A6 NEWS Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, April 27, 2022 Cost overruns hit reload center Homeless mom clings to hope By BRAD CARLSON Capital Press NYSSA — Building the Treasure Valley Reload Cen- ter to original design speci- fications would cost almost one-third more than origi- nally estimated, prompting proponents to scale back the project. The truck-to-train load- ing facility to be built north of Nyssa would ship onions and other commodities east to major markets. Southeast Oregon and southwest Idaho produce about a quarter of the country’s fall storage onions. The 2017 Legislature approved a $26 million Con- nectOregon grant from lot- tery-backed bonds. Legis- lators this year approved a $3 million grant, from fed- eral coronavirus recovery funds, to the city of Nyssa, for a water line extension for the reload center and future industrial development. Greg Smith, Malheur County Economic Develop- ment director and officer of the separate Malheur County Development Corp., said the project is about $9.8 million over the original $35 mil- lion budget. The original plan called for opening nearly 290 acres of industrially zoned ground for development. He said an overarch- ing solution is to reduce the budget and features “from a Cadillac to a Chevrolet” including eliminating “unnec- essary wants.” Cost overruns include about $5 million in unex- pected necessary excavation to deal with excess ground- water, a price from lone building-construction bidder TCG Construction, Meridian, Idaho, that was about $2.9 million above expectations, and steel and asphalt costs driven by high inflation. Smith said construction bidding interest has dropped due to development in south- west Idaho and high transpor- tation costs. The corporation will solicit new bids. About $3 million could be saved by delaying con- struction of one of the three rail spurs for three years, he said. And $1 million could be saved by using a sep- tic waste system instead of a lagoon system serving several companies. Smith said $2 million could be saved by eliminat- ing all access roads except the one to the reload center. Industrial park roads could be added later as funding becomes available. BMH gets $400K equipment grant By STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY — The Blue Moun- tain Hospital District has been awarded roughly $400,000 in federal grant fund- ing to purchase new medical equipment. “Critical access hospitals like the Blue Mountain Hospital District serve as a lifeline for Oregon’s rural commu- nities,” USDA Rural Development Ore- gon State Director Margi Hoffmann said in an April 14 press release. “Too often rural Oregonians are forced to drive hours for specialized med- ical care, while rural health care workers and providers struggle to find funding for basic operations. If an expecting mother no longer needs to travel hundreds of miles for an ultrasound or a grandfather no longer loses crucial days waiting for a cancer screening, that’s a win in our books.” The grant funding came through the Emergency Rural Health Care Grant Program, part of the American Rescue Plan Act. The funds were paid out to 93 rural health care organizations and groups across the country. Joan Sonnenburg, the John Day hos- pital’s director of outpatient and provider services, said the USDA grant has helped the hospital acquire pieces of equipment it otherwise would not have been able to afford. According to the press release, the grant helped the hospital purchase equipment that included an ultrasound machine, a portable chest X-ray machine, and a stand-alone auxiliary generator. Blue Mountain Hospital District CEO Derek Daley said he wished the hospital had had much of this equip- ment during the omicron and delta vari- ant surges. In any case, he said, the hos- pital is in a much better position moving forward for both COVID and non- COVID patients. Showdown looms over BMCC cuts By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian PENDLETON — The Blue Mountain Community Col- lege Budget Committee has its first public meeting to dis- cuss the plan to cut faculty and programs to meet the college’s bottom line. BMCC Faculty Associa- tion President Pete Hernberg said some instructors plan to be at the public meeting Mon- day, April 25, at the Pendleton campus, but he stayed mum about any addresses or state- ments they might make to the committee. BMCC President Mark Browning contends the col- lege started the 2022-23 budget pro- cess with a $2 million hole. After cutting 39 Browning classified and admin- istrative positions from 2020 through 2022, the college no longer can make cuts to those areas. Now, he told the East Oregonian in a meeting April 19, it’s time to “right-size” Blue Mountain, and that means eliminating faculty. His proposal calls for cut- ting 10 full-time faculty and several part-time positions in multiple disciplines and elimi- nating criminal justice, college prep and industrial systems technology programs. Brown- ing said BMCC is top heavy with faculty compared to other Oregon community colleges. BMCC has 47 full-time fac- ulty teaching just more than the equivalent of 1,000 full-time students, he said, while Clatsop Community College has 29 full-time faculty and 800 full- time students and Treasure Val- ley CC in Ontario has 566 full- time students and 26 faculty. Hernberg contends Brown- ing is conflating the 35 full- time faculty who teach on campus with those who teach in the two state prisons in Umatilla County. The teach- ers at Eastern Oregon Correc- tional Institution, Pendleton and Two Rivers Correctional Institution, Umatilla, receive separate funding, he said, and those students don’t count as part of the college’s 1,000 full- time students. Hernberg teaches math and said he keeps a close watch on funding for the col- lege, so Browning’s claim the college is $2 million short is shocking. “The revenue is projected to be up $300,000 from where we were a year ago,” Hern- berg said. And some of the cuts in the proposal, he said, are for classes that are full. By SUZANNE ROIG The Bulletin REDMOND — When sher- iff’s deputies evicted Tessy Moon from her Redmond home, she told her children they were going camping. At first it seemed like fun, but two and a half years later, it’s anything but. Being houseless has taken more imagination and hard work than she could ever have imagined. Getting drinking water and propane for electricity and heat to the campsite requires a half- mile or more walk and a plan on how to carry the heavy tanks across unstable terrain. She used area rocks and found wire fence material to carve a playground out of sage- brush and hard-packed dirt for her kids to play and ride their bikes. Throughout it all, Moon has remained hopeful that one day soon her family won’t be crammed into a fifth-wheel RV in the sagebrush of a remote area of Redmond. “We try every day,” said Moon, a 36-year-old mother of four. “It’s hard to stay clean when you’re homeless.” Their family van, which doesn’t have a current regis- tration, runs, but only when there’s extra money for gas, Moon said. So most days she and her family walk or use the one bicycle they own. Just a week ago she was on her bicy- cle in Redmond and a motorist hit Moon. Thankfully the bicy- cle and Moon were OK, just a few scrapes and bruises. They walk a half-mile — three times a day — to get the children to three different school bus stops. Their RV home is outfit- ted with a scrap wood entry attached to keep the cold out. A black mailbox is wedged into the rungs of a ladder at the entrance. Does she get mail there? A bouquet of fake flowers greets visitors. “It’s pretty small in there,” Moon said, pointing to the dark interior of the RV. “It’s a tight squeeze for us. But luckily someone gave it to us. Some people here (in Central Oregon) have had it hard.” It’s not the Moon life she imag- ined for her children. It’s not the life she imagined for herself growing up in Tumalo. The past two years have been harder than she ever anticipated. There have been times when she’s had to humble herself for diapers or food. She’s stood on street corners or in parking lots with a cardboard sign asking for help. One time, a woman yelled at her to get a job. Another time, a woman handed her $200 to buy Christmas presents. Moon does what she can to make the site homey. On Eas- ter, she hid plastic eggs filled with candy for the children. And sometimes the children spend the weekend with her mother, who lives in Central Oregon. “Anyone can become home- less,” Moon said. “Don’t judge me.” The path to homeless- ness for Moon was paved with nearly three years of domestic violence that finally ended in divorce. Finalized in May, the court awarded Moon posses- sion of a mobile home in Red- mond. That was after more than 30 court hearings all occurring in the middle of the pandemic. Her divorce took a long time because there were crimi- nal charges against her husband for the domestic violence. Her ex-husband is now serving a jail sentence. The mobile home that the couple bought several years ago has been sitting vacant since November 2019, when the court prohibited the family from liv- ing in the home on Northwest 35th Street in Redmond until the health violation caused by the leaking septic system is fixed, according to court records. Raw sewage was seeping on the ground and into a neighbor’s property, according to court records. The court also posted a lien against the home because of back taxes owed. MT. VERNON PRESBYTERIAN Community Church SUNDAY SERVICE..............9 am SUNDAY SERVICE ..9 am 541-932-4800 EVERYONE WELCOME St. Thomas Episcopal Church Join us on Facebook live Sunday 10am Like us on Facebook! Redeemer Lutheran Church Come Worship with us at Grace Chapel (EMC ) 154 E. Williams St. Prairie City, Oregon 541 820-4437 Pastor Robert Perkins Sunday School (all ages) 9:30-10:30 Sunday Worship 10:45-12:00 John Day Valley Mennonite Church Meeting every Sunday at Mt. Vernon Grange Hall Sunday School ................................ 9:30 a.m. Sunday Morning Worship ............. 10:50 a.m. Pastor Leland Smucker Everyone Welcome • 541-932-2861 2 Corinthians 5:17 Every Sunday in the L.C. Community Center (Corner of Second & Allen) Contact Pastor Ed Studtmann at 541-421-3888 • Begins at 4:00pm JOHN DAY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Sunday Worship • 9AM (541) 575-1326 johndayUMC@gmail.com 126 NW Canton, John Day Food Pantry Friday 3-4PM Like us on Facebook! 24/7 Inspirational Christian Broadcasting Tune into KSPL 98.1 FM For more information, call 541 620-0340 CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Sunday School ............................9:30 am Sunday Worship Service.......... 10:45 am Sunday Evening Service ............ 6:00 pm Children & Teen Activities SMALL GROUPS CALL FOR MORE INFO 627 SE Hillcrest, John Day 59357 Hwy 26 Mt. Vernon 1 st Sunday Worship/Communion ...................10am 3 rd Sunday Worship/Communion/Potluck .....4:30pm 2 nd , 4 th & 5 th Sunday Worship ..........................10am Sunday Bible Study .....................................8:45am Celebration of Worship For information: 541-575-2348 Midweek Service FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Sunday School ..................... 9:45 am Sunday Worship ...................... 11 am Fox Community Church ............. 3 pm Sunday Evening Bible Talk ......... 6 pm Saturday Men’s Study ............... 6 pm Weekdays: Sonshine Christian Schoo l Full Gospel- Come Grow With Us Pastor Randy Johnson 521 E. Main • John Day • 541-575-1895 www.johndaynazarene.com 541-575-1202 Church 311 NE Dayton St, John Day Pastor Al Altnow Sundays 5:30pm Youth: 0-6th Grade Thursdays 6:30pm Youth: 0-6th Grade Jr./Sr. High Youth Connection Wednesdays at 6:30pm Overcomer’s Outreach Mondays at 6pm at LWCC A Christ-Centered, 12-Step Recovery Support Group Pastor Sharon Miller 541-932-4910 www.livingwordcc.com