COMMUNITY Thursday, June 3, 2021 East Oregonian A7 COMMUNITY BRIEFING Pendleton Pride gets ready for Pride March Pendleton Public Library/Contributed Photo A young library patron climbs in a backhoe during Big Truck Day in 2017 at the Pendleton Public Library. This year’s event is Tuesday, June 8, 1-3 p.m. Pendleton library goes big for summer reading program East Oregonian PENDLETON — The first big summer reading activity at the Pendleton Public Library is Big Truck Day. The free event is Tues- day, June 8, from 1-3 p.m. Children will be able to meet the men and women who drive the big rigs. No registration is required. This year’s Big Truck Day features a backhoe, police and fire apparatuses, lawnmowers of unusual size and a flight simulator. The vehicles will be parked behind the library, but make sure you stop inside for some fun vehicle-related activities. As youths are finishing up school, the Pendleton Public Library is gearing up to start seeing lots of tiny faces making their way through the stacks. Library director Jennifer Costley said each year the library hosts a summer reading program for all ages. This year’s theme is “Reading Colors Your World.” Participants can register online or in person. Each person that turns in a completed reading log will receive a free book of their choosing. In addition, there will be a grand prize drawing for each age group. Costley said thanks to the Knights of Pythias, the library will give out three bicycles for grades 1-3 and a grand prize for kids from birth to kindergarten, as well as teens and adults. For those of you who are not familiar with the motiva- tion behind the summer read- ing program, Costley urges people to consider the follow- ing information: Children who don’t read during the summer can lose up to two months of learn- ing by the time they return to school in the fall. Whereas children who read a mini- mum of six books during the summer, and partici- pate in the summer reading program, score higher in reading and math when they return to school. The Pendleton Public Library is at 502 S.W. Dorion Ave. It’s open Monday through Thursday from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. and Friday/ Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information, call 541-966-0380 or visit www.pendletonlibrary.com. ——— Contact community writer Tammy Malgesini at tmalge- sini@eastoregonian.com or 541-564-4539. PENDLETON — United Pendleton Pride is gearing up to celebrate Pride Month. You ng people who spearheaded the 2020 Pride March started the new local group, said Alice Hepburn, president of PFLAG Pend- leton. Pride parades, marches and gatherings are held to help spread awareness of the LGBTQIA+ commu- nity who have struggled and fought to be accepted for who they are, Hepburn said in a press release. The Pendleton Pride March, titled “Proud Together,” will be Saturday, June 12, beginning with a gathering at noon in the Museum Park parking lot on Southwest Frazer Avenue, Pendleton. A 2 p.m. march will head down Main Street to Brownfield Park. Also during the month of June, there will be an art showcase at various loca- tions. Pendleton Center for the Arts, Tamastslikt Cultural Institute, Pend- leton Art + Frame, Great Pacific Wine & Coffee Co. and Crow’s Shadow Insti- tute of the Arts have agreed to display works of art expressing the experiences of LGBTQIA+ and others who have found it difficult to be heard and understood. Participants are invited to tell their stories through art. For more information, visit www.facebook.com/ up.pride.50 or send an email to pf lag.pendleton.or@ gmail.com. Cemeteries commission adds three members SALEM — A La Grande archaeologist who previ- ously worked with the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reserva- tion was appointed to the Oregon Commission on Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian, File The 2020 Pendleton Pride event drew about 75 participants to the streets of Pendleton to raise awareness and cele- brate the LGBTQ community. This year’s Pendleton Pride March will be Saturday, June 12. Historic Cemeteries. Lisa Sumption, director of Oregon Parks and Recre- ation Department, which houses the Oregon Historic Cemeteries, made Shawn Steinmetz’s appointment last fall and added two addi- tional members in May. Steinmetz said his interest in nondestructive technologies can be employed to docu- ments, preservation and helping interpret historic properties, and can benefit historic cemetery manage- ment. The other appointees are Sarah Baylinson, who fills a vacated Central Oregon position, and Lisa Sears, who will fill the vacated coastal position. Baylinson is the collections manager and exhibits coordinator for the High Desert Museum in Bend. Sears is a gene- alogist and family history researcher who is volunteer- ing in Tillamook County. The new commissioners join Milo Reed, chair, from Port- land; Bev Power, vice-chair, from Medford; Charlotte Lehan from Wilsonville; and Sarah Silbernagel from Pendleton. State law established the seven-member commis- sion to maintain a listing of all historic cemeteries and gravesites in Oregon; promote public education on the significance of historic cemeteries; and help obtain financial and technical assis- tance for restoring, improv- ing, and maintaining their appearances. For more infor- mation, visit www.oregon- heritage.org. For questions, contact coordinator Kuri Gill at 503-986-0685 or kuri. gill@oregon.gov. Library district nixes late charges for overdue items MORROW COUNTY — The board of directors of the Oregon Trail Library District recently voted to adopt a fine-free policy. Patrons no longer will be fined daily for overdue mate- rials. The change, according to a press release from library director Kathy Street, is part of an institutional movement from libraries nationwide, guided by the recommendations of the American Library Associ- ation in an effort to increase free public access to library services. As a special gift to patrons during these chal- lenging times, the Oregon Trail Library District also will erase all past overdue fines for patrons. This does not include past fees for lost or damaged items. Street is very excited for the change. “Many new patrons are afraid to establish an account for fear of costs. Especially families,” she said. Fines should not prevent any member of the commu- nity from accessing services, Street said. Studies in librar- ies that have eliminated fines show there has been no impact on return rates. In fact, it can even increase use of library materials. Only the overdue (late) charges will disappear; lost and damaged charges will remain the patron’s financial responsibility. If a patron orders items from another library and then checks them out at an OTLD branch, they will not be charged overdue fines. If you go to a differ- ent library that still charges fines, and check items out at that location, you will be charged fines for overdue items. Street said the Oregon Trail Library District cannot waive those fines. Going fine free doesn’t mean people don’t have to return books to the library. Items still have a due date and materials need to be returned. Materials can be renewed two times if there are no holds. If an item is not returned, or is returned damaged, patrons still will be charged for lost or damaged items. Many libraries in Oregon have gone fine free already. For more information, contact Street at kstreet@ otld.org or 541-481-3365. Local grads earn distinction at Whitman WALLA WALLA — Salma Anguiano of Herm- iston and Kaitlynne Jensen of Milton-Freewater earned academic distinction for the most recent semester at Whitman College. This recognition is given to students who have completed a minimum of 12 credits and have earned a grade-point average of 3.5 or higher on no fewer than nine graded credits during the semester. — EO Media Group