Remembrance Walk funds given to emergency services HEPPNER G T 50¢ azette imes VOL. 134 NO. 12 10 Pages Wednesday, March 25, 2015 Morrow County, Heppner, Oregon BMCC to take bond to voters again Friends Helping Friends committee members Kathi Dickenson (far left) and Mary Haguewood centric by critics, so the (far right) present the proceeds from the St. Patrick’s Remembrance Walk/Run to Ione Fire Chief Virgil Morgan (center left) and Heppner Fire Chief and EMS Coordinator Rusty Estes college cut renovations (center right) in front of the Heppner Fire Hall Monday. The committee chose to donate this to the pool and theater, as year’s event proceeds to fire and ambulance services in South Morrow County. The event, well as the construction of held each year in the memory of community member and nurse Donna Schonbachler, raised a new indoor arena for the $6,733.85 this year. Heppner and Ione fire departments received $3,366.92 between them, and school’s rodeo team at the the South Morrow EMT Association received $3,366.93. –Photo by Andrea Di Salvo BMCC President Camille Preus gave a presentation to the Hep- pner Chamber of Commerce recently regarding the proposed bond. –Photo by David Sykes By David Sykes Blue Mountain Com- munity College will be going out for a $23 million bond levy in May, with the money to be used for new programs and facilities, and to fix and upgrade existing buildings and infrastruc- ture. The college held a simi- lar levy for $28 million that failed in November. And after a listening tour and input from the public, a BMCC blue-ribbon panel decided to pare the levy by $5 million and try again. If approved, the 15-year levy will require a 25-cent-per- thousand-dollars valuation property tax to support it. The last failed levy was deemed too Pendleton- Pendleton campus. A partial run-down on what the bond is going to buy includes $3.2 mil- lion for a precision irri- gated agricultural facility in Hermiston, a $4.7 mil- lion workforce training and early learning center in Boardman, and $4.7 million in work on the Agriculture Center of Excellence in Pendleton. There will also be $1 million spent on in- struction equipment for diesel tech, dental, nursing and other programs. On the renovation side, the college plans to spend close to $12 million on upgrades and repairs to buildings, data center, tech- nology and other college infrastructure. An example of one of the projects on the bond is a proposed precision irri- gated agriculture facility in Hermiston that would cre- ate a partnership between BMCC and Oregon State University. Should the bond pass, OSU has agreed to provide the land to BMCC for the facility at little or no cost in exchange for use of the building. SPECIFICS OF BOND PROJECTS Hermiston Precision Irrigated Agriculture Cost of whole project: $3,229,470 Pendleton Agriculture Center A renovation of the agriculture center on the Pendleton campus would allow for an expansion of BMCC’s agriculture pro- gram, allowing for a veteran assistance program and additional opportunities in soil, horticulture and animal sciences. Cost of renova- tion: $2,250,000. Cost of whole project: 4,782,360. Boardman Workforce Training & Early Learning Center A partnership with the Port of Morrow would place a workforce development and early learning center behind the SAGE Center if the bond is approved. The facility would house pro- grams in advanced manu- facturing—much needed training for local jobs at the Port of Morrow and in surrounding communi- ties—and early learning in partnership with Inter- Mountain ESD and Head Start. The program would also provide students in BMCC’s early childhood programs a chance to learn and gain experience in the field. Cost of construction: $3,582,360. Cost of whole project: $4,782,360. Other Projects Also included in the bond is money that would protect the community’s investment in BMCC facili- ties, which are 53 years old. A front entry renova- tion in Milton-Freewater would improve safety at the facility, while updated tech- nology infrastructure and classroom technology at the Pendleton Campus and Milton-Freewater, Hemis- ton and Boardman centers would improve students’ learning environments and potential for distance learn- ing opportunities. Improved security and surveillance, includ- ing lighting, ADA access and surveillance cameras, would also take place at all BMCC locations in Uma- tilla and Morrow coun- ties. The Pendleton campus would also receive a sec- ondary access road to the facility for use in emergen- cy situations. The HVM and electrical systems would also be upgraded if the bond were to be approved. Proctor retires from Bank of EO, beautification committee “Wherever we lived— Hermiston, La Grande, Heppner—we had a child in each place,” says Proctor. “We moved here in ’86 and decided this was where we wanted to raise a family.” While Mike continued his career with Les Schwab, moving from sales to as- sistant manager to manager, Proctor says she “worked up and down Main Street, a lot of different places.” She spent some time at Les Schwab as a bookkeeper, but also drove school bus for a while, worked at Coast to Coast Hardware, co- owned Green Feed and Seed with Mike for several years, and worked as a jani- tor for the county. “I loved taking care of the courthouse. It’s a pretty special building,” says Proctor, adding that she also loved doing the landscaping around the historic building. Proctor describes gar- dening as a “passion,” and that passion may be one thing for which she is best known around Heppner. She says she came by her love of gardening and landscaping from her par- ents. “My dad had the veg- etable garden and my mom had the flower garden, so I had the best of both worlds,” she recalls. Proctor was instrumen- tal in getting the faltering Heppner Garden Club go- ing again when the Proc- tors bought the feed store in 1990. “We told the garden club we’d sponsor them if they started up again,” says Jim Benson and Haryss Padberg with Haryss’s 49” sturgeon. Proctor. Then, after the couple –Contributed photo By Andrea Di Salvo Bank of Eastern Ore- gon customers may already be missing the friendly face of bank teller Kay Proctor, who retired March 6. Proctor, 60, spent nine and a half years as a part- time teller at the bank. While many people might crave promotions or career advancement, she said she was happy right where she was. “I loved working with the public,” she says. And that, she says, is what she will miss as she retires. “There’s a lot of good peo- ple in this community who I won’t see as often.” While Proctor’s career with the bank was relatively short, she has a long his- tory in the Heppner com- munity. Born and raised in nearby Hermiston, she graduated from Hermis- ton High School in 1972. She then spent a couple of years in Seattle before returning to Hermiston in 1974. She married Mike Proctor in 1978. They con- tinued living in Hermiston until Mike’s work with Les Schwab Tires moved the couple to La Grande in 1983; they remained there three years, moving to Hep- pner in 1986. In that time, the cou- ple’s three children, Josie, Julie and Roy, were born. G-T Trophy Corner sold the feed store in 1998, Proctor herself became an active member of the gar- den club. Aside from her own garden work, Proctor can also be seen around town talking to Yard of the Month recipients and shar- ing their stories with the Gazette-Times. Around the time she joined the garden club, in the early 2000s, Proctor recalls that the City of Hep- pner’s Beautification Com- mittee also was formed. “I think I joined (the committee) on their third meeting,” she says. She was an active member of that committee for the next 15 years. She stepped down recently after completing her final project with the committee, Heppner’s new “talking rocks.” While Proctor has re- tired from work and the Kay Proctor, who recently retired from her position as part- -See PROCTOR RETIRES/ time teller at the Bank of EO, helps customer Mike Gorman. PAGE TWO –Photo by April Sykes Area pastors invited to submit Easter messages Easter is April 5. The Heppner Gazette-Times invites area pastors to submit Easter messages to be published in the paper’s April 1 edition. The deadline is Friday, March 27, at 5 p.m. Messages can be dropped off at the Gazette office, emailed to editor@rapidserve.net, or faxed to 541-676-9211. Call 541-676- 9228 with questions. 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