FROM PAGE ONE WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 2021 Church: Continued from Page A1 He said his young wor- ship team, with members in their 20s and 30s, are able to relate to new families, made up of people of similar age. Their presence keeps ser- vices active and creative, and they even manage to keep him young, he said. Haight’s son, Clayton Haight, is part of the youth- ful renewal. As Hermis- ton Assembly strategy and development pastor, Clay- ton is guiding the church outside of its building. Starting a few months ago, he said, Hermiston Assembly has been promot- ing “house parties.” These are gatherings of people inside of homes, focus- ing on prayer, family, and fellowship. He said, the world is a diff erent place now. Busi- nesses have changed. Many of those businesses that have not changed, have failed. Churches also must change to meet new situations. Bible studies in homes always were a thing, Clay- ton said. People have long gathered in the homes of other believers to pray and discuss scripture. The dif- ference between house par- ties and Bible studies is that the house parties are fuller services. People who par- take in them recognize their place in their religion as leaders and ministers in their own right. It is a small-group model which can continue, even if new rules are created to govern action in the larger church building. “With house parties, even if we see more limita- tions, in place, like before, these house parties can continue to thrive in small groups,” Haight said. Clayton added, he wants a church that is resilient, that “leans into where cul- ture is at.” He also wants to fi nd the best way to serve the community. To date, Haight said, there are six homes that have served as house par- ties. They have fi lled to capacity, with 20 to 30 people. Haight provides the parties with guides. As a Providence: Continued from Page A1 Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Sen. Ron Wyden, center, waves to students at the Families First Child Care Center during a tour Aug. 31, 2021, of the Neal Early Learning Center in Boardman. Care: Continued from Page A1 Griggs also is the Board- man Community Devel- opment Association exec- utive director. She praised the Port of Morrow for being a part- ner, building the facil- ity and bringing in other partners, such as Board- man Foods and Threemile Canyon Farms. Brian Maag, an owner of Boardman Foods, expressed the pleasure he gets out of Family First. He said he was blessed to be raised in a happy, sta- ble family, and he wanted to give back to the com- munity with a program that assists the happi- ness and stability of other families. “We’re in a capital-in- tensive business that takes a lot of machinery, equip- ment and buildings to do, but, at the end of the day, the people are the most important,” he said. He said he wants to reinvest in families. He said Families First is more than a babysitter; it is an educational center. If you can keep children at grade level, they have a better chance of success. He said the center in gen- eral and Brenda Profi tt, director of Families First, is doing an excellent job of educating children. Thomas J. Flaherty, also an owner of Board- man Foods, added he and Maag are from a family with a 100-year-old his- tory in Oregon. They are, he said, “Oregonians to the core.” As such, they care about the state and the Boardman area, and they like what they see in Families First. “This endeavor with this child care center is probably more fulfi lling than anything we have ever done,” Flaherty said. Having gone through dif- fi cult times, he is grateful the Boardman commu- nity had “stuck with” him. He also said he appreci- ates Debbie Radie, Board- man Foods vice president, whom he called a “mag- ical woman who makes things happen.” Radie said, though Families First started in January, Boardman Foods actually began car- ing for workers’ families 17 years ago. Back then, an after-school program was started. In that pro- gram, schools would bus the workers’ children to a Boardman Foods facility. There, the children would snack and do homework while their parents com- pleted their shifts. COVID-19 increased the need of the after-school program, Radie said. With schools closed, children needed more supervision and educational resources. As a result, after-school program hours were extended. The community spread word of the after-school program, Radie said. Soon, people who were not even employed by Boardman Foods were asking if they could enroll their children. Needing more space, she received help from the Port of Morrow, which made available space in their new facility. With this as well as help from Profi tt, she was able to move forward with the new space. The center also received assistance from the Family First Preven- tion Services Act. Wyden and Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, wrote the legis- lation was to help people aff ected by the COVID-19 pandemic. This is important work, said Varon Blackburn, Threemile Canyon Farms human resource manager. “Last year, I had moth- ers working at Threemile Canyon Farms who couldn’t come to work because they didn’t have a place for their kids,” he said. He credited Radie for solving this problem and Marty Myers, visionary Threemile general man- ager, for seeking a solu- tion to child care. Myers died December 2020. “There’s no place like Families First here in Boardman,” said Dan Dal- toso of Umatilla Morrow Head Start, which also wants to off er its support. There is a need for physical infrastructure, Wyden said, but also a need to help people. Child care needs to be more plentiful and aff ordable and needs more programs such as Family First. He said this is not just an urban issue, but also a rural issue. “Supporting kids is a hugely important state- ment about our values as Oregonians,” Wyden said. “We want to make sure that the little ones in our families are taken care of.” Wyden also said that is a moral and an economic issue. lepsy, progressive dyskinesis (abnormal movements), devel- opmental delay, poor muscle tone, brain volume loss, and gradual loss of responsiveness to the environment. Children with this gene disorder develop, albeit with delays, until about ages 1-2 when they begin having sei- zures that cause regression. Within months, or even weeks, children lose their ability to move, speak, eat orally, and control their head and their body. Babies with the FRRS1L gene disorder grow up to be wheelchair bound, non-verbal, tube-fed and in need of con- stant care. For Providence, it took just three months to go from a crawling baby to one that is trapped in a body overtaken by seizures and involuntary movements. Fundraising promising In August, the three women helped create the fundraising page www.FRRS1L.ORG and mobilized other families. The exact number of children in the world living with FRRS1L gene disorder is unknown, but in a Facebook support group, parents of 14 FRRS1L chil- dren have started to raise funds. Miranda Rector is helping the group with public relations. The initial goal was $100,000 in the fi rst month, the amount needed by Dr. Berge Minassian, a gene therapist at the University of Texas-South- western, to compose a team of researchers. Minassian told parents he would investigate possi- ble treatments, but he advised them that it would require at least $400,000 to fund the proj- ect up to clinical trials. The campaign was launched at 6 a.m. Aug. 22. By 6 a.m. the next day, less than 24 hours after the fundraiser began, that fi rst $100,000 had been com- mitted. Within fi ve days, on Aug. 27, donations totaled more than $200,000 and as of Sept.1, some 649 donations totaled more than $281,000. Miranda said that one of the fi rst contributions was a $10,000 pledge, but every “$20 donation” is appreciated. The largest donation has been $20,000. “All we want to do is fi nd a cure for these babies,” she said. Meanwhile, Minassian has contacted a group of scien- tists in Germany who recently completed a promising study specifi cally on FRRS1L gene replacement therapy in mice. Minassian was optimistic and the parents were ecstatic. Providence’s Journey Providence turned 4 on Aug. 4. Born without compli- cations, at 6 months old she was unable to sit on her own or hold her head up. She was considered developmentally delayed. Miranda started a Facebook album and Instagram account for Providence to track her medical journey, which has included eight hospital stays. Twice this spring she spent 16 and then 17 days at Oregon Health & Sciences University in Portland. For more about Providence and the gene disorder visit: www.FRRS1L.ORGLink_ rkuchkta Instagram: Hope4frrs1l Facebook: Finding Hope for FRRS1L licensed and educated min- ister, he said his role is to equip believers. He pro- vides some order, though he does not their gather- ings to be ritualistic, but people to make Jesus their centerpiece and to bless one another. He hopes the suicide, pornography, loneliness and despair that have grown during the pandemic will be reduced by increased faith in God. Austin Naillon, Assem- bly family pastor, said he likes the changes. “We’re excited,” he said. “It looks like God is doing something big, and we couldn’t be more excited.” Hermiston Assembly meets at 10:30 am for Sun- day service. The infant was improving, albeit slowly, and by the time she was 1 year old, Providence was supporting herself sitting, her head control improved, she was eating softer foods like steamed veggies and she was army crawling around the Rec- tor’s home in Hermiston. “That fi rst year she was crawling, eating toast, blow- ing raspberries. She laughed and would grab and pull her- self up,” Jason said. During a month-long trip to Colorado just after Providence turned 1, her aunt, a former special needs and preschool teacher, noticed the baby star- ing off into the distance. She suggested Miranda and Jason get her tested. At Sacred Heart Children’s Hospital in Spokane, an MRI came back normal, but an EEG showed Providence was hav- ing “absence seizures,” which cause lapses in awareness. They are a type of generalized onset seizure, once referred to as petit mal seizures, mean- ing they begin in both sides of the brain at the same time. They begin and end abruptly but can last up to 30 seconds — so brief they sometimes are mistaken for daydream- ing and may not be detected for months. An epilepsy medi- cation, Keppra, was prescribed with hope to help, but after a few weeks seizures progressed. Doctors ran another EEG, did a lumbar puncture and more MRIs. They poked and prodded Providence. They did what seemed to be an inordi- nate amount of bloodwork. With a second medication, ONFI (a benzodiazepine used along with other medicines to treat seizures), Providence showed improvements. “I thought we were on the right track,” Jason said. “Then the seizures happened again, and it all went downhill from there.” Providence started strug- gling to drink from a bottle. Doctors — and the Rectors — realized even higher doses of ONFI weren’t working. “If anything, Providence started becoming more lethar- gic, sleepy and like she was in a haze,” her mother said. The parents consulted a feeding therapist at Kadlec Medical Center in Richland, Washington, and in December, just before Christmas, Provi- dence was admitted to OHSU for a gastrostomy-jejunostomy tube, which passes through the abdominal surface, into the stomach and down into the sec- ond part of the small intestine. The family returned home, but on Christmas Day, Prov- idence was readmitted to OHSU with more seizures and respiratory distress. Over the next four months, she returned to OHSU four more times for the same issues. On Feb. 19, 2019, Prov- idence was diagnosed with EEIE-37. By March, she had totally regressed. She had lost all physical abilities. Providence no longer could play with her toys, move her arms or legs on purpose, and she had no head control. She was eating only through the J-G tube. She also developed strider and laryngomalacia, essentially losing muscle tone in her throat. Medical equipment started stacking up. She was pre- scribed a Nebulizer, electric suction machine, ventilator for CPAP use, medical chairs, oxygen tanks and more. In May 2019 she had sur- gery for a gastrostomy tube, a more permanent feeding tube that connects directly to her stomach, and a supragotto- HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A7 Kathy Aney/Hermiston Herald A member of the Hermiston Assembly congregation masks the edges of a sign in the church’s lobby for painting on Monday, Sept. 6, 2021, during a work day. plasty to remove tissue from her throat to help reverse the strider and laryngomalacia. After the surgeries, Prov- idence further regressed. Among other things, she has cortical vision impairment, meaning she has diffi culty con- trolling her eyes. Her vision is currently around -15 corrected to a -12. She has been on seven diff erent anti-epileptic medica- tions; none have completely stopped the seizures from breaking through. So now Providence relies on her parents for everything. Miranda and Jason, both 33, didn’t know what normal was when Providence was born. “We heard comments … ter might have somewhat of a normal life. The possibility of her walking, even hold- ing her head up on her own. Even a fraction … that would be a huge blessing that could expand her quality of life. That’s been the prayer since she started regressing.” “This new gene therapy could be the light at the end of tunnel,” Jason said, “even if it could just stop the seizures and let her smile.” Successful gene therapy could also save their marriage. “It’s been rough on our fam- ily,” Miranda said. For the last six months, Miranda and Jason have seen each other as little as 15 min- Wil Phinney/For the Hermiston Herald The Rector family of Hermiston pose for a photo in late August 2021 at Funland Park in Hermiston. From left, Jason, Providence, 4, Miranda and Joshua, 2. The family is working to raise $400,000 to help Providence, who suff ers from a rare genetic disorder. ‘she’s not holding her head up; you might want to get her checked out,’” Miranda said. “We took her to a pediatri- cian who told us some kids take longer than others. ‘Give it six months,’ and that’s what we did.” Miranda and Jason ques- tioned their parenting skills. “We thought it was our fault … we didn’t put her on her tummy early enough or get early intervention soon enough,” she said. “Now four years into this, there’s noth- ing we could have done that would change where she is right now.” “I specifi cally remember doctors telling us, ‘Her condi- tion is progressive. The stud- ies say that quality of life is unknown but not good,’” Miranda said,noting that most children with EEIE, also known as Otahara Syndrome, don’t live past the age of 2. Hope The chance that gene replacement could change Providence’s quality of life is what her parents hope for. “There are no words,” Miranda said. “To even dare fathom the idea that our daugh- utes a day — from the time she returned home from work at 1:30 p.m. to when he had to leave at 1:45 p.m. “We literally live on a schedule, her schedule,” Miranda said. Miranda doesn’t hide the fact the relationship between she and Jason has been strained. She noted there are 84% more divorces for parents of special-needs children. Jason agreed with Miran- da’s assessment that their mar- riage is “on a thread.” “I don’t know the future,” he said, “but it’s not uncommon.” If gene therapy works, that would be fantastic. If it doesn’t, the Rectors know Providence’s future – maybe not their own. “We love Provi exactly where she’s at right now. Our love is vast. If this is how it will be for the rest of her life, we’ll love her no matter what,” Miranda said. In the meantime, with funds being raised and a doctor eager to fi nd a cure, Miranda and Jason Rector will be hopeful. “I know there’s a child in there who knows what’s going on,” Miranda said. “She’s just stuck in a body that doesn’t respond.” CONCEALED CARRY PERMIT CLASS SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 11 TH Hermiston Ranch & Home 9AM &12PM CLASSES Multi-State $ 80 Oregon Included No Fee Oregon Only $ 45 MULTI-STATE Valid 35-States, including Washington Shaun Shaun Curtain Curtain 360-921-2071 360-921-2071 or or email: email: ShaunCurtain@gmail.com ShaunCurtain@gmail.com | www.ShaunCurtain.com.com | www.ShaunCurtain.com.com