PAGE LABEL GOES HERE WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 2021 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A1 WINNER OF THE 2020 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 2021 HermistonHerald.com EasternOregonMarketplace.com UPDATES Offi cials unlikely to reinstate restrictions By BRYCE DOLE STAFF WRITER UMATILLA COUNTY — Umatilla County con- tinues to report some of the highest COVID-19 infection rates statewide, but county commission- ers say they won’t step in to reinstate pandemic restrictions. “I think if we tried to implement any kind of restrictions, I don’t think anybody would follow them,” Commissioner John Shafer said Monday, July 26. With almost 80,000 res- idents, the county saw 8% of Oregon’s total COVID- 19 cases over the past two weeks, despite account- ing for less than 2% of the state’s total population. During that same period, the county reported the second highest posi- tive test rate statewide at 17.6%, as hospitals in Pendleton and Hermis- ton reported an uptick in patients hospitalized with COVID-19. Only neighboring Mor- row County had a higher rate at 17.9%. Wallowa County had the third high- est rate, 14.8% The county in the past two weeks has averaged 32 cases per day, a sharp rise from the nearly 10 cases per day the county was reporting earlier this month. It’s a total that tops several densely populated counties in Western Ore- gon and amounts to a case rate nearly seven times higher than Multnomah and Washington counties, according to the state. Umatilla County Pub- lic Health Director Joe Fiumara said the county is expecting to report an especially high case count July 27. By noon July 26, the county added up more than 80 new COVID-19 cases from the weekend, and Fiumara expected that number to continue to rise. According to the Ore- gon Health Authority as of 12:01 a.m. July 26, Uma- Kathy Aney/Hermiston Herald First grader Sebastian Macias receives some help from teacher Yisel Amaya on Thursday, July 22, 2021, to log onto a laptop during summer school at Sunset Elementary, Hermiston. Learning is fun Hermiston’s summer school a hit By NICK ROSENBERGER STAFF WRITER See Restrictions, Page A1 Kathy Aney/Hermiston Herald Nona Buschke raises her hand Thursday, July 22, 2021, in Yisel Amaya’s fi rst grade summer school class at Sunset Elementary, Hermiston. Hermiston School District’s wildly successful free summer camp program, running from June 21 to July 31, is reintroduc- ing children to the fun of learning after a year of online and hybrid school. The program, which is broken up into two sessions and open to all students grades K-12 enrolled in the Hermiston School District, has been a smash hit with both parents and students. Along with free meals and childcare, the pro- gram off ered a more hands-on and experiential learning focus after a year disrupted by COVID-19. The classes were centered on matter the students don’t nor- mally experience and tried to cover more subjects than the usual slate of academics, such as math and English. Some of their off erings included opportunities to learn about physics by build- ing a rollercoaster or solving a crime scene for a forensic sci- ence class. “So just lots of diff erent activ- ities and learning than the tra- ditional classroom,” said Tanya Kennedy, a summer program coor- dinator and dean of students at Desert View Elementary School. Student built bridges and cata- pults for civil engineering and con- struction, had the chance to try diff erent sports or even take an Ethiopian culture and history class. Some also learned how to code, build solar race cars and learn about history through simulations to give them a hands-on approach to learning. One such hands-on activity for third grade had students excavate chocolate chips from soft cook- ies as if they were digging for fos- sils during their dinosaur-themed week. On top of this, the district off ered sports camps every other week that high school athletes and coaches run while fi rst through third grad- ers got two weeks of free swim les- sons. Additionally, each elemen- tary grade went on two fi eld trips See School, Page A8 Stanfi eld fi nishing water tower renovations By NICK ROSENBERGER STAFF WRITER Cecili Longhorn/Contributed Photo The Stanfi eld water tower has stood for more than 100 years, and while the city no longer uses it, it remains a local landmark. The water tower is undergoing the fi nal stages of renovations, including fresh coats of paint. INSIDE STANFIELD — For a century the Stanfi eld water tower has stood over the town and provided a recog- nizable landmark for gen- erations of locals, and now, after three years of work, the 50,000-gallon water tower nearly is complete with renovations. With painters adding their fi nishing touches in the next two weeks, Stan- fi eld residents will be able to see the completed tower with up-to-date metalwork, a fresh coat of paint and new lighting, according to Scott Morris, Stanfi eld’s public works director. Morris said an inspec- A3  Home manufacturer sued for alleged civil rights violations tion a few years ago of the out-of-use water tower had shown defi ciencies in the structure, and they faced the choice of either tear- ing down the tower or fi x- ing it up. The price to tear it down, however, was the same price to fi x it. With this in mind, the city manager put out a survey to gauge public support for the two options, and the consensus was to keep it. “For a good portion of the people who have been here for a long time, they wanted to see it stay,” Mor- ris said. Like for many in Stan- fi eld, the tower is an important fi xture for Mor- ris and an important part of A3  Traffi c changes coming on East Diagonal Boulevard the town’s history. According to histori- cal city minutes, a special council meeting was held Oct. 2, 1919, to accept bids for the construction of the new city waterworks. Pitts- burgh-Des Moines Steel Company won the bid to install the tower for $9,410 and fi nished construction in 1920. The whole water system was approved with a 20-year loan of $30,000 — or about $470,000 in today’s dollar value. And, with the 150-foot tower visible from Inter- state 84, it has been a marker for generations of families coming home. Morris explained when he was a child and return- ing from trips to Portland A6  Summer events returning to the area in force with his family, they’d see the tower and get excited they were almost home. He said the tower is a logo and a landmark for the town. When Stanfi eld residents decided to refurbish the water tower, planners and city offi - cials decided to split the $180,000 budget into thirds. Construction began in Octo- ber 2019, with the fi rst year dedicated to fulfi lling dif- ferent Oregon Occupational Safety and Health require- ments and fi xing structural issues. The second year was focused on metalwork and fi nishing up the structural repairs, while the third year was focused completely on painting, which was done by See Tower, Page A8 A7  Law fi rms in Easterday case charging $1 million a month