Hermiston City Council OKs bond purchase to finish projects

Published 5:00 am Wednesday, February 14, 2024

The Hermiston City Council at its meeting Jan. 30, 2025, passed a supplemental budget of $6.7 million.

HERMISTON — The Hermiston City Council and its Urban Renewal Agency voted Monday night, Feb. 12, to authorize the purchase of $20 million in bonds to pay for seven city projects.

Those projects, most of which are in various stages of completion, are:

• The Harkenrider Center: Plans call for building out the basement at a cost of $600,000.

• Finishing Hermiston City Hall’s information technology space at a cost of $300,000.

• Library phase II: Reconfigure the upstairs and finish the downstairs at a cost of $4.5 million.

• Public Safety Center: Renovate the police side, incorporate the former municipal court space and increase space for fire district at a cost of $11.5 million.

• Arc Building remodel at a cost of $$650,000.

• Eastern Oregon Trade and Event Center Barns Project: Extend two of the three barns (beef and swine), and pave small animal barn at a cost of $1.6 million.

• North Hermiston Urban Renewal Area: Build a road connecting North Highway 395 to Northeast Fourth Street with new traffic signal on Highway 395 at a cost of $5 million≥

City Manager Byron Smith said the barns at EOTEC will be extended to accommodate the growing number of animals at the fair. Paving the small animal barn will allow the event center to rent out the barn for recreational vehicles , boats and other vehicles during winter.

Smith said two grants came in totaling $1.277 million to help pay for the project. Smith said the fair is seeking additional funding to help close the gap and that the city will contribute.

The NHURA was formed in 2023.

“It was formed for one project – to build a street connection between Highway 395 and Northeast Fourth Street,” Smith said.

He added that moving forward with the project will give potential developers certainty as to where the road will be so they can begin planning for future projects.

Smith said the city will borrow $20 million in the form of Full-Faith and Credit Bonds, which are different from a general obligation bond in that a vote by the citizens is not required because no new taxes will be collected.

A total of $5 million of the $20 million will be repaid by the NHURA and the other $15 million will be repaid through Enterprise Zone funds.

The council voted 5-1 to purchase the bonds with Councilor Jackie Linton voting no.

“Hermiston has a lot of growing needs – traffic, public safety, you name it,” package will really be able to prepare us for the future,” Councilor Roy Barron, said, “— so I think this.”

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