REGION Saturday, July 9, 2022 Full morning for a senator Ron Wyden visits Umatilla County, discuss veteran aff airs, drones, Latino issues By ANTONIO ARREDONDO East Oregonian PENDLETON — Oregon U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden on Thursday, July 7, highlighted the move to block certain changes at the Veterans Aff airs clinic in Walla Walla. Wyden was on a swing through Umatilla County and also visited the Hermiston Hispanic Advisory Commit- tee and learned more about the Pendleton Unmanned Aerial Systems Range. Wyden held a press conference in the morn- ing at the Oregon National Guard Aviation Facility at the airport in Pendleton to discuss the VA’s Asset and Infrastructure Review Commission’s proposals to reclassify the Walla Walla veterans facility as a commu- nity-based outpatient clinic and move its 31-bed residen- tial rehabilitation treatment program 180 miles north of Walla Walla to Spokane. That proposal would have caused Eastern Oregon veter- ans to have to drive 180 miles to Spokane for other care. “I’m also a veteran,” Pendleton Mayor John Turner said, “and I use the VA in Walla Walla all the time, and I know that there are hundreds of veterans in Oregon who do the same.” Wyden recently held town halls for Eastern Oregon veterans, their families and veterans service providers to ask top VA offi cials about the proposals to change the Jona- than M. Wainwright Memo- rial VA Medical Center in Walla Walla. In the end, a bipartisan Senate committee, including Wyden, blocked the commission, securing the Walla Walla center for years to come. Ken McCormack, chair for the Veterans Advi- sory Council in La Grande, covered some of the staff - ing issues the VA has faced, a problem Wyden said he would look into. “I want to pledge today that I will keep watchdog- ging this issue on behalf of rural veterans,” Wyden said, Yasser Marte/East Oregonian U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden speaks Thursday, July 7, 2022, at the Oregon National Guard Aviation Facility in Pendelton. “because I know that there are a lot of questions.” Pendleton UAS Range Wyden headed to the nearby Eastern Oregon Regional Airport for a meet- ing to discuss drone testing and its economic impact on the airport. Wyden remarked he was shocked when driving in, noting the newly-built Radis- son Hotel. It’s certainly a far cry from what the airport used to be, a sentiment Steve Chrisman, Pendle- ton economic development director and interim airport manager, agreed with. “The airport was dying, there was no hope in gener- ating operations,” Chrisman said. Chrisman estimates Pend- leton’s UAS range is one of the best in the nation, and the burgeoning work at the range is driving the construction of the Raddison and more. The drone tech is some- thing that interests Wyden. “I am a privacy hawk,” he said, “I think we’ve seen the needs for some of that recently, but part of privacy policy is not freezing tech- nology out, but about how we use technology.” The technology not only has increased airport reve- nue, it also increased inter- est. Sitting next to the senator and local offi cials were four interns — recent Pendleton High graduates interested in the program. With all that interest comes some complication. “It’s all about the red tape,” UAS pilot and instruc- tor Michael Avery said. ”If it wasn’t for the (certifi cates of waiver or authorization) with the UAS, we wouldn’t be able to get off the ground.” Addressing cultural gaps That meeting concluded a busy day for Wyden in East- ern Oregon, which began at 8:30 that morning with a meeting with the Hermiston Hispanic Advisory Coun- cil at the Hermiston Public Library. “There’s a lot of hate in the world towards immigrants right now,” City Councilor Maria Duron told Wyden. “About how we’re here to take other people’s jobs. I would like for that to turn around.” Wyden used the meeting as one to build ideas, aiming to work with the commit- tee to solve problems. He suggested designating Duron as someone who could fi nd immigrant success stories to tell. Other issues also arose. Some Hermiston Latino residents may not understand how to fi le taxes and delegate that task to their children. “The children end up educating their parents and play a third parent role,” City Councilor Roy Barron said, “We want the next generation to be successful and balance those roles.” Mark Gomolski, vice- chair of the committee as well as the executive direc- tor for Agape House food bank, raised concerns about food access. While Agape House receives food from several vendors, it gets very little Hispanic food. Gomol- ski often has to travel to fi elds to distribute what little rice and beans he has. Wyden agreed with most of the points made and chal- lenged the group to take the next step. “We need to start talking about what the legislative steps are,” Wyden said. “I don’t think we can recreate a big bill right now, I don’t think we can, but we ought to get started.” After an hour, Wyden closed the meeting with the committee by offering his support. As a child of immi- grant parents who escaped the Nazis from Germany, he related to many of the issues that the Hermiston Latino community is still dealing with today, including Duron’s point made at the beginning of the discussion. “A lot of people are angry about immigration, but they forget where they come from,” Wyden said. “Unless you are Native American, you are part of the immigrant experience like the Wyden family.” UMATILLA COUNTY Commissioners OK election banning psilocybin By JOHN TILLMAN East Oregonian PEN DLETON — Umatilla County voters get to decide in November if they want to prohibit psilocybin businesses. The county board of commissioners at its meeting Wednesday, July 6, in Pend- leton voted to place a county law on the November general election ballot to ban psilo- cybin manufacturing and service centers. “I passionately move to adopt Ordinance No. 2022- 08,” Commissioner Dan Dorran said. Commissioner George Murdock “passionately” seconded the motion. The motion passed 3-0. Psilocybin is an hallu- cinogenic alkaloid in some toadstool mushrooms, the spore-bearing, fruiting body of a fungus. Oregon voters in November 2020 approved Ballot Measure 109, the Oregon Psilocybin Service Act, which allowed for the manufacture, delivery and administration of psilocybin at licensed facilities. Peter Dejong/The Associated Press, File Umatilla County Board of Commissioners are letting vot- ers decide in November if they want to prohibit psilocybin businesses. This photo from Aug. 3, 2007, shows psilocybin mushrooms in a grow room in the Netherlands. The vote in Umatilla County was strongly in oppo- sition to the state measure, with 64% against and 36% in favor. The county board at its June 29 meeting expressed its desire to have local voters decide whether to allow psilocybin manufacturing and centers in the county. Staff drafted an ordinance to implement a ban and refer the matter to the voters. Under Measure 109, the Oregon Health Authority regulates the manufacturing, transportation, delivery, sale and purchase of psilocybin products and the provision of services for the psychoactive drug in the state. OHA initi- ated a rule-making process to implement the state’s psilo- cybin regulatory program and intends to begin accept- ing applications for related licenses on Jan. 2, 2023, according to the board. OHA by July 6 had not completed the rule-making process for implementing the state’s psilocybin regu- latory program. The county board was uncertain how the manufacture, delivery and administration of psilocybin at licensed facilities would operate within the county. Me a s u r e 10 9 a l s o provided the governing body of a county or city may adopt an ordinance to be referred to the electors of the jurisdiction prohibiting the establishment of state licensed psilocybin product manufacturers and service centers in the area subject to the local govern- ment. Based on Umatilla County voters’ rejection of Ballot Measure 109, commissioners sought to let voters decide the question of establishing a ban on state-licensed psilocybin product manufacturers and service centers within the unincorporated areas of the county. The county board unan- imously adopted the ordi- nance, deeming it necessary for the immediate preserva- tion of public peace, health and safety. If voters approve it Nov. 8, the county law would go into eff ect 30 days after. East Oregonian A3 LOCAL BRIEFING May, June were the wettest of this century PE N DLETON — Almost twice as much rain fell in April, May and June in Pendleton as the 30-year normal for those months, 1991 to 2020, according to National Weather Service records. In January, February and March, the region still was in drought, with 3.60 inches of precipitation at Pendle- ton, versus the normal of 4.04. But a deluge fell in April, May and June, with 7.22 inches of rain, 1.95 times the norm of 3.71. June was the wettest of this century in Pendleton, at 2.16 inches of precipitation. It barely beat June 2017, when 2.15 inches of rain fell. May also set a record for this century, at 3.04 inches, versus 2.97 in 2010. April 2010 and 2012 were soggier, at 2.04 and 2.50 inches, than this year’s 2.02. The rainiest May since 1894 occurred in 1906, when 3.36 inches fell. The record for June was set at 2.90 inches in 1923. The accuracy of early weather records at Pendleton has been challenged, however. Pendleton renews convention center catering contract PENDLETON — Food service at the Pendleton Convention Center is set for the next three years, but that could turn into a nine- year run for the Pendleton Catering Co. The Pendleton City Council at its meeting on Tuesday, July 5, approved a new contract with Pendle- ton Catering to provide food and drink service for the convention center. Accord- ing to a statement from Pat Beard, convention center manager, the new three-year contract ends June 21, 2025, and the city can extend it twice after that date, poten- tially giving the company a nine-year deal. Pendleton Catering Co. began in 2018 and took over the food service and catering contract at the convention center in 2021 for one year. Since then, the company has broken every sales record the center tracks: most gross sales in a month, most off site sales in a month and most alcohol receipts in a month. Beard said he expected the business this year to surpass the annual sales record of $500,000. Per the terms of the contract, Pendleton Cater- ing collects 15% commis- sion on in-house catered events and 5% off site. Hermiston city councilor earns spot on ODC HERMISTON — Herm- iston City Councilor Nancy Peterson recently took a seat on the Oregon Disabilities Commission. The ODC is a gover- nor-appointed commission housed in the Department of Human Services. Peterson will be one of 15 members of the commission, which aims to identify and hear the needs of Oregon’s disabled individuals and prioritize public policy that should be addressed. “You know all of the lobbyists for companies that come to the government and talk about their company?” Peterson said. “Well, we are the lobbyist groups on behalf of the public.” Most of the members of the ODC have disabil- ities; Peterson is a non-bi- nary disabled person. Along with their work on the city council and now the disabil- ities commission, Peterson also works for Columbia Basin College as a disabil- ity services accessibility specialist. Pe t e r- son has been a member of the Herm- iston City C o u n - cil since Peterson winning an election in 2020 and has a long history of diversity rights activism, advocating for many disabled people. “Government is not about wearing a tie or sweat- ers,” Peterson said, ”it’s about letting people know which road to walk on — or in my case, roll on — to get the job done.” If you are interested in joining one of the 250 commissions available in the state of Oregon, go to www.oregon.gov/gov/ Pages/board-list.aspx. Umatilla County burn ban to start Thursday PE N DLETON — Umatilla County’s burn ban begins Thursday, July 14, the board of commissioners decided at its July 6 meet- ing. The unusually wet spring left conditions about a month behind last year, county Planning Director Bob Waldher reported. Airport passenger traffi c up 32% in fi rst half of 2022 PENDLETON — Air travel at Eastern Oregon Regional Airport, Pendle- ton, was up in the fi rst half of this year compared to last. Departing and arriv- ing passengers were higher every month in 2022 than in 2021 Enplanements were up 31.6% and deplane- ments were up 32.5% for the six-month period, according to data from the city. There were no delayed or canceled fl ights during the Fourth of July week- end, according to Boutique Air’s records, despite wide- spread chaos in the national air transport system. Steve Chrisman, Pendle- ton economic development director and interim airport manager, Erica Stewart, administrative specialist, reported Boutique in 2021 had 4,108 boardings and 3,994 disembarkations. The fi rst six months of last year saw 1,725 passengers deplane and 1,803 board. In the fi rst half of this year, 2,372 passengers departed and 2,285 arrived. Former airport manager John Honneman provided fi gures for previous years of Boutique’s service. The eff ect of the pandemic on fl ights is dramatic, crash- ing from 561 boardings in January 2020 to 58 in April. Passenger numbers have not yet recovered to their pre-pandemic peak of 642 enplanements in October 2019. That year, 6,763 passengers boarded. Enplanements fell to 3,565 in 2020, then rose to 4,108 in 2021. If the trend for the fi rst half of this year continues, 2022 could register more than 5,400 boardings. — EO Media Group Kids ages 4-7 years weighing 55 lbs. or less 24 contestants will be chosen from a blind draw MUTTON BUSTIN’ SIGN-UPS EOTEC RODEO MERCANTILE 1705 E Airport Rd Hermiston, OR 97838 July 14, 2022 LeeAnnOttosen@UmpquaBank.com UmpquaBank.com/Lee-Ann-Ottosen 540 S Main St Stanfield (541)-561-5653 Sign up - 6:00 pm Draw - 6:30 pm Child and parent/guardian must be present for sign-ups and weigh-in. Insurance documents must be signed.