HERMISTON HERALD Wednesday, August 17, 2022 HermistonHerald.com EasternOregonMarketplace.com INSIDE, FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY A GO! EASTERN OREGON AUG. 17-24, 2022 fair wage “Pioneer Day is an event that allows us to look toward the past to appreciate the present.” WWW.GOEASTERNOREGON.COM Celebrate Cove Cherry Fair Pioneer Day PAGE 3 Taste Melon Fest HERITAGE STATION MUSEUM’S ANNUAL EVENT RETURNS PAGE 8 PAGE 7 Listen Jazz Trio Volunteers work for the love of the Umatilla County Fair PAGE 4 Left: Learn something new at Heritage Station Museum’s Pioneer Day, Aug. 20. Shannon Gruenhagen Contributed Photo Arts & Events in Eastern Oregon Popular magazine spotlights the best in local entertainment. LIGHTER SIDE Erick Peterson/Hermiston Herald Lori Browning, fair volunteer and Lions Club member, hands a meal to a fairgoer Thursday, Aug. 11, 2022, at the Umatilla County Fair, Hermiston. BY ERICK PETERSON Hermiston Herald Three Minutes With ... Lori Davis. A2 LOCAL NEWS The Umatilla County Fair survives because of its volunteers, according to fair administration. And the volunteers state they are happy to do the work. “This fair could not happen without them,” Fair Manager Angie McNalley said. She said more than 400 people volunteer at the fair. These people are not just giving free work during fair week; they are performing tasks throughout the year and do a variety of labor. Some are board managers and sales committee members. Others help out with animals in barns. McNalley said she has a small staff of five em- ployees in the fair office. They work hard, she said. Other paid workers, including the employ- ees at vendor booths, similarly put forth great effort. Still, McNalley said, the volunteers are es- sential and dedicated. She said she sees them throughout the year, working and anticipating this event, which this year takes place Wednesday, Aug. 10, through Saturday, Aug. 13. These volunteers are of all ages, she said. They have varied backgrounds and skills. What unites them, however, is their passion, she said. She added she is frequently taken aback by their devotion. “It’s hard for me to take a compliment,” Mc- Nalley said of her own work. “I’m paid to do it.” The volunteers, on the other hand, are not paid, leading the fair manager to state that she “honestly doesn’t know” if she would be doing what they do if she were in their shoes. “They love this fair,” McNalley said. VOLUNTEERS SPEAK THEIR MIND Umatilla County Fair Board Director Kelly Burke agreed with McNalley about the devotion of volunteers and the fair’s need for them. “We wouldn’t be able to do what we do (if not for them),” he said. See Fair / A12 EPA to Oregon: Take action against nitrate polluters Rep. Bentz holds town hall in Boardman. A3 COMMUNITY Showcasing the last days of the 2022 Umatilla County Fair. A7 BUSINESS & AG Hermiston getting new tattoo business. A8 BY ANTONIO SIERRA Oregon Public Broadcasting The U.S. Environmental Protec- tion Agency is urging state officials to take more action on nitrate pol- lution in Eastern Oregon’s Lower Umatilla Basin. A July 29 letter from the EPA to the Oregon Health Authority, the Oregon Department of Environ- mental Quality and the Oregon De- partment of Agriculture praised the state for some of the measures it’s taken to provide clean water to res- idents in Morrow County, but said that’s not enough. “EPA expects the state to hold nitrate sources accountable by re- quiring them to assume some of the responsibilities set forth above and, more importantly, to change their practices to reduce the amount of nitrate they discharge to groundwa- ter,” wrote Edward Kowalski, direc- tor of EPA Region 10’s enforcement and compliance division. Nitrates are a chemical commonly found in fertilizer. In excess amounts, Monica Samayoa/Oregon Public Broadcasting This April 15, 2022, photo shows Silvia Hernandez’s private well in the outskirts of Boardman. The Environmental Protection Agency lauded the state’s efforts to deliver clean drinking water to Morrow County residents affected by nitrate pollution but wanted more action to address the issue at its source. they can affect the health of people’s lungs, thyroid and bladder. High nitrate levels in Morrow OUTSKIRTS County and western Umatilla County’s groundwater supply has been on the state’s radar for more than 30 years, but a recent round of water testing of private wells in the Boardman area found many resi- dents had unsafe levels of nitrates in their drinking water. Kowalski highlighted a Lower Umatilla Basin work plan com- pleted by the three agencies, the plan including initiatives for ni- trate contamination education, free drinking water tests and alternative water sources where necessary. He also gave plaudits to the agencies’ plans to seek funding for these ini- tiatives at the Oregon Legislature Emergency Board’s September meeting and the long session in 2023. But Kowlaski wrote the state could no longer rely on voluntary practices and had to address the source of nitrates. According to a 1997 study by the state Depart- ment of Environmental Quality, agricultural and industrial opera- tions were among the top sources of the chemical. See EPA / A12 UMATILLA COUNTY Irrigon Marina looks to make improvements. A9 Veteran prosecutors rejoin district attorney’s office. A14 Da Vinci Robotic Surgical System • • • • • Dr. Marques Johnson | Dr. David Maccabee | Dr. Ann Rust State-of-the-art Precision Smaller Incisions Less Pain Shorter Hospital Stay Faster Recovery www.gshealth.org