NEWS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2022 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A3 Morrow County voters decide on school bond in May District’s schools are in need, according to superintendent By ERICK PETERSON Hermiston Herald Schools in Boardman, Hep- pner and Irrigon need an upgrade, according to Dirk Dirksen, the superintendent of the Morrow County School District. And the district is due for a bond to pay for the improvements. “The last bond was 21 years ago,” he said Feb. 14 at a meet- ing of the district’s board of direc- tors. “The buildings, as far as the upkeep and things like that, has been excellent, but we have a lot of older buildings. They are feeling their age.” The board supported the pro- posal and voted to place a general obligation bond measure on the May 17 ballot. A statement from the district stated the bond measure, if passed, Dirksen would raise $138 million. This money would be supplemented with a matching $4 million grant from the Oregon School Capital Improvement Matching Program, for a total of $142 million. The bond would mature in 20 years or less, according to the district, which estimated the bond rate at $2.67 per $1,000 of assessed property value, although the actual levy rate may dif- fer. If the measure passes, a tax- payer who owns a house assessed at $200,000 would pay approxi- mately $534 per year. Dating back several decades, Dirksen said, the schools do not meet modern standards. The super- intendent said security needs have changed. The current expectation is for offi ces to be placed at the entrance of a school, where admin- istrators can keep an eye on peo- ple as they enter. A remodel of buildings would include relocating offi ces, he said. Further renovations would cre- ate separate spaces for junior high and high school students. Junior high and high school stu- dents would have their own locker rooms and gymnasiums. Other modernizing, which would be made possible through the bond, would update and fi x electrical, HVAC and plumbing systems, he said. “We have showers that don’t work, and we have bathrooms that need to be refreshed,” Dirksen said. Other shortcomings, which he pointed out, include limited electrical outlets. It is not uncom- mon, he said, for a classroom in his district to have only two electrical outlets. Some parts of some build- ings do not have proper ventilation or heating, he said. He said another focus would be adding classrooms to existing schools, especially out in Board- man, where he expects the great- est population growth. Adding new classrooms will keep the district from having to add modular build- ings to their schools, he said. There would be no new schools as a result of the bond, Dirksen said. The improvements made possible through this bond would revamp current buildings, doing all of the things mentioned, plus improving parking and making the buildings more accessible for dis- abled students. The district has plans to distrib- ute fl yers, create an explanatory video and share information on the district website and social media. Dirksen said he is excited about the possibilities for improving his schools, especially since he is retir- ing soon. This is his last school year. “This is my 41st year, and my entire career has been in Morrow County,” he said. He taught for 15 years and was an administrator at River- side Jr./Sr. High School in Board- man before becoming the super- intendent. He said, after years of work for the district, he would like to see his schools move forward in a positive way. This bond, he said, creates good things for future generations. Returning to the stage — fi nally Hermiston High is among local groups returning to the stage MORE ONLINE See more photos with this story online at www. hermistonherald.com. By JENNIFER COLTON For EO Media Group When “The Sound of Music” closed on March 1, 2020, Pendleton’s College Community Theater expected to open its next production in six weeks. Instead, rehears- als at the Bob Clapp Theatre would be canceled for two years. “Little Women: The Broadway Musical,” the fi rst Pendleton-based theater pro- duction since the coronavirus pandemic, runs the next two weekends, Feb. 24-26 and March 3-5, in the theater on the campus of Blue Mountain Community College. “When COVID hit, it was really scary because nobody knew what to expect,” said Margaret Mayer, president of the CCT board of directors. “We had no idea it would be two years, no one knew. Here we are.” Almost exactly two years later (“Sound of Music” opened Feb. 20, 2020; “Lit- tle Women” opens Feb. 24, 2022), Mayer was back in the theater as music director for “Little Women.” Caitlin Mar- shall is directing. “The last two years have been really stressful. People need something that can take their minds off everything,” Marshall said. “I really just feel it’s important to keep some kind of normalcy with all the chaos going on.” That idea of normalcy has prompted shows to come back this month in Herm- iston and La Grande, even with COVID-19 impacts. At Hermiston High School, Jordan Bemrose brought together 70 students for per- formances of “Beauty and the Beast.” “The biggest reason we wanted to jump back into live theater is mostly to give these fantastic students something exciting to look forward to,” she said. Bemrose added the per- forming arts students are tal- ented and hardworking and need opportunities to shine. “With online school, we missed out on so many per- formance opportunities that now, being back in person, we wanted to make up for that loss of time,” she said. “For many students, singing, acting and playing their musi- cal instruments is their whole life and inspiration and what they aspire to do as careers after high school.” With the lingering impacts of COVID-19, the Hermiston production required masks to rehearse on stage and care- ful tracking to avoid quaran- tine that could cancel rehears- als — or performances. That Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Samantha Steff ey, right, and Pablo Galindo perform as Belle and Gaston Thursday, Feb. 17, 2022, during a rehearsal for Hermiston High School’s production of “Beauty and the Beast” at the high school. The show’s fi nal pearformacene was Feb. 19. Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Aaron Thacker performs as Beast on Thursday Feb, 17, 2022, during a dress rehearsal for Hermiston High School’s production of “Beauty and the Beast.” Aurelio Marin performs as Lumiere on Thursday Feb, 17, 2022, during a dress rehearsal for Hermiston High School’s production of “Beauty and the Beast.” same fear became a reality this month for Eastern Ore- gon University’s “We’ve Got Your Number,” a choreo- graphed choral performance. Several students tested pos- itive for COVID-19, and the show was postponed two weeks to Feb. 25 and 26. That delay pushed “A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder,” a stage musical planned to open March 10, into EOU’s fall term. “It’s exciting to be back and yet it’s frustrating at the same time. The biggest prob- lem with bringing theater back is COVID is still doing everything it can to prevent it from coming back,” said Ken Wheeler, associate professor of theater at EOU. “As much as things are getting better and we’re seeing the sun at the end of the storm, it’s still aff ecting it.” For tickets to “We’ve Got Your Number,” visit www. eou.edu/music. Returning to the stage during a pandemic requires fl exibility and creativity. When the pandemic hit, the Elgin Opera House’s spring 2020 production of “Matilda” was only weeks learn lines, music, choreog- raphy, organize props and set, and get all of the mov- ing pieces together, including the orchestra, who rehearse separately and join us during our dress rehearsal week. We rehearse at least two hours after school during our pro- duction months, and dress rehearsal week we rehearse after school four to fi ve hours fi nalizing everything.” Those hundreds of hours do not include the extra pan- demic struggle of rehearsing with masks or returning to the stage after a two-year hiatus. away from opening. Instead of opening that March, the show was postponed for a year and a half. In between, the Opera House tried outdoor pro- ductions as well as a fully recorded production of “High School Musical Jr.” During this musical, rehearsed in the winter of 2021, actors were split into cohort groups that rehearsed and recorded on diff erent days with no live audience. “When we announced we were recording ‘High School Musical,’ we thought we’d get just a few people audi- tion,” said Terry Hale, Elgin Opera House executive artis- tic director. “We had 70 or 80 kids from fi ve diff erent coun- ties. That’s how important this is.” Hermiston High School also saw large participation numbers with “Beauty and the Beast,” a show they’ve been rehearsing since the middle of November. “(I wish people knew) how hard these students work and how much time, eff ort and talent are needed to put a full show together,” Bem- rose said. “It takes weeks to Specials: Feb 20-25 % 20 Bible Writing Accessories 0 F F Feel Great, Live it Up! 541-567-0272 2150 N. First St., Hermiston WE ARE OPEN TO SERVE YOUR HEALTH NEEDS Turmeric - Improves lung function Cell Power - Balances ph and lowers acid that causes blood clots 0 F F INCREDIBLE HULK SMOOTHIE $ 1 DELI SPECIAL $7.95 • WATCH FOR OUR IN STORE SPECIALS • Happy Hen w/12oz soup CALL AHEAD AND USE OUR DRIVE THRU! FACE SHIELDS & MASKS $5-$7 “Everyone is out of prac- tice with the process, but we’ll work at overcom- ing those handicaps just so we can put the show on,” Wheeler said. “There’s noth- ing that beats a live shared experience in a darkened the- ater. That communication between the actors and the audience, there’s nothing that compares to that. We’re striv- ing to get back to that as soon as possible even if we have to take strange precautions to be able to do it. It’s worth it. “ In Baker City, Eastern Oregon Regional Theatre has presented a few shows — the children’s theater pre- sented “Jungle Book” in the fall of 2021, and “Pride @ Prejudice” wrapped up a two-weekend run Feb. 20. “Because theater is known as collaborative art, it was one of the few art forms almost totally shut down during the pandemic,” said Abby Dennis, EORT artis- tic director. “Since our art form requires being around others, theater people were completely cut off from being able to work through the overwhelming emotions from the past two years.” Bemrose said seeing a show come together is the greatest reward of theater, along with how accom- plished the cast and crew feel. Hale said it is the way the performing arts bring joy and life to those on and off the stage. “As a society, we focused so much on being afraid of death (in the pandemic) that we stopped doing the things that brought us joy, the things that made us alive,” Hale said. “One of the best ways to celebrate life is through the arts. If people keep com- ing out, we’ll keep doing it.” Dennis said returning to the stage is “bittersweet.” “I love being able to entertain my community, but it hurts to think of everything we’ve lost over the past two years,” she said. EORT’s 2022 schedule includes “Women Playing Hamlet,” “God of Carnage,” and the children’s theater will present “The Enchanted Bookshop” and “Macbeth.” In Pendleton, tickets are still available for “Little Women” for both weekends, Feb. 24-26 and March 3-5. For information, go to www. elginoperahouse.com. “It’s going to be an amaz- ing show,” Marshall said. “Come fall in love with these sisters and have a great night of theater again — fi nally.”