WINNER OF THE 2020 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 2021 HermistonHerald.com EasternOregonMarketplace.com Dream Team puts focus on fun Athletes of all abilities meet for weekly softball game By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR On Tuesday nights at Herm- iston’s Field of Dreams, a very unusual softball game takes shape. Both teams wear the same green T-shirts, emblazoned with the words “Dream Team.” There are half a dozen shortstops, but zero outs. The game is only two innings long. The weekly games are part of an annual tradition that takes place each spring when special needs athletes from age 6 and to young adult play together, helped along by members of local Little League teams. On Tuesday, May 4, the Devin Oil Marlins softball team and the Hermiston Generating Car- dinals baseball team were taking their turn. “My favorite part is at the end of each game, when they ask, ‘When do we get to play again?’ ” Coach Tasha Bleyenberg said. She and Coach Kristi Smalley gather their 18 players each week at 6 p.m. They start out by pair- ing up Dream Team athletes with Little League athletes for a game of catch to warm up, then lead everyone in some stretches before the athletes divide into two teams and the game begins. “Are we gonna have some fun tonight?” Smalley asked every- one during the May 4 game, while everyone enthusiastically chimes back that fun is the focus. David Shasteen, age 9, said he has been on the Dream Team for several years now. His favorite part is getting to swing the bat. There are no strikes — players get to hit the ball as many times as they need, either from a ball pitched by a coach or a T-ball tee — and David said he usually hits the ball right away. “But sometimes I miss the ball on the fourth time or the second time,” he said. The players’ skill varies widely. During the fi rst inning, one player wandered toward third base after hitting the ball before her Lit- tle League buddies got her going in the right direction toward fi rst base, while the next hit a line drive past third base and jogged quickly straight to fi rst. All players run one base at a time, until the last batter brings everyone home. Outfi elders send the ball back to the pitcher instead of to a base, and See Dream Team, Page A10 Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Members of the Dream Team raise their hands and cheer following a game at Hermiston’s Field of Dreams on Tuesday, May 4, 2021. The Dream Team’s Nathaniel Shasteen, accompanied by a pair of Cardinals players, runs toward second base at Hermiston’s Field of Dreams on Tuesday, May 4, 2021. Foster parents open their homes to children in need resource parents to stop by and pick things out for free. If Osuna was asked to advise people who are thinking about doing foster care but are feeling intimidated, she said it would be that “the kids are worth it.” “The journey isn’t a walk in the park by any means, but these kids deserve love and a safe place,” she said. May is National Foster Care Month By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR For Bianca Osuna, being a fos- ter parent is a dream come true. “I know it sounds kind of cheesy, but I didn’t dream of being a fi refi ghter when I was growing up, I dreamed of being a mom,” she said. When Osuna didn’t end up having biological children, she turned to the foster care system three years ago as a way to still provide a home for children. Her fi rst placement — a set of four siblings — lasted about a year. She has continued to care for other children since, and said she has enjoyed the “ever-learning” experience. Many of the children who come into her home after a last-minute phone call from the Department of Human Services are coming from very diffi cult situations, such as homes with drugs and abuse. Osuna said she has had to learn a lot about parenting in a diff erent way than the way she was raised. “People think, ‘How hard can it be? It’s just babysitting,’ ” she INSIDE ‘We need more kiddos’ Michelle Davis/Contributed Photo Michelle Davis and her husband, Al, have been doing foster care for about fi ve years total. said. “But it’s not. It’s retraining the brain from trauma.” Osuna has no regrets, however, about becoming what DHS now calls a “resource parent.” Even her fi rst experience, when she went from having no children to hav- ing four dropped off at a moment’s notice, was a rewarding one she said she would do again. She enjoyed taking the kids around to their sports and other activities and spending time with them at home. A3  Shortage of lifeguards aff ecting swimming lessons schedule “I was like a chicken with my head cut off and I loved it,” she said. There is plenty of support for resource parents, too, she said. Kids have case workers and court appointed special advocates and counselors, and parents have train- ings and support groups. A new nonprofi t called Sweet Potato’s Closet, which opened last year, provides a large selection of cloth- ing, hygiene items and more for A5  Concert set to raise money for cystic fi brosis research Michelle Davis and her husband did foster care for the past two and a half years in Oregon, and for about three years before that while they were living in Kansas. She and her husband have two biological children, but decided they had room in their home for more. “We thought, you know what? We need more kiddos in the house,” she said. The Davises have spent on aver- age about a year with each child or sibling set they’ve taken into their home. They also frequently pro- vide respite care, which provides temporary child care for a child in the foster system while the person or family they are living with does something else, such as traveling out of town for a business trip. Davis said if someone wants to dip their toe into the world of foster A7  Gift card proposal would benefi t local restaurants care to see how they like it, doing respite care for a day or two at a time can be a good way to start. There’s always a risk that bio- logical children and foster children in the same home might not get along well, similar to biological siblings, but Davis said her chil- dren have always been great about accepting everyone. “My oldest just turned 9 yester- day and he has the biggest heart of gold,” she said. “He just accepts anyone who comes in.” She said the other day when she asked her 4-year-old where babies come from, he answered that someone comes and drops them off , of course. No more empty nesters Tonya Wilson and her husband are just coming up on one year of doing foster care. So far they have welcomed three teenagers, all related, into their home. “We’re empty nesters, and we suck at it,” she said when asked why they decided to get certifi ed as foster parents. “It’s so quiet and empty.” Wilson said it can take up to a year to get approved to be a fos- ter parent, but in this case she and her husband were fi rst approved as See Foster, Page A10 A9  Initiative petition concerns Oregon farmers, ranchers