WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 2018 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A3 COMMUNITY Drug court gets another chance By PHIL WRIGHT STAFF WRITER Drug court’s return to Umatilla County could take another step forward Wednesday. Dale Primmer, director of Umatilla County Com- munity Justice Depart- ment, is asking the county board of commissioners to approve having Com- munity Counseling Solu- tions provide treatment for drug court participants. The board will consider the request during it regu- lar meeting Wednesday. Having a treatment pro- vider is a crucial step to bringing back drug court. Community Justice operated the program until state funding declined last year. Since then, Primmer said, his department has worked with the circuit courts of the 6th Judicial District and others to find a way to restart the pro- gram. The next iteration plans to use a post-con- viction but pre-sentenc- ing model, so offenders can work through treat- ment to receive less severe sentences or even have the court dismiss charges. The state courts and the local public safety coordinating council will oversee the drug court. Primmer said Commu- nity Justice sought bids for a treatment provider, and Community Counsel- ing Solutions, which offers behavioral health services in Morrow, Wheeler, Gil- liam, and Grant counties, came up with a proposal to take on the job. Under the plan, Com- munity Counseling Solu- tions will hire two full-time certified alcohol and drug counselors and a clinician/ program manger to provide drug court treatment in the 6th Judicial District, which encompasses Umatilla and Morrow counties. The cli- nician will work in Board- man, where the company has an office, and the coun- selors in Pendleton and Hermiston. Community Counseling estimated a drug court ser- vices budget of $596,000 from April 1, 2018 through June 30, 2019, including for travel and offices. That drops to about $536,000 if the county provides work space. Insurance will cover some of the costs, but Primmer said that leaves a gap of about $250,000, and the funds from the 2017-19 Oregon Justice Reinvest- ment Grant would fill that hole. The state provides those funds to programs that keep offenders out of prison. The size of the gap depends on several factors, Primmer said, including the number of participants and insurance coverage. The Oregon Health Plan, for example, covers addic- tion treatment. “So that amount won’t be static,” he said. Drug court could com- mence as soon as July 1, and Primmer said that is probably a cautious approach to make sure all the pieces are in place. State courts are writing the polices and procedures for drug court, and Commu- nity Counseling Solutions would have to hire the staff and get them up to speed on the program. STAFF PHOTO BY E.J. HARRIS Station director Phil Hamm gives a tour of the greenhouse facilities at the HAREC to U.S. Rep. Greg Walden an Oregon Sen. Bill Hansell on Wednesday outside of Hermiston. Walden tours upgraded station By JADE MCDOWELL STAFF WRITER After the 2018 federal spending bill secured more than $3 billion in funding for agricultural research, Rep. Greg Walden got to see some of that work first- hand last week at the Herm- iston Agricultural Research and Extension Center. Walden got a tour of the center last Wednesday as part of a trip through Uma- tilla County. Director Phil Hamm, as enthusiastic as ever in his promotion of the experiment station, showed off insect-raising rooms, soil testing labs, green- houses, bee research and more. “In your district you have the best experiment station anywhere,” Hamm told the congressman. After making sure everyone — even Univer- sity of Oregon Ducks fans like Walden and state sen- ator Bill Hansell — had on their very own Ore- gon State University Bea- vers baseball cap, Hamm showed Walden about $1 million in improvements made to HAREC since Walden’s last trip out to the station a couple of years earlier. Cam Preus, pres- ident of Blue Mountain Community College, also touted the multi-million dollar precision irrigated agriculture facility the col- lege built on the HAREC campus last year to give students hands-on training with things like maintain- ing the station’s 15 center pivots. “We’ve got to get those students hands on, that’s how they learn,” she said. A few improvements April means spring cleaning By JADE MCDOWELL STAFF WRITER It’s spring cleaning month in Hermiston. “Clean-sweep” events the next three weeks offer opportunities to get rid of junk, weeds and litter com- munity-wide before code enforcement takes notice. “We have three compo- nents, none of which are new, but they’re enhanced,” parks and recreation director Larry Fetter said. The first is Sanitary Dis- posal’s clean-up week, which runs April 1-7. Uma- tilla County residents can dump loads up to 454.5 pounds and 2.5 cubic yards for free, excluding tires. Cash customers can receive $14 off larger loads. The loads can be dropped off from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon- day through Friday and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. The transfer station is two miles north of Hermiston at 81144 N. Highway 395. For information, call Sanitary Disposal at 541-567-8842. For recyclable items, all Umatilla County residents can take advantage of the city’s free recycling event Saturday, April 14 at Uma- tilla Electric Cooperative, 750 W. Elm Avenue. “We’re taking all the standard recyclable items we’ve taken in the past, the bulk of which are tires,” Fet- ter said. This year, however, tires do not have to be sepa- rated from rims before drop- off. Other items collected include appliances, electron- ics, glass, metal, untreated wood with no nails in it, latex and oil-based paints, news- paper, cardboard and bat- teries. For items like motor oil and sensitive documents that need shredding, which the city won’t take that day, they will provide informa- tion about where those items can be disposed of. Once people have taken care of the junk on their own properties, they’re invited to help clean up public prop- erty around town on Satur- day, April 21. Fetter said the “I Love My City” activity should be the biggest yet. Current esti- mates show about 400 peo- ple are expected to partici- pate in the clean-up day. While I Love My City was started by Hermiston Assembly of God as a series of service projects, other churches have since signed on. The April 21 clean-up event is open to anyone who wants to help. Participants are invited to show up at 9 a.m. at McKenzie Park. “Anyone can show up, and if they’re looking for a job to do they can check in at the big tent,” Fetter said. The group will be divided into six teams that will each be given a zone to clean up. Zones will be along North First Place and the railroad tracks, on the west side of Highway 395 between Elm Avenue and Jennie Avenue, and four downtown zones stretching from Highland Avenue to Gladys Avenue. Each zone will be given specific tasks, including picking up litter, weed- ing, scrubbing graffiti and removing leaves and other debris piled along the sides of buildings. He said graffiti has been a problem in Hermiston recently and he hopes peo- ple will help police catch the vandals and that people will let the city know about graffiti in public parks so they can remove it quickly. made to the station in recent years includes the remodel of some research labs, solar panels that save the station about $30,000 per year on their electri- cal bill, two new crop cir- cles and the Don Horneck Memorial Building, which includes an agronomy lab and insect-rearing rooms. Currently in the works is also an expansion of the plant pathology lab and new conference room. Hamm said the improvements are thanks to generous support from farmers and other stake- holders in the area, who are unmatched around the state in their support for the extension center. “No one, absolutely no one, can come close to the support we get from our stakeholders,” Hamm said. He said later in the year HAREC plans to hold a “thank you day” during which they will add new names to the list of sup- porters on a large stone out- side the front office. Hamm said Walden’s name will be on that list for his work to remove a federal rever- sionary clause that had pre- viously stipulated that the land where HAREC sits would revert to the federal government if any part of it were ever used for some- thing other than agricul- tural research. Preus, during her part of the tour, told Walden that without the change to the reversionary clause the partnership with BMCC and HAREC to build the precision ag building on the HAREC campus would not have been possible. She said not only are full- time students able to get a BRIEF Officers investigate shooting of car near Newport Park Newport Park. Once they arrived at Northeast Sixth Street and East Hurlburt Ave- nue, they found a dark-col- ored Honda sedan with sev- eral bullet holes in it. “Preliminary investiga- tion found that three occu- pants were in an argument with a male in a light-col- ored SUV,” Edmiston said. “The argument continued with one of the three males Hermiston police are investigating a shooting that took place near Newport Park on March 27. According to Police Chief Jason Edmiston, offi- cers responded at 8:27 p.m. to reports of gunshots near breaking out the back win- dow of the SUV with a bat. The male in the SUV pulled a firearm and the three males fled the scene.” Edmiston said officers believe the male in the SUV pulled up to the unoccupied Honda and shot at it numer- ous times. They found shell casings near the Honda, and the SUV fled the area. 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Hamm added that HAREC and BMCC hope someday people will come from all over the world, not just the Pacific North- west, to learn about preci- sion irrigated agriculture in an arid climate. Carl Melle, dean of career technical education for the college, said they were also plan- ning to begin a series of Wednesday morning work- shops for high school stu- dents interested in pursuing a career in agriculture. Walden said he was pleased that the federal omnibus spending bill had increased the amount of funding for agricultural research from the previous year. “It’s so important, the work you do, and the work they do across the state,” he said. Later that day Walden visited Pendleton, where he discussed rural school funding with county offi- cials and the opioid crisis with Sheriff Terry Rowan. It’s official: IS CONNECTED EOU has been designated Oregon’s Rural University! Enjov big-time Internet speeds without spending big bucks! 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