REGION Saturday, March 19, 2022 East Oregonian A3 Drone testing becoming more integrated into Pendleton By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian PENDLETON — Pendle- ton’s drone testing program is starting to come off the hill. I n Fe b r u a r y, t h e unmanned aerial systems company Spright announced it was starting a proof-of-con- cept program with Interpath Laboratory and Yellowhawk Tribal Health Center to transport medical tests from Interpath facilities at 2640 S.W. Perkins Ave., Pendle- ton, to Yellowhawk’s clinic in Mission. Spright ran its fi rst test in mid-February, but it was a long time in the making. Pendleton Economic Development Director Steve Chrisman said the origins of Spright in Pendleton can be traced back to a conference sponsored by the Associa- tion for Unmanned Aerial Systems International last year. “It was just kind of fortu- itous, bumping into each other,” he said. Chrisman didn’t bump into the people behind Spright, an Arizona subsid- iary of a medical trans- port company, but instead found himself at the booth for Wingcopter, a German aerospace company that was situated across the way from Pendleton’s booth. Chrisman began chatting with a man from Wingcopter, who told Chrisman the company was working with a customer who specialized in unmanned medical test delivery. Chrisman connected the Spright/Contributed Photo The unmanned aerial systems company Spright in February 2022 tests a proof-of-concept program to transport medical tests from Interpath Laboratory, 2640 S.W. Perkins Ave., Pend- leton, to Yellowhawk Tribal Health Center in Mission. VERIZON STARTS TESTING AT PENDLETON UAS RANGE PENDLETON — The telecom giant Verizon is now one of the Pendleton Unmanned Aerial Systems Range’s newest customers. Verizon Robotics announced on Tuesday, March 15 that it is now running tests at the Pendleton Unmanned Aerial Systems Range. According to a press release, testing at the range will focus on improving their research and development eff orts, which will include training range staff in how to use a mobile command vehicle to communicate with its drones. “The operations we are deploying at Pendle- ton Range will help advance R&D initiatives for customers,” Verizon Robotics President Mariah dots between Interpath’s presence in Pendleton and Spright, which eventu- ally led to Spright renting a hangar from the Pendleton UAS Range. Scott said in a statement.“The range’s location helps create a local innovation testbed that can emulate real-life conditions, helping to bring products and services to market faster.” In the press release, Verizon touted its eff orts at developing UAS software that will help integrate drones into the national airspace, which is the main reason the Federal Aviation Administration designated Pendleton and other communities around the country as designated test sites. Verizon is just the latest large corporation to take an interest in Pendleton. Amazon recently confi rmed that it was testing drones at the range. In an email, Justin Steinke, Spright’s vice presi- dent of operations, explained what drew the company to Pendleton. While Spright’s unmanned vehicles are undergoing the Federal Avia- tion Administration certifi - cation process, Steinke said Interpath and Pendleton off ered the right conditions for it to test its product. “Interpath Laboratory is located inside the current test range, which allows us to accelerate the testing of the aircraft and the business case,” he wrote. “Having usable airspace to test and validate our operations in Pendleton is enabling Spright to accelerate the development of our solutions and more rapidly help people around the globe. Most importantly, Spright intends to continue to operate with Interpath after the testing phase is complete, making it an innovative win for the community of Pend- leton.” Steinke said Spright intends to test for the next six to nine months in locations around Pendleton before making its product fully available next year. Inter path CEO Tom Kennedy did not return a request for comment, but in a press release, he explained why the lab testing company would be interested in invest- ing in drones. “Medical laborator y services in rural areas frequently must invest inten- sive time and resources into sample pick-up,” Kennedy said in a statement. “We anticipate Spright’s drone delivery service will alleviate many of the drawbacks and costs associated with auto- mobile-based delivery. This initiative represents an exam- ple of our embrace of inno- vative solutions that provide more effi cient and eff ective services to our clients.” Yellowhawk became the third partner in the group through Interpath, which processes the medical tests conducted at the Mission clinic. Yellowhawk CEO Aaron Hines said the medical center was attracted to the test program because it could mean faster test results for their patients. As it stands now, an Interpath vehicle picks up tests at Yellow- hawk once per day. But if UAS took over test delivery, Yellowhawk could deliver and receive tests multiple times per day, meaning their patients could be treated more quickly. While Hines likes the idea, he said he would want to study a drone delivery system for a longer period of time before moving forward with it. He said he wants to know how test specimens might be aff ected should one of the drones fail and crash. And while drones might be more effi cient, conventional vehicular transportation has a much longer track record. To Chrisman, Spright’s partnership with two well- known local entities is evidence UAS are closer to integrating into people’s everyday lives. In UAS range’s earlier times, drone companies tended to conduct most of their testing at the Pendleton airport or in a secluded area far from public view. While many operations at the drone company still are opaque, Verizon and Amazon have recently confi rmed, or even announced, their presence in Pendleton. BMCC president orders ‘full institutional review’ become more candid and have included feedback that the college doesn’t always PENDLETON — In the feel like a welcoming envi- wake of negative feedback ronment. from students and with But student sentiments budget cuts on the horizon, aren’t the only reason Blue Mountain Commu- Browning wants a review. nity College President Mark With enrollment continu- Browning is planning a “full ing to erode, Blue Moun- institutional review” of the tain expects to make more college. budget cuts following two Browning made previous rounds of his announcement staff reductions. in a March 2 presi- While BMCC dent’s report to the gets audited each BMCC Board of year like every other Education. public agency in the “We need to hear state, Browning said from those who we the review will take strive to serve that Browning a wider look at the school’s operations in some ways, we are not meeting our own and programs and provide standards, we are not deliv- recommendations on how ering on our promise to be to improve them. Browning Students First,” he wrote. said all of these measures “This is a stark wake up are taken with the idea of call. We must do better. And setting BMCC back on the improvement starts with the path of growth. difficult work of internal “We can make budget examination and review, adjustments so that we each of us individually, as balance our budget, but we departments, as buildings, have to make sure we are as a campus.” making those adjustments Since starting in the such that we have resources position last year, Brown- available to be proactive and ing said he’s been speak- grow versus just hanging ing with students to gauge on,” he said. ”I’m not inter- their thoughts on the college ested in hanging on. I’m and its staff . As time went interested in growing and on their comments have being vital and thriving.” By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian MonteVista Homes/Contributed Image The Hermiston City Council, in its role as the Hermiston Urban Renewal Agency, during its meeting Monday, March 14, 2022, approved a resolution directing staff to prepare a plan for a new urban renewal district along Feedville Road to develop The Hayfi elds, a development that would add more than 1,300 homes to Hermiston. Hayfi eld development could bring Hermiston more homes By ERICK PETERSON East Oregonian HERMISTON — The Hayf ields development would add more than 1,300 homes to Hermiston. The 353-acre site is in the city limits near the inter- section of Highway 207 and Feedville Road with Community Park to the east. The Hermiston Urban Renewal Agency — which also is the Hermiston City Council — during its meet- ing Monday, March 14, approved a resolution direct- ing staff to prepare a plan for a new urban renewal district along Feedville Road. The move came after presentation from Monte- Vista Homes. Luke Pickerill, MonteVista Homes owner, said this is a major step for the city. “At full buildout, we will have 1,300 housing units, which represents about 15% of the total population in today’s numbers of the city of Hermiston,” he said. He d e s c r i b e d T he Hayfields as a “master planned community,” which means that it is “designed to off er the very best in home life, from the design of open spaces and the architectural fi t within the city to environ- mentally-friendly technology and sophisticated amenities.” These are “not like old neighborhoods where houses popped up here and there with less or no regard for the overall community design,” his presentation slide stated. Instead, the MPC provides amenities such as parks and gathering spaces for the enjoyment of the neighbor- hood and the city. Pickerill gave the coun- cil some history of the area. Around 20 years ago, the land was annexed into Hermiston, he said. Plans at the time were to develop the property into a golf course community. This plan hit a snag during the Great Reces- sion of 2008. Nearly a decade after the recession, Pickerill said, landowners attempted to start a new housing devel- opment, but they lacked the infrastructure and available services. “They found it wasn’t possible without a public/ private partnership,” he said. Between 2017 and 2021, landowners and the city of Hermiston explored several options to make the best possible use out of the site. They sought to use this land to help address Hermiston’s housing supply problems, Pickerill said. “In early 2021, I was intro- duced to the landowners,” he said. MonteVista and the land- owners worked together to create a master plan for the community, which they would call The Hayfi elds. Getting into the details of the plan, Pickerill said the housing units would consist of single family detached housing, single family work- force housing, apartment sites, a senior manufactured facility and commercial sites, he said. School and fi re sites also are part of the plan, as shown on a layout Pickerill presented. “Our community will unlock the value of this land,” Pickerill said. “It will also elevate Hermiston to a new position in the region.” After his presentation and discussion, the city coun- cil voted unanimously to approve the resolution autho- rizing staff to begin an urban renewal planning eff ort and get the ball rolling on The Hayfi elds. Although Browning said the college is planning on moving forward with the review, it’s still in the early stages. He said the review will be conducted by a third party and he’s already talking with a few potential companies about taking on the task. He doesn’t yet have a timeline for when the review will begin and end, and whether it will be completed by the time the college approves a budget for the next fi scal year. While the review comes at a tough time for the college, Browning still struck an optimistic tone about the future of BMCC. “I don’t want to paint a picture that everything is doom and gloom, because it’s certainly not that,” he said. “We’re doing a number of really good things. We’re going to be coming up here in a couple of months on a time of graduation, where students are going to be walking across the stage, getting their degree and certifi cate, and they’re gonna have a whole new world out in front of them. 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