REGION Tuesday, May 3, 2022 East Oregonian A3 HERMISTON Lack of staff hits local DMV offi ces nightmare whirlwind,” she said. ERICK PETERSON East Oregonian HERMISTON — East- ern Oregon residents were frustrated and disappointed Thursday, April 28, when they found the Hermiston DMV offi ce was closed. Sarah Krebs of Ione was there to update her driver’s license. “I came a long ways to come here, and now it’s not even open,” she said. Her birthday is May 1, the expiration date of her license. The Pendleton DMV was open, according to the DMV website, and Krebs said she would try it, as she got back into her vehicle and left. The posted hours on the front door of the Hermiston offi ce are Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Still, the doors were locked at 2:30 p.m. April 28. “This offi ce is closed due to staffi ng,” according to a sign on the door. The sign also guided people to the Oregon Driver & Motor Vehicle Services website, oregondmv.com, for more infor mation, and it notified visitors to check their email for more information if they had Problem remains after reopening Erick Peterson/East Oregonian The Hermiston DMV offi ce, 810 S. Highway 395, is not open Thursday, April 28, 2022, during normal business hours, due to lack of staff . scheduled appointments. The DMV website stated the Heppner offi ce also was closed April 28. There was no further mention about when they would reopen. Another disappointed person, Dominick Giefing, had been waiting in front of the Hermiston DMV at 810 S. Highway 395. He said he had been at the offi ce the day prior but was not able to get his driver’s license because he had forgotten his eyeglasses. “This is the biggest incon- venience ever,” he said. “They should be open. DMVs don’t help people. They just make their lives harder.” H is mot he r, M i n a Edwards, was sitting with him in her vehicle out in front of the offi ce. They are both from Ione. She said they have been through a lot of bureaucracy on the road to get Giefi ng’s license. She had tried the DMV’s customer service phone number, but had not received help after half an hour of being kept on hold. “It’s been an unfortunate Hermiston DMV reopened April 30. The Heppner offi ce, though, does not operate on Fridays. DMV spokesperson David House said the agency is receiving a fraction of the job applications it had in previ- ous years and called the staff - ing critical. “We’re suff ering across the state,” House said. People are retiring or leav- ing for other jobs, and not enough new applicants are stepping in to fi ll open posi- tions, he said. The Medford offi ce is at half its regular staff , and offi ces like the Hermiston offi ce, which he said operates with two or three workers, can shut down when a single person gets sick and has to stay home. There are 60 offi ces state- wide, and many of them are staffed by two or three employees, including the Hermiston offi ce, he said. He added that all of the Oregon Department of Trans- portation is facing this prob- lem, not just the DMV. House recommended that people in need of services visit the DMV website to see if they can be helped that way. Stanfi eld city manager strikes out on Warrenton job By ETHAN MYERS The Astorian Commissioners chose to move on and terminate nego- tiations. WARRENTON — Stan- “The city manager is a crit- field City Manager Ben ical piece to the city’s leader- Burgener is not going to be the ship, there’s no doubt about it. next city manager of Warren- But we also need to make sure that we’re not cutting services ton. The Warrenton City to just get the CEO in the C Commission unanimously suite,” Balensifer said. “I approved off ering the don’t have any ill will position to Burgener, or any issues with Mr. but now the Oregon Burgener. I’m disap- coastal town’s search pointed that we’ve continues for its next reached this point but city manager after it is a tight job market, contract negotiations and housing is expen- with the only fi nalist sive and we are at failed. Burgener where we’re at.” Warrenton Mayor The city made Henry Balensifer, who was two off ers to Burgener, with tasked with handling nego- the second off er being fi nal. tiations, announced at a city Burgener made three coun- commission meeting Tuesday teroffers, according to the night, April 26, that several city, all higher than the city’s off ers were made between budget and raising his asking the parties, but Burgener’s amounts each time. fi nal off er exceeded the city’s Balensifer said Burgener’s budget. off ers, which were looking for a base salary far higher than the advertised amount, caught the city off guard. He also was looking for signifi cant relocation benefi ts, which the city couldn’t meet, Balensifer said. Balensifer was sympa- thetic to concerns of housing, but Burgener’s lesser experi- ence and room to grow had to be considered by the city in the process, he added. The city held several staff and community receptions with Burgener, as well as panel interviews by commu- nity leaders, public adminis- trators, city department heads and the city commission. The feedback was positive and unanimously supported hiring Burgener, the city said at the time. Before being city manager in Stanfi eld, Burgener was the city administrator in Ada, Minnesota, and the fi nance manager and administrative services manager for the Utah Department of Transporta- tion. Burgener was set to replace Linda Engbretson, who announced her retire- ment last year but agreed to work on an interim basis until her replacement was hired. “I did just want to comment that I’m disappointed that negotiations didn’t work out but I did want to assure this commission, as I think you all know, that you have some quality staff,” Engbretson said at the end of April 26 meeting. “Hopefully there are some other options out there as you move forward, but your department heads are hardworking individuals who will hold the weight if it comes down to that.” Engbretson said she wants to offi cially be out of the role by July, but added the date is fl exible if she knows someone is coming in. CTUIR hires new deputy executive directors East Oregonian MISSION — The Confed- erated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation has hired two new executive directors. Jonetta Herrera started Monday, April 25, and Shana McConville-Radford starts May 2, according to a press release from the tribes. “I look forward to having both of these CTUIR tribal members join our executive management team and build a solid working relationship with the board of trustees,” CTUIR Executive Director Donald Sampson said in the announcement. Herrera has an educational background in construction and business administration combined with work experi- ence as a former department director for CTUIR, and McConville-Radford has a law degree and has worked in national and regional legis- lative aff airs and served as the Bureau of Indian Aff airs superintendent for the Salish Kootenai area. According to the press release, the tribes in 2019 hired Seattle-based account- ing and consulting fi rm Moss Adams to conduct a full review of the CTUIR orga- nizational structure. The report identifi ed the need for two deputy executive direc- tor positions. The board of trustees directed the Offi ce of the Executive Director to develop the positions to report to the executive direc- tor. “The deputies will share the responsibility of super- vising 16 departments,” according to the release. “The updated organizational structure will help CTUIR meet the demands of the tribal government.” “I am very honored to be chosen for this position,” Herrera said in the press release. “I look forward to making a positive impact for our community working with the CTUIR team.” Herrera holds a bache- lor’s degree in construction management with a minor in business administration from Central Washington Univer- sity. She has more than 15 years of experience manag- ing large projects often involving multimillion-dol- lar contracts. “It is an exciting oppor- tunity and important time to meaningfully rebuild, recon- nect and refocus our shared organizational values, rela- tionships, identity and purpose to allow our people and our organization to thrive in a post-pandemic environ- ment,” McConville-Rad- ford said in the statement. “I am committed to creating and promoting an emotion- ally safe environment where employees and tribal citi- zens are comfortable asking questions, off ering ideas and Got a great business idea for downtown Pendleton? are confi dent that their lead- ers are present engaged, and responsive,” she said in the release. Radford holds a bachelor’s degree in political science from Portland State Univer- sity with a master’s in interna- tional law from the University of New South Wales. Sampson also thanked Matt Johnson and Teara Farrow-Ferman, who served as interim deputy execu- tive directors for the past year. Sampson said they will assist Herrera and Radford as they transition into their new position. Erick Peterson/East Oregonian Matthew Cecil looks over paperwork April 22, 2022, in his offi ce at Horace Mann Insurance in Hermiston. The paper- work documents his eff orts in helping people manage their student loan debts. Local insurer helps with student debt ERICK PETERSON East Oregonian H ER M ISTON — Matthew Cecil said he is helping free people from student loan debt. He is a licensed insur- ance producer with Horace Mann Insurance Company, 662 E. Main St., Hermiston. “We work primarily with educators,” he said. “We have a service called ‘Student Loan Solutions.’ What it provides is a way for the educators to obtain student loan forgiveness through federal programs that are available.” He said he will sit down with a client for an assess- ment, going over the size of the debt, the types of loans and determine eligibility for forgiveness. Then, he will assist with paperwork. If he is not able to get the loan totally forgiven, he said he can often get a portion forgiven or payments reduced. That consultation is free, he said, and he can help other public service employees, too. If a person works for a governmental employer or a 501(c)3 tax-ex- empt employer, they can qualify. Other employees of not-for-profi t organizations also may be helped, he said. He listed emergency management, military, public safety, law enforce- ment, public legal services, disability services, services for the elderly, public health, library services and other school-based services as professions covered by loan-forgiveness programs. “I currently have 249 active clients from the Northwest,” Cecil said. He added he has 506 records, including people who have expressed interest in the program and around 52 who were declined because of ineligibility. He has helped 50 people to date, he said. And those 50 have had a total of nearly $1.4 million forgiven. He called student loan “a burden” for many people, and he is thankful he was able to pay for his own schooling without such an albatross. “Unfortunately, with the structure of their careers, (educators and other public servants) have to pursue higher education and get that degree to be certifi ed, so it’s required for them,” he said. “A lot of them go back for their masters, but then they’re saddled with student loan debt.” Increasing interest, forbearance, life problems and more can complicate a person’s situation and make the end of debt seem impos- sible. “I’ve heard all kinds of stories, whether it’s a small amount or hundreds of thousands of dollars, and (borrowers) are not going to be able to pay (the loans) on their own,” he said. Cecil spoke of a few stories from people he has helped. He shared the written testimonial of one Umatilla educator who said he had $110,000 before Cecil could help him. This educator, according to the testimonial, started an income-based repayment plan with lower payments. He also got $65,000 worth of student loan debt forgiven. “I still have $40,000 that I still need to pay on, and some of those payments have been counted toward forgiveness. Thirty-nine more payments and I’ll be done,” he said, according to the testimonial. A second written testi- monial told of how another educator, from Walla Walla, was able to reduce his loan by more than $10,000. He, too, expressed gratitude to Cecil for his work. Cecil stated this sort of help, assisting people at no cost to them, makes sense from a business standpoint. By helping people with their student loans, he is attract- ing potential customers. Also, he is better serving his existing customers. His agency sells auto, home, life and other forms of insurance. 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