REGION Thursday, July 7, 2022 East Oregonian A3 MILTON-FREEWATER Freewater Square opens in time for summer events By MAX ERIKSON Walla Walla Union-Bulletin M I LT ON - F R E E WA- TER — Freewater Square on Milton-Freewater’s North Main Street has officially opened to the public. More than 100 people joined the opening, with live music and more Thurs- day, June 30, celebrating Milton-Freewater’s newest community event space that can be used for a variety of gatherings and celebrations. Awards were given to the mural artists who painted the wall for the square, and local youth band S.A.W. from Athena performed rock songs for the crowd. Walla Walla Cheese Co. provided ice cream, and attendees could have a slice of a cele- bratory cake. Freewater Square has been in the works for three years and now is ready to host live events, food trucks Max Erikson/Walla Walla Union-Bulletin Milton-Freewater Downtown Alliance Executive Director Julie Culjak addresses the crowd June 30, 2022, before the ribbon cutting for the new Freewater Square. and act as a public space. The Milton-Freewa- ter Downtown Alliance has spearheaded the proj- ect, renovating and restor- ing what was once a vacant gravel parking lot. Dow ntow n Alliance Executive Director Julie Culjak said having the opening is amazing, and she joked that now she’s going to sleep for the next two months. “It was an incremental process as we put every- thing together,” Culjak said. “We continued to get grants through 2020 and 2021, and that kept pushing us forward.” The vision is for the square to be used by local businesses or organizations for events or even a movie night during the summer, Cuiljak said. The square also will be used to develop small busi- nesses in what Culjak calls an incubator program. Small, converted storage buildings on the site can be rented and used for a start-up business to establish a work- ing site. The square was wired to provide power to food trucks and the entertainment stage that is a converted flatbed trailer. Mi ke Waliser f rom Milton-Freewater was there with his wife and son and said it was the first time he had seen the square and thinks it’s a great place for the community to get out and do stuff. “Once the word gets around, people will come out STANFIELD and socialize,” Waliser said. “It’s great for Milton-Freewa- ter to have an option like this.” Waliser’s 10-year-old son Henry also was excited and having a good time. “I really like having the music,” Henry said. “And I hope I get to have some cake too.” Dr. Norm Saager has been the Milton-Freewater Down- town Alliance president off and on for the past 12 years and played an integral part in bringing Freewater Square to the community. He said he was very happy with the number of people who came out to support the opening. “This will be a very posi- tive thing for this end of town, and we are working on a regular schedule of events,” Saager said. “We want to have a family night, games night or even a wine-tasting night.” He said the community is reviving an event that ran before the pandemic hit called Thursdays Rock, and Freewater Square is the perfect place to do it. Thursdays Rock is a community event that will offer food vendors, live music and other entertainment. It will run on the third Thurs- day starting in July until the end of September. Local businesses will stay open late, and a differ- ent theme will be highlighted each month. Saager said he sees Free- water Square as part of a larger offering in the Walla Walla Valley and hopes people don’t restrict their view to just the city of Walla Walla when finding fun things to do. “There is a lot going on here and everywhere,” Saager said. “People should check everything out that’s happening in all our commu- nities and not solely focus on just one place.” COVID-19 Growth continues, rebounding from pandemic CDC recommends By JOHN TILLMAN East Oregonian STANFIELD — Stan- field and its businesses are growing and upgrading as they rebound from the pandemic years. M a s s e u s e Sh a r r o n Newton, 78, moved her busi- ness, Royal Health Thera- pies, from a Hermiston office into her remodeled Stanfield home during the pandemic. “It was a good move,” she said. “It’s interesting how Stanfield is growing, with the new housing district on the other side of the high school. A lot of houses have gone up in just six months.” The $12 million, 41-unit Patriot Heights low-income housing project at 155 Valor Ave. was unveiled May 16. Newton also cites recent developments such as the general store, excavation for another housing complex on Stanfield’s south side and new street lights downtown. “When the lights are lit up, it’s striking,” she said. “The beautification is very nice. There’s a lot of growth.” Newton moved because of the pandemic. “There was fear,” she recalled. “I lost a lot of regu- lar clientele. Some have returned, but not all. The remodeled home office is working out.” Newton’s health has declined and COVID-19 hit her home, so she cut back on work. “It’s what I consider part time,” she added, “at four days a week, with three or four clients per day.” Newton remodeled her house to separate an office from the private area. She has a large lot for conve- nient parking and easy access right off Highway 395. “It’s convenient working from home,” she said. “If a client is half an hour late now, I’m a lot more patient than I would have been in my office in Hermiston.” She also said some of her regular clients prefer the atmosphere at home. Housing projects, businesses expand The Panoramic Ridge housing development, west of Highway 395, contin- ued to expand, the city’s fiscal year 2022-23 budget reported. Homes and lots sold out in phase four and 39 sites soon will be ready for construction in phases five and six. The Umatilla County Housing Authority finished its Patriot Heights devel- opment this past year. This brought in revenue through additional utility services and about 150 new residents for local businesses and activities. It also provided a local Head Start program and created access to addi- tional land prime for private housing development. This project increased system development charges fund- ing by more than $200,000. The 99-unit Bumblebee Estate housing develop- ment is under construction. It should bring in property taxes, utilities and roughly 300 new residents, the budget reported. Dollar General and Java Junkies are both in the construction phases, aiming to open this summer. These will bring additional jobs and revenue to the city, according to the budget report. In addition, more than 10 residential and two or three commercial lots are going through the development process. a small website, started selling on Facebook and Venmo with free deliv- ery and showed her cloth- ing lines and sizes over the internet. “I was scared to death,” she said. “I didn’t want to sound stupid or uneducated, but I did it, and it worked. It saved my business.” Baker said growth in Stanfield has been “amaz- ing.” She also raised her family in town. She cred- ited public works director Scott Morris and his crew for keeping city parks clean and watered and the city council and city manager Bergener lifting up the Videos saved women’s Ben town. wear business “The city has come a Live online videos saved long way,” she said. “We Stanfield native Kathy have a great Fourth of July Baker’s business, Fun Fash- event. They’ve done such a ions Boutique, 165 Coe good job.” Ave., during the pandemic. Baker also noted the “W hen (Gov.) Kate schools are packed with Brown shut us down great teachers and staff. on March 15, 2020, I didn’t know what to “Stanfield has do,” Baker recalled. changed a lot,” “I’m not a big online she assessed. “I’m very proud of it. I store, just bricks and love my commu- mortar.” The shutdown nity. They work so Baker hard. There was a came just as Fun Fashions was getting little street sweeper products in from market. on Coe and 395 this morn- Columbia Bank came to ing. I’d only ever seen Baker’s rescue. So women those machines in big cities still could shop in her store, before. It’s wonderful. They the bank backed her in need recognition.” picking five customers to Summer is Baker’s slow receive $250 each in free season. She said she expects merchandise. business to pick up when Baker also has built school starts again. Umatilla County receives grant for digital map By JOHN TILLMAN East Oregonian PEN DLETON — Umatilla County is under- taking a pilot project to create a digitized, real-time map of its roads, bridges and culverts. T he cou nt y b oa rd of commissioners at its June 29 meeting accepted a $250,000 grant from the Oregon Department of Administrative Services for the project. The county intends to match this state funding. “I’m excited about this initiative,” said Dan Dorran, the county commissioner overseeing the project. “Whether you’re hauling potatoes, wheat or you’re FedEx, the data will be available to all.” The pilot project is one of the first in the nation, Dorran reported. When completed, it should allow county road users to iden- tify in real time all the information they might need to plan their best route. The digitized map is to appear initially on a website, but later on an app, he said. “Users will be able to look at county roads like they can now for state and federal highways,” Dorran explained. “It’s not just GPS, but will include load limits, traffic data, weights, number of axles and trip counts. That’s done at the federal level. We want to transfer that capability to counties.” Dor ran cited Smith Frozen Foods’ need to haul waste from its Weston plant to a Hermiston area feed- lot. The map app with digi- tized data would permit the company to optimize routes for its trucks. “It could save them two-and-a-half hours and keep 1½ tons of carbon from going into the air,” he said. A farmer harvesting wheat could look at the app and find the best route to follow. Local agriculture indus- FEEL THE SPEED, EVEN AT PEAK TIMES. try has expanded over the past 30 years, Dorran noted. Public and private invest- ment in irrigation systems and value-added develop- ment in fresh packed and frozen foods have totaled $400 million. “Our roads date from the late 1800s,” he pointed out, “but we’re hauling 40 to 60 tons of wheat on some of them. Having real-time data would let us prioritize maintenance money.” The county isn’t in the same flood and emergency system as the state and federal government, Dorran said. The digitized mapping is to include those levels, but 99.9% will be devoted to Umatilla County roads. The pilot project for transportation planning will serve as a platform upon which other coun- ties around the country can build, Dorran observed. T he com missioners selected DKS Associates as consultant on the project, thanks to their expertise in transportation and connec- tions with software engi- neers. The firm specializes in “smart mobility”, with eight offices in California, Oregon, Washington and Texas. The board received a single bid for replacing the bridge on Mac Hoke Road near Nolin. Costs will be shared between the county and state, using an Oregon opportunity grant, reported Com missioner George Murdock. The county’s timeline called for “soon,” so far just one bidder responded to its request for proposals: Ariz Co. LLC bid $934,850. †† 45 For 12 mos, plus taxes & equip.fee.$10/mo equip. fee applies. Limited availability in selectareas. *Price after $5/mo Autopay & Paperless bill discount (w/in 2 bills). Limited availability in select areas. 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Whole home Wi-Fi connectivity may require AT&T Smart Wi-Fi Extender(s) sold separately. ††Internet speed claims represent maximum network service capability speeds and based on wired connection to gateway. Actual customer speeds are not guaranteed and may vary based on several factors. For more information, go to www.att.com/speed101. ©2021 DIRECTV. DIRECTV and all other DIRECTV marks are trademarks of DIRECTV, LLC. AT&T and Globe logo are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property. Hospitalizations for COVID-19 in Region 9 still are below their peaks in Octo- ber 2021 and February 2022. Baker, Malheur, Morrow, Umatilla, Union and Wallowa counties compose Region 9. Patients hospitalized with positive COVID-19 peaked at 45 in Region 9 on Feb. 4. On June 25, 12 were hospital- ized in the region, up from 0 on April 30 and some other days that month. Umatilla County Public Health continues to offer COVID-19 vaccines at Pendleton, Hermiston and other locations, said Alisha Southwick, the department’s deputy director. It resumed automatically mailing test kits to people exposed to COVID-19-infected individ- uals in response to the surge. The kits also are available for businesses. “We provide support to outbreaks in vulnerable sites, such as long-term care facili- ties,” she added. The county continues to monitor case reports and the wastewater sample data from Hermiston and Pendleton, Southwick said, and the public health department’s message is the same as before the latest surge. “Stay home if you’re sick,” she admonished. ”Wear a mask indoors in public. Get vaccinated and boosted. The message gets stale, so it’s difficult to drive it home. We share it with the media at every opportunity.” LOCAL BRIEFING No annual contract. 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