A10 STATE Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, April 6, 2022 The ’Bow gets new bosses By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian PENDLETON — Pendle- ton’s most famous bar is under new ownership. Business partners Tanner Hawkins and Chris Zimmer- man bought the historic Rain- bow Cafe late last year, tak- ing over for the McGee family. Hawkins, a farmer north of Pendleton, and Zimmerman, an offi ce manager for his father’s chiropractic offi ce, offi cially bought the Rainbow on Dec. 28, the Rainbow’s New Years celebration acting as an unof- fi cial coming out party for the bar’s new owners. Hawkins and Zimmerman view themselves as stewards of one of Pendleton’s oldest businesses, and are looking to maintain the spirit of the Rainbow that’s been estab- lished over the decades. “It’s more than just a bar and cafe,” Hawkins said. “It’s an iconic little piece (of) downtown Pendleton. If it was any other business, I don’t know that Chris and I ever would have pulled the trigger.” The Rainbow, the old- est continuously operating bar in Oregon, began its life in 1883 as The State Saloon and Banquet, its business including both a brothel and opium den. After operating as a cigar shop during the Pro- hibition years, the business relaunched as the Rainbow, gaining its iconic neon sign and Irish themes in the early 1940s. An accomplished drag car racer and longtime auto shop owner, Steve McGee moved from Lake Oswego back to his hometown of Pendleton in 1999 and bought the Rain- bow with his wife, Joanne. McGee died in 2017, but Joanne continued to run the bar until selling it to Hawkins and Zimmerman. The pair said they didn’t buy the Rainbow looking to make money. They’re keep- ing their day jobs and plan to reinvest any profi ts they make from operating the Rainbow back into the business. Haw- kins said the new owners plan to renovate the Rainbow’s bathrooms and are looking into converting the building’s second story space into a vacation rental. But otherwise the core look and service that the Rainbow has been off er- ing for decades will remain. “We’re not going to turn it into an Applebee’s,” Hawkins said. “It’s gonna stay what it is. We’re going to upgrade the bathrooms. (They) really need it. There’s a lot of wear and tear that can be upgraded. But the Rainbow itself is not is not going to change.” The Rainbow is open from 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. six days per week (it closes at midnight on Sundays), meaning it serves both the early-morning coff ee klatches and the late-night bar crowds. Zimmerman and Haw- kins said they’ve been on both sides of the customer spec- trum and wanted to respect the views of long standing patrons. Hawkins said the pair con- sulted with regulars and staff to make sure they got the tra- ditions and decorations right during St. Patrick’s Day, one of the Rainbow’s biggest days of the year. Following two years of COVID-19, Haw- kins said they were happy with the packed house they saw on March 17. The partners credited staff for ensuring the business stayed open during the owner- ship transition. Hawkins com- pared the learning curve of operating a restaurant and bar to “drinking out of a fi re hose,” but he and Zimmerman have been able to lean on the Rain- bow’s workers to help teach them the ropes, from work- ing with vendors to contact- ing temporary employees who help out during busy times. Hawkins and Zimmerman said their workforce ranges from 12-15 employees, but they would like to hire more perma- nent workers to help keep their staff from getting stretched too thin. When a dishwasher called in sick one day, Zimmerman said he washed dishes for fi ve hours at the Rainbow to help keep things moving. While the new own- ers’ fi rst St. Patrick’s Day is already in the books, summer event season is right around the corner. Hawkins said the Rainbow made a deal with Jackalope Jamboree to become the June music festival’s offi - cial afterparty. The Rainbow also is keep- ing an eye on the culmina- tion of Pendleton’s event sea- son: the Round-Up. In the eyes of the Rainbow, Round-Up is “three or four St. Patrick’s Days” put together. Senate passes shipping reform bill By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press WASHINGTON — Agri- cultural exporters are closer to getting some relief from signif- icant supply-chain disruptions with the Senate’s unanimous passage of the Ocean Shipping Reform Act. The legislation to help fi x the supply chain and ease ship- ping backlogs passed by voice vote on Thursday, March 31. It was introduced by Sens. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., and John Thune, R-S.D., with 29 cosponsors. Companion legis- lation led in the House by Reps. John Garamendi, D-Calif., and Dusty Johnson, R-S.D., passed the House in December by a vote of 364-60. “Congestion at ports and increased shipping costs pose unique challenges for U.S. exporters, who have seen the price of shipping containers increase four-fold in just two years,” Klobuchar said. “Meanwhile, ocean carriers that are mostly foreign-owned have reported record prof- its. This legislation will help American exporters get their goods to market in a timely manner for a fair price,” she said. The bill will make it harder for ocean carriers to unrea- sonably refuse goods that are ready to export at U.S. ports, Thune said. The Ocean Shipping Reform Act will: • Require ocean carriers to certify that late fees — known as “detention and demurrage” charges — comply with federal regulations or face penalties. • Shift the burden of proof regarding the reasonableness of “detention or demurrage” charges from the invoiced party to the ocean carrier. • Prohibit ocean carriers from unreasonably declining shipping opportunities for U.S. exports, as determined by the Federal Maritime Commission in new required rulemaking. • Require ocean common carriers to report to the com- mission each calendar quarter on total import-export tonnage and loaded and empty 20-foot Tim’s Mobile Pipe Press OUR PLACE OR YOURS Irrigation Pipe Repair Mount Vernon,Oregon 208-251-4929 equivalent units per vessel that makes port in the United States. • Authorize the commis- sion to initiate investigations of a ocean common carrier’s business practices and apply enforcement measures, as appropriate. • Establish new authority for the commission to register shipping exchanges. The legislation is endorsed by more than 100 organiza- tions, including the American Association of Port Authorities and the Agriculture Transporta- tion Coalition. Once implemented, the bill will provide urgently needed relief to all exporters and importers, in particular agri- culture exporters, the coalition said in a press release. “The transportation crisis for U.S. agriculture products has become increasingly dire. Many agriculture products pro- duced in the U.S. experience signifi cant competition from other countries. If we cannot deliver our products depend- ably, our foreign customers will fi nd alternatives to our exports,” the coalition said. A recent coalition survey found that, on average, 22% of U.S. agriculture foreign sales could not be completed due to ocean shipping disruption, higher costs and carrier practices. The reform act “specifi cally addresses these practices, which are causing so much hardship to U.S. agriculture and threaten our global competitiveness,” the coalition said. Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin Librarian Pia Alliende in the Elton Gregory Middle School library Thursday, March 24, in Redmond. Alliende is one of three librarians in the country recently nominated for School Librarian of the Year by the School Library Journal. A life full of stories Redmond librarian amplifi es culture, diversity in schools By BRYCE DOLE The Bulletin REDMOND — Pia Alliende says her passion for storytelling stems from her parents. Libraries in her hometown of Santiago, Chile, were “piti- ful,” she said. Being a librar- ian in the capital city, which sits in a valley at the foot of the Andes mountains, was not a popular career choice. Books were expensive. Her family was relatively well- off , but her parents were stern, urging the family to be cau- tious with money. Books and reading became a family treat, delivered on Sundays by Alliende’s father, a lawyer with high standards and a “strong but soft heart.” Alliende’s father would read to the family from books he crafted with pieces of card- board and kept in a basket in the closet. This was how books became a guiding force for Alliende, a librarian whose life and career have spanned mul- tiple countries and impacted students, teachers and libraries around the world. While school districts across the country are ban- ning books about gender and race amid a national reckon- ing over equitable education, Alliende is stocking shelves in Redmond School District libraries with books that illu- minate the experiences of people from underserved and marginalized communities. The 60-year-old Alliende has played a major role in revamping libraries in the dis- trict, replacing withered old books with new ones and get- ting rid of literature that per- petuates racist stereotypes. “I want to have books that represent them, not misrepre- sent them,” said Alliende, who serves as part of the Redmond School District Equity Task Force and is co-chair of the Oregon Library Association’s (Equity, Diversity and Inclu- sion) and Antiracism Commit- tee. She added: “I feel that it’s really, really sad that we, as school librarians, need to fi ght for kids to read.” Alliende’s work has not gone unnoticed. She is one of three librarians in the country recently nominated for School Librarian of the Year by the School Library Journal. STRUCTION, LL N O C C AW Featuring: • • • • • Daily & tes Ra Weekly Budget 8 Motel 711 W Main St, John Day, OR 97845 • (541) 575-2155 Roofing • General Construction Remodeling Fences Decks Storage Sheds Andy Wolfer 541-910-6609 Alliende’s goal is to pro- vide students with the option to explore the stories of peo- ple from backgrounds and cul- tures diff erent from theirs. She wants to use storytelling to instill empathy and compas- sion, particularly for those stu- dents whose experiences have historically been ignored. She said, “Sometimes, the kids are invisible.” Recently, Alliende helped the district obtain four grants amounting to more than $25,000 to improve pro- grams at libraries in Redmond schools that have higher con- centrations of Hispanic and Spanish-speaking students. Those include Elton Gregory Middle School, where more than one in fi ve students iden- tify as Hispanic and one in 10 speak Spanish as their fi rst language. In addition, she raised more than $2,500 by com- pleting a 347-mile bike-pack- ing trip through Oregon, just before her 60th birthday. The funds went to libraries across the district, she said. Alliende uses part of the grant funds to bring in Span- ish-speaking authors and hold monthly bilingual family engagement nights where stu- dents and their families hear stories and play Latin Ameri- can games. She said she wants to “foster the idea that their Spanish is good, that their culture is good, that what- ever they do is good, and feel proud.” It was through her par- ent’s storytelling that Alliende found an interest in his- tory. She attended a Catho- lic high school and university in Chile, but she grew bored. She wanted to go to America. She applied, and received a scholarship through the U.S. Fulbright Program, the fl ag- ship international academic exchange program meant to foster relationships between countries. With the grant, Alliende traveled to New York in 1990 to study history at Stony Brook University. The move was hard on her relationship with her parents, she said. But Alliende fell in love with big city nightlife — and with a Spaniard from the Montana farmlands. After college, she struggled to fi nd work because of language barriers. With her new hus- band and a child on the way, Alliende moved back to Chile and to her childhood home. “We had nothing,” she said. After having children, Alliende and her husband moved their family to a town south of Santiago. She worked at a private school, but Chile still wasn’t where she wanted to raise her kids. The fam- ily headed back to the United States after obtaining work visas. She landed a job as an interpreter at a school in Arlington, Virginia, where she became an advocate for fami- lies from Latin America. There, she found a love for libraries. Her commute to work near Washington, D.C. was long, requiring the family to leave their kids in day care for hours. So she proceeded to look for jobs elsewhere in the coun- try. She eventually landed a job as a media library special- ist at Redmond High School in 2006. Three years later, amid the nationwide housing crisis and ensuing economic melt- down, Alliende was laid off . Fortunately, she found a job as the head librarian at the International School of Seville San Francisco de Paula in Spain. Her family moved to Seville, where they remained for a decade. Alliende helped modernize libraries and led workshops for librarians and teachers in places like Dubai, Budapest, Thessaloniki, Paris and Madrid. Meanwhile, her children, who had lost some of their knowledge of Span- ish while living in the U.S., became bilingual, she said. “That was pretty neat,” she said of her kids. “I couldn’t have done it.” In 2019, after Alliende’s children fi nished high school, the family returned to Red- mond and moved back into their home on the Crooked River Ranch. After applying to nearly every school district in Central Oregon, she accepted a job as a library technician at a local elementary school in Redmond. Alliende looked toward schools with more eco- nomically disadvantaged fam- ilies and saw that many of the schools had outdated books. She wanted to help. The pandemic only strengthened Alliende’s resolve to help struggling stu- dents. She made weekly vid- eos for children and helped them engage with their school- ing as they navigated online learning. She purchased a reading app for district stu- dents to have access to digital materials and pushed for bilin- gual videos. As one of the few Spanish-speaking teachers at the school, she wanted to fos- ter the idea in students that “their countries, their cultures, matter.” She’s moved to help them by a book she has in her home, a book written by a friend and mentor who once told her: “Everyone has a story to tell and if you don’t write it, it doesn’t exist.” But it’s more than that. “Literature and its power,” Alliende said her mentor argues in the book, “are the only weapon capable of sav- ing lives.” and Much More! CCB#186113 Monday - Thursday 7am- 6pm Monday - Thursday 7am- 6pm Friday 8am - 5pm Friday Sharpe 8am - 5pm Mendy FNP Mendy Sharpe FNP Apppointments available Shawna Clark, DNP, FNP 541-575-1263 S283676-1 139101 235 S. Canyon Blvd. John Day, Oregon 97845 Accepting new Patients! Go to: www.canyoncreekclinic.com