WINNER OF THE 2020 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 2022 HermistonHerald.com EasternOregonMarketplace.com ‘A better world’ Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Hermiston School District Superintendent Tricia Mooney, left, and Jose Aparicio, a construction manager with the Wenaha Group Inc., walk the site of the new Rocky Heights Elementary School on Jan. 12, 2022, in Hermiston. Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Marchers carry signs Monday, Jan. 17, 2022, along East Main Street in downtown Hermiston during the annual Martin Luther King Jr. Day Peace March. Hermiston church hosts MLK Jr. Day Peace March By ERICK PETERSON Hermiston Herald Jesus Rome has lived in Hermis- ton for 30 years, and he said he has been to every Martin Luther King Jr. Day Peace March in the community since it inception in 2000. Monday, Jan. 17, was no excep- tion. Rome is the treasurer for the Hermiston Cultural Awareness Coa- lition, which organizes the event each year. “When I think about MLK and other civil rights leaders, I can’t help but remember and appreciate all the past pioneers that have gone before me and paved the way so I can have Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald the rights and freedoms I have now Signs sit on the ground Monday, Jan. 17, 2022, as marchers listen to speeches in this country,” Rome said. Rome pointed out injustice in at the First United Methodist Church in Hermiston following the annual Martin Oregon’s past. In 1844, he said, Ore- Luther King Jr. Day Peace March. gon voted into law the Black Exclu- sion Act, which essentially made it illegal for any Black families to move into Oregon territory. “I just can’t imagine being my skin color and growing up in those days and even during the days of the civil rights movement era and expe- riencing the constant racial trauma and discrimination on daily basis,” he said. Around 80 people attended the march, which began at 11 a.m. at the Hermiston First United Method- ist Church, 191 E. Gladys Ave., and traveled down Main Street. Police escorts and a United States fl ag bearer led the proces- sion. People of varied ages, elders to children, took part. Some peo- ple sang “We Shall Overcome,” and others held homemade signs depict- Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald ing King. Pastor Patty Nance, whose Pastor Marlando Jordan speaks Monday, Jan. 17, 2022, at the First United church hosted the event, walked Methodist Church in Hermiston at the annual Martin Luther King Jr. Day Peace at the back of the march. She said March. she was glad her church could play a role in the celebration of King. In but he had refl ected on King and his sion in the week prior to the MLK addition, Nance expressed hope that legacy. march, he said he wishes many of people would hear the speakers and “I think he did a tremendous job our nation’s leaders could express gain understanding of the state of in bringing things to our country that similar messages of togetherness. the world and its need for change. needed to be addressed,” he said. Following Smith in his speech, Kicking off speeches, Rev. King’s message, especially as Carol Jeff eries, HCAC member, Chuck Barnes, St. John’s Episcopal it relates to unity, is particularly spoke briefl y to encourage com- Church priest, off ered a munity. Also, she intro- prayer. duced Jessica Chavez, Hermiston City Man- high school scholarship ager Byron Smith spoke winner. next, focusing on King’s Chavez, who plans optimism, his confi - to become a high school dence that people could teacher, said King’s mes- work together for a bet- sage is “a guide” as she — Jessica Chavez, Hermiston High School student and ter world. Smith chal- and others strive for a HCAC scholarship winner lenged listeners to be better world. Peaceful like King. He also said protest, she said, is key, we should take the in eff orts toward racial example of organizations such as important and relevant these days, equality. The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat- Smith added. Pastor Marlando Jordan of Sozo ter-day Saints and the National “He was not trying to draw lines Church in Kennewick spoke at the Association for the Advancement between diff erent races or diff erent event and said King was a man of of Colored People, who united in a peoples,” Smith said of King. “He God, a man of vision, a man of cour- partnership to further causes of jus- was trying to show that we need to age and a man of love. tice and progress. come together.” Quoting King, the Kennewick Prior to the MLK march, Smith Smith in his speech expressed preacher said, “Hate is too great a expressed modesty at his inclusion. confi dence that we, as a nation, can burden to bear.” “I don’t know if I bring anything unify, even during a time in which See March, Page A9 extra special” to the event, he said, many of us are divided. In a discus- DR. KING’S MESSAGE IS A GUIDE AS WE STRIVE FOR A BETTER WORLD INSIDE A2  Hermiston History off ers a look into the past A3  Police make arrest in 2015 murder case Hermiston schools set to open in fall ‘They’re going to be beautiful,’ construction manager says of new schools By ERICK PETERSON Hermiston Herald Starting this autumn, Hermiston will have two new elementary schools. Trudging around in the muck Jan. 12, at the con- struction site of the new Rocky Heights Elementary School, Hermiston School District Superintendent Tri- cia Mooney said she was pleased with its progress. “I am impressed,” she said. This is the fi rst school construction she has over- seen, she said, and she is enjoying it. “It’s going up fast, and it’s really looking like a school.” She added she also was happy about the advance- ment on the Loma Vista Ele- mentary project. She was on the site with Jose Aparicio, Wenaha Group Inc., construction manager, and Jon Fowler, project superintendent with Kirby Nagelhout Construc- tion Co. Voters in November 2019 approved an $82.7 mil- lion bond measure to pay for projects to address stu- dent capacity. The new Rocky Heights and Loma Vista schools are part of the district’s plans to address capacity. Anticipating a grand opening Mooney, along with the Wenaha and Kirby Nagel- hout bosses, said the schools were on schedule to open for classes in the fall. Aparicio said the schools will have the same “feel and layout” as Herm- iston’s West Park Elemen- tary School. The two new schools will resemble each other, too, he said. The big- gest diff erence between them will be the direction they are facing. The buildings will have four classrooms per grade level — kindergarten through fi fth grade — and four classrooms for addi- tional programs. This gives the building a total of 28 classrooms. The maximum occupancy will be 600. This is needed, Mooney said, because the area is See Schools, Page A9 DEQ fi nes Port of Morrow $1.3M Port violated its permit more than 1,000 times in the last few years, according to regulators By GEORGE PLAVEN EO Media Group Oregon environmen- tal regulators have fi ned the Port of Morrow $1.3 mil- lion for repeatedly over-ap- plying agricultural waste- water on nearby farms in an area that already has ele- vated levels of nitrates in the groundwater. The state Department of Environmental Quality announced the fi ne on Jan. 11. Under a DEQ water qual- ity permit, the port collects nitrogen-rich wastewater from food processors, stor- age facilities and data cen- ters at its Boardman indus- trial park, which it then reuses to irrigate neigh- boring farm fi elds growing potatoes, onions and other high-value crops. A6  Comedy show coming to Hermiston on Jan. 28 But according to the agency, the port violated its permit more than 1,000 times from 2018 to 2021, exceeding the limit on how much nitrogen can be safely applied to farmland and resulting in 165 tons of excess nitrogen in the fi elds. Leah Feldon, DEQ dep- uty director, said these are “serious violations of water quality regulations that are in place to protect public health and the environment.” The Port of Morrow is Oregon’s second-larg- est port, behind only the Port of Portland. It is in the Umatilla Basin of northeast Oregon, where in 1990 the state declared a Groundwa- ter Management Area due to high levels of groundwa- ter nitrates exceeding 7 mil- ligrams per liter. In a statement, Ryan Neal, the port’s general manager, said it takes the violations seriously and will work in collaboration with DEQ toward fi nding a long-term See Port, Page A9 A7  National Guard returns to help in Eastern Oregon hospitals