NEWS Wednesday, June 5, 2019 HeRMIsTOnHeRaLd.COM • A9 PGE starts scholarship fund for laid-off workers By ANTONIO SIERRA STAFF WRITER Portland General Electric is attempting to dull the sting of upcoming mass layoffs at Boardman Coal Plant by offering employees free classes at Blue Mountain Community College. PGE spokesman Ste- ven Corson said the com- pany’s $30,000 donation to BMCC to establish the pro- gram was one of the ways PGE was avoiding leaving its employees high and dry. “We don’t want to be that company,” he said. PGE announced its intention to cease coal- based energy production at the plant back in 2010, but they recently started talking with the more than 70 employees who work in Boardman about their post- coal plant options as the deadline loomed. Corson said some employees talked about transferring to another PGE worksite while others mulled retiring. But for those employees HH File Photo The Boardman power plant is set to close at the end of 2020. who were looking to stay in the area, the company is offering them a chance to switch careers by get- ting a degree or certificate at BMCC. Corson said the pro- gram was not only meant to benefit their employees, but act as a retention tactic to ensure that employees have an incentive to con- tinue working at the plant through its closing date on Dec. 31, 2020. Casey White-Zoll- man, BMCC’s vice pres- ident of public relations, said she and BMCC Foun- dation Executive Direc- tor Margaret Gianotti vis- ited the Boardman facility a few months ago and were impressed by PGE’s plan. “This is a pretty amaz- ing thing they’re doing,” she said. According to White-Zollman, the PGE Boardman Scholarship Fund is open to anyone who is or will become unem- ployed due to the closure of the Boardman Coal Plant. Starting with the sum- mer term in June, schol- arship recipients will get as much as $1,500 toward their tuition. Recipients must be enrolled in at least one class, and if they maintain at least a 2.5 grade point average, they will get another $1,500 for a second term. Corson said the scholar- ship fund will remain active through the end of 2021, one year after the Board- man Coal Plant is slated to close. White-Zollman said six PGE employees have already applied for the scholarship. Commissioners, crowd do not like county charter proposals By PHIL WRIGHT STAFF WRITER The group recommending changes to Umatilla County’s government felt pushback May 29 against its proposals. The oppo- nents sang a song of, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” The eight-member charter review committee presented its findings and three potential ballot measures to the board of commis- sioners during a work session at the county courthouse in Pendle- ton. The simplest measure would change the charter’s description of the law enforcement department to the sheriff’s office and rather than spelling out most of the duties of the sheriff refer instead to Oregon law. Elections also change. Per the proposal, if no more than two candidates file, there would be no May primary election and the candidates would advance to the November general. If more than two run, the two who win the most votes in the primary face off in the general. The biggest proposal changes the county from three full-time commissioners to five part-tim- ers who would be responsible for hiring the county counsel and a county manager. That also drew the most resistance. Commissioner Bill Elfering said the lack of a full-time com- missioner is a concern. “Some have tried this the other way, and it hasn’t worked very well,” he said. Commissioner John Shafer hitched on, pointing out that Clat- sop County is considering nixing its manager and volunteer board for full-time commissioners. Charter review members strove to defend the position, arguing the size of the county and the size of the county’s budget demands a professional at the helm. Michele Grable, the charter committee chair, and other members argued commissioners should focus their time on policy, county advocacy and strategy and not the “nit- ty-gritty” of management. Grable recalled one night when Commis- sioner George Murdock oversaw the problem of a leak in the dis- trict attorney’s office on the third floor of the courthouse. She said commissioners have better things to do with their time. Some old habits are hard to break, Murdock said in his defense, but there was a greater issue. “I have an uncomfortable feel- ing we are rushing to judgement,” he said. “I’m still at a point I want to ask questions.” One of those, he continued, was about how a manager would affect the public’s access to commission- ers. Yet he also said having he and his fellow commissioners alone decide the structure of county gov- ernment “causes me great discom- fort.” The broader public instead, he said, should decide. Some of that public spoke up at the end of the meeting. Nearly all said they did not like the idea of part-time commissioners and a full-time manager. One man said he wanted to be able to take as much time with a commissioner as his problems demand, while others worried a full-time man- ager would impose his will on the county. Most, including Rex More- house of Pendleton and Rob Lovett of Hermiston, said they have no problem with access to commis- sioners now and the county board is working just fine as is. Only one person spoke in favor of the committee’s recommenda- tions: Hermiston Mayor David Droztmann. “I work in that environment,” he said, “and it works really well.” The charter committee and the county board planned to continue the discussion June 4. YOU’RE INVITED TO AN EXCLUSIVE SPECIAL EVENT! FREE Hearing Exam! $125 Value! June 5 - June 7 • 9 am to 5 pm FACTORY TRAINED PRODUCT EXPERT On Site During the Special Event! During our Special Event, a factory trained product expert will be available to personally discuss the unique advantages Miracle-Ear hearing technologies offer, and to answer all of your questions. We will be previewing the latest state-of-the-art Miracle-Ear Products. 100% INVISIBLE Miracle-Ear AudioTone TM Pro Now You See It. Now You Don’t! 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