INSIDE: Hermiston police arrest man for murder | PAGE A3 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 2021 146th Year, No. 26 WINNER OF 16 ONPA AWARDS IN 2021 $1.50 BACK TO THE FUTURE 2022 brings another pandemic New Year By GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau COLD TEMPERATURES TURN EASTERN OREGON RAIN INTO Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Andrew Taylor-Beaver, 12, sleds down the hill in Aldrich Park on Monday, Dec. 20, 2021, as a fresh snow blanketed Pendleton. SNOW By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian UMATILLA COUNTY — Just a day before the calendar recognizes the fi rst day of winter, many communities in Eastern Oregon saw their fi rst signifi cant snowstorm of the cold weather season. Cold temperatures turned rain into snow Sunday night, Dec. 20, and the snow continued into the morning of Dec. 21. The National Weather Service issued a winter weather advisory through 3 p.m. that day. Every region of Umatilla County saw signifi cant snow- fall through the morning. Joe Solomon, a meteorologist with the weather service, said Pendle- ton received 1-3 inches of snow, Hermiston 2-5 inches and the Milton-Freewater and Walla Walla areas about 2 inches of snow. Solomon explained what factors turned a standard rain storm into something much icier. “There was a stalled cold front that runs across northern Oregon to southern Washington with a steady stream of mois- ture moving along that front,” he said. “Cold air north of that front has been slowly fi ltering in all the way down into north-central Oregon.” Most area schools already started their winter break, giving students some snow to play with on their fi rst offi cial day off . The Pendleton School District wasn’t set to break for the holiday season until Dec. 22, but the district canceled school the morning of Dec. 20. Blue Mountain Commu- nity College eventually joined its K-12 peers in canceling in-person classes on all of its campuses. Snow and ice also can wreak havoc on local infrastructure, and it took a brief toll on Herm- SALEM — A rapidly spread- ing deadly virus. Record-breaking fi res. Acrid smoke from the Pacifi c to Pendleton. A riot in the Capitol. As 2020 came to a welcome close a year ago, an exhausted Oregon public had hope for the New Year. The worst of the COVID-19 pandemic seemed over with the arrival of vaccines. The Labor Day fi res were gone, and the smoke that gave the state the worst air in the world some days was gone. Protes- tors who fought with police in the Capitol in Salem were gone with the end of the special session. Soon, 2020 would be in the rear view mirror. An optimistic joke that the worst had passed was that “Hind- sight is 2020.” But as 2021 in Oregon winds down, it feels like a sequel of the highly unpopular horror classic, 2020 in Oregon. Dark humor dominates — the wordplay now is turned into rueful wordplay that 2021 is actually spelled as “2020 Won.” Now the question is if we are going to have a trilogy. In announcing a sixth wave in two years of COVID-19 would arrive around Jan. 1, Gov. Kate Brown noted another year of COVID-19 wasn’t on anyone’s wish list. “I know that bracing for a new variant as we head into our second pandemic holiday season is not what we all hoped for,” Brown said. Many of the catastrophes that marked 2020 as no one’s favorite year were back in 2021. COVID-19 deaths start to ebb Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Vehicles on Monday, Dec. 20, 2021, navigate a snowy Main Street in Pendleton after the fi rst signifi cant snowfall of the season. iston electric customers. In an email, Steve Meyers, the member services administrator for the Umatilla Electric Cooperative, wrote that accumulated snow caused a tree limb to fall into a power line, cutting off power to 987 UEC and Hermiston Energy Services customers for about an hour during the morning. Snowstorms also mean road closures on Interstate 84 and other state roads, just as resi- dents begin traveling to visit friends and family for the holi- day season. The westbound lanes on Interstate 84 were briefly closed between mileposts 193 and 374, and Oregon Department of Transportation spokesperson Tom Strandberg said he expects more in the coming days. See Snow, Page A9 Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Snow covers the Let ’Er Buck sign near the Pendleton Round-Up Grounds on Monday, Dec. 20, 2021, in Pendleton. The National Weath- er Service in Pendleton forecasts another weather system coming this week that should bring snow and rain to lower elevations. The vaccines set off a mass scramble for appointments, with most people told they might have to wait until mid-summer for inoc- ulation. Then demand fell off a cliff . Bottles of Pfi zer and Moderna vaccine with fewer and fewer arms to put them in. From a high of 50,000 shots in April, demand in Oregon shrank to less than a tenth of that on days in June. Vaccination became another political wedge issue. A riot at the U.S. Capitol showed the fragility of peaceful democracy. The fi res were back — earlier and more remote this year — but burning miles of scars in the land and cost- ing millions of dollars to contain. The smoke choked not just Oregon but jet streams shared it with places as far as Boston. This year added a grim stretch of record-frying heat on June 28. It hit 116 degrees in Port- land. Salem was 117. Temperatures more familiar to Death Valley than the Willamette Valley. See 2022, Page A9 Demand for holiday decorations increases at secondhand stores By ALEX WITTWER AND ERICK PETERSON EO Media Group HERMISTON — Locals deco- rating for Christmas are finding more of what they need this year at of secondhand stores. Local thrift stores are seeing an uptick in Christmas shoppers, espe- cially new ones, as supply chain issues dim prospects for artifi cial trees, decorations and lighting at big box retail stores. Over at the Hermiston Goodwill store on Monday, Dec. 20, there was a small inventory of Christ- mas decorations. Some of the goods were mixed in with other items — a wreath, for example, sat between a weed wacker and an empty golf club bag. Also, ornaments, stockings, plastic holly and more were orga- nized on shelves and in bins. Seven artifi cial trees stood near the door. Standing behind a register, a Goodwill employee said the store has been busy selling such items. Over at The Salvation Army Store & Donation Center, Pendleton, a volunteer picked up the phone to say the same thing. It is busy, she said, and the store seemed to have fewer Christmas decorations than in years past. Open Dec. 18 and 19, the Outreach Thrift Store is closed throughout the remainder of the year. However, Carolyn Clemons, a store director, said she had been carrying Christmas decorations. “We’ve had everything from trees to ornaments, Santas, snow- men and more,” she said. See Stores, Page A9 Alex Wittwer/EO Media Group Angi Train looks through Christmas decorations at the People Helping Peo- ple secondhand store in La Grande on Friday, Dec. 17, 2021. Thrift stores have seen an increase in customers as supply chain issues hamper large chain re- tailers’ stock of Christmas goods.