REGION Thursday, March 24, 2022 East Oregonian A3 More than $1.5M in federal funds headed to Oregon East Oregonian WASHINGTON, D.C. — Oregon’s U.S. Sens. Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden on Tuesday, March 22, announced more than $1.5 million in Federal Emergency Management Agency funds is headed to Oregon to help fund the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation acquisition of fi ve properties in the fl oodplain. “I saw fi rsthand how the fl ood in February 2020 was devastating to the Confeder- ated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation and other residents in Umatilla County,” Merkley said in a press release. “I am pleased that CTUIR will now have the funding needed to safely remove structures that were damaged beyond repair by East Oregonian, File A property along Cayuse Road in rural Umatilla County is inaccessible Feb. 9, 2020, as fl ood- waters had yet to subside. The Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation is re- ceiving more than $1.5 million in federal funds to help with the acquisition of fi ve properties in the fl oodplain. Giving senior center new purpose By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian PENDLETON — A demo- lition team worked quickly this week on the interior of Pendleton’s former senior center in preparation for its metamorphosis into a chil- dren’s center, as child care director Brittney Jackson and architect Mark Seder looked on. Down came the ceiling tiles, the framework that held them in place and the old insulation. Gone was a wall between two small rooms to create a larger preschool room. If all goes to plan, the Pendleton Children’s Center at 510 S.W. 10th St. will open in September for preschool- age children. Fundrais- ing will continue to pay for Kathy Aney/East Oregonian Nicolas Altamirano, of Pursuit Construction of Salem, re- moves a framework that once held ceiling panels in place on Tuesday, March 22, 2022, at the former Pendleton senior center, 510 S.W. 10th St., site of the future Pendleton Chil- dren’s Center. further renovations, includ- ing a new playground. Kathryn Brown, secre- tary-treasurer of the nonprof- it’s board, said the group received $98,000 in local donations since the board formed in 2019. In addi- tion, grants from the Oregon Community Foundation, the Niemeyer Foundation and the Walmart Foundation total $260,785. The senior center building, worth $300,000 also came as a donation. Biggest donors include $20,000 from Hill Meat Co., $20,000 from Rodney Parker of Pioneer Title, $10,000 from an anonymous medical prac- tice and $10,000 from CHI St. Anthony Hospital. “Our second phase will be to acquire the adjacent building and to renovate the top fl oor,” Brown said, “so that we can expand our child care center to have capacity for 150 infants, toddlers and preschoolers.” ——— Editor’s Note: Kathryn Brown is the vice president of the EO Media Group, the parent company of the East Oregonian. Burning weed pile ignites garage Kathy Aney/East Oregonian the raging fl oodwaters. This clean-up is an important step in the tribe’s remarkable eff orts to restore fl oodplains and protect water quality. I look forward to continuing to work with Oregon’s sover- eign tribal nations to ensure they have the resources their communities need to thrive.” “The impact of the Febru- ary 2020 floods in Eastern Oregon was painfully clear in the faces of the community I met with at the Red Cross shel- ter and the emergency oper- ations center,” Wyden said in the release. “The destruc- tion landed especially hard on the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reser- vation. And I’m glad to have teamed up with tribal offi cials to secure these federal emer- gency funds for this cleanup and property acquisitions that are essential steps in the road to economic recovery.” The grant comes to a total of $1,524,951.53 to help fund the acquisition of every struc- ture on five properties in the fl oodplain as well as the required assessments, studies and environmental historic preservation review necessary to demolish and/or restore the properties in the fl oodplain. “This will help Umatilla Indian Reservation residents recover from the February 2020 flood of the Umatilla River that was so devastat- ing to so many homes and so much property,” said Kat Brigham, chair of the Board of Trustees of the Confeder- ated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. We are extremely grateful to Senator Merkley and Senator Wyden for their support.” Pendleton company gets federal help with power storage studies By JOHN TILLMAN East Oregonian PENDLETON — A new Pendleton-based energy company is receiving federal assistance on electrical power storage. Coyote Steals Fire Energy Group of Pendleton fi led its articles of incorporation with the state in July 2021. The U.S. Department of Energy on March 15 announced Coyote Steals Fire was one of 14 organizations nationwide to successfully apply for such aid under the Energy Storage for Social Equity Initiative. Patrick Mills, project manager at CSF Energy Group, said staff at U.S. national laboratories will provide the company with technical assistance with the storage portion of its work with its partners, the Confed- erated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. He said the company is in discus- sions with the CTUIR Board of Trustees “as how best to generate, store and distrib- ute energy to reservation communities.” Jiselle Halfmoon, interim communications director for the tribes, said CSF Energy Group is a separate, indepen- dent company that Donald Williams, an enrolled tribal member, founded. The Department of Energy launched the Energy Storage for Social Equity Initiative in September 2021 to support power storage in underserved communities to increase resilience and long- term affordability of their energy supply. Pacif ic Nor t hwest National Laboratory of Richland, Washington, and Sandia National Labora- tory of Albuquerque, New Mexico, will help the 14 groups assess their energy challenges, evaluate solu- tions and find partners to meet their client communi- ties’ goals. Greg Koller, senior public aff airs advisor at PNNL, said the technical assistance team will work closely alongside Coyote Steals Fire to evalu- ate needs, scope and feasibil- ity of energy storage to meet local energy goals. “Pacif ic Nor thwest National Laboratory will conduct an equity and work- force analysis for Coyote Steals,” he said, and assis- tance “may include system and load analysis, energy storage sizing and siting, equity metrics, economic and fi nancial analysis and util- ity interconnection require- ments. “Our ES4SE Team is scheduling meetings with the selected participants over the next few weeks to understand their communities, energy needs and project scopes,” he added. “At this time it is premature to specify what PNNL will be providing for CSF Energy and the Confed- erated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation.” Koller said Pacifi c North- west National Laboratory is working with the CTUIR Board of Trustees’ process in conjunction with Coyote Steals Fire in developing the project scope of work. “The ES4SE techni- cal phase ends at the end of this calendar year,” he said, “so we are anticipating the technical assistance will be provided by then.” Mills previously procured funding for and managed two phases of the Umatilla Indian Reservation geother- mal resources assessment and a 98 kilowatt grid-tied solar array installation. A Pendleton fi refi ghter sprays the remains of a garage off Southwest Tutuilla Creek Road, Pendleton, after a weed pile fi re spread to the structure Tuesday, March 22, 2022. Property owner George Ogden said while the garage was a total loss, no one was hurt and fi refi ghters kept the blaze from spreading to nearby structures, including his home. The heat from the fi re, however, warped the paneling on the house. 3/25-3/31 Pendleton FNP fails probation, hands over license East Oregonian PEN DLETON — A Pendleton resident surren- dered her family nurse prac- titioner license after failing to follow requirements of probation under the Oregon Board of Nursing. Shannon Blood gave up her license voluntarily earlier this year, according to the nursing board’s Tuesday, March 22, news release of recent disciplinary actions. According to the stip- ulated order of voluntary surrender, Blood received her nurse practitioner license on Oct. 1, 2013. On Sept. 24, 2020, the board received information that Blood was practicing outside the scope as a family nurse practi- tioner. Blood wa s prov id- ing mental health services since September 2015 in her private practice, according to the order, including prescrib- ing therapy and providing continuing education cred- its related to mental health. The nursing board opened an investigation and subse- quently placed Blood on two years of probation start- ing May 19, 2021. Part of that required her to check in each month with her “compliance monitor” and complete five continuing education courses within the fi rst six months of proba- tion. She failed to complete the courses, according to the order, and in October stopped checking in. The nursing board staff sent Blood a letter and asked her for an explanation of her non-compliance. Blood contacted the board staff and explained she decided to “take her career in a diff er- ent direction and wished to voluntarily surrender her FNP license at that time.” Blood signed the order to give up her license on Jan. 31. Blazing Fast Internet! Prepare for unexpected power outages with a Generac home standby generator REQUEST A FREE QUOTE! 877-557-1912 FREE 7-Year Extended Warranty* A $695 Value! Limited Time Off er - Call for Details Special Financing Available Subject to Credit Approval *To qualify, consumers must request a quote, purchase, install and activate the generator with a participating dealer. Call for a full list of terms and conditions. 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