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About Hermiston herald. (Hermiston, Or.) 1994-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 26, 2020)
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 2020 HermistonHerald.com UPDATES EasternOregonMarketplace.com Protests spark confl ict City offers live updates of Funland progress Protests, shooting ratchet up police overtime costs By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR BY JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR The city of Hermis- ton is offering an up-to- date look at progress on building the new Funland Playground at Butte Park through a live video feed at hermistonprojects.com/ funland. Work crews have been leveling and preparing the site to begin installa- tion of playground pieces that have already arrived. In addition to a new play- ground, they will also be installing a new picnic shelter, restrooms and a concession stand nearby. In addition to the video feed, the website also offers an interactive map of what the playground will look like, illustra- tions of the different sec- tions planned for the play- ground, a breakdown of the project’s budget and a frequently asked ques- tions section. According to the site, the city has $1,662,000 of its goal of $1,750,000 for the project. Individuals and businesses can still buy an engraved fence picket to help support the project. The city hopes to have a grand opening celebra- tion of the playground by late October of 2020. The playground burned down in a suspected arson in May of 2019. The city started the hermistonprojects.com website in 2019 as a way for city residents to check on the progress of capital improvement projects in the city or fi nd out infor- mation about the project’s budget and purpose. The site has tabs for planned projects, projects in progress and completed projects. People can also sort projects by type, includ- ing wastewater, water and street projects. Staff photo by Ben Lonergan A Black Lives Matter protester calls out through a megaphone early in the evening. A crowd of roughly 40 Black Lives Matter protesters were met with about 100 counter-protesters at the intersection of Highway 395 and East Highland Avenue in Hermiston on Friday, Aug. 21, 2020. Staff photo by Ben Lonergan A counter-protest organizer walks the line of counter-protesters chanting through a megaphone. A crowd of roughly 40 Black Lives Matter protesters were met with about 100 counter-protesters at the intersection of Highway 395 and East Highland Avenue in Hermiston on Friday, Aug. 21, 2020. Rising tensions pushed a Black Lives Matter protest and count- er-protest in Hermiston late into the night twice over the weekend, causing high overtime costs for the Hermiston Police Department. A shooting unrelated to the protests took place in Hermiston on the afternoon of Friday, Aug. 21, and Hermiston Police Chief Jason Edmiston said between the shooting and the protests that took place Aug. 21-22, the department used up the equivalent of a month and a half of overtime pay in two days. That doesn’t count the extra hours put in by the department’s leadership paid on a salaried basis, he said. A group of Hermiston resi- dents have been holding a Black Lives Matter protest on Friday evenings, which organizers say usually draw 10 or fewer peo- ple. But a Facebook event created for the Aug. 21 protest sparked a rumor online that, in the words of one post shared 85 times, “BLM & ANTIFA Members from the Portland area will be coming to Hermiston,” possibly in the range of 150 people. By 6 p.m. — the scheduled start to the Black Lives Matter protest — about 100 counter-pro- testers had gathered in the strip mall parking lot on the west side of the Highway 395 and High- land Avenue intersection. Many were openly carrying handguns or rifl es, and most were carry- ing fl ags (America, Confederate, Trump, Thin Blue Line and Don’t Tread on Me) instead of signs. The group’s apparent orga- nizer, who declined to give his name to the Hermiston Her- ald, asked those gathered to not engage with the other group of protesters unless their life was threatened, and to avoid racial slurs and name-calling. He said their goal was to prevent any vandalism. See Protests, Page A12 “PEACEFUL PROTESTS ARE GREAT. THEY’RE AWESOME. THAT’S WHAT AMERICA IS ALL ABOUT. BUT WHEN IT GETS VIOLENT, THAT’S A PROBLEM.” Terina Newton, Hermiston Pandemic shifts college plans for area grads By ANNIE FOWLER FOR THE HERMISTON HERALD It’s that time of year of where college campuses nation- wide would be welcoming back students. The coronavirus pandemic, which has shuttered campuses and altered sports schedules from Ore- gon to Florida, has caused colleges to change their method of offering classes to students. Recent Hermiston graduate Josie Goodrich, who is attend- ing Washington State University in Pullman, will begin her college experience at her family’s dining room table. “Honestly, it’s upsetting,” said Goodrich, who is studying crimi- nal justice law enforcement admin- istration. “I was excited to start a new chapter in my life. I would like to be there. Now, not much is changing, except for the teachers.” Goodrich is just one of thou- sands of area students who have had to change their post-high school plans with COVID-19 and local governments keeping cam- puses closed. INSIDE Staff photo by Ben Lonergan Josie Goodrich is attending her Washington State University classes online from home in Hermiston after the COVID-19 pandemic caused the university to decide on a virtual start to the school year. According to Eastern Oregon University’s website, classes will be held in-person, remotely and in hybrid formats this fall. Some class locations may change to con- trol classroom density. Blue Mountain Community College in Pendleton will pro- vide classes and student support A3 Shooting puts Hermiston man in critical condition from a distance during fall semes- ter, while Walla Walla Community College will offer online classes, and select in-person classes where hands-on learning is needed. Goodrich, who started classes Monday, Aug. 24, said she bought some books for her classes, and also bought online access material A6 Hermiston residents march to raise awareness of human traffi cking for one of her classes. She also had to buy several online programs that are needed to submit class work because each professor uses a dif- ferent program. The hardest part of the fall dis- tance learning for Goodrich was doing the sorority rush online. She spent the better part of a week doing Zoom interviews and taking virtual tours of the different soror- ities at WSU. “There are 14 sororities at WSU,” Goodrich said. “You pick your top 10, go through inter- views, and cut the list down again. It would have been nice to do that in person.” Goodrich now is a member of Kappa Delta, and said she’s already made friends with her sorority sis- ters on social media. While Goodrich is learning from home, her 2020 Hermiston classmate Garrett Walchli is at Utah State University in Logan. He has a mix of online classes and hybrid classes, which include some in-person instruction. “I moved down here a week and a half ago,” said Walchli, who is a member of the Aggies foot- A7 Maxwell Market to reopen Thursday after Umatilla County returns to Phase 1 ball team. “Our campus is open, but depending on the professor, there are online classes, in-person classes, and some that are a mix.” Classes at Utah State begin Aug. 31, but because of COVID- 19, the football season has been put on hold until the spring. The Mountain West Conference, as well as every other major confer- ence throughout the nation, opted to move their seasons. “We can’t be with the coaches or in the (athletic) facilities,” said Walchli, who is majoring in inter- national agribusiness management. “I live in the dorms, and there is no mixing of students. You cannot go visit someone in another dorm. We are trying to be college students the best we can.” The two facets of Idaho Heppner co-valedictorian Nicole Propheter is attending school at Lewis-Clark State Col- lege in Lewiston, Idaho, where she also is a member of the women’s golf team. Classes started Aug. 24. She appreciates being able See College, Page A12 A8 Hermiston School District sees lower enrollment heading into 2020-21