Friday, December 19, 2025
28.0°F

Royal City soldier takes recruiting to the screen

JOEL MARTIN | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 3 years, 1 month AGO
by JOEL MARTIN
Joel Martin has been with the Columbia Basin Herald for more than 25 years in a variety of roles and is the most-tenured employee in the building. Martin is a married father of eight and enjoys spending time with his children and his wife, Christina. He is passionate about the paper’s mission of informing the people of the Columbia Basin because he knows it is important to record the history of the communities the publication serves. | November 12, 2022 1:53 PM

ROYAL CITY — Royal City native Pedro Popoca is helping to recruit the next generation of soldiers.

Popoca, a second lieutenant in the Army National Guard now living in Seattle, appeared recently in videos for the Army’s “Decide to Lead” promotion campaign to increase officer training participation.

“It was actually one of my friends that's also an officer in the program with me (that got me into it),” Popoca said. “She was pictured in another video and she was telling me that they were looking for more people to be part of that campaign video. I ended up interviewing for this campaign and they liked me, so they put me into the video.”

Popoca has roles in two videos, both of which can be found on YouTube. In “So Early,” he is shown helping a cadet climb a structure in an obstacle course, then being helped up in turn. In “Together,” he is seen carrying a map and leading cadets into a forest clearing for night training.

“The shooting was done here in Seattle,” he said. “I believe it was in October. It was later in the afternoon and they shot some scenes like at a local high school where we're working out with weights and running and stuff like that. I don't think that made it into the actual campaign video, but we did that first. And then another day we did the actual footage that was made into the video.”

Popoca was born and raised in Royal City and graduated from Royal High School in 2010, he said. He went on to attend Big Bend Community College, then earned a bachelor’s in landscape architecture from the University of Washington. It was while he was working on his masters in urban planning and design, also at UW, that he found himself in the Reserve Officers Training Corps program. While in ROTC, he participated in recruitment efforts on campus, he said.

The “Decide to Lead” campaign, which launched last summer, is intended to encourage young people from all backgrounds to consider training to become Army officers, according to a statement from the Army.

“Research tells us that very few young people today consider Army service and even fewer believe that the Army is a viable path for college-bound youth," Maj. Gen. Alex Fink, chief of Army enterprise marketing, said in the statement. "'Decide to Lead' helps address some common misperceptions about Army service by showing youth how officership can be the ultimate launch pad for the career and lifestyle they want.”

Popoca isn’t planning on packing up and heading for Hollywood, though. He works as a landscape designer in civilian life and continues his Guard service as well.

“Now I have my unit and my soldiers that I am in charge of, but I still encourage and talk to them to like, you know, hey, try out the officer route,” he said.

Joel Martin can be reached via email at [email protected].

For more info on the recruitment program visit:

“So Early”: https://youtu.be/QtIgIvvj1gk

“Together”: https://youtu.be/PlndxMLK-Kk

photo

COURTESY PHOTO/U.S. ARMY/YOUTUBE

In this still from the promotional video “So Early,” 2nd Lt. Perdro Popoca is shown climbing an obstacle course structure with some help from cadets.

ARTICLES BY JOEL MARTIN

‘Our favorite time of year’
December 19, 2025 3:30 a.m.

‘Our favorite time of year’

Shop with a Cop brings smiles to both children and officers

MOSES LAKE — The heavy police presence outside local stores recently wasn’t because of a crime wave. It was police officers engaging in their favorite annual event. “This is one of those times throughout the year that we don't have to go and ask for volunteers to help,” said Moses Lake Police Chief David Sands. “The first day we put it out, I think we got 20-some people say ‘Yeah, we’re in.’ That's just under half the department right away.“

BASIN EVENTS: Dec. 19-27
December 19, 2025 3 a.m.

BASIN EVENTS: Dec. 19-27

COLUMBIA BASIN — It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas, and a lot of people will be spending time at home with their families or at the church of their choice. Still, there are a few things happening around the Basin. Here are some ideas:

Chimney maintenance is essential for safety
December 19, 2025 3 a.m.

Chimney maintenance is essential for safety

MOSES LAKE — With Christmas just around the corner, lots of folks are using their fireplaces for warmth, roasting chestnuts or just a pleasant atmosphere. But before Santa pays your chimney a visit, you should make sure it’s in good working order. Chimney fires are responsible for more than three-fourths of residential building heating fires, according to the U.S. Fire Administration. Regular inspections and cleaning are the best way to prevent that, said Michael Harper, known as The Chimney Guy. “If they’re using (the fireplace) aesthetically – date night, Christmas, New Year’s, show-off times, something in the background here and there, (they should) have it inspected once a year for peace of mind,” Harper said. “If they’re using it two to three days a week religiously through the winter months, they need to have it cleaned once a year.”