WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 2016 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A3 LOCAL NEWS Marie Baldo prepares to retire — for the second time Second career after Army fulfills a delayed dream By JADE McDOWELL Staff Writer Librarians often get ste- reotyped as quiet individu- als who do most of their liv- ing in the pages of books. But before Marie Baldo was handling returns, she was handling nuclear weap- ons in Germany. Baldo, Hermiston Pub- lic Library’s director since 2004, is retiring at the end of the month. It’s her second retirement, after ¿rst retiring from the 8.6. Army. “When I was a teen there were two things I wanted to do,” she said. “I wanted to be a librarian — big time, I wanted to be a librari- an — and I wanted to join WAC (the Women’s Army Corp).” When she left high school she decided to pur- sue the librarian path, but she graduated from college into a recession and after si[ months of not ¿nding work as a librarian she went on to plan B and joined the Army. The WAC was being phased out, but her college degree allowed her to enter as a second lieutenant and participate for a year be- fore she was transitioned to ordnance work. 6he spent much of her Army career handling nuclear weapons in Germany, but jokes she was “issued” her husband Fred Allen at Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Al- abama. 6he eventually transitioned from nuclear weapons to chemical ones and ended up as command- er of the 8matilla Chemical Depot in the late 1990s. The next step would have been the Pentagon, but Baldo didn’t want to move to Washington, D.C. Her husband had already retired from the Army to follow her to Hermiston, so she made the decision to retire too. 6he saw an opening for a librarian in 8matilla and decided to dust off her li- brary sciences degree. The job may not have been as exciting, she said, but it also didn’t keep her up at night worrying that a mis- take under her watch would Baldo’s retirement The public is invited to Baldo’s retirement gathering Thursday from 4-6 p.m. at the library, 235 E. Gladys Ave. For more information call 541-567-2882. STAFF PHOTO BY E.J. HARRIS Hermiston Public Library director Marie Baldo stands next to a display case full of pigs she has received over the years working at the library. cause mass casualties. “6pecial weapons, nu- clear and chemical, it’s a real tightrope, a zero-mis- take environment,” she said. “Going from that to putting on antlers and doing a story time was a relief.” 6he had to get used to the way libraries had changed since she left school — the absence of a physical card cat- alog was a shock after spend- ing so many hours in school learning how to properly type up cards. But she said many functions of her job, such as managing employees and writing up reports, are not much different than what she did in the Army. Libraries are becoming wall-less, she said. People used to be limited to the books on the shelves of their libraries. Now they can jump online and request an inter-library loan from across the state, download an e-book, listen to an au- diobook or use a subscrip- tion-based database. “I can’t tell you what it’s going to look like in the fu- ture,” she said. One of Baldo’s favorite parts of the job, however, is still buying books. “I love zombie books,” she said. “We probably have a higher percentage of zom- bie books than at other librar- ies.” Another favorite experi- ence has been working with the teen advisory council. Baldo said when she came to the library the young adult section was small and mostly held classics like Tom 6aw- yer. 6he put together a group of teenagers, won a grant and took them to Barnes and Noble in Kennewick to pick out $1,000 worth of young adult books for the library and then discuss them over lunch. The “mall crawl” has since become a beloved an- nual tradition. “They found ‘The Hunger Games,’” she said. “They’ve found good books, and our circulation jumped tremen- dously.” 6he said she already had a large amount of respect for the staff when she arrived, because she had served on the Hermiston City Coun- cil and knew how hard they worked. 6he has enjoyed working with them and col- laborating with other librar- ians. “I know librarians from Ontario to Hood River, and they have become my friends,” she said. One thing she hasn’t en- joyed as much is dealing with the facilities side, in- cluding several major repairs and remodeling the library to get rid of a former decorating scheme she described as “vi- olently pink.” Now she is leaving it all behind for retirement on June 30. Baldo said her pre-retire- ment present for herself was going through the qualifying process for the T6A pre- check program. 6he and her husband already have two trips planned (to the beach and an Alaskan cruise) and hope to take many more. Her third dream as a teenager, af- ter the Army and library, was to travel. “Talk about a lucky life,” she said. The city has not yet se- lected Baldo’s successor and is still reviewing candidates. Council OKs hike to electricity customers this fall )DPLO\ORVHVKRPHWR¿UH ZLWKLQ KRXUV RI VRQ¶V JUDGXDWLRQ By JADE McDOWELL Staff Writer By JADE McDOWELL Staff Writer Community members are collecting donations for a Hermiston family work- ing to rebuild their lives after losing their home to a ¿re on June 4. Ayden Prewitt, a Herm- iston High 6chool senior, had walked with his class earlier in the day and was going home to get ready for the school-wide graduation party when he was greet- ed by a wall of thick black smoke at his front door. He called 9-1-1, then his parents, Cyndi and Jeremie Prewitt, who were at anoth- er graduation party a half- mile away. His parents drove home, arriving before the ¿re de- partment got there. They ran into the house to try and grab what they could and search for the family’s two dogs, but the smoke and Àames pushed them back out again before they could save the Pomeranians. “There was just nothing we could do,” Cyndi said. The insurance adjuster has ruled the house a total loss, although the family is still working to salvage a few items the ¿re skipped over or they pulled out when they ¿rst arrived. “We lost a lot of pho- tos, but there are still some left,” Jeremie said. Their daughter JaNessa, who will be a senior in the fall, also lost items, includ- ing some of the clothing she wears to events as a 8matilla County Fair prin- cess. The Prewitts’ third daughter 6kylar is not liv- ing at home but had some things stored there. Cyndi and Jeremie said the help they have received since has been extreme- ly humbling, starting with three of Ayden’s friends who refused to leave their side the night of the ¿re. “They missed out on their graduation party to stay with us,” Cyndi said, wiping away tears. Employers have of- (27(& DSSURYHV PLOOLRQ EXGJHW By JADE McDOWELL Staffj Writer The Eastern Oregon Trade and Event Center ap- proved a $9.1 million bud- get on June 10. The 2016-2017 budget includes $8.5 million ear- marked for construction. Operating costs have been a question mark for the EOTEC board, as the event center building re- cently became operational while most of the project remains under construc- tion. For the 2016-2017 ¿s- cal year the city of Herm- iston and 8matilla County are budgeted to contribute $45,190 each to be added to a beginning cash fund of $55,300 and an estimated event revenue of $46,200 for the year. An additional $297,665 from the tourism promotion assessment on hotels will provide funds to be used for marketing. In addition to business manager Heather Cannell’s salary, personnel costs will include a full-time admin- istrative assistant, two part- time janitorial staff and a part-time ¿nance position split with the city. On the construction side, bills will be paid out of a be- ginning cash balance of $4.6 million, as well as a $1.4 mil- lion state grant administrated by the Port of 8matilla, $1 fered paid time off to deal with the aftermath of the fire, Jeremie’s moth- er Donna Anderson has let them stay with her, and friends and strang- ers alike have donated clothing, gift certificates and other items. Mailing Made Easy, where Cyndi works, is acting as a drop- off point for donations, and other people have reached out through Face- book asking how they can help while the Prewitts rebuild their home. “There has been a tre- mendous outpouring of people wanting to help,” Jeremie said. “It’s been very comforting.” Cyndi’s coworker Car- The Hermiston City Council approved an elec- tric rate increase of 2.59 percent Monday. The change was small- er than the 4.4 percent in- crease Hermiston Energy 6ervices superintendent Nate Rivera originally recommended during a May 23 work session. “We were able to tight- en our belts and ¿nd some cost savings,” he said. The rate adjustments vary by account type. The charge per kilowatt hour will remain the same for residential customers but their base charge will in- crease from $10.50 per month to $14. 6mall com- mercial customers will see a .71 percent increase, large commercial cus- “We wish you a Great Summer!” tomers a .4 percent increase, industrial no increase and ir- rigation customers a 6.43 per- cent increase. The changes will take effect on bills calculated after 6ept. 1. The rate increase follows an 11 percent increase adopt- ed a year ago, but prior to that Hermiston Energy 6ervices had not raised rates for 12 years. The utility had instead built up a sizable reserve fund when the cost of wholesale power from Bonneville Power Administra- tion was low and has been pull- ing money from its reserves for the past few years to make up for signi¿cant increases in the cost of power from BPA. Rivera said at the May 23 workshop that model was not sustainable. He also said that Hermiston Energy 6er- vices needed extra funds to make capital improvements, including a new $1 million substation called Hermiston East that should help reduce power outages in the city and get customers back online faster if they do occur. Rivera also wants to institute “smart meters” that would tell HE6 as soon as the power goes out and allow the utility to automatically collect detailed reports of customers’ energy usage without sending a me- ter reader door to door. 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