SIX- Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, March 2, 2005 Local students hold Winter Dance Recital On Friday, Feb 25, 25 local girls, ages 3-12, held their Winter Dance Recital at Heppner High School The g irls are tra in e d by E lyshia R ennison, o w ner o f P erfo rm in g A rts and Humanities o f Hermiston, who comes to Heppner on Mondays to teach tap, jazz and ballet During the recital, the girls were broken into five different groups with four groups performing both Chamber Chatter Bv Claudia Hughes, Exec. Dir. There was a robin in my yard this morning, a true sign o f spring Rain is now falling soft upon our fields this afternoon and it’s beginning to look “green” in the Chamber office and around Heppner as “A Wee Bit O ’ Ireland” fast approaches. People are coming through the Chamber door for parade applications, C ruz-In inform ation, bringing donations for the first ever Luck O ’ the Irish Casino night, getting applications for feeding large groups o f people, checking on RV sites and the list goes on March 17-20 is just around the corner Pick up a brochure to see some o f the new events added A call to the office today offered a true Irish brogue at the other end, calling from Arlington, VA. Alan Carrick and friends will be here for our celebration to sing around town at various events and at Bucknum’s. He wanted to be sure that Father Condon knew they had learned to sing “Molly Malone,” just for him It may be difficult to beat these guys if they choose to enter the KUMA coffee hour brogue contest ‘Tis grateful I am for all the leprechauns in the form o f Joann Burleson, Doris Brosnan, Tonia Adams, Sharon Harrison and Chamber President Nancy Gochnauer, who checked mail, answ ered requests, sent out parade registration, w orked on publicity, took minutes and performed a myriad o f other tasks involved with the Chamber of Commerce while I was out for two weeks. Chamber weekly meetings continue. All entities report at Chamber this first Thursday, March 3 On March 10, Representative Greg Smith will hold a conference call at noon giving the Chamber a monthly legislative update and on March 17 a member business will again be featured during the Chamber luncheon The Chamber Board o f Director’s meeting will be held on Wednesday, March 23 at 11:30 a m at John’s Place. Thought for the Week: “People often say motivation doesn’t last; neither does bathing, that’s why both are recommended daily.” -Z ig Ziglar a jazz or ballet piece and a tap piece and one group performing only a tap piece T he g irls will be performing soon at Willow C reek T errace fo r the residents and will hold their Spring D ance R ecital in May. Legion and Auxiliary brings Child ID to lone students T he A m erican Legion and Auxiliary, along with the cooperation from the lone School D istrict believes that children are our most treasured possessions. With this in mind, they are planning “ The Child ID Program” o f lone, locally being called the “Protecting Our Kids” project Consider this: There is a flash flo o d , an earth q u ak e; som e o th e r natural disaster; someone takes your child- How would you tap into the Amber Alert System? T he child ID kit in clu d es: m edical information, DNA samples o f your child, fingerprints and o th e r im p o rtan t information as well as a place for the picture o f your child Each kit becom es the property o f the parent or guardian These kits are available to the Legion for $ 2.50 each and will be finished by the American Legion Auxiliary However, if anyone wishes to help defray the expense o f getting all children involved, you Seventh-Day Adventist Church hosts may donate if you wish guest speaker discovered the deep secrets Organizations may wish to help also W o rld -re n o w n e d of Bible prophecy Fie speaks The Sheriff’s office the author and speaker Doug on will help w ith th e Batchelor will be speaking at “amazing” fin g erp rin tin g to ensure the Heppner Seventh-Day facts o f proper completion If you A d v e n tist C h u rch via la s t - d a y have any questions please satellite on Friday, March 4 e v e n ts ... telep h o n e one o f the at 7 p m. There will be no e v e n t s following Robin M oran, charge for the meeting or for th at are Chair o f the “Protecting Our the study materials. Free happening Kids” Project; Irene Holtz, child c are will also be today Auxiliary President; Eunice Tie provided McElligott, Auxiliary Vice- Batchelor, who was S ev en th - President; or June Crowell, living in a cave and found an D a y A uxiliary S e c re tary - old Bible, dusted it off and Adventist Treasurer began his journey Through Church is The gro u p is years o f in-depth study, he located at 560 N. M inor targeting the “big” school for Street in Heppner March 8 St. Patrick’s Senior Center news Volunteers from the Christian Life Center are hosts for the March 9 noon meal at St Patrick’s Senior Center The menu for the day is chili, baked potatoes, coleslaw, Parker House rolls, peaches and cottage cheese and brownies The C enter has been notified that the Mural Committee has elected to present a print o f the museum mural to the Senior Center The presentation will take place on March 9 during the meal The center is encouraging an exceptional attendance on that day to show the Center's appreciation for the gift Last week, members o f the Heppner High School Honor Society filled in as hosts o f the meal They prepared the room, served participants and helped clean up The center appreciated their willingness to offer community service at the gathering l i. Lexington Grange to host community sale Lexington G range #726 is hosting a community yard sale on Saturday, March 5 from 10 a m to 5 p.m. Tables are free and com m unity m embers are invited to bring and sell their belongings at the Grange For m ore in fo rm atio n c o n tac t C larence at 989-8493 or Robin at 422-7262 DA seeks medical rep for COUIlty child abuse team The Morrow County H ealth D istric t heard a re q u e st from M orrow C ounty D istrict A ttorney David C Allen for a medical representative to serve on the c o u n ty ’s child abuse multidisciplinary team A llen ask ed the health district to allow a provider to serve on the team and suggested Terry A n d erso n , a p h y sician ’s assistant who is working at the Irrigon clinic. Allen said th a t the child abuse multidisciplinary team has been lacking the medical piece o f the team, which is vital He said that funds for train in g , tra n sp o rta tio n , mileage and lodging for the team member and medical exams for the possible victim are available through CAMI (C h ild A buse Multidisciplinary In v e stig a tio n ) w hich is funded by the state through crim inal fines, fees and assessments. Allen said that while the team member would be required to attend training, m eetin g s and a p p ea r in court, the team sees only around 10 assessments per year and probably only one o r tw o o f those actually come to trial. He said the bulk o f incidents probably o ccu r in the B oardm an- Irrigon areas. He also said th a t the team w ould w elco m e o th e r m edical p ro fe ssio n a ls, such as nurses, nurse practitioners and MDs. The board agreed with the request and gave p e rm issio n fo r A llen to contact Anderson. Beautification Commission declares City Cleanup Days =The C ity of H ep p n er’s B eautification Commission has declared March 1-13 as “City Cleanup Days.” During the annual “ C ity C lean u p D a y s,” residents are encouraged to do their part in beautifying the community. The cleanup days are being tim ed to happen before Heppner’s St. P a tric k ’s C eleb ratio n to spruce up the town before the large influx o f visitors. Les Schw ab Tire C e n te r is helping the com m unity by accepting tires for disposal. This is limited to Heppner residents and four passenger or pickup tires per family. The fo llo w in g cleanup opportunities are also available and are located at or near the City Yard off Riverside Street next to Jay Coil Fabrication. -A m etal recycle dum pster for larger metal objects Tires, refrigerators, w ashers, dryers or other ap p lia n ce s c an n o t be accepted -A yard debris only d u m p ster (no household garbage) -A y ear-ro u n d recycling bin for household metals, glass, newspapers (no plastic). These are limited to City o f Heppner residents only For further information contact Heppner City Hall at 676-9618 M a g n e tic D oor Signs H ERE H eppner G azette-T im es 676-9228 Also at the meeting, the board -heard the January financial report which shows a $47,000 loss for the month, compared to a $14,000 loss for December and a $25,000 average monthly loss The loss was due in part to a $27,000 Medicare payment settlem ent, a physician’s q u a rte rly bonus and increased costs to hire a substitute lab technician to replace one out following surgery MCHD also paid $13,538 to Columbia River Health Services, according to the district’s agreement to help with funding the new B oardm an clinic. In ad d itio n al o p e ra tin g revenue, the district received a $20,775 grant to purchase a four-wheeler for use at the county’s new OHV park. -heard th at the district’s cash flow was up $185,000 and the days in acco u n ts receivable was dow n to 67 days, both improvements. -heard that the new director o f nursing services, M olly R hea, w as doing “excellently.” “A lot o f things have been coming at her and I think she’s really enjoying it,” commented CEO Victor Vander Does He said that the switch in job descriptions fo r R usty E stes, from maintenance to emergency services, and Carl Lauritsen, from emergency services to m ain ten an ce, w as also working well. -heard the following report for January: Pioneer Memorial Clinic-429 patient visits with 14 o f those new patients and an additional 38 patients seen by a nurse; Irrigon Clinic-192 patients with 30 o f those new patients and 52 additional patients seen by a nurse; ambulance r e p o r t- 12 runs for the Heppner ambulance, 26 for B oardm an and 16 for Irrigon; Pioneer Memorial Hospital-nine admissions, 322 o u tp a tie n ts, 67 em ergency room encounters, 1362 lab tests, 116 x-ray procedures, 23 CT scans, 36 EKG tests, 31 re sp ira to ry th erap y procedures, 104 hospital visits by providers covering the em ergency room for $26,128 in revenue; 153 H om e H ealth v isits and procedures, and 742 drug d o ses for $ 3 7 ,7 3 6 in revenue -heard a report from Vander D oes concerning bids on x-ray equipment. He said th a t he receiv ed a variety o f bids on a variety o f equipment and is in the process o f comparing those bids. -discussed finding a board m em ber from the Irrig o n area w ith board m em ber Ken M atlack o f Irrigon, who has expressed a desire to leave the board since he has been elected Morrow County Sheriff and serves on a number o f other boards. lone Schools corrects honor roll list The recently published honor roll list from lone Schools for quarter two and semester one had been made in error, including no distribution between group A (4.0- 3.5) and B (3 49-3 0) honor roll students. The corrected list for the school is as follows: Quarter 2: Grade 5: (A)- Steven Holland, Zac Orem, Jordan Peterson, Christine Raible, Makenna Ramos and Mary Rietmann; (B)- Adam Collin, JoAnna Patton and Micah Stillman Grade 6: (A)- Beth Morter (4.0), Mariah Bradfield, Tom Holland and Jake Trahan; (B)- Tim Clay, Mary Gates, M arco Juarez, Kevin LaRue, Alex Rietmann, Tanner Rietmann and Shelby Wiggers. Grade 7: (A)- Alex Carlson (4.0), Sarah Stillman (4.0) , Stefanie Archer, Mike Raible, R.J. Ramos and Heather Wiggers; (B)- Gunner Jessen and Tyree Svetich. Grade 8: (A)- Tiana Camarillo, Kara Clay, Matt Coleman and Brenna Rietmann; (B)- Luke Bradfield and Clay Morter Grade 9: (A)- Justin Archer (4.0), Shannon Clay (4 .0 ) , Emily Rietmann (4.0), Kip Krebs and Teonna Vandever; (B)- Paige Armstrong, Kaylee Palmateer, Alan Rietmann and Kylee Svetich. Grade 10: (A)- Stephanie Holland and Kayla LaRue; (B)- Mason Bradfield, Meghan Gaines and Megan Tollefson Grade 11: (A)- Tony Bolin, Jenny Griffith and Kyle Palm ateer; (B )- Tyler Brow n, A shly G ram s, Kelly Thompson and John Walton. Grade 12: (A)- Nick Christman (4.0), Barbara Holland (4 0), Kasie Peterson (4.0), Alyssa Rietmann (4.0), Missy Baker, Arthur Ekstrom, Amanda Emery, Sara Peck and Tyler Riverman; (B)- Austin Arballo, Taylor McElligott and Kim Morris Semester 1: Grade 5: (A)- Steven Holland, Zac Orem, Jordan Peterson, Christine Raible, Makenna Ramos and Mary Rietmann; (B)- Adam Collin and Micah Stillman Grade 6: (A)- Beth Morter (4 0), Mariah Bradfield, M ary G ates, Tom H olland, Alex Rietm ann, Tanner Rietmann and Jake Trahan; (B)- Marco Juarez, Kevin LaRue and Shelby Wiggers Grade 7: (A)- Alex Carlson (4 0), Sarah Stillman (4.0) , Mike Raible and R J. Ramos; (B)- Stefanie Archer, Matt Hams, Gunner Jessen, Tyree Svetich and Heather Wiggers. Grade 8: (A)- Tiana Camarillo (4 0), Kara Clay (4.0) , Matt Coleman and Brenna Rietmann; (B)- Luke Bradfield and Clay M orter Grade 9: (A)- Justin Archer (4.0), Shannon Clay (4 0) and Emily Rietmann (4 0); (B)- Kip Krebs, Kaylee Palmateer, Alan Rietmann, Kylee Svetich and Max Trahan Grade 10: (A)- Stephanie Holland (4 0), Kayla LaRue and Megan Tollefson; (B)- Mason Bradfield and Brittnee DesBouillons Grade 11: (A)- Tony Bolin, Ashly Grams, Jenny Griffith and Kyle Palmateer, (B)-William Bergstrom, Tyler Brown, Kelly Thompson and John Walton Grade 12: (A)- Nick Christman (4 0), Amanda Emery (4 0), Barbara Holland (4 0), Tyler Riverman (4 0), Missy Baker, Arthur Ekstrom, Taylor McElligott, Kim Morris, Sara Peck, Kasie Peterson and Alyssa Rietmann, (B)- Austin Arballo