LOCAL Wednesday, March 6, 2019 herMIsTOnheraLd.cOM • A3 Major drug bust puts strain on local foster care system By JAYATI RAMAKRISHNAN STAFF WRITER Operation Wildfire, a January drug bust by the Blue Mountain Enforcement Narcotics Team, put 65 people from Umatilla, Morrow, Union and Gilliam counties behind bars. It also sent a wave of children into the foster care system. According to Court Appointed Special Advocates, 38 children entered foster care in Umatilla County in January. At least eight families were involved with the drug bust, said Diane Shockman, the CASA volunteer coordinator for western Umatilla County. “The reason kids were in danger is that non-safe people were fre- quenting their home, or they were in the car while mom or dad was selling drugs, reasons like that,” said Shockman. Jesus Rome, the director of CASA, said the bust has had a trickle-down effect on families, with many kids taken away from home due to neglect. In his seven years at CASA, he said he’s never seen that many children come into foster care in a single month. CASA works with a variety of organizations — including the Department of Human Services and the courts — as liaisons for foster care children. “One day, we had six shelter hearings in Hermiston, and two in Pendleton,” he said. “Some had one child, but most had more than one.” staff photo by Kathy aney The Pendleton Convention Center served as a command and processing center for Operation Wildfire, a significant BENT drug bust that seized large amounts of drugs and involved at least 65 arrests. Shelter hearings, which are court proceedings that happen when a child is removed from their home, must be held within 24 hours of a child being removed. Because there was such a large influx of children coming into the system, Shockman said many peo- ple were rushing to make sure chil- dren had places to go. “Caseworkers were scrambling to find homes and places to put them, the legal teams were pro- cessing paperwork, Judge Temple was having hearings,” she said. Shockman said many of the children’s relatives stepped in and DHS was able to do emergency certifications so the children could stay with them. Once a child is in foster care, there must be a discovery hear- ing within 30 days, and within 60 days they must have a jurisdic- tional hearing. At that time, the court also orders disposition, or determines where a child will be placed, as well as services for par- ent and child and visitation with family. Within the next six months, the court will have a permanency hearing to determine what the next step should be for the child. Though they’ve been removed from their homes, Shockman said the goal is almost always to reunite children with their parents. “It’s so variable,” she said, not- ing that sometimes, a parent can’t have contact with their child. But even if they’re incarcerated, she said, they make an effort to let the child visit. “We really bend over backward to reunite kids with their parents,” she said. “It’s in the best interest of the kids. But the kids’ timeline is so short — we can’t always wait for Hermiston family celebrates Rare Disease Day By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR Jacenda McKen- zie-Richter is a zebra. It’s a common meta- phor in the medical world — when people hear hoof- beats they usually picture a horse, but they could be hearing a zebra. Likewise, when medical symptoms appear, physicians often assume they come from a common ailment instead of a rare disease. Jacenda, 11, of Herm- iston, has two rare dis- eases: mastocytosis and Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. Each year on Feb. 28, offi- cially known as Rare Dis- ease Day, she and her fam- ily make T-shirts with drawings of zebras to edu- cate people about rare dis- eases. On Thursday her pink shirt featured a zebra with a unicorn horn. Though she’s not often asked, Jacenda and her family take any opportunity they can get to talk about the disease. “My really good friend Kirsten knows, and a cou- ple of other good friends,” she said. She said her teach- ers also know about her conditions. When someone has an allergic reaction to a bee sting or food, their body produces an abundance of histamine, causing swell- ing, hives and other symp- toms. Jacenda’s mother Dena Hill said mastocyto- sis causes Jacenda’s body to produce too much hista- mine every day. Even with taking a strong antihista- mine daily, her skin some- times shows reactions, and twice she has sponta- neously gone into anaphy- lactic shock. “She didn’t need a bee sting or anything,” Hill said. About 1 in 10,000 peo- ple have mastocytosis, according to the National staff photo by Jade Mcdowell Dena Hill, left, and Jacenda McKenzie-Richter show off their zebra-unicorn shirts representing Jacenda’s two rare diseases. Institutes of Health, but only 5 percent of them have the cutaneous form Jacenda has. Her problems started right after she was born, when Hill started noticing odd bumps, welts and hives that would pop up then go away quickly. She kept bringing it up to doctors, who dismissed it. “I was a single mom, 19, and I was never around babies so I didn’t know much,” she said. “But something didn’t seem right.” One day when Jacenda was about a month old, Hill brought her to the emer- gency room with a blood- filled blister the size of a quarter on her wrist. “I had a nurse basically accuse me of child abuse, saying I must have burned her with an iron,” Hill said. The accusation stung, and Hill worried child pro- tective services would be called. She didn’t know it at the time, but it’s not uncommon for parents of children with rare diseases to be accused of child abuse when their child presents with unexplained bruises, broken bones or other symptoms. Luckily for Hill, Jacen- da’s pediatrician was sup- portive and started con- ducting research that finally ended with a proper diag- nosis of cutaneous maso- cytosis a couple of months later. When Jacenda was five, her doctors started looking into the fact that she walked “floppy,” Hill said. After a few years of incorrect diag- noses she was finally genet- ically tested for and diag- nosed with Ehlers-Danlos, an inherited connective tissue disorder that mani- fests in a variety of ways, from thin skin to congeni- tal hip dislocation. Jacenda has experienced heart prob- lems, leg pain and ultra-soft skin. Hill said having a serious illness or chronic disease is always difficult. But when the illness is something few people have heard of it adds an extra layer of stress. Doctors might not believe patients, or might misdiagnose them and give them the wrong treatment. Some people with rare dis- eases suffer for years before finding a correct diagnosis, and sometimes there aren’t very effective treatments available because phar- maceutical companies and government entities would rather fund research for more common ailments. “It’s hard,” Hill said. “You can feel really alone. Something like breast can- cer, it’s horrible, but you’re not as alone. With a rare disease, you don’t see it on TV, you don’t see fundrais- ers for it. You’re lucky if you ever even get to meet someone else with it.” She doesn’t want Jacenda to feel like her diag- noses are something to be ashamed of, so every year they celebrate Rare Disease Day on the last day of Feb- ruary. They make T-shirts with facts about masto- cytosis and Ehlers-Dan- los, plan a fun activity and let Jacenda pick out what they’re eating that day. On Thursday, they cel- ebrated the snow day with some sledding. Jacenda said she was excited for dinner: parents to get their act together.” She added that reunification is not a fast process. They need to be sure parents are serious before reuniting them with their children. Charlie Clupny, a longtime CASA, said reunification is not always possible. “I’m on a case where the kids were on a reunification track — then they were on a reunification/ adoption track, and now they’re on an adoption track,” he said. Clupny said in that case, the parent did not commit a violent crime. She had been doing well and on track to get her children back, but then had a death in her family that affected her so badly, it set her back. The parent was not actively abusing her children, but was neglecting them. “Which most of the cases are,” Rome said. “Unfortunately with drugs, people use and sell for lots of different reasons. It’s great that the police departments were proac- tive in getting them off the street. But the ripple effect of people that get caught in the system, like this mom — they were doing so well but then they relapse again.” The children in foster care as a result of Operation Wildfire have not yet been paired up with CASAs, as there are not enough to serve every child right now. “It’s a struggle to recruit men and minorities,” he said. But he said the program has grown, and now has about 40 volunteers serv- ing nearly 90 kids. Late snow extends warming station season By HERMISTON HERALD A late round of snow for Umatilla County is extend- ing the Hermiston Warming Station’s season into March. The warming station’s board had originally planned to close the emergency shel- ter last Friday, but will keep it open until at least March 14. Board chair Teesie Hill said they may provide ser- vices even longer if it looks like Hermiston will continue to see below-freezing tem- peratures or snow into late March. Hill said the warming station has seen 16 or more people on a regular basis the last few weeks. “The other night we had 18 people,” she said. “That’s a record for us.” She said she thought they would be able to get enough volunteers to continue into March, but the warming sta- tion is running out of sup- plies and needs donations. The full list can be found on the Hermiston Warming Sta- tion Facebook page, but it includes laundry and clean- ing supplies, hygiene items, socks, gloves, hand warmers and hot drinks, such as cof- fee and apple cider. Donations can be dropped off at the warming station, 1075 South High- way 395, on Wednesdays from 3-6 p.m. and Saturdays from 1-3 p.m. or by appoint- ment (call 360-508-4523). 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Mark Sargent, DVM • Brent Barton, DVM Eugenio Mannucci, DVM, cVMA • Jana von Borstel, DVM, cVMA Small and Large Animal Care Mon: 8-6 Tue - Fri: 8-5 Sat: 8-12 Emergency Service 541.567.1138 80489 Hwy 395 N Hermiston www.oregontrailvet.com MEET PATCH! PLACE YOUR AD HERE! Contact Audra at 541.564.4538 Today! If interested in him please go to fuzzballrescue.com and fill out an application. If you aren’t able to adopt, but would like to donate you can through PayPal by going to fuzzballrescue.com, or you can mail in donations to Fuzz Ball Animal Rescue PO Box 580 Hermiston, OR 97838