NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2022 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A3 Gubernatorial candidate visits Hermiston, Boardman Stan Pulliam arrived Feb. 10 to visit Martha’s House corners of the state,” Pulliam said. “What we’re trying to see is what are the diff erent solutions in the diff erent corners of the state that diff erent neighbors are fi guring out on how to tackle our biggest prob- lems,” he said. By ERICK PETERSON Hermiston Herald Oregon gubernatorial candi- date Stan Pulliam said he is visit- ing all corners of Oregon to learn how locals take on the state’s big- gest problems. The Republican, who is the mayor of Sandy, brought his cam- paign Thursday, Feb. 10, to East- ern Oregon with a morning stop in Boardman and an afternoon tour of Martha’s House in Hermiston. “I’m a mayor, and so I’ve always really heavily believed in local control and local solutions to our problems,” he said. His visit to Martha’s House gave him an opportunity to see how Hermiston is handling its housing shortage. He said Mar- tha’s House impressed him with its community engagement. “My experience as someone who grew up in my hometown of being involved in service organiza- tions is that there is something spe- cial about the feeling when you are able to help out a fellow neighbor,” he said. When a person is trying to tran- sition out of situations that aren’t favorable, there is opportunity to Pulliam on mask mandates, COVID-19 While in Boardman, he addressed several topics, including mask mandates. “I think it’s time for personal choice on masks,” he said. He repeated his message in Hermiston after his tour of Mar- tha’s House. As he took the tour, he wore a mask, and he said it was import- ant to respect businesses and orga- nizations when they required mask usage. Still, he stated people should have the option to decide if masks are right for them or not. He said he was vaccinated and has isolated himself whenever he felt ill. “I do not know whether or not I have had COVID,” he said. He said he may have had it but does not think “we should test every time we aren’t feeling well.” Instead, he explained, “We should just do the right thing, which is fol- low the doctor’s orders, and isolate and not go to work, and not try to spread our viruses to one another.” Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Stan Pulliam, Sandy mayor and Oregon GOP gubernatorial candidate, speaks with administrative staff Thursday, Feb. 10, 2022, at Martha’s House in Hermiston. help, he said, and that is “a special deal.” Pulliam expressed his hope he can help people, too, by addressing the concerns of locals. The tour has concentrated on “a lot of Main Street businesses,” he said, and he added his campaign started with such operations. But Umatilla offi cer was among locals to help in Richland shooting the tour also takes in places such as Martha’s House, in addition to schools, where he could explore educational options. “We’ve done a tour through southern Oregon so far,” he said. “This is our second leg of the tour. On that one, we went up through Eugene and Springfi eld to Med- ford and Grants Pass.” The next stint brought them Feb. 9 to The Dalles, and then to Boardman the morning of Feb. 10 before the visit in Hermiston and a meet-and-greet that night in Pend- leton. Next, the tour heads to the coast. “We’re trying to cover all of the Experts: Food industry must adapt to labor shortages Boardman Foods VP of operations advocates for promoting from within help,’ if we have someone By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI available, we’ll defi nitely EO Media Group go.” Following a deadly Baker said there were shooting in Richland, “defi nitely people from The worker shortage isn’t Washington, the Umatilla other departments in this a temporary trend that farmers Police Department sent area, as well” to assist. and food processors can hope one of its own to help. will soon blow over, experts Aaron Christopher Lt. Keith Kennedy Kelly, 39, was arrested say. rushed to the scene of the late Feb. 7 on the free- As insuffi cient labor shooting Feb. 7. Two peo- way between the town plagues the agriculture and ple had been shot, and of Sprague and Spokane, food industries, employers one had died, at the Fred Richland police said in a must persistently compete Meyer store in Richland. Facebook posting. for workers while investing Offi cers from numer- in automation, according to Police dispatchers in ous agencies were pres- Richland received a call experts at Food Northwest’s ent. Kennedy’s job was reporting yelling and pos- annual processing and pack- to perform a “perimeter sible gunshots in the store aging expo Feb. 3 and 4 in watch” in case the suspect at 11:03 a.m. Feb. 7. The Portland. remained nearby, accord- fi rst offi cers responding “This is the new normal. ing to the Umatilla Police arrived just one minute Things will not go back to Department. how they were before,” said later, police said. “They wanted Osvaldo Granillo, sales direc- Richland anyone who could tor with Redzone Production interim Police come to come,” Systems, which helps compa- Chief Bri- Kylie Baker, Uma- nies with worker productivity. git Clary said tilla police admin- Retaining employees is responding offi - istrator, said. “They key — apart from the expense cers found the really didn’t know of recruiting and training two victims near Kennedy at that point what workers, companies face an each other in the the scale of this “opportunity cost” when they store and said event was going to be.” can’t fi ll orders due to an insuf- that although lifesaving Her department, Baker measures were tried, one fi cient workforce, he said. said, only had two or three already had died. Employee retention offi cers on duty at the doesn’t just boil down to The wounded vic- time, including the school tim was a store employee spending more on wages, resource offi cer, charged who was taken to a hospi- especially with the new gen- to look over Umatilla tal, she said. He had sur- eration of workers, Granillo schools. That left Ken- gery and was listed in said. nedy as the only person critical condition, police A survey of young work- available to assist, Baker said. Neither victim was ers found pay rates are 14th said. on their list of concerns, while identifi ed. “Basically, what hap- enjoying their job is the top The suspect and the vic- pens from a law enforce- tim who died talked before consideration, he said. ment perspective, is once the shooting, according to Workplace culture is a cru- they get on scene at a store video footage seen major event like that, they by police. Police said OREGON CAPITAL check in with a command they don’t know what was post,” Baker said. “What- said and whether the two ever the most immediate knew each other. Police Get the inside need is at that time, that’s also reported the person scoop on state what they get assigned for who died was not a store government and politics! that event.” employee. Kennedy’s perimeter watch was with a pair of other offi cers from diff er- ent departments. Baker said it is uncom- mon for her department to send offi cers to locations as far away as the Rich- land Fred Meyer, which is more than 40 miles away. “I’ve worked here about 10 years, and nor- mally that’s not stan- dard protocol,” Baker said. “But normally, we don’t really have fi ve- scale events occurring in our area, fortunately. So, A hundred years from now it will not matter what My bank account it doesn’t happen very was, the sort of house I lived in, or the kind of car I drove... but the often, but when agencies world may be different because I was important in the Life of a Child. call and say, ‘We need By ERICK PETERSON Hermiston Herald cial consideration for employ- ers who are competing against other companies whose work- ers perform similar tasks, said Matt Crabtree, sales director with Redzone. Given a choice between fi lling boxes with products or peeling onions, for example, a worker may choose the com- pany “where people want to go and spend their time,” he said. “Retention is the cheapest thing you can do to maintain productivity,” Crabtree said. It’s worth spending the time to continuously educate and train employees, focus- ing on communication and soliciting feedback on work processes, said John Damon, that employees in leadership roles know “every crack and cranny” of the operation, said Debbie Radie, vice president of operations at Boardman Foods. “My top mechanic today started on my trim line,” Radie said. Boardman Foods has a generous paid time-off pol- icy and started an all-day child daycare program to retain female employees who’d oth- erwise be compelled to stay home during the pandemic, she said. “We fi nd creative ways for people to have that work-life balance,” Radie said, “even on the work fl oor trimming onions.” workforce development man- ager for Food Northwest, a food industry group. Workers are less likely to jump ship if they see a future at the company, he said. “In this environment, you’ve got to keep engag- ing them and make them feel important,” he said. “If they feel like family, they will stay.” Bright employees can act out and become “smart alecks” when they’re bored, so it helps to provide them with a purpose and opportuni- ties for advancement, Damon said, so they “see a career path where they didn’t see one.” Promoting people from within the company ensures CHOOSE FROM 9 OF YOUR FAVORITE NEW 2022 TOYOTA MODELS CAMRY, CAMRY HYBRID, COROLLA, COROLLA HYBRID, HIGHLANDER, HIGHLANDER HYBRID, RAV4, RAV4 HYBRID & TUNDRA % 2.99 72 APR FINANCING WITH $ 15.19 PER $ 1,000 BORROWED MO. INSIDER COROLLA CAMRY HYBRID CAMRY COROLLA HYBRID HIGHLANDER HYBRID HIGHLANDER priorities Specials: Feb 13-18 20 % 0 F F Scarves Feel Great, Live it Up! 541-567-0272 2150 N. 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