TWO - Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner. Oregon Wednesday, October 2,2002 Lexington Fireman accepted in the V.I.P. The Official Newspaper of the City of Heppner and the County o f Morrow H ep p n e r G A Z E T T E -T I M E S U S.P S. 240-420 Morrow County's Home-Owned Weekly Newspaper Published weekl> and entered as periodical matter at the Post Office at Heppner, Oregon under the Act of March 3, 1879 Periodical postage paid at Heppner, Oregon. Office at 147 W W illow Street Telephone (541 >676-9228 Fax (541)676-9211 E-mail gtiif heppner net or gtiu rapidserse net Web site www heppner net Postmaster send address changes to the Heppner Gazette-Times. P.O. Box 337, Heppner, Oregon 97836 Subscriptions $24 in Morrow Counts, $18 senior rate (in Morrow Count) only, 62 years or older). $30 else­ where David S y k es.............................................................................................................Publisher Katie W all..................................................................................................................... Editor News deadline it Monday at S p.m. For Advertising advertising deadline is Monday at 5 p m Cost for a display ad is $4.75 per column inch Cost for classified ad is 504 per word Cost for Card of Thanks is $7 up to 100 words Cost for a classified display ad is $5.35 per column inch. For Public/Legal Notices public'legal notices deadline is Monday at 5 p m Oates for publication must be specified Affidavits must be required at the time of submission Affidavits require three weeks to process after last date of publication (a sooner return date must be specified if required) On the HEPPNER WEBSITE: www.heppner.net • Start or Change a Subscription • Place a Classified Ad • Submit a News Story • View Real Estate for Sale • City Council & Planning Minutes • Local Businesses • County Park • Willow Creek Park Reservations • Free Digital Postcards • Senior Housing • and more! Childcare resource and referral services available in Morrow County By Katie Wall The U m atilla-M orrow Head Start offers a program called Childcare Resource and Referral. This is a free of charge program that gives aide to child care prov iders and parents looking for child care. C andy G reen from Heppner is a parent/provider consultant, who wants to make sure the people of Morrow County know about this program. G reen said that the program is involved in assisting child care providers who wish to receive training and become registered providers in Oregon. Once a provider becom es registered the program works as a referral service, as well as a technical support group. Providers can call with question including O regon law s and resources available to providers. There are also scholarships available to providers wishing to receive the training to become registered. For the parents o f Morrow and Umatilla counties the program provides them with a directory of registered providers. A parent can call the service and get a list of three to four child care providers in area of Morrow and Umatilla counties they need. For example, a parent in Heppner, who may work in Hermiston and would like to have their child cared for there, could call the service and get a list o f child care providers in H erm iston. The service does not, however, give recommendations of one provider over another. “We suggest that the parent check out the provider and its environm ent and choose a provider based on their own opinion,” said Green. The Childcare Resource and Referral service has over 200 provider listings for Umatilla County and about 30 for Morrow County. They also have two paren t/p ro v id er consultants available at their o ffice in Hermiston. Green would also like to let registered providers know that the service offers a “ lending library.” The library includes learning activities and materials, books, videos, as well as equipment such as cribs, and toddler size tables and chairs. For those providers in Morrow County that would like to utilize the library but cannot get to Herm iston, Green offers to bring materials to and return them for the provider. For those who would like more information. Green is in Boardman on Fridays at the DHS building in Boardman. Or, she can be reached in Hermiston at their offices located at 110 NE 4th St., and by phone at 1-800-559-5878, from 8 a.m.- 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. Births Hunter Quaid Greenup- a son. Hunter Quaid Greenup, was bom on August 14, 2002, to Tiffanie and Travis G reenup, at Good Shepard M edical C enter, H erm iston. H unter w eighed 8 pounds 7 ounces. His sister is Blake Greenup. Grandparents are Barry and Mary Ann Munkers and Bill and C indy G reenup. G reat- gran d p aren ts are Leonard Munkers, Rocky and Nita Proctor and Herb and Nancy Ekstrom. $500 REWARD FOR INFORMATION LEADING TO THE ARREST AND CONVICTION OF THE PERSON OR PERSONS WHO BROKE INTO CABINS AT LAKE PENLAND ON OR ABOUT MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 3 , 2 0 0 2 . PLEASE CONTACT THE MORROW COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPT. AT (5 4 1 ) 6 7 6 -5 3 1 7 . M O RRO W COUNTY CABIN O W N ERS A SSO C IA TIO N , INC. wmmMMwwmm HALLOWEEN & FALL SIDEWALK SALE Friday, O ctober 4th, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. LOTS OF GREAT FALL SAVINGS! M umuj ' j Djuiij * 217 North M ain • H eppner M onday-Frtday 9-« and Saturday »-« 5 7 0 _ 9 '| 5 Q Serving Heppner Lexington t lone n* Country Rota 233 N Mam • Heppner Monday-Friday 9-6 • Saturday 9-6 Isaiah Stillman o f the Lexington V olunteer Fire Department has been accepted to attend the National Fire Academy in Em m itsburg, M aryland. Stillman was approved through the Volunteer Incentive Program whereby FEMA will reimburse most of the expenses upon a successful com pletion o f the class. Stillm an will arrive in Baltimore on Nov. 16 and depart on Nov. 23 after an intensive six days of classes. This process started for Stillman when he was challenged to find a class that they offered and apply for it. Lexington’s Fire Chief Charlie Sumner had to send a special letter o f reference recommending Isaiah for this class and asking for an exemption o f requirements for him to be eligible. The class that he is scheduled to take is “Command and C ontrol o f Incident Operations”. Stillman’s long-term goal is to be a professional EMT and Firefighter. At the age of 18 he has already completed training to become a NFPA Fire Fighter I and is a certified w ildland firefighter. Stillman has been a member of the Lexington Fire Department for 3l/ j years but up until now has been limited by his age in how much he could do. In October, Stillman will be trying to complete his wildland task performance book to become a Single Resource Crew Boss. Stillman will be taking classes from Blue Mountain Community College this coming winter term to prepare him for classes at Chemeketa Community College next fall. Stillman would like to get an Associate of Arts Degree in Fire Suppression as well as in Fire Prevention. While going to college in Salem he will be working a 24- hour shift a week as a fireman. He would like to work a shift as an EM T also. He said, “ In addition to the class at BMCC for the next year I will try to earn money for college and continue to serve our community on the fire department.” When asked about the upcoming training Stillman said, "The N ational Fire Training A cadem y will give me the opportunity to meet and to work with professional firemen who have like goals. This class will allow me to meet some college requirements and it will provide me with an excellent training opportunity. At the same time it makes me nervous for several reasons: 1 have never flown before, 1 will be working with professional firemen, and being back there where there are a few more people than Lexington.” When asked about what his family thought about his goal to be a fireman/EMT he replied, “They were apprehensive at first but are supportive o f it now. A couple of thing that have helped me over the years have been the motivation I have received from the various trainings and the encouragement received from various people.” p rofessional developm ent opportunities. A1 Meunier, who spent 16 years as a school superintendent in Northeastern O regon and now serves as directo r o f the L eadership Development Center which is housed at the ESD, will serve as project director. The Leadership Development Center is a joint project o f Lewis & Clark, the ESD, and E astern O regon University. Murdock said that the developm ent o f the grant documents was a team effort which involved Dr. Tom Ruhl, dean o f the Graduate School of Education and Kim Locatell, program specialist from Lewis & C lark as well as C ourtney Stenson, a resource procurement specialist with the ESD. He went on to applaud the hours o f work which went into preparing the 105-page grant document. Added Murdock, “we are cu rrently in the m idst o f adm inistering a Transition to Teaching Grant Program grant which was written in cooperation with the Northwest Regional Lab. The new com ponent for ad m in istrato rs is a natural addition to our efforts to have a regional presence throughout Eastern Oregon in bringing high quality training to local educators.” He also noted that Stenson had played a key role in the preparation of the “Transition To Teaching” grant request. In ad dition to the Transition to Teaching Program and the new REAL Project, the U m atilla-M orrow ESD also operates the “Education Toolkit” program which provides training for about fifty-five new teachers in Northeastern Oregon and the Eastern O regon Sum mer Institute, a two-week summer program which this year attracted nearly 300 teachers. B oth M eunier and Murdock, who played an active role in helping design and prepare the program design, will also be involved in its implementation. For additional information contact the Um atilla-M orrow ESD, at (541)966-3102. illows Grange #672, lone Saturday, October 12th Spaghetti Feed (5:30 p.m.) } and Blue Mountain Old Time Fiddlerf8 Association (7 p.m.) Music and Meal: Adults $8 • Seniors & Students $7 • Ages 6-12 $2.50 • 6 & under tree 676-9426 wmmmmm mm. I Editor's note: Letters to the Editor must be signed The Gazette-Times will not publish unsigned letters Please include your address and phone number on all letters for use by the G-T office The C-T reserves the right to edit TheCrT is not responsible for accuracy of statements made in letters. (Any letters expressing thanks will be placed in the classifieds under ‘Card of Thanks "at a cost o f $7.) Two faces of Gordon Smith To the Editor: W ill the real G ordon Sm ith please stand up? He presents two different faces in his current television ad campaign. One strategy portrays him as a really nice guy. This is the compassionate Gordon Smith in the TV ads that run over and over each day, show ing his concern for people, such as gays and lesbians, who are often the object of discrimination and hate. One can applaud his compassion while getting very tired of the frequency of the ads. There is also the Gordon Smith whose campaign is almost like a pit bull in tenaciously attacking Bill Bradbury, again and again, for his voting record on taxation in the O regon Legislature. O f course, at times that voting record was not that different from Gordon Smith’s when they served together in that body. But this Smith strategy is neither kind nor strong on logic. In recent years, money has been d esperately needed to fund O regon’s programs; attacking those who have voted for tax increases of various kinds to pay for them seems more than unfair. And if you remember, Smith ran this same type of anack ad against Bradbury before the primary election last spring had even selected Bill Bradbury as Smith’s opponent. Gordon Smith can advertise at this level because he has raised much more money for this cam paign than Bill Bradbury has. Smith started his barrage of TV ads two months before N o v em b er’s general election, at a level usually aired only in the last two weeks. The TV viewer is being bombarded with ads showing these two faces of Gordon Smith. I suggest that Gordon Smith do Oregonians a real favor- stop repeating all those ads, and give the millions saved to the State of Oregon to help maintain police officers, correctional institutions, manageable class sizes in schools, etc. People would vote for him out of gratitude for the help with Oregon’s current budget crisis... and relief at not having to watch all those ads for another six weeks. (s) Linda Shaw Heppner 4th Annual Morrow County Lewis & Clark Bicentennial Observation in Boardman The free pie social will be Umatilla-Morrow ESD received grant The Um atilla-M orrow Education Service District has received a grant from the U.S. Department of Education School L eadership Program in the amount of $607,329 according to an announcement received from the office o f Senator Gordon Smith. The grant was written in cooperation with Lewis & Clark College. ESD Superintendent G eorge M urdock, who was contacted via telephone by Susan Toy in the D epartm ent o f Education, said he was told that the grant ranked third out of 175 which were submitted. A total of 20 grants across the U nited States were funded through the School Leadership Program. Said Murdock, “federal grants are incredibly competitive. To even secure one is a tremendous accomplishment. To be third out of 175 which were reviewed intensively by national experts is definitely something to be celebrated.” The grant program is designed to provide assistance to high-need local education agencies in the developm ent, enhancement, or expansion o f innovative programs to recruit, train, and m entor principals (including assistant principals) for high-need schools. According to Murdock, the U m atilla-M orrow ESD proposed to partner with regional service providers in Eastern Oregon and the Lewis & Clark Graduate School of Education to tailor and implement a program model that specifically focuses on rural areas. The title o f the p roject is REA L— Rural Education and Administrative Leadership. The ESD superintendent also noted that in addition to increasing the num ber and diversity o f candidates who receive th eir ad m in istrato r license. Project REAL will provide learning op p o rtu n ities and stru ctu res to increase the effectiveness of current principals and decrease the effects o f isolation caused by geography and a lack of accessibility to regular Letters to the Editor Meal Only: Adults 12 and older $5 • Ages 6-12 $2.50 • 6 & under free Music Only: Adults $4 • Seniors and Students $3 PMn»m n m m iM m m racn PM ntm »»n»m «nttM »cn«n ixNn«iHn n Mnni i A tra il o f m usical opportunities from Boardman Marina Park to Riverfront Center, as well as a pie baking contest, pie social and educational exhibits, will be part of the free afternoon activities for Lewis & Clark B icentennial H eritage Observation, to be held Oct. 13 in Boardman. The observation will be topped with a 7 p.m. concert featuring “Music from the Era of Lewis & Clark” by The Trail Band. The event recognizes Oct. 19, 1805, when Lewis & Clark, the Corps o f Discovery, Sacagawea, her French trapper husband Charbonneau and infant “Pomp” all visited and camped with native people on a sandy island in the Mid Columbia. The island, off shore from Irrigon Marina Park in North Morrow County, is now under the waters of the Columbia River. The 2002 Lewis & Clark B icentennial H eritage Observation will begin at 2 p.m., on Sunday, Oct. 13, with free musical presentations along the Columbia River Heritage Trail. Visitors are encouraged to explore the level paved trail connecting Boardman Marina Park, Captain A1 James Historic Barge Tug, Riverfront Center and the new Port o f M orrow trail east o f Riverfront Lodge. K inzel & H yde, an acoustic blues duo from Portland, w ill perform outdoors at Marchelles, the site of the original Boardman OWNR Depot; Win Weston Combo will offer Old time fiddle music at the Riverfront Lodge; and The Shenanigans will play at the pie social. An early “American style Pie Baking Contest” begins at 5 p.m. at Riverside High School, 210 Boardm an Ave NE, Boardman. The pie contest is open to all. Judging for “Prettiest Pie,” “Flakiest Pie Crust, “ and “Judges Favorite Pie” takes place at 5:30 p.m. held from 6 - 7 p.m. and will be com bined w ith educational exhibits. Lorie Watlamet, from the C olum bia River Inter-Tribal Fisheries Enforcement, will have an exhibit on preserving cultural resources; & the new Columbia R iver H eritage Trail M ap/ brochure will be available. A fternoon activ ities and advertising for Lewis & Clark Heritage Observation are funded by M orrow County U nified Recreation District. Beginning at 6:30 p.m., Riverside High School Auditorium doors open for The Trail Band concert seating. Trail parking is available at Boardman Marina Park Boat Launch area, Captain A1 James, and Riverfront Center. To reach the trail, take Interstate 84 exit #164, north on Main St. to the Columbia River. Turn left on Marine Dr. for Boardman Marina Park, or turn right on Marine Dr. for Riverfront Center. Trail Band C oncert tickets are $10 if purchased by Oct. 12, and are available at these locations: in Boardman- Columbia River Title Company, 101 SW K inkade Rd., Boardm an Pharmacy & Hardware, 202 1st St. NW, and Boardman Chamber o f Commerce, 206 N. Main St.; in Irrigon- Irrigon City Hall, 1095 N. M ain St., and H uw e’s Washboard & Laundromat, 300 E. Highway 730; and in Heppner- Columbia River Title Company, 126 May St. C oncert T ickets purchased at Heritage events on Oct. 13 are $12. C oncert Sponsors Include: City o f B oardm an; Morrow County Court; Potlatch; Boardm an Pharm acy & Hardw are; Boardman Health Care C enter, N orth M orrow C om m unity Foundation and others. For more inform ation about 2002 Morrow Co. Lewis & Clark Heritage Observation, call (541)481-9457. Head Start program gets funding The Umatilla-Morrow Head Start program received $343,000 in federal funding for the fiscal year 2003. The funds will be used to continue Head Start’s on-going pre-kindergarten programs, for children ages three to five. The announcement of the funding came Sept. 24 from Senators Gordon Smith (R-OR) and Ron Wyden (D-OR). Both senators praise the program. “ This funding ensures that Oregon children will be granted the educational tools needed to have a happy, successful future,” said Smith. “Throughout Oregon, Head Start is helping give kids the skills to succeed in both school and life,” added Wyden. Head S tart, w hich is funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Administration for Children and Families, is a child development program that serves low-income families. The program not only provides pre-kindergarten program s, but also includes medical, dental and mental health care, nutritional advisement, and parental involvement in children’s lives.