WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 2022 3 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A3 LOCAL NEWS Housing developments booming in Umatilla Umatilla County board approves new position, equipment requests BY JOHN TILLMAN Hermiston Herald Umatilla County is getting a new service coordinator posi- tion for the county’s develop- mental disabilities program. The county board of com- missioner at its meeting Aug. 17 approved the new position, which is to create consistency with monitoring require- ments of foster and residential homes and employment sites. The county estimated the an- nual costs of the position is about $110,000, and carryover dollars from the 2021-22 de- velopmental disabilities bud- get will cover that. The expenditure was one of several the county board ap- proved at the meeting. The board gave the OK for a new concrete vault toi- let for Harris Park. The cost of delivering the unit in 2023 to Harris Park comes to $30,355.20. Commissioner John Sha- fer serves on the Wildhorse Foundation board. A grant from the foundation is to pay $14,000 of the cost, leaving a remainder of $16,355.20. The county applied for an Oregon Parks and Recreation De- partment grant to cover some or all of that amount. If that grant were to fail, the county’s public works department still has money in the budget to cover the tab. The board also authorized public works to buy a new power broom from Papé Ma- chinery, Pasco, for $62,397. BY MARCO GRAMACHO Hermiston Herald This 2021 broom is to re- place an older model in the fleet, which the department planned on selling at auction later this year. The board gave the sher- iff’s office the go-ahead to buy new restraint systems by Safe Restraints Inc. for patrol vehi- cles. The cost of four WRAP systems and 20 associated an- kle straps is $7,602.37. Federal program funds will cover the expense. County commissioners also approved the reclassification of a medical assistant to an office assistant II position to work almost full time in Pend- leton’s school-based health centers. Umatilla County Health sponsors and staffs the cen- ters. Alisha Lundgren, the heath department’s deputy di- rector, in a memo to the board explained the county for more than a year has tried to fill a vacant medical assistant po- sition while the nurse practi- tioner and two counselors in the centers need office assis- tant support rather than med- ical assistant support. In other business, the county board presented the first reading to update the county department organiza- tion ordinance and organiza- tional chart and set a second reading for its next meeting. And the board approved con- tracting with Michael Berg- strom of AgriNorthwest, Ken- newick, as a consultant on the central pipeline project. The city of Umatilla contin- ues to experience a boom of major housing developments. Several large housing projects completed have added close to 200 homes off Powerline Road. Work recently started on a ma- jor project that will add 326 houses by the end of the year on an 81-acre site on Grant Avenue just west of the Latter-day Saints church. Jacob Foutz, senior planner for Umatilla, credited the ex- pansion to lower taxes for home builders compared to surround- ing cities. The development of the city’s infrastructure also is part of the reason for the con- struction boom. “Most of the new develop- ment is going on Umatilla’s south hill, which is zoned for residential use and still has plenty of room for growth,” Foutz said. “As developers build out the area, they are required to pay for the needed improve- ments and extensions to roads and utilities, then hand those investments over to the city.” Steven Wilson, chief sales of- ficer at MonteVista Homes, ex- plained the new development in Umatilla has 20 acres dedicated Lexington voters join the leagues of local communities voting on whether to ban psi- locybin-related businesses and manufacturing. The town council on Friday, Aug. 19 adopted a resolution referring the ban to the ballot in the November general elec- tion, Town Recorder Veronica Hess reported. Oregon voted in 2020 to allow manufacturing, distrib- Phil Wright/ Hermiston Herald to the city for parks and future trail expansion. “We are working on the cre- ation of streets and will be able to invite home buyers by Octo- ber,” Wilson said. Wilson explained that sev- eral families are moving to the region from the Tri-Cities area for work. “They are looking for quality housing with affordable prices. We are also seeing a market for retirees who are looking for a place closer to nature. Or fami- lies buying a second home,” he said. The McClannahan Summit offers options of housing with three or four bedrooms, two or three baths in 1,470- 2,500 square feet in single and two tiers. BY ANTONIO ARREDONDO Hermiston Herald Donna Nagely of Richland, Washington, said the reason she and a friend es- caped a re- cent house fire in Uma- tilla is be- cause of a neighbor. Journot Nagely and friend Steve Townsend, were winding down for the night on July 31 at Townsend’s Rio Senda Street house in Uma- tilla. Then a neighbor rushed in the door. The grill in the yard had caught fire. The propane tank was shooting flames at the house. Conner Journot, 18, had been outside cleaning his fish- ing line, Nagely said. When he saw a plume of smoke com- ing from his neighbor’s house, he at first assumed they were having a barbecue. Once he looked over the fence, how- uting and possession of psi- locybin and psilocin, psyche- delic chemicals found in some mushrooms. State law pro- vides that a city council may adopt an ordinance to give local voters the say in prohib- iting the establishment of any of those registered or licensed activities. Approval of this referendum would prohibit the establish- ment of psilocybin product manufacturers and psilocybin service center operators within Lexington. — Hermiston Herald ever, he understood the grav- ity of the situation. Nagely said Journot rushed into the house to warn the oc- cupants. Townsend was sound asleep at the time, and Nagely was reading. Alerted, the two quickly got ready to leave. By the time they were exiting the house, flames were nipping at the walls. “Steve was a firefighter,” Nagely said, “and even he said “Eastern Oregon’s security company of choice. “Eastern ecurity company of Oregon’s choice. security company of choice. We make your safety and security our top priority.” Residential - Commercial Security Systems • Fire Alarm Systems Video Surveillance • 24-Hour UL Monitoring 541-564-9398 • 541-276-4847 • www.smithsecurityllc.com CCB#209095 WA: SMITHSL842C6 SPECIALS: August 21-26 $1.00 off Mango Madness Smoothie your local health food store & more ppp True Herbs Cayenne 100,000 Heat Units 450mg by Solaray 20 % OFF Elderberry Capsules, by Quantum Health Cayenne is a hot and spicy member of the chili pepper family. 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The McClannahan Summit, he said, is tapping right into the growing need of houses in Northeastern Oregon from families moving to the region to work for companies such as Google and Walmart and for smaller businesses, as well as that segment of elders looking for single-level homes. The view of the Columbia River also is attractive to home buyers, he said, as in close prox- imity to shopping, medical, schools and parks. “We are also seeing families moving to the area to follow their kids going to college,” Wilson said. Umatilla has been developing its infrastructure, and the new home developments brings rev- enue through property taxes, enterprise zone agreements, system development charges and other sources to help the city provide for the needs new homes and businesses create. The city continues to make improvements in the water and wastewater systems, as well as creating better parks with play- ground equipment, lighting and new restrooms. “We are building up in mo- mentum of this huge growth in South Hill, and there are even waiting lists to buy homes there,” Foutz. said. “We said yes to development and it is paying off in the last three years, and there is still great potential.” Neighbor saves two in recent Umatilla house fire NEWS BRIEFS Lexington residents to vote in November on psilocybin businesses An 81-acre site for housing off Grant Av- enue, Umatilla, re- mains under devel- opment Saturday, Aug. 20, 2022. Uma- tilla continues to ex- periences a boom in housing develop- ments. Industry-leading rechargeability rechargeability ReSound ONE ™ rechargeable hearing aids feature up to 30 hours of battery life* or up to 25 hours with unlimited streaming from your favorite devices. *Expected battery life depends on active features, the use of wireless accessories, hearing loss, device age and sound environment. © 2020 GN Hearing A/S. All rights reserved. ReSound is a trademark of GN Hearing A/S. that fire moved fast.” As soon as it started, Nagely said the fire was over; the two walked over to Journot’s house and saw the house go up in flames. It still stands two weeks later, a hollow shell of what it once was. In the whirl- wind of flames, several pic- tures and memories were lost. “You always think, ‘if the house burns this is what I’m going to take,’” Nagely said. “You just don’t have that time.” Nagely and Townsend have relocated to Nagely’s residence but neither of them will forget the hero that saved them. Just three days after the fire, Nagely wrote a letter detailing the events and showing her grati- tude for Journot’s heroism. “Thank you for your valiant effort, Connor,” she wrote. “We are alive because you cared.”