REGION Thursday, February 25, 2021 East Oregonian A3 Hermiston utility rates set to increase by 2.15% The increase is an automatic update tied to infl ation with the community, and it grows with the plan, and it’s not something where we have to come out and ask for a 15% increase every few years,” he said. Water and sewer reve- nue pay for maintaining the city’s water and sewer infra- structure to prevent leaks and other failures. Assistant City Manager Mark Morgan presented an upgrade to the city’s capital improvement plan, which lays out the water, sewer and street projects the city plans to accomplish over the next fi ve years. The plan was fi rst adopted in 2019 and will be updated every two years. Morgan said based on guidance from the capital improvement plan, the city accomplished 14 road, sewer and water projects totaling $2.7 million over the past two years, ranging from repaving 11 blocks of Herm- iston Avenue to replacing one-half mile of 1920s-era water mains. Water and sewer projects scheduled for the next five By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian HERMISTON — Water and sewer rates will increase by 2.15% for Hermiston resi- dents starting in March. The increase is an auto- matic update tied to infl ation. When the city council passed a water and sewer rate restruc- ture in 2018, the restructure included a signifi cant increase for most customers at the time, with larger water users paying higher rates. The 2018 ordi- nance also included a provi- sion that, starting in March 2020, rates would automat- ically increase yearly based on the Engineering News-Re- cord Construction Cost Index as of December of the preced- ing calendar year. Last year, the index rose by 2.15%. According to a memo in the agenda packet for East Oregonian, File Wasterwater churns in the aeration basin before being sent through a fi lter to remove or- ganic matter at the Hermiston Wastewater Treatment facility in Hermiston. Water and sewer rates will increase by 2.15% for Hermiston residents starting in March. the Monday, Feb. 22, city council meeting, the aver- age water user’s combined water and sewer bill would increase by about $3.06 in August (the highest usage month of the year) and $1.73 in January (the lowest). Mayor David Drotzmann said the council had been in an uncomfortable position in past years of raising rates by a large amount at a time after years of no increases. Now, he said, the smaller increases by infl ation should help keep up with rising construction costs for continued maintenance of the city’s water system. “Now we’ve put a pathway and plan in place that it grows years include replacing a 40-year-old booster station, four lift stations, 3 miles of aging water lines, and the membrane that fi lters water at the recycled water treatment plant. On the street side, the city plans to realign the inter- section of Geer, Harper and River roads and use funding from the Oregon Legislature to rebuild North First Place between Hermiston and Elm avenues. The total cost of capital projects planned for the next fi ve years is just over $20 million. Councilor Maria Duron said when rates went up in 2018, she was one who didn’t understand why they went up so much, but she appreciated that city staff have put out so much information online to lay out exactly how the money will be used. “Thank you for making it so clear,” she said. “I was read- ing through it, like, ‘OK, now I get it, now I understand,’ so putting it out there for people to have access to the informa- tion is so laudable.” LOCAL BRIEFING Welcome back, students Hermiston plans airport upgrade Sherwood Elementary School Assistant Tammy Hillmick, dressed as Scooby Doo, welcomes students back on Monday, Feb. 22. Hillmick made sure students were comfortable getting off the bus to prepare for their fi rst day back to school. Contributed Photo HERMISTON — A planned $2 million improve- ment project at the Hermis- ton Municipal Airport will mostly be covered by state and federal grant funds. The airport reconstruc- tion project, scheduled for the summer of 2021, will improve the apron where aircraft park while load- ing and unloading cargo or refueling. According to a news release, the Federal Avia- tion Administration will provide 90% of the funds for the project, and requires a 10% match. The city of Hermiston announced last week that the Oregon Department of Aviation awarded the city $150,000 for the project, which will cover 75% of the city’s required local match to the FAA funds. The city had previously been planning on using the $69,000 in CARES Act federal stimulus fund- ing the airport received in spring 2020 to cover the local match. Now, the news release from the city stated, those CARES Act funds can be used to add a 2-inch overlay of new pavement on Airport Way, which is the only road leading to the airport. According to the news release, while the airport has mostly served recre- ational aircraft, agricultural businesses and corporate jet traffi c, it has more recently seen an increase in cargo shipping through compa- nies, such as UPS, with two to three fl ights per day bringing in packages. Umatilla County reports one new COVID-19 death PEN DLETON — Umatilla County Public Health announced one new COVID-19-related death on Tuesday, Feb. 23, according to a press release. Umatilla County’s 81st death with COVID-19 is a 63-year-old female who tested positive on Dec. 17, 2020, and died on Jan. 2 at her residence in Umatilla County, according to the press release. The individ- ual had underlying medical conditions. — EO Media Group Remembering the last ‘big one’ PPP By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian L East Oregonian, File Jeff Swanson wades from his home with belongings in the fl oodwaters of the Umatilla River near Cayuse on Feb. 8, 1996. The result was severe fl ood- ing across the Pacifi c North- west, resulting in eight deaths, mostly in Western Oregon. Property damage estimates given at the time ranged from $500 million to $1 billion, and The Oregonian reported 21,843 people were evacuated from their homes. In Umatilla County, many of the same areas that fl ooded in 2020 were also under- water in 1996. The Feb. 13, 1996, edition of the Hermis- ton Herald led with a front page photo of Umatilla School District’s athletic complex underwater — described in the article as “knee deep,” while in 2020 the water there reached 4 feet. On the east side of the county, Tom Groat, public affairs manager for the Umatilla County Emergency Management Offi ce in 1996, reported that 24 people had to be rescued by helicopter from the fl ood waters, and there was “quite a bit of damage” to roads stretching from Reith to Echo. The East Oregonian mentioned about 30 residents were busy piling sandbags at River View Mobile Estates as the waters crept higher. Homes along the north fork of McKay Creek had fl ooded, the paper reported, and areas of the Umatilla Indian Reservation were underwater. “A portion of Cayuse Road lost one lane to the Umatilla River above Homly, and in other areas it had eroded to within three feet of the yellow line,” the paper reported. “The Thornhollow-Gibbon area remains closed to traffi c because of deep water over the road.” Coverage of the time compared the event to the last major fl ood in the state, which took place about 31 years earlier in December 1964 and January 1965, and set peak fl ow records at the time. The U.S. Army Corps of Engi- neers reported those floods caused more than $1.8 million in damages at the time and “heavily” flooded Umatilla County communities, includ- ing Adams and Echo. SA LE S THROUGH ST OR ch 1 r a M ay Mond m - 6pm 8a EA LL DAY n o i t a r b e l Ce vent E A CI S PE UMATILLA COUNTY — As longtime Umatilla County residents surveyed the rushing waters of the coun- ty’s fl ood of 2020, it brought to mind another scene, from 1996. The county marked the 25th anniversary of the fl ood of 1996 — generally consid- ered the last “big one” before 2020 — on Feb. 9. When an East Oregonian reporter found Hermiston Irrigation District Manager Annette Kirkpatrick surveying where fl ood waters had over- topped the district’s gates along the Umatilla River during the 2020 fl ood, she immediately made the comparison. “Even ‘96 wasn’t as bad as this,” she said at the time, echo- ing the thoughts of others inter- viewed that day. The numbers bear out that, at least in terms of water height, the 2020 flood was worse. In 1996, the Hermiston Herald reported that water in the Umatilla River had been clocked at 16,000 cubic feet per second in Pendleton on the day of the fl ooding, compared with less than 700 earlier that week. In 2020, water levels reached more than 20,000 cfs at their peak. According to a National Weather Service report, the 1996 flood was caused by a convergence of weather patterns. The preceding fall and that winter had seen precipitation in the Pacific Northwest at 125% above normal, according to the weather service, with “tremen- dous amounts of snow” falling in a short period of time in late January, followed up by a deep freeze. “The weather pattern changed dramatically in early February, with a strong subtropical jet (pineapple express) bringing warm, moist air to the region, which resulted in very heavy rain and rapid snowmelt,” the NWS website states. E H TT U O Join us in this new chapter as Alive & Well is under NEW OWNERSHIP! You will find the same great products and will see new ones on the shelves soon! CHECK OUT OUR SPECIAL FEATURE 2150 N. First St., Hermiston PPP 541-567-0272 6' SOCIAL DISTANCING AND MASKS REQUIRED