EO wins 2022 General Excellence award | REGION, A3 TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, 2022 146th Year, No. 96 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2022 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Heat causes one death in Umatilla County, six in Oregon Hermiston and Pendleton set new record highs Friday Oregon Public Broadcasting and East Oregonian PENDLETON — State offi- cials reported at least six people in Oregon have died from heat-re- ATHENA Local law sidelines charging station project lated issues, including one person in Umatilla County. Of the other potential heat-re- lated deaths last week, three were in Multnomah County and another in Marion County. The Oregon State Medical Examiner’s Offi ce also is investigating the death of an elderly man who died Saturday, July 30, in his home in Clackamas County. He didn’t have a work- ing air conditioner, according to a county press release. No other details were released. The Oregon Medical Exam- iner’s Offi ce did not share addi- tional details, though it noted the heat-related death designations are preliminary and a fi nal cause- of-death determination may not be available for several months. In addition to the deaths, dozens of people have sought medical attention, as the region continues to struggle with prolonged triple- digit temperatures. Multnomah County announced July 28 that Portland’s Bureau of Emergency Communications had received 71 heat-related calls since July 24, and emergency medical services responded to 51 of them. Offi cials also said 22 people had been taken to emer- gency rooms for heat-related illnesses. Many of them were exposed to the heat while on the job. The National Weather Service reported the extreme heat now will last longer than forecasters initially expected. An excessive heat warning covering most of Umatilla and Morrow counties and other areas is in eff ect through until 11 p.m. July 31. See Heat, Page A9 GOING OLD SCHOOL Grant Richie contends community would benefi t; Athena mayor doesn’t see it that way By JOHN TILLMAN East Oregonian ATHENA — Grant Richie of Minam proposed building a high- speed electric vehicle charging station at his One Stop supermar- ket and gas station at Main and Fifth streets, Athena. But the project ran afoul of Athena’s law banning new overhead power cables. “There is only one universal fast-charging station in Pendleton,” Richie said, “and one in Dayton. Walla Walla doesn’t have one. Wildhorse Resort has Tesla char- gers, but there is no universal high- speed charger between Pendleton and Dayton or the Tri-Cities.” He also owns stores in Minam and Walla Walla, and Home Hard- wood Floors, while working as a river guide. The project ran afoul of an Athena ordinance banning new overhead power cables. The Athena ordinance requires connections to existing overhead lines and any new local electricity or telephone lines to go underground, and lines to replace outdated exist- ing overhead lines also have to go underground. Project two years on process Richie said he worked with Pacifi c Power to draw up a proposal, based on the less expensive option of stringing power cables overhead. The power pole across the alley from the One Stop is maxed out with transformers. Pacifi c Power would have to put up a new pole and run two lines about 20 feet to bring 480 volts for the charger. See Athena, Page A9 Yasser Marte/East Oregonian Hermiston police offi cer Trevor Limburg trains Saturday, July 30, 2022, at the former Rocky Heights Elementary School, Hermiston. Former Hermiston elementary school provides real-world place for police training By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian Members of local police agencies and Oregon State Police train Saturday, July 30, 2022, at the old Rocky Heights Elementary School, Hermiston. H ERMISTON — Oregon State Police led local offi cers on train- ing that mimicked real-world situations, including working in blazing heat. The training took place Friday and Saturday, July 29 and 30, in Hermiston at the former Rocky Heights Elementary School. Hermiston Police Chief Jason Edmiston said the plan was to allow the OSP SWAT team to what training it could do, then state police would oversee training for local patrol offi cers that would serve as a reminder to how to respond to certain situations, such as a building alarm or even an active shooter. Yasser Marte/ East Oregonian See Police, Page A9 Candidates for governor take stage in fi rst debate Drazan, Kotek, Johnson highlight diff erences during 90-minute exchange By COREY BUCHANAN Oregon Capital Bureau WELCHES — During the fi rst general election debate in a race for who will become the next governor of Oregon, the three candidates empa- thized with many Oregonians dissat- isfi ed with where the state is headed. Each of the three women, however, offered differing solu- tions to the state’s myriad issues in a 90-minute forum that underscored the chasms among their political philosophies and leadership styles. Republican nominee Chris- tine Drazan, Democratic nominee Tina Kotek and unaffi liated Betsy Johnson — who are running neck- and-neck in recent polls — shared the stage in an event Friday, July 29, hosted by Pamplin Media Group and spon- sored by the Oregon Newspaper Publish- ers Association at the Mount Hood Oregon Resort in Welches. The debate was moderated by PMG President Mark Garber and included questions from local journalists, as well as the opportu- nity for the candidates to confront each other with their own inquiries. Drazan, a Canby resident and former Oregon House of Represen- tatives minority leader who won the Republican nomination, made clear that she views her opponents as leaders of an establishment that has brought Oregon to where it is today, and that the state needs new solu- tions to chronic problems such as homelessness, a lack of housing and mental health services, and economic insecurity. “It’s a little bit ironic to me to constantly hear my opponents on the stage be (aghast) on how horrible Oregon is on this and that and the other — ‘We’re 50th (in the country) on this and we have to work on that,’” Drazan said. “They’ve been in charge. We got here because of their voices. There are not two other people in the state with more power than them besides the governor herself and maybe the senate president.” Johnson, a Scappoose resident who was a Democratic state senator before resigning to run as a unaffi li- ated candidate, emphasized that she represents a middle ground between what she described as extremes on her political right and left, noting Drazan’s pro-life stance on abortion and positing that Kotek is a part of a progressive left that is responsible for mounting problems. “Oregonians are distrustful of the radical right and they are terrifi ed of the progressive left … What could be more diff erent and impactful than a governor with an allegiance only to Oregonians and not to a party agenda or special interests?” she said. See Debate, Page A9