COMMUNITIES OFFER UP HOLIDAY ACTIVITIES » PAGE A4 WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 2019 HermistonHerald.com $1.00 INSIDE LOWER TAXES Hermiston School District expects school bond prop- erty taxes to go down by about 40 cents per $1,000 of assessed valued after paying off all its pre-2008 bonds. PAGE A3 PERFECT SCORE Hermiston’s Case Hiatt hits 100 of 100 targets at state trap shooting tournament. PAGE A7 BED BUILD Church partners with Sleep in Heavenly Peace to build 30 beds for area children without a place to sleep. PAGE A11 BY THE WAY Burn ban in effect Umatilla County’s annual non-agricultural burn ban went into effect Monday. According to a county press release, the burn ban applies to all unincorpo- rated areas of Umatilla County, excluding land owned by the Confeder- ated Tribes of the Uma- tilla Indian Reservation, the state of Oregon, and the federal government. Prohibited activities include burn barrels, yard and garden debris piles, and small scale residential burning. Agricultural burn- ing is still allowed, but smoke management per- mit holders are required to check for burn day status by calling 541-278-6397 or by visiting the Uma- tilla County website or its smoke management Face- book page. • • • Phone lines were down for four days at Two Riv- Staff photo by E.J. Harris Firefi ghters attempt to contain a fi re burning in a residence on Northwest 13th Street in 2017 in Hermiston. Fireworks were the suspected cause.w Fireworks can spark property damage, injuries By JADE MCDOWELL AND JESSICA POLLARD STAFF WRITERS Staff photo by Jade McDowell Fireworks line tables at the Black Cat fi reworks stand in the Fiesta Foods parking lot in Hermiston. See BTW, Page A2 ‘Tis the season for burnt fi n- gers and grass fi res. Fireworks on the Fourth of July have been an American tra- dition since July 4, 1777 when rebellious Colonists still at war with Great Britain used them to commemorate the one-year anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. The tradition calls for some caution, however. While many fi reworks acci- dents end with only minor dam- age, there have been tragedies in the region. Two years ago a pair of families in Hermiston lost their home after a duplex on Northeast 13th Street burned down in a grass fi re that wit- nesses said was likely started by children who had been play- ing with fi reworks nearby. And in 2015 a 25-year-old Pendleton man lost his life in an explosion believed to be caused by home- made fi reworks. Lesley Phillips, who sells Black Cat fi reworks out of a big white tent in the Fiesta Foods parking lot each summer, said she tries to educate customers about ways to keep their celebra- tion from turning into a 911 call. “Safety is a very big key,” she said. She recommends that peo- ple use a hollow concrete block to stabilize fountain-type fi re- works and keep them from blow- ing over the the wind. She also See DANGER, Page A12 Banner illustration: Vecteezy.com Friends of Oxbow help keep restoration area clean and safe By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR I 8 08805 93294 2 n her years caring for the Oxbow area, Eileen Laramore has seen a thing or two. The diminutive 69-year-old is a fi erce protector of the 222-acre Bureau of Recla- mation property along the Umatilla River in Hermiston. She and a handful of other vol- unteers she has christened Friends of Oxbow are out each week battling invasive weeds, assisting in restoration projects and keeping the habitat free from garbage. “One time I found a pair of black stiletto heels,” she said. “They were gorgeous. They were stunning. But how did they get there?” Last summer the amount of man-made trash spiked after a sudden proliferation of homeless camps and criminal activity in the maze of thick brush and trees. “Last year we had nothing but trouble here,” she said. “This year we’ve only had two camps so far.” Laramore said the Bureau of Reclamation was able to curb the problems eventually by being proactive, including cutting down swaths of trees through the biggest prob- lem area to increase visibility. There were no active homeless camps visible as she hiked through the property Wednesday morning, but she pointed out former living spaces as she went. There was the “bicycle chop shop” where police and volunteers pulled out a collection of stolen bicycles, the “party camp” where she found people singing around an illegal campfi re, and the “hole-in-the-ground camp” where someone dug a 10-foot hole and cov- ered it with tin sheets. One woman kept a mattress in a grove of trees that Laramore suspected might be used for prostitution. Then there was the “Taj See OXBOW, Page A12 Staff photo by Benjamin Lonergan Eileen Laramore leads a group of activists who clean up the Oxbow area. Laramore has been involved in cleaning up homeless camps and damage in the area since 2013.