BULLDOGS OPEN CONFERENCE PLAY WITH A WIN » PAGE A10 Wednesday, december 12, 2018 HermistonHerald.com $1.00 INSIDE PEDRO LEAVES Hermiston Chamber of Commerce president Debbie Pedro is stepping down after more than 18 years on the job. PAGE A2 SANTA CLAUS Santa was one of the main attractions at Hermiston’s tree-lighting ceremony Thursday. PAGE S A8, A15 SWEET SOUND Les McMasters makes hand-crafted guitars in his Hermiston shop. PAGE A9 BY THE WAY Rules changed for lost property Hermiston residents who find lost property might get to keep it under new rules passed by the Hermiston city council on Monday. Previously, if someone found lost property and turned it into the Herm- iston Police Department they forfeited all stake in it. Under the ordinance amendment passed Mon- day, city code would fol- low state law, which dic- tates that if a person finds lost money or goods and reports it to the city or police, the property is theirs to keep legally if the owner is not found within three months. For goods or money over $250, the finder must publish a notice in the local news- paper once a week for two consecutive weeks if they want to be allowed to keep the lost property. • • • The deadline is fast approaching to enroll in health insurance through the federal exchange. People who don’t get insurance through an employer, the Oregon Health Plan or Medi- care have until Satur- day to enroll in a plan or staff photo by e.J. Harris/east Oregonian Mail carrier Diane Barton delivers mail to a cluster of mailboxes Thursday on Southeast Cassens Court in Hermiston. By JADE MCDOWELL Staff Writer hey may not have elves or flying reindeer to help them out, but the nation’s mail carriers still manage to deliver Christmas presents to millions of homes each year. The U.S. Postal Service expects to deliver a total of 15 billion let- ters and 900 million packages during the holiday season, defined as Thanksgiving to New Year’s Day. Diane Barton, who delivers mail in Hermiston, is doing her part. Thursday afternoon she was winding through a set of cul-de- sacs on the east side of town, dis- persing a truckload of boxes and envelopes. Mail carriers through- out the nation were delivering two days worth of mail Thursday after postal services were suspended for a day to honor former president George H.W. Bush. Barton said the holiday sea- son means longer hours and more challenging deliveries, but it’s also fun to see how excited people are to see her this time of year, espe- cially children. “The volume of packages, of course, changes tremendously,” she said. T see bTW, Page a16 staff photos by e.J. Harris/east Oregonian USPS carrier Diane Barton grabs a bin of parcels while delivering the mail on her route Thursday in Hermiston. Packages take longer to deliver than letters. They must be scanned with a hand-held device so that patrons who are tracking the pack- age know it has arrived. Some small packages will fit in a mail- box, but in other cases the car- rier must get out of their truck and walk up to the front door. Some- times a signature is required, or the home’s resident prefers the package is put someplace less con- spicuous than the porch. Barton said she often can’t fit all of the packages for her route into her truck this time of year so see Helpers, Page a16 Nonprofits put donated items to work By JAYATI RAMAKRISHNAN Staff Writer 8 08805 93294 2 As Christmas draws near, shoppers may turn to thrift stores to purchase gifts with a low price tag. For many local organizations, the money earned from those sales is going directly back into the ser- vices those groups provide. For oth- ers, the flow of money is slightly more complicated. The size of the organization dic- tates how the money is used, as does the nature of the group itself. For Hermiston-based organiza- tions like Agape House, the Eastern Oregon Humane Society and Divine Blessings Thrift Shop, all the money stays local. For a national organiza- tion like Goodwill, some of the funds go into hyper-local endeavors, but money from local sales also supple- ments regional services. Goodwill operates by territory — Hermiston’s is part of the Goodwill Industries of the Columbia, which includes 13 counties in Oregon and Washington. About one percent of money from local sales goes to the national orga- nization, said Ken Gosney, executive director of Goodwill of the Colum- bia. He said this year the Hermiston store earned about $1.5 million from donation sales. The Hermiston store gets about 28,000 donations per year, counted by the number of people that staff photo by Jayati ramakrishnan/east Oregonian see donate, Page a16 Jose Mendoza has worked at Goodwill in Hermiston for 10 years as a driver.