Pendleton’s Rock Camp returns to in-person | COMMUNITY A6 Fireworks silhouette a mother and daughter Sunday evening, July 3, 2022, at the Walmart parking lot in Pendleton. Yasser Marte/East Oregonian TUESDAY, JULY 5, 2022 146th Year, No. 84 $1.50 WINNER OF 16 ONPA AWARDS IN 2021 WILDFIRE SEASON Fireworks explode in the night sky Sunday, July 3, 2022, over Pendleton to celebrate Fourth of July. Survey fi nds fears eased after spring rains Photos By Yasser Marte/ East Oregonian By MICHAEL KOHN The Bulletin Pendleton lights up the night Left: The Lopez family gets their chairs and sparklers out Sunday evening, July 3, 2022, at the Walmart parking lot in Pendleton for the town’s Fourth of July fi reworks show. Right: The Perkins and Erickson family get ready Sunday evening, July 3, 2022, to watch Pendleton’s Fourth of July fi reworks show from the Walmart parking lot. PORTLAND — Significant rainfall this spring noticeably greened up the Oregon country- side and appears to have calmed nerves across the state, according to a survey about wildfi re danger conducted in June by the Oregon Values and Beliefs Center. The survey, conducted June 2-11, found 60% of respondents felt wildfi re was a threat to their local communities. In May 2021, that number was 68%. The wildfi re perception survey interviewed 1,446 Oregon residents 18 or older. The survey sought to gauge how concerned Oregon resi- dents are heading into what offi cials have warned could be a dangerous wildfi re season. In mid-May, Gov. Kate Brown warned this year’s fire season could be extreme due to drought and climate change. But May and June were relatively cool and wet in the Pacifi c Northwest, lowering drought levels across the region. Oregon’s only remaining swath of exceptional drought — the high- est level of drought according to the U.S. drought monitor — is in an area straddling Crook and Jeff er- son counties. “Considering the extremely wet spring, it is not a major surprise that when asked about their area of Oregon, Oregonians’ concern for wildfi re has decreased a bit since May of last year,” according to a statement from the polling group. See Wildfi res, Page A9 Red dresses call attention to the missing Wildhorse Pow Wow recognizes thousands of missing indigenous women By ANTONIO ARREDONDO East Oregonian MISSION — After two days full of dancing and drumming at the 26th annual Wildhorse Pow Wow, the many indigenous tribes gathered in the area took a moment to recog- nize those who are missing. The pow wow is a Native Amer- ican tradition where many tribes gather together to celebrate their culture as well as compete in diff er- ent events. One of the events at this year’s Wildhorse Pow Wow was the Red Dress Competition. “It’s a newer movement to raise awareness for the missing women from Canada and the United States,” Pow Wow Master of Ceremonies Thomas Morning Owl said. “It started in Canada but has moved down here.” The REDress Project displays red dresses in public spaces to show the number of missing Indigenous women. Since 1980, thousands of indigenous women have gone miss- ing, with most cases left unsolved. Morning Owl highlighted several cases in the Yakama tribes as well as some farther north in the Seattle area as regional examples. Antonio Arredondo/East Oregonian A woman watches as participants dance to the beat of the drum Sunday, July 3, 2022, at the Wildhorse Pow Wow in Mission.