NEWS A10 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14, 2021 Rocky Heights murals have watched over generations of students By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR Hermiston Herald, File Customers place orders at the Hermiston Lions Club food cart on at the Eastern Oregon Trade and Event Center during the 2017 Umatilla County Fair. Advisory committee agrees on long-term plan for EOTEC By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR The Eastern Oregon Trade and Event Center could look much different 20 years from now. During the Monday, April 12, Hermiston City Council meeting, the coun- cil approved a 20-year mas- ter plan for the complex. The plan was crafted with the city’s advisory board for EOTEC, with the help of Architects West. The map lays out a foot- print for improvements that will be added to the site over time. Some of those improvements include turn- ing the current overflow parking into grassy sports fields, expanding the cur- rent event center building, adding an indoor area, cre- ating an improved outdoor concert venue, and forging agreements with the neigh- boring airport to use some space for overflow parking during fair week. City Manager Byron Smith said the timing of those improvements over the next two decades will depend on funding availability. “We don’t plan to go and build everything on this map tomorrow,” he said. Mike Kay, a member of the Farm-City Pro Rodeo Board representing the rodeo on the EOTEC advi- sory committee, thanked the city council for being willing to slow down the planning process when stakeholders were unhappy with the direction it was taking. Since then, he said, there had been a significant amount of additional discus- sion and compromise, creat- ing a collaborative plan that everyone, not just the city, was satisfied with. “I think we’ve got a great plan here,” he said. Mayor David Drotzmann agreed, saying while the pro- cess was long and involved some “pretty strong wills,” the end result was a better plan that everyone was in unanimous support. “It’s hard to believe we’re fighting over 95 acres when we used to exist on 7,” he said, referencing the old fairgrounds on Orchard Avenue. He described the plan for EOTEC as one that will cre- ate a resource for the com- munity for decades to come, not only for the fair and rodeo but for many other events and activities. In other business during the April 12 city coun- cil meeting, the council approved a contract with Sineco Construction to replace nearly 2,000 feet of sewer main on South- east Seventh Street between Newport Avenue and High- land Avenue. Assistant City Manager Mark Morgan said the proj- ect is part of a larger effort to replace undersized sewer mains in that part of town that have been overbur- dened as the city continues to grow, and will present further problems with con- tinued development of the South Hermiston Industrial Park if not replaced. Sineco was the low bidder on the project at $596,485, which Morgan said was in line with estimates from city engineers at Anderson Perry. State budget hearings offer virtual participation By GARY A. WARNER OREGON CAPITAL BUREAU Oregon residents can tes- tify about the state’s upcom- ing two-year budget during online hearings that begin this week. The Oregon Legislature’s Joint Ways & Means Com- mittee will take virtual and written testimony for the state’s revenue and spending plans for 2021-22 that must be finalized by June 28. The committee of House and Senate members will take testimony, then vote on the budget in commit- tee work sessions still to be scheduled. The state budget is usually among the last set of bills passed during the odd-numbered year session. The budget-writing com- mittee will hold five regional hearings, with congressio- nal districts used to group testimony. The first hearing is Wednesday, April 14, at 5:30 p.m. for the 1st Con- gressional District, which includes Northwest Oregon. Congressional District 2, which covers most of Ore- gon east of the Cascades, including Umatilla and Mor- row counties, will be Satur- day, April 17, at 1:30 p.m. Other hearings are: CD3: Wednesday, April 21, at 5:30 p.m., CD4: Thursday, April 22, at 5:30 p.m., CD5: Saturday, April 24, at 1 p.m.. To find your congres- sional district: go to www. oregonlegislature.gov/find- yourlegislator/leg-districts. html or call your county clerk’s office. The hearings cover the 2021-22 state budget, which would go into effect July 1. The budget will be in Senate Bill 5555, which currently is a mostly blank framework. An overview of the com- mittee’s plans are at bit.ly/ ORbudget and Senate Bill 5555 as it now looks can be found at bit.ly/SB5555. The hearings will be streamed live, and available for later viewing, at bit.ly/ ORbudgetlive. Written testimony can be submitted at any time, but for specific regional issues, will be taken up to 24 hours before a hearing. To submit testimony elec- tronically, go to: bit.ly/ ORbudgettestimony. To submit testimony by mail, send to: Joint Ways and Means Committee, 900 State Street NE, Room H-178, Salem OR 97301 Registration is required to testify by phone or video link. Registration closes at the time the meeting is scheduled to begin. Those who sign up to speak online to the commit- tee will be limited to two minutes each. To register elec- tronically, go to: bit.ly/ ORbudgettestify. For assistance, call 833-698-1371. While the groundbreak- ing of a new Rocky Heights Elementary School means more room and nicer facil- ities for students and staff, when the time comes to tear down the old building, Linda Hagemann and Paula Jennings will be a little sad. The women worked together in the summer of 1984 to paint a series of murals in the breezeway of Rocky Heights, which still stand today. The build- ing was originally built in 1962. Jennings said she and Hagemann both had chil- dren in the school at the time, and were part of the parent group supporting the school. Both are “artsy,” she said, they and wanted to do something nice for the students. “We’re both creative people, so it was kind of serendipity,” she said. In fact, the “Serendip- ity” books, by Stephen Cosgrove and illustrated by Robin James, were what inspired them. Hagemann said she liked the short sto- ries in the series, and the lessons they taught about topics, such as friendship, and based the murals on imagining scenes from the books. One mural, for example, features Berry the Huckle- bug, a young bug who runs away so he can play all day and not do any chores. Once he sees how difficult the world can be, however, Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Students at Rocky Heights Elementary School walk past a series of murals, painted by Paula Jennings and Linda Hagemann, on April 13, 2021. “THEY’VE REALLY STOOD THE TEST OF TIME.” Paula Jennings, who with Linda Hagemann painted a series of murals at Rocky Heights Elementary School in 1984 he learns gratitude for his home and returns, prom- ising to do his part to help out. “They were such neat books,” Hagemann said. Jennings said she hasn’t seen the murals in 20 years, but plans to visit the school sometime in the next year before the new Rocky Heights is finished and the old one is demolished. Friends have sent her pic- tures, and she said she is amazed that the murals still have such vibrant colors after so many years. “They’ve really stood the test of time,” she said. Hagemann also said she is also happy to see how well the murals have held up, and like Jennings, wishes there was some way to preserve them for use in the new building. She said she enjoyed the experience of painting them at the time and likes the idea that so many gen- erations of students have enjoyed them. Recently she was a substitute at Rocky Heights, and said she enjoyed sharing the history and meaning of the murals with Princpal Ste- fani Wyant and other staff there. The most valuable and respected source of local news, advertising and information for our communities. www.eomediagroup.com