INSIDE: Hermiston police make arrest in 2015 murder | REGION, A3 WEEKEND EDITION JANUARY 15-16, 2022 146th Year, No.36 $1.50 WINNER OF 16 ONPA AWARDS IN 2021 Cliff Bentz alleges 2020 election was ‘bought’ Bentz also comments on insurrection and school board violence By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian LA GRANDE — Oregon U.S. Rep. Cliff Bentz, R-Ontario, does not believe former President Donald Trump’s claim that President Joe Biden won the 2020 presidential election because of voter fraud. “The election was not stolen, it was bought,’’ Bentz, a fi rst term congressman, said during an appearance Jan. 6. in La Grande. It was one of several state- ments Bentz made during the La Grande event and later expanded on Wednesday, Jan. 12, in an inter- view. ‘It was bought’ Bentz said Democrats had an enormous edge in funding donors with deep pockets, including one who donated $400 million to Biden’s campaign. Bentz said the Democrats spent several times more money per vote than the Republi- cans did. Bentz referenced a large dona- tion made by Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and suggested it benefi ted Biden and Democrats. In September 2020, Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan, person- ally made a $300 million donation to two groups — Center for Tech and Civic Life and the Center for Election Innovation & Research. The money was specifi cally desig- nated to recruit poll workers, supply them with personal protection equipment and set up drive-thru voting. The rest was distributed to state election offi cials throughout the country. According to a press release, the Center for Tech and Civic Life received an additional $100 million from Zuckerberg and Chan in October 2020. Bentz said he based his comments around an October 2021 article from The Federal- ist, a conservative media website, entitled “Zuckerbucks 101: How A Media Mogul Took Over The 2020 Election And Why GOP Leaders Must Never Let It Happen Again.” The article, mostly citing other conservative sources, argues the Center for Tech and Civic Life “corrupted” elections by sending money to election offi ces in Demo- cratic-leaning areas and by facili- tating the mail-in voting process. Referencing the article, Bentz said the nonprofi t was not apoliti- cal because the founders had once worked for an organization with See Bentz, Page A8 Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian A disco ball spins Wednesday, Jan. 12, 2022, in the main hall of the Active Senior Center of Pendleton. The nonprofi t Pendleton Children’s Center took ownership of the building Jan. 10. Finding a home Pendleton Children’s Center acquires the former senior center By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian ENDLETON — A local nonprofi t is looking to turn the Active Senior Center of Pendleton into a facility that serves residents on the other end of the age spectrum. On Monday, Jan. 10, the Pendleton Chil- dren’s Center announced it had acquired the senior center at 510 S.W. 10th St. with the intention of renovating it into a child care facility that will eventually serve 150 or more children between the ages of six weeks and kindergarten-age. Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian See Home, Page A8 The Active Senior Center of Pendleton, 510 S.W. 10th St., is going to be home to the Pendleton Children’s Center. P Hermison’s new schools get ready for fall Projects are part of $82.7 million bond voters passed in 2019 Voters in November 2019 approved an $82.7 million bond measure to pay for projects to address student capacity. The new Rocky Heights and Loma Vista schools are part of the district’s plans to address capacity. Anticipating a grand opening By ERICK PETERSON East Oregonian HERMISTON — Starting this autumn, Hermiston will have two new elementary schools. Trudging around in the muck Wednesday, Jan. 12, at the construc- tion site of the new Rocky Heights Elementary School, Hermiston School District Superintendent Tricia Mooney said she was pleased with its progress. “I am impressed,” she said. This is the fi rst school construc- tion she has overseen, she said, and she is enjoying it. “It’s going up fast, and it’s really looking like a school.” Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Hermiston School District Superintendent Tricia Mooney, left, and Jose Aparicio, a construction manager with the Wenaha Group Inc., walk the site of the new Rocky Heights Elementary School Wednesday, Jan. 12, 2022, in Hermiston. She added she also was happy about the advancement on the Loma Vista Elementary project. She was on the site with Jose ST. ANTHONY HOISPITAL & OREGON HEALTH AUTHORITY NO APPOINTMENT NEEDED. ESTIMATED RESULTS IN 3-5 DAYS Aparicio, Wenaha Group Inc., construction manager, and Jon Fowler, project superintendent with Kirby Nagelhout Construction Co. EVERY WEDNESDAY IN JANURARY 2022 11AM-1PM ST. ANTHONY HOSPITAL 2801 ST ANTHONY WAY - PENDLETON FREE Covid Drive Thru Testing (Self Administered) Mooney, along with the Wenaha and Kirby Nagelhout bosses, said the schools were on schedule to open for classes in the fall. Aparicio said the schools will have the same “feel and layout” as Hermiston’s West Park Elementary School. The two new schools will resemble each other, too, he said. The biggest diff erence between them will be the direction they are facing. The buildings will have four classrooms per grade level — kindergarten through fi fth grade — and four classrooms for additional See Schools, Page A8 SAVE TIME REGISTER ONLINE WWW.DOINEEDACOVID19TEST.COM