WEEKEND EDITION Recent HHS girls soccer coach in jail on sex crimes | REGION, A3 JULY 30 – 31, 2022 The new entrance to the Camp Umatilla military facility near Hermiston is under construction Wednesday, July 27, 2022. Yasser Marte/East Oregonian 146th Year, No. 95 $1.50 WINNER OF 16 ONPA AWARDS IN 2021 Camp Umatilla enjoys building boom Backup operations center for the Army Corps of Engineers also in development By JOHN TILLMAN East Oregonian H ERMISTON — The Oregon Military Depart- ment’s Camp Umatilla at the former Umatilla Chemical Depot west of Hermiston is enjoying a building boom. Remodeling and renovation of existing facilities are underway, as well as new construc- tion to house and feed infantry trainees. “We’ve had $56 million in construction so far,” said retired Col. Todd Farmer, now civilian installations manager for the state military department. “We’ll spend about another $22 million over the next two years.” U.S. Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley on Friday, July 29, announced they secured funding for community projects across Oregon in the fi scal year 2023 Senate appro- priations bills, including $6 million to Camp Umatilla for housing construction. The Oregon Military Depart- ment also is renaming Camp Umatilla as the Raymond F. Rees Training Center in honor of Maj. Gen. Fred Rees of Helix, four times former Oregon National Guard adjutant general. “It will be the premier Guard infantry training facility in the western region,” Oregon Army National Guard Chief of Staff Col. Alan Gronewold said. “The Yasser Marte/East Oregonian An infantry squad trains Wednesday, July 27, 2022, in a tactical formation at Camp Umatilla near Hermiston. The military facility serves as an Army National Guard Regional Training Institute and soon will house a back- up operations center for the Army Corps of Engineers. renaming ceremony is Sept. 29.” A new entrance to Camp Umatilla was under construction Wednesday, July 27, amid several more projects on the base. An arbor- ist was operating on 80 year-old patients providing shade on the busy camp’s streets and exercise yards. “There will be an interchange between the entrance and the railroad tracks,” Farmer said. “One exit will be for Morrow County, and the other will take you to Umatilla County.” Continuity of operations centers A backup operations center for the Army Corps of Engineers also is in development at Camp Umatilla. “It’s a continuity site for both Seat- tle and Portland,” Gronewold said. The Corps and the Oregon National Guard share two build- ings on the base. In an emergency, the Corps can use one structure for administration of its Seattle, Port- land and Walla Walla districts, while the other is suitable as a helicopter hangar and aviation command center. The airport in Pendleton could participate as well. A Magnitude 8 or 9 Cascadia zone earthquake or other major emer- gency might temporarily knock out the Guard’s Salem operations center. “It’s designed to operate for 72 hours with its own resources,” Gronewold said. “Then air and ground assets would arrive from all over the country, in a Katrina- like operation.” Gronewold also said the Guard plans on building its own backup emergency operations center at Klamath Falls, home to the 173rd Fighter Wing at Kingsley Field Air National Guard Base. The southeast tip of Camp Umatilla lies near the intersection of Interstates 82 and 84. It is in both Umatilla and Morrow counties. Its southern boundary skirts the rail- road and Gun Club Road westward. Ongoing projects at the base include construction of new barracks and security checkpoints and renovation of World War II-era structures. A shortage of concrete supplies has slowed building, Farmer said. Camp Umatilla received approval for construction of $27 million barracks buildings in the National Defense Authorization Act in 2020 and 2021. The barracks will increase the National Guard’s ability to house visiting soldiers by 448 beds, according to a 2021 press release. See Boom, Page A8 IMESD plans for August school safety summit By SHANNON GOLDEN The Observer PENDLETON — In the wake of May’s deadly shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, American school districts, govern- ment offi cials and law enforcement are searching for solutions to school safety issues. The InterMountain Education Service District, in partnership with local law enforcement and regional school districts, aims to address safety in Oregon schools Aug. 8 during a School Security Summit. “Uvalde rocked us, just like Sandy Hook did,” IMESD Superintendent Mark Mulvihill said. “As we go back to in-person instruction, we want the public to be assured that we’re work- ing hard to deal with active shooter situations.” “We’ve been so focused on IMESD serves almost two dozen COVID safety protocols that our school districts in four counties — active shooter training has been on Morrow, Umatilla, Union and Baker the back burner,” he said. — and aims to have representation For Mulvihill, the implementa- from each one. According to tion of this common language between schools and law Mulvihill, almost 150 people will be in attendance at the enforcement is a crucial summit, from police offi- aspect of making emergency responses in schools more cers and sheriff deputies to effi cient. educators, superintendents “It’s critical that we agree and school mental health providers. on the same vocabulary terms The agency’s last school Mulvihill for emergency situations,” he safety summit took place in said. 2016. Mulvihill acknowledged the The service district led a region- tremendous turnover of law enforce- wide eff ort in 2016 to encourage all ment and district staff that may have school districts in the area to adopt occurred in the six years since as a the same security terminology that motivation for this year’s event. could be used in the event of an He also noted the pandemic’s emergency. This Standard Response impact on school safety issues. Protocol, created by the “I Love U Guys” Foundation, aims to improve communication between school administrators and law enforcement offi cers in emergencies. Although not every district has adopted this new terminology, Mulvihill credited local law enforce- ment for their continued commitment to school safety. “I cannot be more impressed by the response of law enforcement at this time,” he said. “Their commit- ment to schools in this area has been stunning.” Pendleton School District Super- intendent Kevin Headings said the school is excited to take part in the summit. “With the recent events in Uvalde and Buff alo, we can never take the eye See Safety, Page A8