NEWS Wednesday, august 25, 2021 HeRMIstOnHeRaLd.COM • A3 Hermiston Herald hires new editor erick Peterson, 45, is eager to report on Hermiston’s diversity, more By BRYCE DOLE staFF WRIteR HERMISTON — Erick Peterson, a Hermiston res- ident with years of journal- ism experience, has joined the Hermiston Herald as its new editor and senior reporter. Peterson, 45, started his new role with EO Media Group on Monday, Aug. 24. In addition to Hermiston, he will cover neighboring communities in both Uma- tilla and Morrow counties, including Boardman, Stan- field and Umatilla. “We are excited to have Erick on board,” said Andrew Cutler, publisher of the Hermiston Herald. “He brings a fresh set of eyes to the Herald and we are excited to see what ideas he has moving forward.” Peterson was born in Southern California and was raised in West Rich- land, Washington. Growing up reading the Tri-City Her- ald, Peterson came to love newspapers while deliver- ing them to his communi- ty’s doorsteps during his first job. He believes news- papers are integral institu- tions for keeping the public informed and holding power to account. “The uglier side of the world needs to be brought to light so it can be repaired,” Peterson said. “And report- ers have a very important job in exposing that.” Peterson graduated from Central Washington Uni- versity in Ellensburg, Wash- ington, with a Bachelor of Arts degree in philosophy. But it wasn’t until he went to China that he decided to pursue a career in journal- ism. For 10 years, he trav- eled through the country and wrote for magazines and newspapers, covering com- munity news, business and travel stories. Peterson returned to the United States and found a job as an editor at the Review Independent in Top- penish. After working for the Yakima Valley Publishing newspaper for a few years, he left to obtain a certifi- cate in instrumentation and industrial automation, but quickly decided that career wasn’t for him. Meanwhile, he reported freelance stories for the agricultural newspa- per the Capital Press, which, like the Hermiston Herald, is a member of the EO Media Group. After meeting his wife, Peterson moved to Hermis- ton four years ago and began working as a cashier at the local Safeway. He left the job shortly after the pan- demic started to take care of his family and help his step- son through online school. Amplifying the voices of people in his commu- nity is what inspired Peter- son to apply for the posi- tion with the Herald. He said he’s thrilled to be joining a paper that has a history of strong local journalism, par- ticularly under the leader- ship of former editor Jade McDowell. “The paper’s got a ter- rific tradition,” he said. “It’s been worked by some fan- tastic people. Jade is in that tradition. And I want to con- tinue that tradition. I want to contribute to a proud newspaper.” Peterson is married to Nancy Peterson, a longtime Hermiston resident, dis- ability services employee Hermiston agrees to help fund bridge analysis HeRMIstOn HeRaLd The Hermiston City Council approved a plan to jointly fund a look at putting a bridge across the Umatilla River. City Manager Byron Smith told the council that since 2001 the city’s trans- portation systems plan has considered a bridge over the Umatilla River, and now the city’s needs for that bridge have multiplied over the past 20 years, and those needs are going to increase. Hermiston continues to be the fastest growing community in Eastern Ore- gon, with a population now exceeding 19,000. Accord- ing to Smith’s memo to council on the bridge proj- ect, the city is tracking to reach nearly 23,000 resi- dents by 2030. The project would ana- lyze putting in a bridge to align with either Elm Ave- nue or Punkin Center Road. Smith said the analysis would cost $130,000, and Umatilla County and the city of Umatilla already are on board with sharing the cost. Umatilla has agreed to put in $30,000, Uma- tilla County has agreed to shoulder $50,000, Smith said, leaving Hermiston to put in the remaining $50,000. The city has chased fed- eral grants to pay for this examination, Smith said, but continuing to go that route would “really slow things down a lot.” And the $50,000, he added, is about the same amount the city would pay if it obtained a grant. Councilor Jackie Mey- ers said this idea has been on the city’s burner for 20-plus years, and now it’s time to flesh out the tech- nical work of determin- ing which spot is going to work the best. The council voted 8-0 in favor of a memoran- dum of understanding out- lining the joint funding of the engineering analysis, which the firm Anderson Perry & Associates will do. The council also met in a closed-door session to discuss the contract with the city manager. Smith has served in the role for seven years. After the session, the council voted unani- mously to extend Smith’s contract through Aug. 24, 2023, adding one year to his contract. Mayor Dave Drotzmann expressed his appreciation for Smith and his leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic. at Columbia Basin College and Hermiston city coun- cilor. Peterson will not cover city council because of his wife’s role. “We had long talks during the interview process about the potential conflicts of interest that could come from that,” Cutler said. “It’s important that readers know we take that seriously — whether perceived or real. So Erick will not cover any- thing to do with the city council.” Peterson added: “There’s going to be a lot of questions as to how objective I can be, and I can start off by saying I can’t be trusted to be objec- tive” covering city coun- cil, he said. “I love my wife more than anything. I love her more than any job I’ll ever have. I’m excited about the possibilities of this job, but I love my wife way more than I love anything else.” There are many top- ics Peterson hopes to bring to the table as the paper’s new editor, including the pandemic, climate change, agriculture and religion. In particular, he looks to report on Hermiston’s diversity, telling stories about the town’s underrep- resented and marginalized communities. “Erick’s experience as a journalist, both in the inland Northwest and over- seas, gives him a broad per- spective that will serve him well as our editor in Herm- iston,” said Kathryn B. Brown, vice president of EO Media Group and pub- lisher of The Other Oregon. Peterson emphasized he wants to get to know com- munities in and around Hermiston. He hopes peo- ple will reach out with story ideas or just to introduce themselves. Umatilla County’s COVID-19 death toll rises to 108 HeRMIstOn HeRaLd The Oregon Health Author- ity reported two more Umatilla County COVID-19 deaths Mon- day, Aug. 23, raising the county’s death toll to 108 since the pan- demic began. The disclosure comes as the county reported 69 new COVID- 19 cases, a slight decline from the record-breaking surge seen in previous weeks. The first victim is a 54-year- old man who tested positive Aug. 14 and died Aug. 17 at Good Shepherd Medical Center, Herm- iston. He had unspecified under- lying health conditions. The second victim is a 66-year- old man who tested positive July 19 and died Aug. 13. The state has yet to determine where he died. He had unspecified under- lying health conditions. The county has reported nine COVID-19 deaths during the past week, a new pandemic record. Locals react as Taliban seizes Afghanistan amid U.S. withdrawal By BRYCE DOLE AND NICK ROSENBERGER staFF WRIteRs Veteran communities in Eastern Oregon were among the many who felt mixed emo- tions with the rapidly unravel- ing situation in Afghanistan. Kerry Thompson, Eastern Oregon University’s Herm- iston Center military-veteran coordinator, has been in total disbelief at the pullout from Afghanistan and said he’s heartbroken. “I ask myself, is it all for nothing?” Thompson said. “Over 2,000 American lives lost over there, trillions of dol- lars we spent and my heart really goes out to the Afghani civilians. They have to be ter- rified of what they’re going through right now.” Thompson said his son had served in Afghanistan as well and they both had friends who died while serving. He said he is worried about the American troops trying to get everyone out right now. “Do I think we needed to still be there?” he asked, “No, I do not. The way that we left I think is going to be a stain on America.” Thompson, who served in the Army from 1987 until 2008, was part of the first ground forces in Afghanistan with the 10th Mountain Divi- sion in 2001 and 2002. He was deployed two times, once to Iraq and once to Afghanistan. He said the pullout could’ve been done more sys- tematically. To him, it felt like one day troops were there and the next day they weren’t. “I haven’t been in the Army for 13 years, but I’ve never seen anything like this,” he said. For veterans who are strug- gling with recent news rolling out of Afghanistan, “be proud of yourself and what you’ve done,” Thompson said. “And don’t be afraid to reach out to anyone if you need help.” President defends decision to withdrawVeterans and their families nationwide are reel- ing from the recent news of the Taliban’s rapid seizure of Afghanistan after the United States began withdrawing troops. On Monday, Aug. 16, Pres- ident Joe Biden defended his decision to withdraw the troops. “We gave them every tool they could need. We paid their salaries. Provided for the maintenance of their airplanes,” Biden said of the Afghanistan government, which crumbled in a matter of days. “We gave them every chance to determine their own future. What we could not provide was the will to fight for that future.” Biden echoed a senti- ment held by many veterans and their families across the nation: “How many more gen- erations of America’s daugh- ters and sons would you have me send to fight Afghans — Afghanistan’s civil war, when Afghan troops will not?” Duane Carter, a Hermis- ton resident and veteran of the United States Army, 24th Infantry, served in Operation Desert Shield in Saudi Arabia and Desert Storm in Iraq. Car- ter said he has grown numb to the news. “It didn’t surprise me,” he said of watching the Afghan government crumble. “But at least we’re getting out of there.” But scenes from the Kabul Airport, showing Afghan cit- izens desperately climbing onto aircrafts to escape, did surprise Carter. Some citizens who clung to planes fell to their deaths, according to news reports. Carter said he “had no doubt” the Taliban would reaf- firm its grip on the nation after the U.S.’s departure. But what was surprising, Carter said, was the speed at which the Afghan government fell. “I feel sorry for all the guys who served over there, lost their lives, got wounded,” he said. “This must crush them. There was a lot of time and effort over there. And it’s just gone.” The most important thing now, Carter said, is to “get all the troops out” safely. “We’ve already lost too many people,” he said. Local leaders speak out Now a refugee crisis is sweeping the world, as Afghan citizens desperately seek a way to escape the country. Oregon Sen. Bill Hansell, R-Athena, is one of a hand- ful of Republican legislators who have so far signed a let- ter that seeks to create a safe passage for Afghan refugees. The letter, sent to Oregon Gov. Kate Brown and U.S. Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, calls on the Biden administration to “lift the refugee admission caps and take other emergency human- itarian actions that will save lives at this pivotal time.” It says the state must “take all the necessary steps to be pre- pared to resettle families when they arrive.” “It’s not right, morally, to abandon our friends in tough situations,” Hansell said. Hansell said he would sup- port efforts aimed at expe- diting the process of getting Afghans safely to the U.S. He said he has grown “con- cerned” and “frustrated” with the U.S. government’s actions leading up to the Afghan gov- ernment’s collapse. Pendleton Mayor John Turner, an Iraq veteran and retired colonel and infantry officer who served in the 1st, 3rd and 4th Marine divisions for 28 years, said he thought the collapse of Afghanistan was very predictable. “I think any of us that were paying close attention were a bit surprised by the rapidity of how the Afghan government fell,” he said. “I don’t think anybody was surprised by the fact that it actually fell.” Turner said it was an Shekib Rahmani/The Associated Press Hundreds of people gather near a U.S. Air Force C-17 transport plane at a perimeter at the international airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, Aug. 16, 2021. That day, the U.S. military and officials focus was on Kabul’s airport, where thousands of Afghans trapped by the sudden Taliban takeover rushed the tarmac and clung to U.S. military planes deployed to fly out staffers of the U.S. Embassy, which shut down Aug. 15, and others. incredibly difficult issue and it will continue in the weeks to come with the United States only being able to evacuate about 5,000 peo- ple a day. Since the United States still has tremendous combat power, though, he said he thinks the Taliban will be sensible and let the evacuation take place peacefully. While he’s sure it’s frus- trating to veterans who served in Afghanistan, Turner said they still accomplished their goal to eliminate the Taliban as a source of power and a safe haven for terrorism train- ing — even while they might not have been able to convert Afghanistan into a pro-West- ern democratic government over the following 19 years. “We probably should have withdrawn 15 years ago,” he said. “This is a problem that’s been faced now by four American presidents over a 20-year period. Afghanistan is a unique country. It’s got a tribal culture. It’s not nec- essarily adaptable to West- ern democratic principles, so I don’t think anybody who served there was surprised by what happened.” HOME MAINTENANCE CENTER 541-567-7534 TN20 Wood Stove 1,499 $ • 18” max logs • 55,000 BTU Pellet Stoves 1,599 $ Heats 1800 sf Other Stoves & Sizes In Stock Breckwell P22 freestanding Presto Logs 4.50 6 Log Pack $ Pellets per ton White $ Bags 215 Brown $ Bags 235 Wood Stove Pipe Pellet Stove Pipe Gas Stove Pipe Blaze King Wood Stoves Quadra-Fire Wood & Pellet Stoves Door Gasket Rope Gasket Cement HERMISTON, OREGON Sale ends August 31st