A8 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM Umatilla house fire displaces 2 HERMISTON HERALD A Umatilla house fire displaced two women on Wednesday, Jan. 3, and sent huge clouds of black smoke into the air above a small neighborhood on Cherry Street. Engines responded from Umatilla Fire Department, Umatilla County Fire Dis- trict, Boardman Fire Depart- ment and Irrigon Rural Fire Department to the home at 1913 Cherry St. Scott Goff, Umatilla County Fire District fire marshal, said the depart- ment has not yet been able to identify a cause for the fire. Contacted Tuesday for an update, he said the base- ment of the home was still flooded, preventing fire per- sonnel from getting down there to investigate. Goff identified the resi- dents of the house as owner Carolyn McCall and her daughter Annette. STAFF PHOTO BY JAYATI RAMAKRISHNAN A house on fire on Cherry Street in Umatilla on Wednesday afternoon. Firefighters from Umatilla, Umatilla County Fire District 1, Irrigon and Boardman responded to the blaze. HERMISTON HERALD Ryan Bounds gone through a bi-partisan review process. Senators have the ability to withhold “blue slips,” a Senate rule that essentially allows the minority party veto power over judicial nominees. The committee is now reviewing Bounds’ applica- tion, as well as other candi- dates according to Merkley’s office. If his nomination is approved this time around, Bounds would require a con- firmation hearing from the Senate Judiciary Commit- tee before joining the Circuit Court. Merkley and Wyden didn’t dispute Bounds’ cre- dentials, however, and he has support from Rep. Greg Walden and attorney associ- ations down to local mayors. Walden, a Republican, wrote in September that Bounds would represent a conservative, rurally-rooted voice on the court which holds great power on federal decisions in the Second Con- gressional district. Letters of support were sent to Merkley and Wyden from 15 Oregon senators including Bill Hansell, the Oregon Criminal Defense Bar, the Oregon Wheat Growers League and both Hermiston Mayor Dave Drotzmann and Pendleton Mayor John Turner. Bounds has been a federal prosecutor for the District of Columbia, an assistant to the president on domestic policy and a deputy assis- tant attorney general in the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of Legal Policy. Earlier in his career Bounds was a law clerk for O’Scannlain, one of the most conservative judges on the 29-member Ninth Circuit court. Bounds has a B.A. in psychology and political sci- ence from Stanford Univer- sity and a J.D. from Yale Law School. Oregon has tradition- ally had two seats on the cir- cuit court, which is directly beneath the U.S. Supreme Court. It guides federal law in nine Western states. Hermiston High student to attend to Brown University By JAYATI RAMAKRISHNAN STAFF WRITER This fall, Heidy Mejia- Puerta will wake up for her first day of school on the opposite coastline. Mejia- Puerta, a Hermiston High School senior, was recently accepted to Brown Univer- sity as an early-decision applicant. The terms of the application state that Mejia- Puerta is now committed to attending the Ivy League school — an exciting pros- pect for her. “Looking at the curricu- lum, the location and the stu- dent body, I found [Brown] to be the one for me,” she said. “I knew if I did early decision, I’d be happy with attending Brown.” Though she has not yet visited the campus, Mejia- Puerta said one of the things that attracted her about Desert View school principal resigns trict since 2008, focusing on curriculum and instruc- tion. She previously served as the superintendent/prin- Families of students at cipal of Ione School Dis- Desert View Elementary trict and Ione Community School were informed on School for four years. She Jan. 2 that the school’s prin- has taught first and fourth cipal, Laura Jacob- grade, and worked sma, resigned over as an elementary winter break. school reading specialist. Assistant super- intendent Bryn Browning also Browning told acted as an interim families in a let- principal at West ter sent home with Park Elementary students that she after Shane Pratt would serve as the Jacobsma left in October of school’s interim 2012 for personal reasons. principal for the District com- remainder of the munications offi- 2017-2018 school cer Maria Duron year. said Jacobsma Jacobsma was gave notice of her hired for the Des- ert View job in resignation on May 2017 and Dec. 29, but did not give a spe- moved from Browning cific reason for her Oakridge School departure. District, where she Duron said district worked as an instructional coach and taught multiple administrators do not yet grades. She said she was know when they will post leaving the position for the position, but the search for a new principal will be personal reasons. Browning has been the conducted during spring, assistant superintendent the regular hiring season for Hermiston School Dis- for school districts. By JAYATI RAMAKRISHNAN STAFF WRITER Bounds nominated to Ninth Circuit Court Ryan Bounds, an assis- tant U.S. Attorney for Ore- gon and a Hermiston native, has been nominated for a second time by President Donald Trump for a seat on the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The White House announced the nomination of Bounds and 20 other jus- tices on Friday in states it said are “suffering from judicial emergencies.” Bounds was first nomi- nated by Trump in September to replace Appellate Judge Diarmuid O’Scannlain, who took semi-retirement senior status Jan. 1, 2017. Bounds’ nomination was effectively blocked at the time by Oregon Sens. Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden, both Democrats, because they said Bounds had not WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 2018 NEWS Heidy Mejia-Puerta Brown is the school’s open curriculum, which does not bind students to general education requirements, but allows them more flexibil- ity in the early classes they take, before settling on a course of study. A first-gen- eration college student, she said she is unsure of what she’ll study, but is interested in law and political science. She is also the recipi- ent of the Brown Univer- sity Scholarship, which will cover a significant portion of her tuition. She credited her admis- sion to the school to tak- ing advantage of resources available to her, as well as help from teachers and staff. A member of the LEDA (Leadership Enterprise for a Diverse America) schol- ars program, Mejia-Puerta spent several weeks last summer at Princeton Uni- versity, learning about how to prepare for college applications. “I think the application process, for me, was much simpler than for a lot of my classmates,” she said. “I had a lot of resources and peo- ple helping me. But as facil- itated as it was, it was still daunting.” She said being involved with LEDA helped, with people from the program continuing to check on her and helping her with the pro- cess even after she returned from Princeton. She also credited her involvement with the Gen- eration College program, run locally by HHS staff Melody Bustillos and Roger Berger. BRIEFS call Sylvia Smith at Dinner, auction set tion, 541-720-0040. Jan. 20 to help local Nonprofit center man fight cancer aids people with A benefit dinner and silent auction will help vision impairments raise money for John Parker of Hermiston, who is being treated for pancre- atic cancer. A small group that meets regularly at Oasis Vineyard Church with Parker’s wife, Vanda, are organizing the event to help offset costs due to medical treatment. The event is Saturday, Jan 20 at 5:30 p.m. at the church, 1255 S. Highway 395, Hermiston. The cost is $20 per person or $120 for a table of eight. The meal includes pork chops, potatoes, a vegeta- ble, rolls and dessert. Items up for bid include a guided goose hunt and gift baskets from Lucky Endz Gifts and Bell- inger Farms and Gourmet Shoppe. For more informa- tion or to make a dona- The Edith Bishel Cen- ter for the Blind and Visu- ally Impaired provides assistance to people who are blind and visually impaired. A nonprofit organi- zation, the center offers vision examinations, inde- pendent living aids, skills training, social activities, support groups and work- shops for family members. Located at 628 N. Arthur St., Kennewick, the Edith Bishel Center is ded- icated to serving the blind and visually impaired in southeastern Washington and northeastern Oregon. Donations assist with its mission. For more information, contact 509-735-0699, info@edithbishelcenter. org or visit www.edith- bishelcenter.org. Follow us on Facebook!