipments. However, the state has yet to provide a concrete timeline for when the next prom- ised shipments should arrive, raising concerns that further delays and a bottle- neck effect could be possible, according to Joe Fiumara, the county’s public health director. “I’m telling people that it’s a tenta- tive date,” Fiumara said of the upcoming See Lessons, Page A9 See Vaccines, Page A9 West Umatilla County rebuilds more carefully Easterday Dairy moving forward despite company’s trouble By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press BOARDMAN — Plans to revive Oregon’s second-largest dairy remain unchanged, despite the new owners — a prominent farm family based in Southeast Washington — facing alle- gations of fraud by Tyson Foods. Easterday Farms purchased the dairy, formerly Lost Valley Farm, in 2019. The family registered a new business in Oregon, called Easterday Dairy LLC, which is now seeking state approval to reopen the dairy in rural Morrow County with up to 28,300 total cattle. But Oregon regulators say they are proceeding with caution and watch- ing closely amid an unfolding scandal involving Easterday Ranches, the live- stock arm of the family’s multi-pronged agricultural operation. Easterday Ranches supplies cattle for a beef plant run by Tyson Fresh Meats near Pasco, Washington. In January, Tyson sued Easterday Ranches for $225 million, accusing the ranch of faking invoices and charging the company for more than 200,000 cattle that, in fact, did not exist. Both Easterday Ranches and East- erday Farms have since fi led for Chap- ter 11 bankruptcy protection. Easterday Farms is the family’s farming business, growing 22,500 acres of potatoes, onions, corn and wheat in the Colum- bia Basin. In a statement to the Capital Press, Cole Easterday, one of the owners of Easterday Dairy, said the company is still working to secure a Confi ned Animal Feeding Operation, or CAFO, permit from the Oregon Department of Agriculture and Department of Envi- ronmental Quality to reopen the dairy See Dairy, Page A9 FREE Self-Administered COVID-19 testing. No insurance or doctor’s order needed Every Monday through March 29th 9am to Noon At the Pendleton Convention Center. SAHPENDLETON.ORG