LOCAL WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 2022 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A3 Umatilla County again discusses hiring a professional manager By JOHN TILLMAN Hermiston Herald Talk is on the table again for hiring a professional manager to administer the day-to-day operations of Umatilla County. That’s a move Commissioner Dan Dorran favors. Dorran was a member of the Umatilla County Char- ter Review Committee in 2019 that recommended the county move off having a board of commissioners run the county and bring on a manager. “After hours of testi- mony from staff , past staff , past commissioners, local community leaders, outside county administrators and others, the charter review committee brought back a recommendation to put a county administrator on the ballot along with other rec- ommendations. Although the commissioners at the time did not put the recom- mendation on the ballot, they did make a commit- ment to further the discus- sion. Although four years have passed, we are having those discussions now.” Since Dorran’s 2020 election to the county board, he has led the eff ort to reconsider the issue. He will become commission chair in January. Dorran convened a meet- ing on March 22 to revisit the commit- tee’s recom- mendation to employ a county Dorran m a n - ager. He reminded participants of its conclusion. Commissioners George Murdock and John Sha- fer were there, along with county counsel Doug Olsen, who staff ed the charter review process. Two of the original members of the charter review committee, Sally Anderson Hansell and Jerry Baker, also attended, as did Hermiston Mayor David Drotzmann and City Manager Byron Smith. Looking on as well was Bill Grable, husband of Michele Grable, who chaired the committee. At the meeting, commis- sioners agreed to discuss the issue further with a veteran county manager, who has yet to be identifi ed. “Umatilla County has grown in population, reve- nue and complexity,” Dor- ran argued. “With this growth and complexity, the commissioners’ abil- ity to eff ectively and suc- cessfully manage, partici- pate and advocate for the best advancement of Uma- tilla County becomes a chal- lenge.” Several others pres- ent concurred. Umatilla County’s bud- get last year was almost $124 million. Impending changes in the composition of the com- mission make this a timely topic. While there were no votes at the meeting, there was a suggestion to hold off hiring a manager until the November election, should the county even decide to go that route. The makeup of the com- mission in 2023 will be dif- ferent. Murdock is retiring, and six candidates are run- ning for his position. Shafer is seeking reelection and has two challengers. In the meantime, the county plans to hold discus- sions with an outside expert. “To further this dis- cussion and decision, it is important for the commis- sioners to have the ability to listen, question and have a conversation with a pro- fessional county adminis- trator consultant to have our options and parameters defi ned,” Dorran said. Oregon counties employ various administrative systems. Gilliam, Sher- man, Wheeler, Crook, Grant, Malheur and Har- ney still use county courts, with a judge and two part- time commissioners. Such judges serve as chairs of the county boards of commis- sioner. Their judicial author- ity extends only to juvenile and probate matters. These activities are secondary to their primary administrative duties as county heads. Umatilla is among those with three, full-time, co-equal commissioners. Some counties with far fewer than Umatilla’s about 82,000 residents hire pro- fessional managers, includ- ing Morrow, Hood River and Clatsop. Umatilla’s population ranks 14th among Ore- gon’s 36 counties, but is 14,000 higher than num- ber 15 Klamath’s. Number 13 Polk’s is only slightly higher. Administrators are the norm in larger coun- ties, including Washing- ton, Clackamas and Marion. Multnomah County elects an at-large chair and four commissioners from geo- graphical districts. County commissioner candidates give their spiels By PHIL WRIGHT Hermiston Herald Umatilla County com- missioner candidates during a forum Thursday night, March 31, generally agreed homelessness, drug addic- tion and mental health are key areas to improve in the county. The seven candidates on the stage at the Pend- leton Convention Center also expressed near identi- cal stances on a number of issues, including universal support for Umatilla County as a 2nd Amendment sanc- tuary, which voters passed in 2020, legal immigration and opposition to moving from a board of commissioners to a county manager. Incumbent John Shafer is vying against two challeng- ers: conservative activist Hol- lyJo Beers and former Uma- tilla County employee Rick Pullen. Six candidates are running for the open Position 1 seat on the board: Business owners Bob Barton of Herm- iston, Jesse Bonifer of Ath- ena, Susan Bower of Pend- leton and Cindy Timmons of Milton-Freewater partici- pated in the forum, but Alvin Young, a Hermiston store manager, and David Nelson, former state senator of Pend- leton, were no-shows. The format allowed a min- ute for some answers and 30 seconds for others. Some- times, then, responses from candidates were like a puddle — wide but not very deep. Shafer touted his work spearheading the move for the county to not renew the contract with Lifeways Inc. for mental health services and instead bring on Community Counseling Solutions. The new nonprofi t has been han- dling County mental health and addiction treatment since December 2021, and Shafer said there has been signifi cant improvement in services. “Now we go to where you are when you are in cri- sis,” he said, instead of telling someone they should go to a hospital. He also said communities and organizations are making some headway dealing with homelessness, pointing to the work of Community Action Program of East Central Ore- gon to revitalize a former hotel in downtown Pendleton as the Promise Inn, homeless shelter and transitional hous- ing project. But the county has work to do when it comes to recharg- ing aquifers in the west side of the county, he said, in criti- cal groundwater areas. Beers said she is the East- ern Oregon head of Oregon Three Percenters, a right-wing group. She said she is a con- stitutionalist and would “bring a constitutional approach to county government.” She said she would push for more accessibility and transparency in county government if she wins and make fi ghting drugs a priority. She and several candidates said the county has to take on the increase in drug use and addiction in the wake of the passage of Measure 110, the law that decriminalized the personal possession of small amounts of hard drugs. Pullen said Umatilla County is his home and talked up his 10 years in county management and 20 years in government over- all. He also is serving a three- year term on the Tillamook County Fair Board, which expires June 30, 2023. He said he would make improving county roads a pri- ority. While some are fi ne, others are in serious need of repair. “They look like they’re on the moon,” he said. And the county needs to be ready to help farmers due to the 2022 Legislature pass- ing a bill to establish overtime pay requirements for agricul- tural workers in Oregon after 40 hours per week. He said that bill is going to have dev- astating eff ects on local farm- ers and the county needs to get ahead of what is coming. Barton, owner of Barton Laser Leveling Inc., said his decades in business give him the skills the county board needs. He said he considers homelessness a major hurdle for the county, which faces challenges to increase hous- ing and providing enough services. In a similar vein, he said, the county needs to fi nd a way to confi ne people suf- fering from mental illness to protect them and the public. He also said he wants more for the county’s youth, such as a virtual recreation center. Umatilla County, he said, aff orded him the opportunity to have a good life, and he wants to pass that on. Bonifer said as commis- sioner he would take hard stances again state mandates for masks and vaccines. “We are a charter county. We don’t have to listen to the state,” he said. He also said he would cut “unnecessary” county jobs to free up more funds to help with mental health and homelessness. Bower said as commis- sioner she would focus on the roll the county plays in regional economic develop- ment and working on ways to improve mental health ser- vices, perhaps through grants but also through private-pub- lic partnerships. The county’s organiza- tional health also is of impor- tance, she said, and voters need to support commissioner candidates who have pro- fessional backgrounds. That way, she explained, the county would not have to go down the road of hiring a pro- fessional manager. During a question about what the candidates know on the defunct Blue Moun- tain forest management plan, Bower said as a commis- sioner, she would not have to know the ins and outs of that Pendleton Friends of the Library B OOK S ALE April 15th & 16th • 10am-5pm kind of sweeping plan, but she has to know who the experts are to call about the topic. Timmons touted her work serving on the Blue Mountain Community College Founda- tion and as vice-chair on the Umatilla County board for CAPECO. “I think it’s important to be involved because that’s how you have the thumb on the pulse of the community and know what’s going on,” she said. As commissioner, she said, she would want to take on homelessness as well as push for helping local busi- nesses keep their doors open while recruiting new busi- nesses to the county. The county also needs to address the rising use of drugs, she said, and focus on elder care. Beers, Pullen and Boni- fer admitted they knew noth- ing of the Boardman to Hem- ingway transmission line, the project to build a massive 500-kilovolt line across from Boardman to Western Idaho. The Umatilla County Republican Party hosted the forum at the Pendle- ton Convention Center, and Vance Day, a former Marion County Circuit Court judge, served as moderator. Day was on a swing through East- ern Oregon campaigning for a seat on the Oregon Court of Appeals. Perhaps as many as 50 people were in the audi- ence when the event began at 6 p.m. The Oregon primary elec- tion is May 17. The last day to register to vote in the pri- mary is April 26. For more information about voter reg- istration, visit bit.ly/38lxaHk. Antonio Sierra/Hermiston Herald Kevin Headings, speaks Thursday, March 31, 2022, during a public interview at the Pendleton School District administrative offi ces. Pendleton School District names Hermiston principal next superintendent By ANTONIO SIERRA Hermiston Herald The Pendleton School District stayed local with its pick for superintendent. At a special board meet- ing on Saturday, April 2, the board unanimously voted to enter into contract nego- tiations with Kevin Head- ings, the principal of Herm- iston’s West Park Elementary School and the former super- intendent of the Stanfi eld School District. Headings had been vying with Kim Casey, a high school principal from Grand- view, Washington, to replace Superintendent Chris Fritsch, who is retiring after fi ve years in Pendleton. Both introduced them- selves and fi elded ques- tions at a community forum Thursday, March 31, before meeting with the Pendleton School Board behind closed doors. The board deliber- ated its choice well into the night, but held off on making an offi cial decision until the minute-long special meeting on Saturday. The board expects to come to an agreement with Head- ings later this month. Con- tract pending, Headings will start the job on July 1. While candid board dis- cussion on the two candidates remains private, Headings and Casey previously made a public case for their hiring at the community forums. ‘My strength is doing the work’ During his public inter- view, Headings assured com- munity members this was not the best format to speak to him in. “I don’t really interview well at all,” he said. “My strength is doing the work.” Following stints working in public and private schools in Kansas, Salem and Leb- anon, Headings arrived in Eastern Oregon to work in the Stanfi eld School Dis- trict, fi rst as a K-6 princi- pal and then superintendent. During that time, Headings said he worked to make the district more transparent and improve its perception in the community. While he went from superintendent to principal when he took the job at West Park, he said he made the move so that he could learn to lead a larger district under the tutelage of former Super- intendent Fred Maiocco and former Assistant Superin- tendent Wade Smith. Nearly nine years later, Headings said he was ready to return to the top job. Headings said he plans to be out and about in schools and the community as much as possible. “I don’t enjoy sitting in my offi ce,” he said. “I don’t enjoy offi ce work.” Both Stanfi eld and Herm- iston have signifi cant Latino populations and Headings was asked the same ques- tion Casey was about what he would do to help them in Pendleton. While Head- ings didn’t want to imple- ment anything before further studying the situation, Head- ings said Stanfi eld had some success with Hispanic fam- ily nights at the schools to increase trust and participa- tion in the Latino community. The runner-up Casey spent the early parts of her introduc- tion spotlighting her rural bonafi des. She said she grew up in Ellensburg, Washington, in a farming family that spent plenty of time on horseback and in the combine. “You can solve a lot of things with baling wire and baling twine,” she said. Casey started her career in business, including a stint working in Chrysler’s Port- land offi ce, but switched tracks to education after get- ting a divorce. Casey said her career move encouraged other women in her fam- ily to go back to school and was hoping she could “break the cycle” with students in Pendleton. Casey said she could get creative in recruiting and retaining teachers, having hired a math teacher through a job ad on Craigslist and working hands-on with fi rst- year teachers to fi nd them housing in Grandview. “We really need to think outside of our box,” she said. Grandview High School is a majority Latino school and an audience member asked what she did to serve that student population and she might implement those ideas in Pendleton, where Latinos are a small but grow- ing population. Casey said it’s not just about translating school messages into Span- ish, but also about under- standing Latino culture and incorporating it into how the school approaches students and families. She said a similar, culturally-sensitive approach also could be used for students from the Con- federated Tribes of the Uma- tilla Indian Reservation. 2022 I Northeast Oregon Pendleton Public Library 502 SW Dorion Ave FREE ADMISSION Specials: April 3-8 Are allergies bothering you? $ 1 0 F F PHOTO CONTEST SINUS CALM by Boiron Feel Great, Live it Up! 541-567-0272 2150 N. First St., Hermiston WE ARE OPEN TO SERVE YOUR HEALTH NEEDS 20 % MANGO MADNESS SMOOTHIE 0 F F can help relieve sinus pressure, headache, congestion and pain. 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