INSIDE SPORTS HERMISTON TRAP SHOOTING CLUB WINS SECOND STATE TITLE IN A ROW PAGE A7 Hermiston Herald HermistonHerald.com WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 2017 $1.00 INSIDE END OF THE LINE NORPAC closing Hermiston Foods this year Parent company will shutter Hermiston processing plant after 27th season By JADE McDOWELL STAFF WRITER STAFF PHOTO BY KATHY ANEY Hermiston Foods, which is the city’s ninth largest employer, will close sometime after the end of the current harvest season. The closure of Hermiston Foods will ‘help us drive effi ciencies and reduce operational complexities as we invest in continued growth and innovation in our frozen product lines.’ Hermiston will lose one of its top employers by the end of this year. Hermiston Foods Incorpo- rated, a subsidiary of NORPAC Foods, will close later this year as its functions are consolidat- ed into NORPAC’s facilities in Brooks and Quincy, Washing- ton. An exact timeline has not been announced, but NORPAC spokeswoman Amy Wood said processing will proceed as nor- mal through the end of the cur- rent harvest season. The vegetable-processing plant is Hermiston’s ninth-larg- est employer, according to the city’s 2016 fi nancial report. NORPAC was not able to pro- vide information about its num- ber of employees and other questions submitted on Monday, but according to the city’s report the plant employs 325 people, most of which are seasonal. The plant, however, is NOR- PAC’s smallest operation, ac- cording to the Statesman Jour- nal. The closure was listed as part of a broader announcement by NORPAC that it has sold off its canning operations to Sene- ca Foods Corporation and was closing its beet-canning facility in Salem as a result. New NOR- PAC CEO Shawn Campbell said in a statement that the sale of the canning operations and the clo- sure of Hermiston Foods will “help us drive effi ciencies and reduce operational complexities as we invest in continued growth and innovation in our frozen product lines.” Hermiston Foods opened in April 1990, and the Hermiston See NORPAC, A12 New NORPAC CEO Shawn Campbell HERALD FILE PHOTO Hermiston Foods General Manager Trent Waldern stands in front of the business on Highway 395 in Hermiston. New technology has made the vegetable processing plant more effi cient since it opened 27 years ago, but did not save the plant from closure by its parent company NORPAC Foods. THREE MINUTES WITH MEET THAI IMMIGRANT ANN ONPHIAN, WHO MOVED TO THE AREA IN 1999. PAGE 2 REV INTO SUMMER FUN THE HERMISTON CLASSICS CAR CLUB PURRS INTO SUM- MER WITH ITS 22ND ANNUAL COOL RIDES CAR SHOW. PAGE 4 IN TAMMY’S SHOES COMMUNITY EDITOR TAMMY MALGESINI WARNS ABOUT VISITORS COMING THROUGH TOWN ON SOLAR ECLIPSE TREK. PAGE 6 BY THE WAY City celebrates anniversary next week Next week, on Monday, July 10, the city of Hermis- ton will celebrate a birthday. There are no offi cial events currently on the docket to mark the occasion, but it will be the 110th anniversary of the city’s incorporation on July 10, 1907. Just what does one get a city celebrating its 110th anniversary? • • • Five students from each of Hermiston’s fi ve elemen- tary schools pedaled into summer with new bicycles thanks to Hermiston Ma- sonic Lodge #138. The Bikes for Books pro- gram encourages students in third through fi fth grades to improve their reading skills. Students receive a chance to win a bike by completing AR Reading Goals. Winners of the bicycles and their grade level at each school included: Desert View: Jared Crowther, Abby Goller, Seth Reeve, all third grad- ers, Sydney Slonker-Bowe, fourth grade, and Guada- lupe Esparza, fi fth grade. Highland Hills: Sien- na Harsteen, third grade; Ashton Chairez and Lore- lai Keefauver, both fourth grade; and fi fth graders See BTW, A12 Watermelon harvest to start next week Wet spring slows growth By GEORGE PLAVEN STAFF WRITER July Fourth has passed and that means famous Hermiston watermelons — in all their sweet, juicy glory — are almost back in season. This year’s melon crop may have got- ten off to a slow start compared to recent years, but growers say they are making up ground quickly as temperatures have start- ed rising above 90 degrees during the heat of day. Jack Bellinger, owner of Bellinger Farms, said watermelons fell behind ear- ly following a cool and wet spring, which impacted both the timing of planting and limited the number of hot days needed for the plants to absorb energy. A recent stretch of warmer weather, in- cluding a record high of 101 degrees on Monday, has helped to speed things up, Bellinger said. Still, he is looking at begin- ning harvest July 12-14, which is about a week later than usual. “The name of the game for all crops is heat units,” Bellinger said. “They’ve been pretty hit and miss.” Patrick Walchli, of Walchli Farms, also fi gures to push back harvest by a week to 10 days, though he is not alarmed. Weather patterns like this aren’t unheard of for the region, Walchli said, and he is not expect- ing any problems with yield or quality. “The crop, for the weather we’ve had See MELONS, A12 STAFF PHOTO BY GEORGE PLAVEN Scott Lukas, assistant professor of horticulture at Oregon State University, checks on his watermelon trials Thursday at the Hermiston Agricultural Research and Experiment Station.