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About Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 1994-current | View Entire Issue (July 24, 2019)
2019 UMATILLA COUNTY FAIR PARADE Umatilla County Fair Parade kicks off the festivities Fair week’s festivities begin with the Umatilla County Fair Kickoff Parade, which will usher in another year of fun at the Eastern Oregon Trade and Events Center in Hermis- ton while recognizing longtime fair contributor and former board mem- ber Dan Dorran and his wife, Terri. Dan stepped down from his post on the board in 2017 after two decades of service to the county and said be- ing named a grand marshal is “the highest honor the fair board can be- stow on someone.” With serving board members re- stricted from being chosen as grand marshal, fair director Angie McNal- ley said this year was the right time for the Dorrans. “We saw this as our chance to give a well-deserved former member the recognition,” McNalley said. “They could have received any award 10 times over and it’d be deserved.” The group of parade grand marshals Dan and Terri join only magnifi es the honor for them. “I’ve always looked up to them. To be in the same, rare company as them really means a lot,” Dan said. “I’m not sure we deserve it but we aren’t giving it back. It’s very, very humbling.” The distinction comes after a life- long commitment to the Umatilla County Fair. Dan’s grandfather was 8 | Umatilla County Fair 2019 a fair manager in the 1950s and lived just a few blocks from the fair- grounds. Some of his earliest fair memories were helping clean out the animal stalls. Now, he continues the cycle and has enlisted his children as volunteers around the fairgrounds each year while he and Terri still stay involved and give back to the fair. “We still say it’s our vacation,” Dan While he’s no longer offi cially guid- said. ing the fair into its future, Dan is In his two decades as a member of still passionate about and dedicated the Umatilla County Fair Board, to spreading the importance of not Dan assisted in just about every just the Umatilla County Fair, but aspect of the fair. From livestock all county fairs in Oregon. to food vendors to the budget and more, he did it all. To put as much “Even with social media and the time and effort as he has, he needed changing times, county fairs are still a place for a county to come to- some help from home. gether and celebrate,” he said. “It involves the whole family,” he Other honorees include 2018 male said. volunteer of the year, David Fesler From the 1950s to the present, Dan of Milton-Freewater, and 2018 fe- has seen the fair develop and grow male volunteer of the year, Terrie into what it is today. With yearly Dennis. attendance at 15,000-20,000 when he fi rst joined the board, he said the McNalley said Fesler has been fair now regularly exceeds 80,000 a yearly volunteer ever since his daughters were members of the fair annual visitors. court and last year was integral in He also spoke of an early goal of running the water truck that sup- his and his fellow board members pressed dust around the fairgrounds. that was to raise the yearly livestock Dennis has spent a number of years auction profi ts above $75,000. Now, volunteering in the livestock barns the auction’s profi ts have surpassed helping 4-H and FFA kids. Specif- $500,000 each year. ically, she’s been a fi xture in the sheep barn according to McNalley. Both honorees are invited to partic- ipate in the parade, though they are not required to. The fair board also presented Mi- guel Velasco of Hermiston’s Ve- lasco Used Cars with the 2018 Busi- ness Partnership Award. Velasco has helped grow the fair’s Latino Night on Friday, which features a latino music festival that Velasco coordi- nates. McNalley said Latino Night has become the fair’s best income night. A special recognition award was also presented to Steve Wallace of Western Ag Improvement for his donation of time and resources to upkeep and development of the fair- grounds according to McNalley. The kickoff parade is sponsored by Hermiston’s Ranch and Home and will begin on Aug. 6 at 6:30 p.m. from Hermiston High School and will end at the Bi-Mart on South First Place. East Oregonian/Hermiston Herald