WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 2019 NEWS HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A7 Lights, Camera ... Toxins!?!? Hermiston HazMat team performs live drills By JESSICA POLLARD STAFF WRITER Test tubes and danger- ous spills took center stage at the Umatilla County Fire District Training building Thursday, when the Herm- iston Hazardous Materials Response Team ran several drill scenarios. For the fi rst time in about a decade, the National Guard’s 102nd Civil Sup- port Team — based in Salem — were in town to host the drills and provide training to Hermiston HazMat. “Our hazmat team tried to get drills (with the 102nd CST) in the past, and it’s been a logistical issue,” said Lt. Matt Fisher of the Uma- tilla County Fire District, who organized the drills. “They have a lot of other obligations.” The role of the 102nd CST, according to the Ore- gon Military Department, is to detect, analyze and contain nuclear, biologi- cal and chemical incidents in the state. Each responder must undergo 800 hours of training. Of the 13 HazMat teams that make up the Regional Hazardous Materials Emer- gency Response Teams (RHMERT) in Oregon, Hermiston’s addresses emer- gencies all across northeast Oregon. If the team requires extra help or more specifi ed technology, the 102nd CST would come from Salem to help. “The drills the 102nd CST put on are second to none,” Fisher said. “(They are) as realistic as we can come up with.” Much of the CST’s work involves respond- ing to reports of clandestine labs producing narcotics or methamphetamine around Oregon. Their specialized mobile lab has the ability to identify a diverse variety of Staff photos by E.J. Harris Lt. Matt Fisher, center, demonstrates how to use a HazMat 360 infrared spectroscopy to fi refi ghter Matt Lewis, left, and Lt. Jeff Armstrong on Thursday while training in Hermiston. The infrared spectroscopy, which uses a laser to determine chemical compounds, is a valuable tool for fi refi ghters responding to hazardous materials incidents. Firefi ghters, from left, Matt Lewis, Lt. Jeff Armstrong, Josh Smith and Jeremy Grazier look over video taken during a HazMat training exercise Thursday with the Umatilla County Fire District 1 in Hermiston. A fi refi ghter shows off a piece of equipment during Thursday’s drill. hazardous materials, from drugs to explosives. Drills like Thursday’s are important opportunities for the CST to identify the lim- itations and specifi c meth- ods of HazMat teams across Oregon, according to Tony Bernabo. This way, when they respond to a crisis with another team, they can tai- The fi rst scenario that the 102nd CST designed for the team involved a lab that may have looked like it was man- ufacturing illicit drugs, but was actually being used to manufacture explosives. HazMat team members entered the site two at a time, fi rst to assess the scene, and then again to bring in the lor the response to the spe- cifi c area. It’s also an opportunity for the teams like Herm- iston HazMat to become acquainted with newer HazMat technologies. A robot used to assess scenes before entry was rolling around outside before the drills Thursday morning. Staff photo by E.J. Harris equipment needed to ana- lyze and identify hazardous materials. Each time a responder exits the “hot zone” — the site of the toxic event — they must leave their anal- ysis substances aside and head to the decontamination zone to be washed accord- ingly, explained Bernabo. When the team re-en- tered the site, they brought several sensors for radiol- ogy and gasses, as well as a device called the HazMa- tID 360, which looks like a digital record player, but is actually an infrared spec- troscopy system that uses a laser to analyze and identify hazardous materials through a massive archive. According to Fisher, the HazmatID 360 can iden- tify chemical compounds down to the brand. The dis- trict hopes to upgrade their HazMatID 360 to a more portable recent version at some point. The second scenario involved a power outage and toxin extractions from plant matter. The job of a HazMat team, Fisher said, is not to clean up the mess but to identify and contain the hazardous materials in order to protect people and the environment. Depending on their con- ditioning, responders can usually remain in Level A HazMat suits, which have oxygen tanks, for up to an hour and 30 minutes, according to Capt. Phillip Troy of the 102nd CST. The Hermiston respond- ers all hold other jobs — from paramedic to fi re- fi ghter — when they aren’t responding to the esti- mated 10 calls that happen each year across northeast Oregon. “We wear many different hats,” said Fisher. Although the team still has large quarterly drills and bimonthly trainings, Fisher said this can make schedul- ing trainings quite tricky. For the Hermiston HazMat team, around 80% of situations are traffi c-re- lated, including the most recent incident out of Stan- fi eld a few weeks ago when a truck leaked 5 to 10 gal- lons of diesel. The other 190 gallons were contained by the team, which drilled into the tank and pumped out the diesel. Hermiston’s fi rst family of auto racing By ANTONIO SIERRA STAFF WRITER As with so many days on the track, Bill Kik and his family were racing against time. The family had assem- bled at the Kik compound north of Hermiston to take pictures for this story, but the dark clouds gather- ing above the property por- tended another late spring rainstorm. The photo shoot averted disaster and Bill retired to his house, where he went over old pictures that helped tell the story of the neigh- boring property: the Herm- iston Raceway. Charlie and Pat Kik had kept meticulous scrapbooks fi lled with photos and news- paper clippings of the local racing scene and the devel- opment of the race track, and as their son Bill leafed through their pages, memo- ries and old names started to come back to him. Bill’s passion for rac- ing was handed down from his parents, who developed the Hermiston race track after watching an auto race in Pilot Rock and envision- ing the possibilities by their property just off of Highway 395, where Bill and his fam- ily still reside. The track opened on April 30, 1967, as The Uma- tilla Speedway and it quickly built renown. Bill said a TV crew from the Tri-Cities was on hand when Sheridan Dietz, a racer from Pendleton, got into a vicious crash. The col- lision briefl y appeared in the opening montage of “ABC’s Wide World of Sports” before the program’s switch to color caused the produc- ers to cut the footage out of Contributed photo Charlie Kik, right, congrat- ulates racer Ken Hamilton, left, after Hamilton broke the track record on Sept. 17, 1967. Also shown is Bill Jones. Staff photo by E.J. Harris The Kik Family racers are, from left, Linkin Zamudio, 10, Jose Zamudio, Ray Whitbeck, Neena Kik, Bill Kik, Jose “Pickles” Medina, 14, Justus Zamudio, 13, and Brody Whitbeck, 10. Contributed photo Bill Kik drives his Kik-Along sand drag racer in Salt Lake City circa 1980. the intro. Bill added that stunt per- former Evel Knievel stayed at the Kiks’ property when he performed in Eastern Oregon, and driver Tom Sneva raced in Hermiston before going on to win the Indianapolis 500 in 1983. But in the early years of race track, there was one person audiences never saw participate in competitions: Bill Kik. Although he participated in obstacle racing, sand drag racing, and hill climbs, Bill said his dad wouldn’t let him race on the track because he thought it was too dangerous. He dropped racing as a hobby in the 1980s as he and his wife Bonnie raised their three daughters — Neena, Desirae, and Chelsea — and he worked his day job at Sanitary Disposal. But Bill caught the racing bug in 2010 when he won a race track raffl e that gar- nered him a legends car, a race car with a replica body shell powered by a motorcy- cle motor. “It’s a bad, bad disease,” he said. “It takes you hook, line, and sinker.” Bill not only got him- self hooked, but spread his rekindled passion to his daughters, sons-in-law, and grandchildren. The track has long since passed out of the Kiks’ own- ership and its name has changed multiple times. Bill said he helps out at the Hermiston Speedway where he can, but he and his family race at the track about a dozen times per year. At 63 years old, Bill is sometimes asked when he’ll hang up his fi re suit, but he has no plans at this point. “Not ‘til he’s done having fun,” Bonnie said. Father’s Day on the Train! Gold Rush Bandits to Rob Train! Saturday, June 15 & Sunday, June 16 Summer Solstice Dinner Train Saturday, June 22 Tickets online or call 800.323.7330 Schedule & Descriptions www.eaglecaptrainrides.com