BAKER CITY HERALD • TUESDAY, MAY 31, 2022 A3 LOCAL & STATE Eastern Oregon University graduation back to normal after COVID-19 hiatus BY DAVIS CARBAUGH The Observer LA GRANDE — After a three-year hiatus, the Eastern Oregon University commence- ment ceremony will return to its normal routine. The graduation ceremony will take place at 9:30 am. Sat- urday, June 11, at the univer- sity’s football field at Commu- nity Stadium — following two years of altered ceremonies due to COVID-19 and the field’s turf replacement in 2019, com- mencement will now be back to a standard format. This year’s graduation marks the university’s 92nd commencement ceremony. EOU anticipates awarding up to 675 degrees and certifi- cates this academic year, with more than 300 undergraduate and master’s students set to walk across the stage. All who finished their courses in the summer of 2021, fall of 2021 or winter or 2022 are invited to participate in the spring commencement ceremony. The last two years the COVID-19 pandemic altered Eastern’s graduation plans, If You Go OHSU annual convention and awards ceremony: 8:30 a.m., June 10 EOU student awards assem- bly: 1:30 p.m., June 10 Master’s hooding ceremony: 8:45 a.m., June 11 General commencement: 9:30 a.m., June 11 The Observer, File Eastern Oregon University students prepare to receive their diplomas during an outdoor commencement on the La Grande campus in 2017. with the university turning to virtual gatherings and drive- thru ceremonies. Last year, Eastern graduates packed their cars with family members and received their diplomas from EOU President Thomas Insko on the west side of campus. The brigade of cars, many clad with balloons and decorations, included 2020 graduates who did not have a chance to receive their diploma in person the previ- ous year. In 2019, Eastern gradu- ates did not experience the packed football stadium and extra seating typical of a reg- ular year’s commencement because the university was re- placing the football field turf, a project that helped Eastern continue to serve as a hub for numerous collegiate and high school athletic events. According to the university’s registrar, the 2022 commence- ment team and university of- ficials are still in the process of monitoring the COVID-19 pandemic trends if any poten- tial restrictions or attendance routines need to be adjusted. The in-person event is open to the public. Seating is avail- able on a first-come-first- served basis with ADA seating directly on the field. Viewers can also tune in to a livestream at the following link, youtube. com/user/EOUAV. Other commencement ac- tivities are planned for Friday, June 10: the Oregon Health and Science University will hold its annual convention and awards ceremony at 8:30 a.m.; the Eastern student awards assembly begins at 1:30 p.m.; and a special celebration for online and onsite students is at 6:30 p.m. In addition, prior to the main commencement on June 11, there will be a hooding cer- emony for master’s graduates at Gilbert Plaza at 8:45 a.m. With the commencement ceremony back in its standard form on the Eastern football field, the university is planning accordingly for a large crowd. ADA assistance will be pro- vided to transport individuals to and from farther parking lots. All regular campus park- ing spaces will be free for pub- lic usage. During the ceremony, re- freshments will be provided at the stadium’s concession stand. No photos will be allowed on the field, as a professional photographer will be present to take photos of each graduate — photos are allowed from the stands area. Oregon ballot fiasco highlights the ‘invisible’ election chiefs BY GILLIAN FLACCUS AND SARA CLINE Associated Press OREGON CITY — Voters in an Or- egon county where a ballot-printing er- ror delayed primary results for nearly two weeks have elected the same county clerk five times in the past 20 years de- spite missteps that impacted two pre- vious elections and cost taxpayers at least $100,000. Opponents have repeatedly tried to unseat Clackamas County Clerk Sherry Hall, who was first elected in 2002, fol- lowing elections errors in 2004, 2010 and 2011 and a state vote-tampering investi- gation in 2012. Hall makes $112,600 a year in the nonpartisan position overseeing elec- tions, recording property transactions, keeping public records and issuing mar- riage licenses. She is running for a sixth four-year term in November in the sub- urban county south of Portland, and is being challenged by a former librarian who works in the elections department of Oregon’s largest county. The latest scandal in Oregon comes against the backdrop of a polarized po- litical landscape in which vote counts are increasingly scrutinized. Races for local elections clerks — who until re- cently toiled in obscurity and relative anonymity — are getting new attention, particularly from right-wing voters who deny that President Joe Biden won the 2020 election. Local elections chiefs are the first line of defense for elections integrity, but most voters don’t know who their county clerk is, or even what they do, and are likely to skip over the nonpartisan race on Election Day, or simply pick the in- cumbent. Some county clerks are ap- pointed, but in many counties in Oregon and elsewhere they are beholden to the whims of voters who may not be paying attention, said Christopher McKnight Nichols, an associate professor of history at Oregon State University. There’s a “myopia and invisibility about this sort of office in American public life,” he said. The situation in Oregon’s third-largest county underscores the importance of such contests. In the current election, tens of thou- sands of ballots sent out with blurry bar- codes were rejected by a vote-counting machine. The issue affected Democratic and nonpartisan ballots more than Re- publican ones, state officials have said. The fiasco forced the county to shift nearly 200 county employees to vote tab- ulation duties; county officials don’t yet know the full cost of the cleanup job. For days, workers have been trans- ferring each voter’s intent from spoiled ballots to fresh ones, by hand using pur- ple markers, in a painstaking process that might not be complete for more than two more weeks. More than 81,000 ballots out of more than 116,000 had been counted by early Friday, and nearly 35,000 spoiled ballots remained to be du- plicated, according to county tallies. The outcome of the Democratic pri- mary for Oregon’s 5th Congressional District — a close race between a sev- en-term centrist incumbent and a pro- gressive challenger — was delayed more than a week by the blunder. The AP called the race for challenger Jamie Mc- Leod-Skinner on Friday. The results of several other contests remained undecided as the county strug- gled to meet daily vote-counting bench- marks laid out in a corrective plan sub- mitted to the state. “This affects all of us. This is voter in- tegrity,” said Janet Bailey, a Republican voter who protested outside the Clack- amas County election offices Thursday OTEC into our local communities directly, support local students and return value to OTEC Continued from Page A1 member-owners through “We are very excited about the internship projects that the third year of this incred- the students will complete ible partnership between throughout their four years at OTEC and Eastern Oregon EOU.” University,” said Lea Hoover, The four recipients of the OTEC’s director of member OTEC-EOU Rural Scholar- and strategic services. “By ship: allocating four of our schol- • Maya Smith, Baker Early College arships to this program and • Lauryn Pettyjohn, Grant leveraging a matched invest- ment from EOU we can invest Union High School Spring is here for ranchers... Please watch for animals! • Braden Carson, La Grande High School • Ethan Peasley, Burns High School Applicants for scholar- ships must be an active OTEC member or a dependent or tenant of an OTEC member to be eligible for scholarships. Scholarships are funded from unclaimed capital credits. “We congratulate all the 2022 scholarships recipients and are proud to reward the students for their academic success and dedication to their community,” said Joe Hatha- way, OTEC’s communications manager. Baker County scholarship recipients include: • Graduating high school seniors: Savannah Brown, Syd- ney Lamb, Gavin Stone, all from Baker High School. • Returning college stu- dents: Jayme Ramos, Eastern Oregon University; Cheyenne Thamert, Central Oregon Community College. Annual Youth Trail Ride started in 1964 is sponsored by the • Lumber • Plywood • Building Materials • Hardware • Paint • Plumbing • Electrical And much more! 3205 10th Street Baker City 541-523-4422 2390 Broadway, Baker City 541-523-5223 with about a dozen others. “We, in Ore- gon, a week ago we had our primary, and we still don’t know the results.” Hall knew of the problem with the ballots on May 3, but did not take sig- nificant action until after the election on May 17, when it became clear the vote tally was substantially delayed. The Oregon Secretary of State has said Hall refused offers of help from the state; at least one Democratic state lawmaker has demanded a legislative inquiry into the ballot fiasco. Some voters seized on the county’s problems to demand an end to Ore- gon’s trailblazing vote-by-mail system and the use of electronic machinery to count votes. “Our votes have to count,” said Cindy Hise, a Clackamas County voter who wants the entire primary redone. “This has been going on for days. We’re past all hope of it being a true vote.” Hall declined a phone or in-person interview with The Associated Press for this story but said in response to emailed questions Thursday that she would co- operate with any investigation. She said she has no comment on calls from some for her resignation. She also addressed numerous 2020 contributions she made to national Re- publican causes, saying in a brief email that she “maintains neutrality.” The do- nations to the National Republican Sen- atorial Committee and to WINRED, a Republican Party fundraising platform, were all $100 or less. “I have the right as a private citizen to exercise free speech and association. I do give small contributions to a large num- ber of organizations,” she wrote. “I do not accept endorsements of any kind.” Controversy isn’t new to Hall, who has overseen the county’s elections since she took office in 2003. Mon-Fri 7:30 am - 5:30 pm Saturday 8 am - 5 pm Closed Sun Baker County Mounted Posse This is an outdoor camp with horseback riding and outdoor adventure for boys and girls ages 12-15 years old. Cost is $ 2.00 (that's right only $2.00 dollars) June 25-26, 2022 For more information, questions or an application please call Jodie Radabaugh at 541-524-9358 or 541-403-4933 All state and county regulations will be followed. Dave Killen/The Oregonian Rev. Anthony Lathan, center, speaks as Lift Every Voice Oregon held a press conference at Augustana Lutheran Church in Portland on Thurs- day, May 26, 2022. A series of speakers mourned the victims of the re- cent mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, and called for action to get Initiative Petition 17, an act intended to reduce gun violence, on the November ballot in Oregon. Guns Continued from Page A2 have the job,’” Wyden’s state- ment said. In an email Thursday, Wyden said he is pushing to pass gun reforms such as man- dating universal background checks, banning the sale of guns to anyone under 21, and preventing domestic violence abusers and stalkers from ob- taining guns. The Rev. Anthony Lathan, a mental health counselor and a veteran, said the standard weapon during his 12 years in the military was an M16 ri- fle, which can fire 20 rounds. The shooter in Texas used a 30-round magazine, “10 more rounds than someone who’s fighting to protect our coun- try,” Lathan said. “This man legally purchased a magazine and the bullets that were designed to do one thing — to cause maximum harm, to commit maximum pain,” he said. “Fifty senators and mul- tiple governors have blood on their hands because of their inaction.” Revs. Andrea Cano and Linda Jaramillo both spoke in Spanish as they addressed the crowd of about 30 people in- side the church, referencing the pain the Texas mass shooting inflicted upon Latino commu- nities throughout the country. “Weapons of war do not belong in our homes, in our schools, on our streets, nor in our communities that are in this state,” said Jaramillo, who is the former president of the Ecumenical Ministries of Oregon. “We must lift every voice and say, ‘No more.’ ‘Ya no mas.’” Cano, who is interim pres- ident of the Ecumenical Min- istries of Oregon, approached the podium dressed in black as a symbol of her mourning. “La profunda tristeza nos está tomando — that deep grief is just crushing us,” Cano said. “I ask — implore — not only the Latino community throughout Oregon but all our communities to fill out these petitions as soon as possible … If we don’t sign those signa- tures we are complicit.” Community elder Antoi- nette Edwards and her hus- band, Keith Edwards, took a moment to say the names of each child and teacher killed Tuesday in Uvalde, Texas. With every name, Antoinette placed a single red rose one by one into a large glass jar. “It is our job to make ev- ery politician uncomfortable. Make it inconvenient for them until they do something to save our children,” Keith Edwards said after the jar had been filled. “We must do this civilly, we must do it peacefully, but we must make them uncom- fortable — now and until they do the right thing.”