REGION Saturday, May 21, 2022 East Oregonian A3 Pendleton’s Westgate Apartment Homes project moves ahead permits. We have more hous- ing starts on the way and should be on track to issue about 300 new permits in 2022.” The mayor said he is encouraged with the progress on aff ordable housing. “The Wildfl ower complex next to Olney Cemetery will begin renting units in July and will eventually off er 80 units of aff ordable housing,” according to Turner’s state- ment. “In September, the Horizon Project is planning to break ground on another 70 units of aff ordable hous- ing on the east side of Pendle- ton. Both of these apartment complexes have been made possible by partnering with Oregon Housing and Community Services.” Turner also stated the future of more single-family homes is starting to focus on several plots of land. A cluster of about 20 new houses eventually will go on the land near the entrance to the Sunridge Middle School. A group of developers from By JOHN TILLMAN East Oregonian PENDLETON — Work commenced this month on Westgate Apartment Homes, a 204-unit housing complex at 2701 Westgate, Pendleton. Haley Hawkins, portfo- lio manager at C&R Real Estate Management Group, Portland, provided project details. The complex will offer studio, one bedroom, two bedroom and three bedroom apartments with open fl oor plans, air conditioning, 9-foot tall or vaulted ceilings, include cable and internet and more. In addition, resi- dents will have access to a large clubhouse with a recre- ation room, fitness center, sports and business facilities. “This is not subsidized housing,” Hawkins said. “Rents are not yet set but will be refl ective of the amenities and features of the commu- nity.” Pendleton Mayor John Turner in the city’s newslet- Kathy Aney/East Oregonian Construction workers build a retaining wall Wednesday, May 18, 2022, at the site of the fu- ture Westgate Apartment Homes in Pendleton. ter for May called attention to Westgate Apartments as well as other housing projects. Housing studies in 2011 and 2016 showed Pendleton needs new housing for all levels of income, and Turner reported cited leaders see a direct link between scarce housing and a lack of work- force in Pendleton. One study showed a need for 1,000 new housing units in the next 20 years, so in 2017 the city council adopted “more housing” as a city priority with a goal of build- ing 50 new units each year. “After six years of build- ing relationships with land owners, developers and contractors, our eff orts are HERMISTON MILTON-FREEWATER Student drivers take the wheel Driving program set to return to high school By ERICK PETERSON East Oregonian HERMISTON — Driv- er’s education is returning to Hermiston High School. “We haven’t had a class since spring of 2019, so people have been waiting for it to come back,” Steve Anderson, Hermiston High School teacher, said. Anderson is one of the two driver’s education teachers for classes that began Wednesday, May 18, and end July 1. He said the program was put on hold in 2019, by order of the Oregon Department of Education. There are private companies, which were not under the same restrictions, and they were able to off er classes, he said; the Hermiston School District was not so lucky. For months, while these classes were on hiatus, students frequently asked him about driver’s educa- tion, Anderson said. Now that it is available once more, he added, the buzz about it has been positive. “People are really excited about it,” he said. Class sign-up started, and Anderson said the class fi lled quickly. Thirty students are presently enrolled in the class that begins and ends. The application for the program shows students must pay a $300 fee before starting the class, though a student may qualify for reduced tuition of $225. In addition to paying the fee, students must have their Oregon Instruction Permit. According to a Hermis- ton School District brochure, students will attend class fi ve days a week for one hour and drive and observe for three hours one day a week for seven weeks. Anderson commented on one special thing about the class. According to the instructor, students will receive a driver’s education program certifi cate and may qualify for a waiver so they won’t have to take a DMV drive test. Anderson said that his program was vetted by the Oregon Department of Transportation against the DMV test. The school’s fi nal drive test is just as rigorous as the DMV one, he said. The only shortcoming, according to Anderson, is that the program does not have more teachers. There are two for the summer, though more teachers are on the way. He said three teachers are set to be trained during the summer, and they will start in the fall. At that time, the school has plans to off er classes to 60 students, with the potential for 90, if necessary. These teachers, Anderson said, are young. Anderson said he is retiring and plan- ning to return to the district for part-time work. These new teachers, on the other hand, may stick around for years. He stressed, however, that a driver’s training does not begin and end with this program. It is very import- ant, he said, for parents to set good examples for their kids. “If you drive with one hand on the steering wheel, they’ll do the same thing,” Anderson said. Likewise, he added, if parents use their phones or yell at other people on the road, young people will follow suit. For more information, email Anderson at steve. anderson@hermistonsd.org. Pendleton schools have new principals East Oregonian Pendleton — The Pend- leton School District early t h is week a n nou nced it completed the hiring process for several build- ing-level administrator openings and made the following selections. The school district board took official action Thursday, May 19, to approve the hires. PSD selected Piper Kelm as the principal at Sunridge Middle School. She serves as the assistant princi- pal at Sherwood Elemen- tary School, where she has worked for the past three years and also served as dean of students. Kelm started her career at Pendleton High School as a science teacher and taught there for 28 years. She replaces SMS Princi- pal Dave Williams, who resigned eff ective to take a position with InterMountain Education Service District. Coree Terjeson is taking on the role of principal at Washington Elementary School. Terjeson serves as the assistant principal at Wash- ington Elementary, where she is completing her fi rst year in this position. Before being at Washington she was a dean of students, starting to pay off ,” accord- ing to Turner. Pendleton in 2016 issued 10 new housing permits, then averaged 50 housing permits a year from 2017 to 2020. “We issued 163 new permits in 2021,” Turner reported, “and in the first four months of 2022, we have already issued 215 new the Tri-Cities is working with the city to build houses and townhomes on about 56 acres between the Middle School and Southwest Nye Avenue. The city also is working closely with a group of landowners on the east side of Pendleton to eventu- ally develop about 250 acres that stretches from the water fi ltration plant west to High- way 11. This major construction project will require the city to build a water booster pump station near the water fi ltra- tion plant and widen Goad Road for better access. “We intend to form a reim- bursement district, which will require the developers to pay the city back its infra- structure costs as they sell the houses,” Turner stated. New housing in Pend- leton, according to Turner, means a larger workforce, more children in Pendleton schools, more shoppers in stores and restaurants and an increase in property tax reve- nues for the city. special education teacher and intervention specialist for the Hermiston School District. Her teaching career started in the Pendleton School District in 2010 as a special education teacher. Terjeson will replace Wash- ington Principal J.P. Rich- ards who resigned eff ective to take a position closer to family. Heidi Paullus is succeed- ing Terjeson as the assistant principal position at Wash- ington Elementary. Paullus now works for the InterMountain ESD as the Virtual Online Acad- emy principal. For nine years prior she worked as an instructional coach for the ESD. She also taught sixth grade at Sunridge Middle School for three years, fourth grade for fi ve years in the Hermiston School District and fourth grade for eight years in the Jeff erson County School District. T. J. P resley is t he district’s selection as the new assistant principal at Sherwood Elementary School. Presley is the 6-12 grade principal and athletic direc- tor in the Pilot Rock School District. He began his teach- ing career in the Pilot Rock School District as a middle level math teacher. Pres- ley succeeds Kelm as she moves into the principal job at Sunridge Middle School. 4 caught in connection to graffi ti East Oregonian MILTON-FREEWATER — Milton-Freewater police Chief Doug Boedigheimer reported law enforcement has caught three teens and one adult related to numer- ous cases of graffi ti. Boedigheimer in a press release Friday, May 20, reported members of the Milton-Freewater Police Depa r t ment a nd t he Umatilla County Sher- iff’s Office “collaborated on the detention of several juveniles and one adult who had been involved in a month’s long spree of criminal mischief to public and private property in the Milton-Freewater area.” Residents have reported multiple cases of graffiti since, according to the press release, but police had no suspects. Police and sheriff ’s depu- ties, with the assistance of Milton-Freewater Unifi ed School District staff , devel- oped several juvenile suspects. Boedigheimer reported that led to refer- ring three juveniles to the Umatilla County Juvenile Department, as well as the arrest of Harry Dwain Shaul, 19, of Milton-Freewa- ter. Police on May 13 booked Shaul into the Umatilla County Jail, Pendleton. “The graffiti involved in this spree was not of an apparent gang nature,” according to Boedigheimer. He explained police do not think the Nazi swas- tika, which is one of the graffi ti symbols, indicates white supremacist activity in Milton-Freewater, and it has not been specifi cally linked to the aforementioned individuals. “The investigation into their crimes, as well as the swastika, is ongoing,” he stated. Law enforcement also is tallying the cost of the damages from the graffi ti for the purpose of helping the Umatilla County District Attorney’s Offi ce determine charges. Boedigheimer credited the eff orts of law enforce- ment and the school district as an example of “what can be accomplished when school districts and law enforcement across various agencies work together.” CHOOSE FROM 12 OF YOUR FAVORITE NEW 2022 TOYOTA MODELS CAMRY, CAMRY HYBRID, COROLLA, COROLLA HYBRID, HIGHLANDER, HIGHLANDER HYBRID, RAV4, RAV4 HYBRID, TACOMA, TUNDRA & TUNDRA HYBRID % 2.75 60 APR FINANCING WITH $ 17.86 PER $ 1,000 BORROWED MO. 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