LOCAL & STATE TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 2020 MARKET Continued from Page 3A If possible, customers are asked to come alone (no chil- dren or dogs). Although these restrictions do bring changes to the mar- ket, Wijayratne encourages the community to support the businesses that depend on the market. “These local vendors are small businesses,” Wijayratne said. “With COVID, everyone has taken a fi nancial hit. It’s great we can provide a place for them to operate. The only way we can get through this is to come together.” New this year is the Double Up Food Bucks program, which matches EBT pur- chases. Shoppers using an EBT need to fi rst stop at the market booth to get tokens for the amount they want to spend. The Double Up pro- SCHOOLS Continued from Page 3A Witty credited Gill for the work he has done to try to prepare for the reopening, but questioned whether those in the governor’s offi ce are willing to listen to the points of view coming from the school administrators and staff represented by Findley and Owens. “Colt Gill has been working at least 18 hours a day,” he said. “He’s been working re- ally hard to get structure and strategy in place for some- thing that hasn’t happened in our lifetime.” Nevertheless, Witty said the districts banded together with their legislative leaders to emphasize to the Salem bureaucrats the importance of working within communi- ties to fi nd solutions that are best suited for their needs. “Our sense is we need to remind them that local control is important and that Eastern Oregon has a dif- ferent situation than the I-5 corridor between Eugene and gram doubles that amount. Confi rmed vendors for this season include: • Jen’s Garden (fresh greens and produce) • My Roots Farm (straw- berries, tomatoes, fresh greens, squash) • Aichele’s Berries (straw- berries, raspberries, blackber- ries, and blueberries) • Hedge Farm (all fruits, vegetables, jams, and sauces) • Rockin 2 Ranch LLC (USDA Beef, burgers, and jerky, birdhouses, quilted items, and handmade masks) • Rising Phoenix Metal- works/Celtic Cauldron (Kettle Korn, jewelry, metal sculp- ture, scarves, photography) • Clear Creek Beef (USDA Beef) • Baker City Farmers Mar- ket starts table (locals have donated extra plant starts to be sold by donation as a market fundraiser) Portland,” Witty said. As of Sunday, just 37 people had tested positive for coronavirus in the fi ve counties Owens represents in Oregon House District 60. Malheur County accounted for 32 of those. There had been no deaths attributed to the coronavirus in any of the fi ve counties as of Sunday. “Moving forward, we have to have a more fi ne-tuned tool toward local statistics,” Witty said. “We’re hopeful the gover- nor will recognize that it’s not advantageous to shut everything down school-wise and economically across the state if the numbers don’t support it.” Witty said that as of late he has seen a change in the attitude of the high-level school policy group regard- ing recognizing the voices of rural schools of Eastern Oregon. “We want a two-way con- versation and to make sure we’re looking at it with more specifi city and not one size fi ts all,” Witty said. BAKER CITY HERALD — 5A ‘Freedom Rally’ brings crowd to Hermiston ■ Event in defiance of COVID-19 guidelines prompts opposing protest By Alex Castle East Oregonian HERMISTON — More than 100 people came out to the festival street in downtown Hermiston on Saturday in defi ance of COVID-19 guidelines against large gatherings for a “free- dom rally,” subsequently sparking a protest in opposition elsewhere in the city. The rally was billed by organizers as a peaceful and apolitical “infor- mation sharing event” that would feature about a dozen speakers from across the state. Though organizers said they felt the event could have provided more detailed information for its audience, the rally remained peaceful despite concerns over poten- tial confl ict. “It could have been better. I didn’t know exactly what every person was going to talk about,” said Colin Hodges, the event’s primary orga- nizer. “I just thought, let’s bring in as many different people as possible from different positions in different communities and let them speak and see what happens.” Community members and law en- forcement expressed specifi c concerns about the appearance of Joey Gibson, who spoke fi rst Saturday and is the founder of the far-right Vancouver, Washington-based group Patriot Prayer, but Hodges said he felt the event ultimately wasn’t defi ned by Gibson’s presence. “As you can see it wasn’t all about Joey Gibson, and Joey’s a great guy,” Hodges said. “He’s a great, peace- ful guy. He has a bad rap for some things, but that’s because the media spins things and portrays people certain ways.” Reports have detailed Gibson and Patriot Prayer’s history of violent clashes with leftist protestors, par- ticularly in Portland, and previously associated themselves with groups like the Proud Boys, an extremist TREASURE VALLEY STEEL, INC. Manufacturing Zee & Cee Purlins In-HouseCustom Cut Exact Lengths • 24 Colors • Custom Trim • 2 1/2” Corrugated • Delivery Available • Full Soffitt Line • 3 ft. Gulf Coast Panel • 3 ft. PBR Panel • 3 ft. Mesa Panel • 3 ft. Tuff Rib Panel • Standing Seam DELIVERY • 2 ft. Delta Rib AVAILABLE • 3 ft. Pro Panel 40 Year Full Paint Warranty • WeatherX Paint System Ben Lonergan / East Oregonian Rallygoers on Festival Street in downtown Hermiston during the “Hermiston Freedom Rally” on Saturday. After standing and watching a few speakers from the back, Linn said he found most of them interesting and didn’t see any associations with white supremacy. “It doesn’t seem like a white su- premacist rally to me,” he said. Gibson was joined by local speak- — Colin Hodges, primary organizer of Saturday’s rally in Hermiston ers like HollyJo Beers, the local lead for the Three Percenters who is also group that has been labeled a hate running for Umatilla County com- group by the Southern Poverty Law missioner. Beers didn’t use the rally Center and whose members describe as an explicit campaigning event themselves as “Western chauvinists.” but focused her time on the stage to Gibson currently faces felony discuss the Constitution and how charges for inciting a riot for his role she believes current restrictions are in a Portland street fi ght last May threatening the freedoms secured between Patriot Prayer members and within it. members of the anti-fascist commu- “We were pleased with the turnout nity that resulted in a woman being and the people were dynamic speak- knocked unconscious and sent to the ers,” Beers said after the rally. “None hospital with an alleged vertebrae of it was racist, none of it was non- fracture. inclusive.” Joshua Linn is a teacher at Rocky About three blocks away from the Heights Elementary School in Herm- “Hermiston Freedom Rally,” a protest iston and attended the beginning labeled “Essential not Sacrifi cial” of Saturday’s rally after he said a started at the same time. coworker texted him about its con- See Rally/Page 6A nections to white supremacist groups. “I just thought, let’s bring in as many different people as possible from different positions in different communities and let them speak and see what happens.” PREPARE FOR SUMMER TRAVEL TIRES, BRAKES, ALIGNMENT & BATTERIES -FX#SPT5JSF4WD #SJEHF4U #BLFS$JUZ Z ONTARIO 541-889-4214 BOISE 208-336-7505 1460 N. 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