REGION Thursday, March 10, 2022 East Oregonian A3 Armand Larive students earn national recognition for TV program By ERICK PETERSON East Oregonian HERMISTON — On the afternoon of March 1, a middle school teacher and a handful of students busied themselves with the produc- tion of a TV broadcast. They set up lights, turned on a teleprompter and took to their spots. When every- one, and everything, was ready, a young producer cued her anchors, and they began presenting the news. “Good morning, Bull- pups,” one student anchor announced. Thus, Armand Larive Television, the student-cre- ated program of Armand Larive Middle School, Herm- iston, started another show. ALTV produces and broadcasts morning student announcements, which it transmits to all of the school’s students in their classrooms. On occasion, ALTV lives- treams Bullpup sporting events. The students also create a monthly storytelling show in which they interview interesting people and present these interviews as in-depth stories. “You can call it a middle- school version of ‘60 Minutes,’” Rob Doherty, Armand broadcasting advi- sor and teacher, said of the storytelling programs. Recently, ALTV did more than present the news; it became the news. The Student Television Network Conven- tion awarded ALTV with second place in the Broadcast Excellence competition for a Christmas program. The episode included stories on Christmas spirit, women in science and foster parents who are making a difference. “This is a big deal,” Doherty said of the placing. ALTV’s history began in 1997, starting as a school Erick Peterson/East Oregonian Armand Larive Middle School students and their instructor begin a broadcast recording March 1, 2022. The class recently won national recognition for one of its shows. Erick Peterson/East Oregonian Armand Larive Television broadcasters pose with their re- cent award March 1, 2022. Back row from left: Juliette Goyer Rondon, Sofia Rodriguez, Aspyn Inners and Naima Velasco. Front row from left Jaideny Orozco and Matea Sepulveda. club that created weekly announcements for students. It has undergone changes since, growing in recent years. Doherty is the broad- casting advisor and teacher and said the second-place victory was the highest plac- ing ever for ALTV. He said he has more than 150 students a day involved in the program. These students rotate in and out to study and practice jour- nalism, the advisor said. In addition to adding students, ALTV has accu- mulated technology. Doherty said in 2012, ALTV only had one camera. Now, it has 12, as well as additional other equipment — microphones and a formal setup for our show. The shows, dating to 2012, are available to watch on the ALTV website, altv.us. Doherty expressed pride in his students, who not only created an award-winning product; they did it on their own. “I didn’t help the students put that show together,” Doherty said of the particu- lar program that won second place. “They did it entirely by themselves.” He added their achieve- ment was made even better because of the strength of the competition. ALTV’s contest entry placed second to a larger California school with greater resources. Six students, a mix of sixth through eighth grad- ers, discussed their work, the award and their feelings following their recent accom- plishment. One of the broadcasters present was Aspyn Inners, 12. An anchor on the program, she said she has strong feel- ings for broadcasting. She first got involved because of a friend who also was in it. She started taking the classes, she said, and then “fell in love” with the program and the field. Now, she said, her work is about more than an oppor- tunity to spend time with friends and is more mean- ingful than winning awards. “I think (journalism) is about telling a story and putting it in front of people for them to see,” she said. She added she feels a great responsibility to do this work and make sure she is telling stories truthfully. The friend who intro- duced her to the class was Sofia Rodriguez, also 12. She anchored the Christmas program with Aspyn. Sofia said, though, that anchor- ing is not a full-time job for anyone. Students, she said, rotate through several differ- ent positions, which teaches them about different aspects of creating a show. She did admit to having a favorite position. “I love anchoring,” she said. She stated she would like to be an anchor as a career. It was especially exciting for her that ALTV won an award for a program, she said, because she helped anchor it. “I was super stoked about it,” Sofia said of the victory. Sharing her classmates’ excitement for journalism, Matea Sepulveda, 14, spoke of the stories she has been able to create with ALTV. “I’ve done a ton of stories about important topics, like lockdowns and wearing masks at school and how people feel about it,” she said. She added that ALTV is a “really fun place to be” and that she is very fond of her teacher and classmates. Juliette Goyer Rondon, 12, also said she is enjoying herself and learning a great deal. “I’ve learned how to take good shots, lighting, volume and stuff like that,” she said. The technical part of the job is gratifying, she said, but her focus remains on telling important stories. She said she likes to find important topics and spread awareness of them to others. Jaideny Orozco, 11, expressed her own feelings about what she has learned. “I’ve learned a lot — like how we should respect other people, but also how to shoot videos and edit on other soft- ware apps.” Jaideny, a relat ive newcomer to the ALTV, said she is enjoying the company of older classmates. Naima Velasco, 14, for instance, has been in the broadcasting program for more than three years. Naima said her work has changed during the past few years. Her school was closed for much of the pandemic, so she had to be more indepen- dent. She filmed with a small Chromebook, which she also used for editing. “It was a complex process,” she said. She added the whole world became more complex during the past few years, and this is one reason she finds journal- ism exciting. “Personally, I like to focus on stories outside of school,” she said. “I get to thinking about what we haven’t heard of yet, what is going on and what people want to hear about in our community.” Pendleton looking to soften blow of utility hikes Shooting in Hermiston some of the rate increases. sends teen to hospital Cou ncilor McKen non By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian PENDLETON — Utility rate hikes likely are coming to Pendleton residents, but it’s still not expected to be enough to cover the increased costs of maintain- ing the municipal water and sewer system. The city council typi- cally avoids voting on issues at workshops, such as the one it met for on Tues- day, March 8, but Public Works Director Bob Patter- son said he wanted to start talks around the subject so the council could vote on it at its April 5 meeting. Pat terson said t he consumer price index the city uses to determine the cost of maintaining Pend- leton’s drinking water and sewer systems is rising more than 6.5%. “The supply chain is killing us,” he said in an interview before the meet- ing, pointing out the costs of materials for water and sewer lines and other util- ity infrastructure has risen rapidly in recent months. Patterson said city staff are aware other utilities, including electricity and trash disposal, also are likely to rise in the coming months. In light of the economic situ- ation, Patterson said staff was recommending a 3.34% rate increase, about half of the 6.67% cost growth reflected in the price index. But even if the council adopted the entire 6.67%, Patterson and staff said it Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian, File Treated water flows along a channel Dec. 19, 2019, at Pend- leton’s wastewater treatment plant before being piped to the Umatilla River. The Pendleton City Council at its upcom- ing meeting on April 5, 2022, could vote on increasing city utility rates. wouldn’t cover the increased expense of running the city’s utility systems. While staff recommended softening the blow of utility increases this year, Patterson said he would like to return to the council in a year to look at the rate of inflation and consider whether the city can maintain the status quo or raise utility rates again. While the council didn’t take any action on Patterson’s recommendation, members seemed to like the plan. Noting how much the costs of other utilities and goods were rising, Councilor Dale Primmer said he was concerned about how residents with fixed incomes might be affected by the city’s utility increases. “It’s death by a thousand paper cuts with people on fixed incomes,” he said. Several councilors noted the city would need to be proactive about telling resi- dents the city was eating McDonald said she wanted city staff to create a mock water bill so councilors clearly could show how the rate increases would affect everyday customers. “We better communicate that well, if that’s what we decide,” Innes said. While the council is set to meet once more in March, Patterson said he intended to officially request the rate increases at the council’s April 5 meeting. From 2015-20, the city increased water and sewer rates 10.5% per year to secure a pair of massive state loans that helped the city replace its aging under- ground utility infrastruc- ture. From then on, the city tied rate increases to the price index, which had been averaging about 3% per year until recently. Even with all the rate increases, a 2019 study the city conducted showed Pendleton was in the middle of the pack when it came to utility rates compared to other cities in the North- west. The city of Hermis- ton’s utility rates were in the same ballpark as Pend- leton’s. Hermiston Assis- tant City Manager Mark Morgan said at the time he wasn’t sure how much these studies helped with public perception. “If something’s too expensive, it’s too expen- sive,” he said. “It doesn’t matter what the other person is paying.” LOCAL BRIEFING Death of defendant ends prosecution of sex crimes case PENDLETON — The death of a Pendleton man also brought an end to the sex crimes case against him. Richard James Sheldon, 75, died Monday, March 7, according to the Umatilla County Sheriff’s Office. Sheriff’s Capt. Sterrin Ward said the sheriff’s office received request to check on Sheldon, whose jury trial was to begin March 9 at the Umatilla County Court- house, Pendleton. A sher- iff’s sergeant found Sheldon in the area of Barnhart and Airport roads, Pendle- ton, and he had died from a self-inf licted gunshot wound. Pendleton police in February 2020 began inves- tigating Sheldon on sexual abuse allegations and arrested him April 1, 2021. Police in a press release at the time described the investigation as “protracted and complex.” Detectives obtained several search warrants that ultimately “revealed that the alleged sexual abuse occurred over a several year period between 2017 to 2020,” according to the press release. The Umatilla County District Attorney’s Office subsequently charged Shel- don with 19 counts of sex crimes, including two counts of first-degree sexual abuse. State court records also show the court on April 2 set Sheldon’s bail at $500,000. He paid 10% — $50,000 — to bail out on May 7. Circuit Judge Christo- pher Brauer dismissed the case the day Sheldon died. — EO Media Group East Oregonian HERMISTON — Herm- iston police are investigating a shooting Monday, March 7, that put three rounds into an unmarked police vehicle and sent a teen to the hospital. Hermiston Police Chief Jason Edmiston in a press release also reported his department asked the middle schools and high school go into a secure room protocol during the incident. Her miston police at about 1:30 p.m. responded to the area of West Madrona Avenue and Northwest 13th Street on a report of gunshots. According to the press release, an on-duty detective in an unmarked police vehicle was in the area on an unrelated matter and called in the gunfire. “As the detective followed one of the involved vehicles to call out the description and direction of travel for patrol officers, he began receiving fire from an unknown loca- tion,” Edmitson reported. The detective observed a second vehicle and reported its description. Accord- ing to the press release, the detective’s vehicle sustained damage from three rounds but the detective was unharmed. After receiving the vehicle descriptions, officers located a red Nissan Altima on the 1000 block of West Orchard Avenue. Police stopped the car, detained the driver, who was 17, and took the person to the Hermiston Police Depart- ment for questioning. Police seized the car pursuant to the execution of a search warrant, according to the press release, which did not reveal any more informa- tion about the identity of the driver. Officers learned a person with a gunshot wound to the leg was dropped off at Good Shepherd Medical Center, Hermiston. According to the press release, police ques- tioned the “uncooperative 18-year old from Umatilla” who did not suffer life-threat- ening injuries. “This investigation is ongoing,” according to Edmiston, “however it appears to be an isolated inci- dent revolving around a fight that escalated.” The police chief also explained the request to have some local schools use secure room protocol “was not instantaneous as we were trying to assess exactly what we had (to include whether our officer was injured or not) while dispatch was receiving numerous addi- tional calls regarding the unidentified vehicle speeding around town. The elemen- tary schools were released as normal, 40 minutes before this incident began.” This is at least the third shooting in Eastern Oregon involving teens since March 4. The Grant County Sher- iff’s Office arrested a 16-year- old male in Prairie City after a teen girl suffered a gunshot to the face and suffered significant trauma to her head. And Manuel Adam Peralez Jr., 19, of Walla Walla, faces a murder charge stemming from a shooting March 5 in Milton-Freewater that killed Jason Samuel Warner, 18, of Milton-Freewater. 3/11-3/17 Cineplex Show Times Theater seating will adhere to social distancing protocols Every showing $7.50 per person (ages 0-3 still free) Licorice Pizza (R) 6:30p Extra 1:00p show 3/11-3/17 Studio 666 (R) 4:00p 9:30p The Batman (PG13) 3:00p 4:40p 7:00p 8:30p extra 12:50p show 3/11-3/17 Uncharted (PG13) 3:50p 6:40p 9:20p extra 1:10p show 3/11-3/17 Dog (PG13) 3:40p 6:20p 9:00p extra 1:20p show 3/11-3/17 wildhorseresort.com • 541-966-1850 Pendleton, OR I-84 - Exit 216