NEWS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14, 2021 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A3 City council thinks over Scammers work to separate senior housing proposal people from their money By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR Opponents say there’s no need for more assisted living facilities By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR Hermiston city council- ors asked for more time to think over a proposal for a new senior living develop- ment after the plan was met with opposition from exist- ing assisted living facilities during the council’s Mon- day, April 12, meeting. Representatives of Guardian Angel Homes and Sun Terrace Hermiston told the council they are strug- gling to fi ll rooms and staff - ing positions at their facil- ities, and questioned why the city would give away land to incentivize building more facilities. “I don’t think there’s a need,” said Matt Frantz, whose family owns Guard- ian Angel Homes. The idea was fi rst pre- sented to the city council in August 2020, when the council gave staff the green light to put out a request for proposals for a senior liv- ing project on a piece of property on Northwest 11th Street. The city purchased the 20-acre parcel, known as the Green Property, in 2005 for $420,000. The plan was to use the property, which is adjacent to the city’s recycled water treatment plant, to detour recycled water through the property before returning it to the Umatilla River, in order to lower the water’s tempera- ture fi rst. But tests of the idea didn’t work as well as expected and the idea was abandoned. Assistant City Man- ager Mark Morgan told the council that given a num- ber of challenges with the property, and the fact the city had demolished a home and outbuilding after pur- chasing it, it was unlikely the city could recoup its entire investment if it put the land up for auction. If someone did buy it at auc- tion, he said, they would likely build a single home on it, which would not add much to the tax base. Morgan’s proposal, then, was to give away approxi- mately 8 acres of the prop- erty, on the far side from the treatment plant, to a developer who promised to build some sort of housing for seniors on the property. He calculated that if such a development went in, the city would gain more than $3 million in property taxes and utility revenue over the next 20 years. He said additional senior living would make sure there was space for aging Baby Boomers as they needed it, and allow local professionals with aging relatives needing care to stay in the area. He said the development would also create jobs, both directly Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald, File The city of Hermiston is weighing the possibility of off ering just over 7 acres of land, near the city’s recycled water treatment plant, for a potential senior living development. and through increased need for services, such as dental care. Any agreement would have a “clawback” clause in which the city could take back the property if the development wasn’t built in the specifi ed time frame or wasn’t used for senior living for at least 25 years. The city put out a request for proposals for such a development, and a committee of two city councilors, staff and a plan- ning commission member selected a proposal from Paradigm Compass LLC, a partnership between two Oregon investment fi rms that both have a history of building and managing senior living projects in Oregon. One of the recent proj- ects the partnership com- pleted together is Juniper Springs, completed in Red- mond in 2018. The 7-acre site includes 60 assisted liv- ing units, 24 memory care units and 12 independent living cottages. Paradigm Compass’s proposal for the Hermiston site includes the same mix of units on the same size of property, and would be staff ed by 50 full- time positions. “This was very, very similar to our site,” Mor- gan said. Christopher Looney, one of the partners in Par- adigm Compass, said the company hires a third-party fi rm with expertise in the senior living market to con- duct a market study before building any project. The analysis helps the com- pany decide whether the project will be profi table, and is used to acquire the required certifi cate of need from Oregon Department of Human Services. “We did have a market study conducted for Herm- iston; it was conducted in October of last year, and it did show adequate demand in the market,” he said. He also noted that last year’s property tax bill for the similar development in Redmond had been about $200,000 — the type of money that the Hermiston project could also generate each year after it was com- pleted, likely in 2023. During the public com- ment period, however, Frantz, speaking from the point of view of Guardian Angel Homes, described himself as “really puz- zled” about how the fi rm retained by Paradigm Com- pass came to the conclu- sion there was enough need to support that many more assisted living units. “I’m really shaking my head,” he said. Frantz said after talking to Hermiston’s other three assisted living facilities besides Guardian Angel Homes, he found that they had a combined total of 241 assisted living units, with 47 of those units currently vacant. He said Guardian Angel Homes had submitted a pro- posal for the Green Property, but only to build independent living homes for seniors. He said if Paradigm Compass was sure there was a need for more assisted living and memory care in Hermiston, the company would build the project whether the city gave them property or not, and the same property tax and utility revenue would come to the city anyway, with the added bonus of being able to put the Green Property up for sale. John Krise, who stated he was present to represent Regency Pacifi c, which owns Sun Terrace Herm- iston, also questioned a need for more assisted liv- ing units in Hermiston. He said Sun Terrace is cur- rently running an occu- pancy of about 70% for the fi rst quarter of 2021. Jackie Linton, a Herm- iston resident, testifi ed she would rather see a por- tion of the property used for housing for homeless residents. After councilors had time to listen to all of the presentations and com- ments and to ask questions, Councilor Nancy Peter- son said she wanted time to absorb the information and further consider the data shared from both sides about the need for senior living in Hermiston. Other councilors agreed, and voted 6-1 to table the decision to declare 7.18 acres of the Green Property surplus until their April 26 meeting. In heist movies, thieves use elaborate plans, high- tech hackers and clever disguises to steal money. But in real life, the tool of choice for criminals is often just a telephone or email address. Hermiston Police Chief Jason Edmiston said city residents losing signifi - cant amounts of money to scammers happens more often than people might think. “We see this every day,” he said. “And what’s scary is what we don’t see because peo- ple don’t report it out of embarrassment.” Locally, he said he has seen a single person sometimes lose upward of $100,000. And unlike the theft of an object locally, where police may be able to track down the sus- pect and retrieve the item, money sent to scammers operating out of foreign countries is usually lost for good. Sometimes the scams are simple, blanketed approaches. A scammer might continually call ran- dom numbers until some- one picks up, for exam- ple, and then state they are with the Internal Rev- enue Service and the per- son owes hundreds or dol- lars in back taxes that they need to pay immediately. Other times, however, they can be more sophis- ticated. Edmiston said with the proliferation of social media and other online sources of informa- tion, scammers can fi nd out the names of a tar- get’s family members and other details that can be used to make a request for help sound legitimate. They might claim they kidnapped a specifi c rela- tive, or they might send a text or email pretending to be someone’s boss, telling them they need to transfer a large sum of money to a client right away. Criminals can also create email addresses that look very similar to an organization’s actual domain name, or “spoof” phone numbers, making it look like the person is call- ing from a diff erent, local number. Edmiston has gotten calls from residents letting him know that they had just received a call from what appeared to be the Hermiston Police Depart- ment phone number, from a caller that claimed to be Edmiston. Sometimes callers impersonating local police will tell people they have won Publisher’s Clearing- house but must pay a fee in order to receive the mil- lions of dollars waiting for them. Sometimes they will claim to be collecting donations on behalf of the department. Other times, the scammers will tell people they have a war- rant out for their arrest for a ticket they didn’t real- ize they had, but can avoid going to jail if they pay up right now. “It would be an abso- lute tactical disadvan- tage to call someone and tell them you’re coming to arrest them,” Edmiston said of the warrant scam. He said people claim- ing to be from a national charity supporting police who say that proceeds will be donated to local law enforcement are not tell- ing the truth — Hermiston Police Department doesn’t see a cent from such orga- nizations. Similarly, peo- ple can pretend to be other charities or businesses too (criminals have sometimes impersonated the Hermis- ton Herald to ask people for “donations”). They can also pretend to be an electric cooper- ative telling people their bill is late, an online dat- ing partner who needs money to come for a visit, a retailer needing someone to confi rm their credit card number, a property man- ager renting out a home, a recently deployed sol- dier trying to sell their car, a technical support person off ering to fi x a virus on a computer, or dozens of other identities. Edmiston said when in doubt that something might be a scam, it’s a good idea to talk it over with someone else. “If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is,” he said. But some people are stubborn, and at the end of the day, it’s their money that they can choose to send it where they want. Edmiston said sometimes victims respond angrily to police trying to con- vince them to stop sending money to a scammer. One person even threatened to sue the department. If a scam is run through a credit card or bank account, sometimes the bank can halt the trans- action. But often scam- mers will direct people to wire money, purchase gift cards or mail cash to pre- vent that from happening. Edmiston said the depart- ment does provide victims information about how they can work to try and restore their credit score if it was ruined by a scam- mer, but it’s a “tedious process” that is up to the victim to work through. “As much as we try to assist people with justice after the fact, it’s very dif- fi cult, sometimes impossi- ble,” he said. Car trouble? Lost your license?