WEEKEND EDITION THE WEEK IN PHOTOS LOCAL TEAMS HEADED TO UNOFFICIAL CROSS-COUNTRY CHAMPIONSHIPS SPORTS, B1 THE BACK PAGE, A10 TWO MORE SUSPECTS ARRESTED IN MOTEL INCIDENT E O AST 145th Year, No. 75 REGION, A3 REGONIAN APRIL 10-11, 2021 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2020 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Search continues for missing Idaho woman Deborah ‘Deb’ Hendrichs has been missing since Jan. 11 By DICK MASON La Grande Observer MEACHAM — Cindy Taylor is not losing count of the days her sister has been missing. She also is not losing hope. Taylor’s sister, Deborah “Deb” Hendrichs, 56, of Star, Idaho, went missing on Jan. 11 at about 5 p.m. just outside Meacham, where her car, a black Toyota RAV4, ran out of gas at a bridge entrance. “This is day 87, Hendrichs I do not want this to become a cold case,” she said. Taylor has been working fever- ishly since Jan. 11 to fi nd her sister. Taylor was in La Grande on Monday, April 5, and Tuesday, April 6, scour- ing the area in Meacham with her husband and two metal detector operators. The search, like others in the area, proved fruitless. “We found nothing. We were hoping to find personal effects there,” said Taylor, who lives in Merrill near Klamath Falls. Oregon State Police Lt. Daniel Conner of Union County shares Taylor’s frustration, explaining no new leads have surfaced. “The case has gone absolutely dark,” he said. To get the investigation to move forward, OSP again is encourag- ing people to come forward with any new information they have. State police is particularly eager to talk with anyone who may have seen suspicious activity late in the afternoon of Jan. 11 near where Hendrichs’s compact SUV stalled, Conner said. An Oregon Department of Trans- portation worker was the last person who reported seeing Hendrichs after her vehicle stalled. Conner said the ODOT employee asked Hendrichs if she needed help and she said her cellphone was not working in the area but someone was coming to help. The ODOT employee then put out safety fl ares to protect Hendrichs and called OSP, which sent a trooper to assist. The trooper arrived 20 minutes later. By then, Hendrichs’s vehicle was empty. State police have not been able to confi rm any reports of anyone seeing Hendrichs since that time. Hendrichs is an employees of the Les Schwab Tire Center in See Missing, Page A9 Mr. Smith to return from D.C. Gordon Smith heading back to Pendleton after retirement By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian PENDLETON — Gordon Smith is returning home. Following 24 years in Washing- ton, D.C., fi rst as a U.S. senator then as the chief executive offi cer of the National Association of Broadcast- ers, Smith is step- ping down to an advisory role with the lobbying group and returning to his birthplace: Pendle- ton. I n a v ide o message announc- Smith ing his retirement, Smith said he would step down at the end of 2021 to spend more time on his family business, his church and his family. “Many of these things I have put on hold this past quarter century to give public service and to be among broadcasters,” he said. “I look forward to time with them, doing things that grandfathers ought to do: attending baseball games, recitals and more.” As a lobbyist, Smith represented some of the largest radio and tele- vision broadcasting companies in the country, including iHeartMe- dia, Cumulus Media and the Sinclair Broadcast Group. And although providing news is only one part of what these broadcasters do, it’s one See Mr. Smith, Page A9 Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian At midnight on Thursday, April 8, 2021, Lifeways closed its Aspen Springs Psychiatric Hospital in Hermiston after just over six months in operation. A BIG LOSS Lifeways closes Aspen Springs as psychiatric hospital By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian H ERMISTON — When Aspen Springs Psychiatric Hospital opened in Hermiston, it was hailed as a sorely-needed addition to the state’s meager supply of mental health treatment beds. But the facility closed at midnight on Thurs- day, April 8, after just over six months in operation, citing “unsustainable” diffi cul- ties staffi ng it. Umatilla County Commissioner John Shafer said Aspen Springs had been a “wonderful” addition to the county’s eff orts to improve access to mental health services, and he was disappointed it would not continue. “It kind of took the wind out of our sails, to be honest,” he said. “It was a huge blow.” Lifeways, a community mental health provider covering parts of Eastern Oregon and Idaho, opened the 16-bed inpatient hospital for acute psychiatric care offi cially in September 2020, four years after it fi rst broke ground on the project. According to a news release, it served a total of 75 patients between then and its closure on April 8. The facility was at the highest level of psychiat- ric care off ered in Oregon, for individuals experiencing a severe mental health crisis. The news release stated Lifeways will work with Oregon Health Authority to fi nd “an alternative level of care for Aspen Springs that is more aligned with health care worker availability.” Liz Johnsen, chief See Loss, Page A9 Evolving tech changes work at electric cooperatives Umatilla Electric Cooperative linemen use GIS in the fi eld By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian HERMISTON — When Mitch Colvin started working as a lineman for Umatilla Electric Cooperative six years ago, he spent a lot of time looking at maps. The maps, which crews hauled around in their pickup trucks, spanned two black binders, each several inches thick and much wider than a standard binder. When line- men needed to locate a specifi c util- ity pole or other infrastructure, they had to look up the right paper map out of thousands, then search the tiny numbers on the page, looking for the right one. Now, everything is digitized and everyone has their own iPad. “It speeds up the process a ton,” Colvin said. “You just type it in and it pulls it right up.” The iPad not only pulls up the information that was previously contained in the maps, but also a trea- sure trove of other details, from the size of a transformer to the name and phone number of a customer associ- ated with a meter. Linemen can also COVID-19 NUMBERS add information, such as photos, from on-site. The Geographic Information System used to help crews pinpoint infrastructure in the fi eld is overseen by Adelaide Zumwalt, GIS adminis- trator for UEC. At the cooperative’s Hermiston offi ce, she toggled through diff erent maps, showing an interconnected See Electric, Page A9 TOTALS FOR WEEK ENDING 4/8/2021 IN UMATILLA COUNTY RISK LEVEL MODERATE NEW CASES OVER 2 WEEKS 74 TOTAL CASE GOAL 40 OR LESS OVER 2 WEEKS POSITIVE TEST RATE 3.8 % POSITIVE 1.2% TEST GOAL % 5