REGION Thursday, January 13, 2022 East Oregonian Dancer plans performance to honor police LOCAL BRIEFING By ERICK PETERSON East Oregonian Copeland retires from BMLT HERMISTON — Dancer Breaeh Rios, 10, of Hermis- ton, is looking forward to paying tribute to Anthony Dia, an Ohio officer who was killed on the job. Breaeh will dance to honor Dia and other offi cers at upcoming contests. Her fi rst competition is March 18-20 at Sheer Elite in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. A Highland Hills Elementary student, Breaeh said she feels a little nervous about her upcoming performance, where she has planned a contemporary solo dance, as well as jazz, lyrical and hip-hop performances. “I’ve only done one solo, and that was last year,” she said. Still, she said, her last performance earned her plat- inum honors in Tacoma, so she feels confi dent she will do well in the upcoming contest. She said she is prepar- ing with a lot of practice and stretching. As part of her practice, she will see a chore- ographer in Texas. WALLA WALLA — Tim Copeland, executive director of the Blue Mountain Land Trust, is retiring. BMLT announced the news in a press release Tues- day, Jan. 11. Copeland joined the trust as its executive director in November 2014. During his tenure, BMLT tripled its geographic service area in southeastern Washington and Northeastern Oregon to become one of the largest regional land trusts in the Pacifi c Northwest, accord- ing to the press release, and expanded its natural resources education and outdoor recreation activities. BMLT’s conservation easement holdings increased from 866 acres to 13,659 acres with an additional 9,500 acres projected to close in early 2022. In 2021, the BMLT also acquired its fi rst owned property, Phipps Meadow, a 278-acre parcel of environmental signifi- cance on the Middle Fork of the John Day River. Thousands of guests each year, even during the pandemic, have attended or viewed the trust’s education programs, including Learn- ing on the Land and Learn- ing on the Land Online. The Blues Crew also has been successful in its contri- butions to recreation oppor- tunities in the Umatilla National Forest, includ- ing the restoration of the Horseshoe Prairie Nordic Ski Area, the press release stated. Copeland will continue to serve as a director of the Washington Association of Land Trusts and the Oregon Agricultural Trust. He is the immediate past president of the Washington Associ- ation of Land Trusts. Cope- land also will be involved in the transition of leadership through the fi rst quarter of 2022. Board member Greg Brown assumes the role of Dance history and ambitions Breaeh said she has been dancing and competing since she was 3 years old. “I started dance because my mom stuck me in it,” she said. Though her mom is not a dancer, they dance together and have enjoyed making videos, she said. In addition, they have watched many videos on TikTok. Throughout her years of performance, Breaeh has visited various cities throughout Oregon, Idaho and Washington, she said, and has received awards with her dance groups. She dances with Dance Unlimited, a Hermiston school. There, she said, she enjoys working with her coaches. She added they work well together to Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Breaeh Rios, 10, left, talks with members of the Umatilla County Sheriff ’s Offi ce and Herm- iston Police Department on Saturday, Jan. 8, 2022, at the Staff ord Hansell Government Center in Hermiston. Breaeh, a competitive dancer, will be performing a law enforcement tribute dance at a set of upcoming competitions in remembrance of fallen Toledo, Ohio, police offi cer Anthony Dia. meet her goals. “I want to become a professional dancer and go to Juilliard,” she said. Breaeh credited The Juilliard School for being a premier performing arts school that will require “lots of dedication” from her if she is to attend. In addition, her ambitions include learning choreogra- phy, something she said she will eventually study. Forthcoming performances The daughter and grand- daughter of men in law enforcement, Breaeh said police are important to her. She was particularly touched by the death of Dia, whom she calls a hero. He stands out, she said, because of his fi nal radio call before his death in which he told a dispatcher he loved his family. Her upcoming solo performances, which she has dedicated to Dia and other police offi cers, are especially meaningful to her. Dia, she said, was 26 years old and a father of two children. “It touched my heart specially, because I feel Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Hermiston dancer Breaeh Rios, age 10, fourth from right, poses alongside members of the Umatilla County Sher- iff ’s Offi ce and Hermiston Police Department on Saturday, Jan. 8, 2022, at the Staff ord Hansell Government Center in Hermiston. police don’t get support much,” she said. Breaeh’s mother, Kelley Rios, supports her daughter. “I am incredibly proud of Breaeh for doing this trib- ute dance at competition and doing what she feels is right despite the outcome,” Rios said. But she expressed concern that people will respond negatively to a performance in support of police. “We placed platinum in Tacoma last year,” she said, “and Breaeh knows she may not place this year simply because of what she is doing and how the judges perceive it.” After Coeur d’Alene, Breaeh has performances April 8-10 at Spotlight in Portland, April 22-23 at Team Dance in Richland, Wash- ington, May 13-15 at Show- stopper in Tacoma and June 28-July 2 at Nationals/Team Dance in Nampa, Idaho. interim executive director pending the recruitment of a new executive. Four locals up for state boards, commissions SALEM — Gov. Kate Brown submitted a list of state board and commission appointments to the Oregon Senate for confi rmation, and four locals are up for consid- eration. Brown selected two Umatilla County residents and one Morrow County resi- dent for fi rst-time appoint- ments: Sandra Sampson, treasurer of the Confeder- ated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation Board of Trustees, for the Health Policy Board; Greg Clouser of Umatilla to serve on the Public Employees’ Benefi t Board; and Morrow County Commissioner Jim Doherty to serve on the Energy Facil- ity Siting Council. Sampson would fi nish out a four-year term that expires Dec. 31. Clouser and Doherty would serve four-year terms that end in 2026. The fourth selection is a reappointment — Eric Quaempts, CTUIR director of Natural Resources, to the Water Resources Commis- sion for a four-year term that ends in 2025. “I am committed to ensuring that all boards and commissions represent the growing age, racial, and gender diversity of our state,” Brown said in a press release. “Our policies, programs, and initiatives are stronger when diverse perspectives have been at the table, helping to craft them. I appreciate the willingness of all these nomi- nees to help us build a safe, strong, just and equitable Oregon for all.” T he Se n a t e Ru le s Committee is scheduled to consider the nominations in February. — EO Media Group HEALTH NOTIFICATION! Are You Hard of Hearing? A major name brand hearing aid provider wishes to field test a remarkable new digital hearing instrument in the area. This offer is free of charge and you are under no obligation. 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