NEWS A8 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 2020 The Columbia Development Authority meets By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR Staff photo by Ben Lonergan A Hermiston Police car blocks access to Southeast Fifth Street in Hermiston due to downed power lines on Saturday, May 30, 2020. Council adopts budget amid calls nationwide to ‘defund the police’ By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR The Hermiston City Council adopted a new bud- get for 2020-21 on Monday, June 8. The budget’s biggest cap- ital improvement projects for the year are water and waste- water improvements, includ- ing replacing wastewater pipes along Newport Ave- nue and water mains along Ridgeway Avenue. The city also plans to rebuild Funland Playground at Butte Park after it burned down in 2019, and fi nish design work for a restructuring of the three- way intersection of Geer, Harper and River roads. The original plan had been to give city staff a 2.75% cost of living increase in July, but reduced revenue because of the pandemic has pushed that raise out until at least January 2021. The budget passed with- out debate between coun- cilors, but Mayor David Drotzmann said he hoped community members watch- ing knew that the budget had been discussed in depth pre- viously at a budget commit- tee meeting that included multiple councilors and members of the public. “We’re very familiar with this budget,” he said. At a time when many major metropolitan areas are discussing calls by the Black Lives Matter movement to “defund the police” by diverting more funding away from police departments and into social services, Herm- iston’s police budget added two positions. A new school resource offi cer, paid 75% by Hermiston School Dis- trict, will be assigned to the middle schools, and a new records clerk will help the department process increased requests for body camera footage and other records. At the end of the city council meeting, as coun- cilors discussed recent pro- tests in Hermiston, Drot- zmann said he felt the Hermiston Police Depart- ment’s work was essential to the community. “We need you; we value you,” he said. He also said he was proud of Hermistonians for making their voices heard through protest, and that they did so without resorting to personal violence or destruction of property. City councilor Lori Davis said she had a constituent who asked her to bring up the Hermiston Freedom Rally, which took place May 30 in protest against COVID- 19 restrictions. She said the constituent felt frightened and disturbed by the peo- ple who showed up carry- ing “assault rifl es,” with their faces covered, and that the image “didn’t represent Hermiston.” Drotzmann said he got several calls and emails from people who were also con- cerned about that rally and wanted the city to not allow it to take place. The group rented the downtown festival street from the city. “When we start silencing one group, who gets to make that decision, and when does it stop?” Drotzmann asked. City councilor Roy Bar- ron also said he had heard concerns, particularly regard- ing the perception that speak- ers for the rally were “bring- ing white supremacy to town,” but like Drotzmann, he didn’t want to infringe on others’ right to free speech. He said he attended the Black Lives Matter pro- test on June 6 and he under- stood that the anger motivat- ing such protests around the world are an expression of pain that the black commu- nity is feeling. He encour- aged everyone to work together to root out systemic racism. He also said he thought Hermiston has a great police department, but they shouldn’t have to be the ones handling so much of the mental health and addic- tion problems in the commu- nity. He said he wanted to see more help for them in those areas, more training to equip them to handle those situa- tions and protocols to make sure offi cers are taking care of their own mental health so that they can deal with high- stress situations. “I would encourage peo- ple to engage with our police department,” Barron said. Monday’s regular meet- ing was preceded by an hour- long work session to discuss possible changes to Hermis- ton’s zoning rules to accom- modate a proposed homeless shelter. The shelter, proposed by a new local nonprofi t known as Stepping Stones, would be comprised of at least 20 Conestoga huts 6 feet by 10 feet wide on a lot behind the Agape House. The huts, which would have no run- ning water or electricity, would each offer a homeless individual, couple or a par- ent and child a place to sleep in exchange for fulfi lling steps, such as volunteer work or applying for jobs to help them move out of home- lessness. The lot would also include a common building where guests could socialize and charge their cellphones. Guests would only be allowed on the property in the evenings to sleep and would be supervised by a paid security guard and cam- eras. They would be required to follow rules, such as pass- ing a cleaning inspection each morning and not leav- ing the property again once they arrived for the night. During the meeting, city planner Clint Spencer pro- posed new rules to allow “temporary emergency shel- ters” in light industrial zones. The rules included provi- sions, such as surrounding the property with an 8-foot, chain-link fence with pri- vacy slats, providing ade- quate lighting and providing one permanent toilet per 10 residents. Those rules will be dis- cussed at the next planning commission meeting before going to a public hearing sometime in July. As the Columbia Development Authority continues to wait on the fi nal approval needed for the Army to transfer the former Umatilla Chemi- cal Depot to local control, CDA director Greg Smith worries about what might slow the transfer down. He told the board during its June 4 meeting that many of the key play- ers with the U.S. Army and Oregon Military Depart- ment, who have been working with the CDA, are retiring soon or have recently retired, replaced by new people who aren’t familiar with the years of work that have already been done on the transfer agreement. “I want to share that’s a real vulnerability for the CDA,” he said. The former Army depot, which closed in 2012, comprises about 17,000 acres in Umatilla and Mor- row counties along Inter- state 84. About 7,500 acres have already been turned over to the Ore- gon Military Department for a National Guard train- ing facility. The Army is working to turn over con- trol of the rest of the prop- erty to the CDA, which is a partnership between fi ve local governments, for development of a wildlife refuse and approximately 3,965 acres of industrial and commercial land. So far, the transfer deal has hit seven years worth of speed bumps, from dis- agreements about water rights to drawn-out nego- tiations on preserving cul- tural sites, such as the Oregon Trail ruts that run through the property. The agreement over cultural sites, known as a programmatic agreement, is one of the last pieces of the puzzle. Now that the CDA has come to an agreement with the Con- federated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reserva- tion, Smith said the docu- ment needs to be approved by the federal Offi ce of General Counsel. “I’m nervous, because what I’m hearing from folks in D.C. is that the OCG is signifi cantly back- logged, so we need to fi g- ure out how to make this a priority,” Smith said. He said companies continue to express inter- est in industrial land on the depot, as soon as the CDA has the authority to lease or sell the property. The CDA’s infrastructure committee has been meet- ing with Anderson Perry & Associates, Umatilla Elec- tric Cooperative, Cascade Natural Gas, railroad con- sultants and other com- panies as they create a plan for extending needed infrastructure to those sites. The CDA didn’t have much business to con- duct during its meet- ing, but they did approve Smith to work with Uma- tilla County Emergency Manager Tom Roberts on an agreement for the county’s emergency man- agement department to use some equipment the CDA had been left. Rob- erts also thanked the CDA for allowing his depart- ment to use a couple of the depot’s concrete igloos, built to store munitions, for storage. SAVE $10 ON THIS GREAT GIFT FOR DAD! $34.95 PET OF THE WEEK All Fuzzball Rescue Animals have been adopted! K N A TH YOU! We will have more soon, so keep watch on our website or Facebook. Order online and save with flat-rate shipping at Umatilla.PictorialBook.com Order by mail now (discount expires 6/21/20): ☐ Ship my order to me: $34.95 plus $6.95 shipping and handling per book. Order will be shipped to the address below. 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