REGION Thursday, April 15, 2021 East Oregonian A3 Bailey’s Bill passes Oregon Senate unanimously Bobby Levy to shepherd bill through committee hearings in House By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian SALEM — The Oregon Senate voted unanimously on Monday, April 12, to pass Bailey’s Bill. The bill, named for Weston-McEwen High School student Bailey Munck, increases penalties for criminal sexual contact with an underage victim if the off ender was the victim’s teacher. If approved by the House and signed by Gov. Kate Brown, the legislation fi xes a discrepancy. Currently, a coach convicted of sexual abuse in the third degree receives harsher penalties than a teacher who commits the exact same crime. Munck, now 17, testifi ed on March 25 to the Oregon Senate’s judiciary commit- tee, telling of sexual abuse in 2019 during a volleyball road trip by Andrew DeYoe, an English teacher and also a scorekeeper for the volleyball team. DeYoe, 31, after plead- ing guilty to harassment that included sexual touching, spent a night in the Umatilla County Jail and will serve fi ve years probation. He wasn’t required to register as a sex off ender. If DeYoe had been a coach, he might have been convicted of a Class C felony, a crime that carries sentences up to five years in prison Hansell Levy PENDLETON — Pend- leton’s cut of the $1.9 tril- lion American Rescue Plan Act hasn’t dropped into its account yet, but the city’s various tourism interests were already ready with a presentation. D ubbed “ Pe nd let on Comes Alive,” the plan called for the city to use $250,000 from Pendleton’s federal stimulus payment to boost the local tourism industry. Led by Pendleton Economic Development Director Steve Chrisman, including repre- sentatives from the Pend- leton Convention Center, the Pendleton Chamber of Commerce and the Pendleton Round-Up Association, the group thinks it can help the city’s tourism recover from the eff ects of the COVID-19 pandemic by creating new initiatives like horse and buggy rides and sending people dressed in Western garb downtown to interact with tourists. Addressing the Pendleton City Council at a Tuesday, April 13, meeting, Chris- man said one of Pendleton’s shortcomings with tourism is that it didn’t off er many of the Western experiences people are familiar with during Round-Up week. “For one week a year we underpromise and overde- liver the greatest show on grass,” Chrisman’s slide- show states. “For (11 and 3/4) months per year, we grossly overpromise and grossly underdeliver.” Chrisman and the group’s solution for this “horrible injustice” was to expand Pendleton’s off erings during high-tourism months in spring and summer. Besides the buggies and the Western actors, some of the ideas that would be introduced include adding regular bar hours at the Pendleton Underground Tours speakeasy and the Let’er Buck Room, placing six covered wagons around town, and holding guided tours of the Round-Up Grounds. Once these concepts were put into place, the group anticipated bringing in 54,000 new visitors to Pend- leton by Year 5. Ch r isma n said t he $250,000 would be a one-time investment, with the new concepts funded by eventually charging for some of the services and the reve- nue that would be generated from new overnight stays via the city’s lodging taxes. “This is going to seem like a tiny sum if it accom- plishes even a fraction of what I think it’s capable of accomplishing,” Chrisman said. The council seemed receptive to the group’s pitch, but didn’t fully commit to the project’s price tag. City Manager Robb Corbett praised the group’s efforts while also going over some of the less fl ashy options that were on the table. Corbett said the general fund — the pot of money that funds services like police, fi re and parks — has shrunk in recent years, and the city could use the stimulus to help shore it up. Additionally, the city had millions of dollars worth of deferred maintenance on city facilities, including critical repairs at the Vert Audito- rium and at the Pendleton Aquatic Center. Councilor Dale Primmer liked the idea of stabilizing the general fund, pointing out that the region’s increas- ingly erratic weather had put Pendleton through multiple emergencies. “We have to sit on some capital to deal with these emerging situations,” he said. Ultimately, the council liked the idea of investing its $1.7 million in tourism, infra- structure and the general fund, but it didn’t commit fi rm dollar amounts to these priorities. LOCAL BRIEFING BMCC sets timeline for presidential search PEN DLETON — If everything goes accord- ing to plan, Blue Mountain Community College will have a new president by July. At a Wednesday, April 7, meeting, the BMCC Board of Education approved a timeline to replace former President Dennis Bailey- Fougnier. Citing his health, Bailey-Fougnier resigned in February after a little less than two years on the job. The board subsequently appointed former Tillamook Bay Community College President Connie Green as the interim president. BMCC is hiring Gold Hill Associates for $29,000 to help conduct the search. Gold Hill, which has conducted presi- dential searches for BMCC in the past, has conducted more than 150 searches for community colleges in 26 states, including work for 11 colleges in Oregon. From April 15 to May 21, Gold Hill will begin their recruitment process as the position is advertised online and in various publica- tions. After a BMCC search committee reviews appli- cations, the committee will hold a fi rst round of inter- views in late May and early June. On June 3, the commit- tee will select fi nalists, who will travel to Pendleton for on-campus interviews from June 7-9. The board is then expected to spend June and July selecting a fi nal candi- date, negotiating a contract and announcing their deci- sion to the public. Jane Hill, the chair of the board, said BMCC designed the process to involve as many diff erent stakeholders as possible. “I feel like this is a robust public process,” she said. Hill said the search committee is sending out a Taylor and a $125,000 fi ne. Munck for permission to John Bartron, retired name the bill after her. On Apr il 12, We s t o n M id d le Bartron watched the School teacher and vote on his laptop athletic director, from Pendleton. As convinced Sen. Bill roll call proceeded, Hansell, R-Athena, to consider sponsor- he watched the lights ing legislation that next to each sena- tor’s name turn green would close the gap between coaches and Munck one by one and soon teachers. Hansell realized the vote was researched the idea and offi - unanimous. cially sponsored the bill along “I was elated and had with Sen. Kathleen Taylor, goose bumps from head to D-Milwaukie. Hansell asked toe,” Bartron said. Pendleton pitched on using stimulus for Western expansion By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian Primus survey to stakeholders asking them what kind of qualities they want to see in the next president. And once fi nalists are chosen, she said BMCC will host a series of public forums so that locals have a chance to give their input. Three seats on the BMCC board are up for election in May, and with board members Heidi Van Kirk and Tony Turner retiring, there will be at least two new members on the board once they take offi ce in July. Although the board will choose a new president around the same time it’s onboarding new members, Hill said she’s confident BMCC’s process will lead to a fair outcome and a smooth transition. — EO Media Group A text from Bailey arrived almost immediately. Three hearts. The teen had watched the vote from Athena while on a break at the Sugar Shack where she works. At first nervous, she started feeling more confident when Sen. Floyd Prozanski, D-Eugene, began speaking in favor of the bill. Prozanski, the chair of the Senate’s judiciary committee, had initially shown doubts during the committee hearing while questioning Umatilla District Attorney Dan Primus about the current law. “When (Prozanski) got up there, I started feeling more confi dent,” Munck said. “The vote was cool to watch. The lights lit up green one by one. I kept waiting for one to be red and there wasn’t.” She returned to work “smiling from ear to ear.” Hansell praised his colleagues for their unani- mous 28-0 vote on Senate Bill 649. Two senators, Sen. Dallas Heard and Sen. Chuck Thomsen, were absent. “This was huge,” Hansell said. “This is a common- sense bill that will protect our kids. Bailey has courageously told her story, now it’s time for us to act so that she can get justice. Those in positions of infl uence over our kids need to be held accountable when they violate their trust. I urge my colleagues in the House to pass this bill.” Hansell said Rep. Bobby Levy, R-Echo, will shepherd the the bill through commit- tee hearings on the House side. Hermiston to take additional time to mull senior housing proposal By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian HERMISTON — Herm- iston city councilors asked for more time to think over a proposal for a new senior living development after the plan was met with opposition from existing assisted living facilities during the council’s Monday, April 12, meeting. Representatives of Guard- ian Angel Homes and Sun Terrace Hermiston told the council they are struggling to fill rooms and staffing positions at their facilities, and questioned why the city would give away land to incentivize building more facilities. “I don’t think there’s a need,” said Matt Frantz, whose family owns Guard- ian Angel Homes. The idea was first presented to the city coun- cil in August 2020, when the council gave staff the green light to put out a request for proposals for a senior living project on a piece of property on Northwest 11th Street. The city purchased the 20-acre parcel, known as the Green Property, in 2005 for $420,000. The plan was to use the property, which is adjacent to the city’s recy- cled water treatment plant, to detour recycled water through the property before returning it to the Umatilla River, in order to lower the water’s temperature fi rst. But tests of the idea didn’t work as well as expected and the idea was abandoned. Assistant City Manager Mark Morgan told the coun- cil that given a number of challenges with the prop- East Oregonian erty, and the fact the city had demolished 5.167 x 7 - color a home and outbuilding after purchas- ing it, it was unlikely the city could recoup its entire investment if it put the land up for auction. If some- one did buy it at auction, he said, they would likely build a single home on it, which would not add much to the tax base. Morgan’s proposal, then, was to give away approxi- mately 8 acres of the prop- erty, on the far side from the treatment plant, to a developer who promised to build some sort of housing for seniors on the property. He calculated that if such a development went in, the city would gain more than $3 million in property taxes and utility revenue over the next 20 years. He said additional senior living would make sure there was space for aging Baby Boomers as they needed it, and allow local professionals with aging relatives needing care to stay in the area. He said the development would also create jobs, both directly and through increased need for services, such as dental care. Any agreement would have a “clawback” clause in which the city could take back the property if the development wasn’t built in the specifi ed time frame or wasn’t used for senior living for at least 25 years. The city put out a request for proposals for such a devel- opment, and a committee of two city councilors, staff and a planning commission member selected a proposal from Paradigm Compass LLC, a partnership between two Oregon investment fi rms that both have a history of building and managing senior living projects in Oregon. One of the recent projects the partnership completed together is Juniper Springs, completed in Redmond in 2018. The 7-acre site includes 60 assisted living units, 24 memory care units and 12 independent living cottages. Pa r a d ig m Compa ss’s proposal for the Hermiston site includes the same mix of units on the same size of property, and would be staff ed by 50 full-time posi- tions. “This was very, very simi- lar to our site,” Morgan said. Christopher Looney, one of the partners in Paradigm Compass, said the company hires a third-party fi rm with expertise in the senior living market to conduct a market study before building any project. The analysis helps the company decide whether the project will be profi table, and is used to acquire the required certifi cate of need from Oregon Department of Human Services. “We did have a market study conducted for Herm- iston. It was conducted in October of last year, and it did show adequate demand in the market,” he said. After councilors had time to listen to all of the presen- tations and comments and to ask questions, Coun- cilor Nancy Peterson said she wanted time to absorb the information and further consider the data shared from both sides about the need for senior living in Hermiston. Other councilors agreed, and voted 6-1 to table the decision to declare 7.18 acres of the Green Property surplus until their April 26 meeting. 4/16-4/22 Cineplex Show Times Theater seating will adhere to social distancing protocols Every showing $7.50 per person (ages 0-3 still free) Voyagers (PG13) 1:40p 4:40p 7:40p Godzilla vs. Kong (PG13) 1:20p 2:00p 4:20p 5:00p 7:20p 8:00p Former PGG Corporate Complex with 41,985± square foot building and excess land Reuse opportunity with retail showroom, offices, service center and warehouse 2± acres of excess land. Potential for business park Raya and the Last Dragon (PG) 1:00p 4:00p 7:00p Nobody (R) 12:40p 3:40p 6:40p wildhorseresort.com • 541-966-1850 Pendleton, OR I-84 - Exit 216 2310 NW Everett St. Suite 250 – Portland, Oregon 97210