NEWS WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 22, 2021 Silage fi re burns in southwest Hermiston Department says the fi re is not hostile Hermiston Herald The silage fi re burning in southwest Hermiston contin- ues to garner attention from Umatilla County Fire District No. 1. The district reported there is little it can do to extin- guish the silage pile that has been burning for more than a week but the property owner is working toward that end and has trucked in water and hauled off loads of silage. Umatilla County Fire Dis- trict No. 1. in a press release reported it responded to the fi re the morning of Dec. 8. Crews found a large pile of corn silage that had self heated and began to openly burn. Firefi ghters extinguished the fl ames and returned several times after the fi re fl ared up. “These types of fi res occur when organic materi- als begin to break down,” the press release explained, which releases heat, and in the right conditions can lead to smol- dering and open combustion. The fi re district said this pile has all the components for this type of fi re — moist organic material, decomposition, compression and ventilation. And recent high winds pro- vided the ventilation to bring the combustion to the surface of the pile. “This fi re is a large smol- dering pile of organic mate- rial that requires the use of heavy equipment and water to complete extinguishment,” according to the press release. “To simply fl ow water on this type of fi re as has been sug- gested by some citizens, will do nothing to mitigate the smoke in a timely fashion.” The district compared the fi re to a fi re in a trash can inside a residence. Flowing water on the roof of the struc- ture would have no eff ect on putting out the fi re in the can. “This is not a hostile fi re at this time,” the press release continued. “We are well aware of the impact that the smoke is having on the community, and the land owner is taking all the required actions to complete extinguishment of this fi re.” Those actions include the use of water trucks and heavy equipment. The district explained it lacks that kind of heavy equipment and does not have operators to handle it. The press release also explained this fi re does not fall under the district’s open burning regulations and is unintentional. It also is burn- ing an open pit and is not cre- ating a hazard to anything sur- rounding that area. Therefore, the property owner is respon- sible for extinguishing the fi re. In a press release Monday, Dec. 20, Umatilla County Fire District No. 1 reported it con- ducted a follow-up inspection on the silage pile fi re, and the property owner is trucking in water and hauled off 15 loads of silage during the weekend. Umatilla County Fire Dis- trict No. 1 also stated it has been in contact with the city of Hermiston, Umatilla County Smoke Management and the Oregon Department of Envi- ronmental Quality regarding the fi re and will continue to monitor the situation until the work is complete. HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A3 Padawans assemble at library Erick Peterson/Hermiston Herald Attendees at the Hermiston Public Library’s Teen Star Wars Party answer trivia questions on Wednesday, Dec. 15, 2021. In addition to the trivia, the young Jedi Knights played games and ate snacks. HHS students win fourth Hermiston man arrested following Congressional App shooting death Challenge for district and convenient way to access some of the most popular safety and emergency services all in one app. Using the app, a person can dial any num- ber from the provided list of emergency numbers. The user can get an exact location with a button click, showing data such as latitude, longitude and address, regardless of location. Also, it is possible, through the app, to connect with emer- gency contacts and access a map that includes nearby emergency locations. “The Emergency App has been in the works for a long time,” said Robert Theriault, HHS computer science teacher. “The students thought of the Hermiston Herald Four Hermiston High School students recently won the 2021 Congressional App Challenge for Oregon’s Dis- trict 2. Rami Hozi, Cordell Patrick, Blake Wickers and Zeferino Araiza were notifi ed of their award by Congress- man Cliff Bentz’s offi ce. The Hermiston students are study- ing computer science. The students created the Emergency App, which allows anyone, at any time, to access emergency services such as phone numbers, location, con- tacts and a map. The premise stemmed from an idea to give people an easy app last year and have been planning the best way to imple- ment the app. It was decided early on that they wanted it on both Android and iOS so a majority of mobile users could utilize the app. However, this meant that they needed to learn two interfaces to get both sys- tems working. It was one of the largest endeavors I have seen in the last six years at Hermis- ton High School.” The students are invited to attend the House of Code next spring. The Congressional App Challenge mission is to inspire, include and innovate eff orts around STEM, coding, and computer science education. Hermiston Herald A Hermiston man is in jail after a shooting early Sunday, Dec. 19, left another man dead. Hermiston police at about 1:24 a.m. responded to a report of a man who may have been shot in the parking lot of Metro Mart, 1120 W. Highland Ave., according to information Hermiston police Capt. Travis Eynon posted on the department’s Facebook page. Offi cers arrived and found Kevin James Hines, 27, of Herm- iston, unresponsive and not breathing. Umatilla County Fire District No. 1 medics arrived shortly after and “worked valiantly” on Hines, according to the post, but he died at the scene. The local major crimes team responded with detectives from Boardman Police Department, Morrow County Sheriff ’s Offi ce, Umatilla Police Department, Uma- tilla County Sheriff ’s Offi ce, Pendleton Police Department and Umatilla Tribal Police Department. Those detectives and Hermiston police detectives and offi cers worked through the night investigating the crime. Police at about 8:05 a.m. arrested Ethan Matthew Bowe, 23, at his Herm- iston residence and booked him into the Umatilla County Jail, Pendeton, for fi rst-degree murder, unlawful use of a weapon and tampering with evidence. “This was not random,” according to Eynon’s post, “and there is no reason to believe anyone else is in danger.” Bowe remains in jail in lieu of $15,000 bail. He has a probable cause preliminary hearing Dec. 28, 8:15 a.m. in Courtroom 5 in the Umatilla County Circuit Court, Hermiston. Hermiston bumps hangar rents, OKs grant for trail project By PHIL WRIGHT Hermiston Herald Renting space at Herm- iston Municipal Airport’s open hangar is getting more expensive. The Hermiston City Council during its meet- ing Monday, Dec. 13, voted 8-0 to raise the rental rate for “open T-hangars” from $65 per month to $100 per month. The move came after the city’s Airport Advisory Committee on Dec. 1 asked the council to increase the rents. Assistant City Man- ager Mark Morgan in a memo to council noted, “It is unknown when the last time was that this rate was adjusted, but it is assumed to be at least 20 years.” The open hangar has space for 10 planes and has seven paying tenants, according to the memo, and has had seven to 10 ten- ants for the past several years. The city estimated the higher rent will increase annual hangar revenue at the airport by an additional $2,900 to $4,200 per year. The city will place the additional revenue into the Airport’s Hangar Con- struction Reserve Fund, although the city is uncer- tain about building new hangars at the airport. “It may make sense to simply demolish the exist- ing open hangar Building No. 1 and replace it with an enclosed facility,” the memo stated. The council also gave unanimous approval for the city to accept a grant of $266,498 from Oregon Department of Transporta- tion’s Oregon Community Paths program to build the Belt Park Greenway Trail from Southwest Seventh THANK YOU for your business! WE NOW OFFER RETAIL MEATS! PORK Pork Chops Roast Sausage Bacon • Ham BEEF Steak Roast Extra Lean Burger Street to the Buttercreek Apartments at the end of West Juniper Avenue. The project also will improve the trail, making it acces- sible to wheelchairs and scooters. The trail — 2,822 feet long — will meander along Belt Creek, according to a memo from Parks and Rec- reation Director Brandon Artz, with shade, rest areas, doggy waste bags and gar- bage cans, which the city will maintain. The total cost of the project is approximately $297,000. The city will be responsible for the remain- der minus the grant amount. In other business, the council voted 8-0 to approve joining two class action lawsuit settlements resolving opioid litiga- tion. Under the terms of the deals, McKesson, Cardinal Health and Amerisource- Bergen will pay a maxi- mum of $21 billion over 18 years, and Johnson & John- son will pay up to $5 bil- lion over no more than nine years. Approximately $22.8 billion in the proceeds go to state and local subdivisions. That ekes out to about $250,000 for Hermiston during the span, Mayor Dave Drotzmann said. City Manager Byron Smith agreed that was not much money to start an opioid treatment program, but the city can look to part- ner with other local govern- ments also getting a share and pool resources. And the council approved updating city code to make unlawfully applying graffi ti a viola- tion with a penalty of up to 100 hours of community service. The new language goes into eff ect 30 days after passage. HAPPY HOLIDAYS DESERT COBBLER SHOE & BOOT REPAIR LET US “MEAT” YOUR LAST MINUTE CHRISTMAS GIFT NEEDS SPECIALTY SMOKED PRODUCTS • Hunter Sausage • Summer Sausage • Pepperoni Sticks • Jalapeno Sticks • Teriyaki Sticks • Also our World Renowned Beef Jerky! • We now have Jalapeno Cheese Summer Sausage E.O.M.S. EASTERN OREGON MEATS 541-567-2011 253 W. Hermiston Ave., Hermiston easternoregonmobileslaughter.com • Purses • Belts • Much More! CELEBRATING OVER 40 YEARS! 120 NE 3rd St. • Hermiston • 541-567-2008 At the top of the meet- ing, the city took a moment to present a certifi cate of recognition to John Per- kins, who for 18 years has portrayed Santa Claus at local events. Perkins, who suff ers from late-stage pan- creas cancer, was on hand to accept the recognition, including a plaque from Artz. Perkins, a Hermiston native, thanked the city and donated the green chair he has used as Santa to the city. MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A BLESSED NEW YEAR! Thank you for shopping at local businesses.