News Blue Mountain Eagle A9 Wednesday, July 1, 2015 Harney groundwater worries halt new well permits Area in detail Groundwater pumping is exceeding recharge in Harney basin OREGON Water regulators have largely stopped permitting new agricultural wells in Or- egon’s Harney Basin due to concerns about groundwater depletion. Groundwater pumping is exceeding the rate of re- charge in the area, which has prompted the Oregon Water Resources Department to deny most new permits until it conducts a multi-year study of the situation, said Ivan Gall, the agency’s groundwa- ter section manager. “You can see these de- clines occur over a fairly broad area of the valley,” groundwater rights are used each year, while only about 170,800 acre feet are avail- able for use. Heavy rains only offer a temporary reprieve from the problem, Gall said. “A really wet year helps for a period of time, but then it rolls over and begins its downward trend again.” Once the agency com- pletes the study, it may con- tinue denying new well per- mits for agriculture and only allow “exempt” domestic uses, he said. However, the OWRD will establish rules for the region that may allow an existing permit to be canceled — like- ly in return for money — so that a new well can be drilled, Gall said. OWRD’s decision to halt new well permits came af- ter WaterWatch of Oregon, an environmental non-pro¿ t, protested several approvals last year. The group became con- cerned after seeing the agency issue multiple well permits without determining if water is available or whether the wells would affect surface water, said John DeVoe, its executive director. “This was happening over and over,” he said. Even so, it was becoming apparent that groundwater pumping in the basin was unsustainable, which would require action to prevent the area from developing more severe problems such as those seen in the Umatilla Basin, DeVoe said. “I think it’s an area that was going to get some scruti- ny whether we were involved or not,” he said. The Harney Basin expe- rienced a major increase in well drilling over the past decade for farm uses, said Gall. However, it’s dif¿ cult for OWRD to deny permits un- less it has data to support such a decision, and the agency’s resources are limited, he said. “The development got ahead of the data collection,” he said. Fight over fuel standard kills transportation plan It represented the best of what we do. It was bipartisan. It took into account urban and rural interests.” “ By Peter Wong Capital Bureau SALEM — One day af- ter it surfaced, Oregon law- makers gave up Thursday on a transportation funding plan linked to alternatives to a recently approved stan- dard for low-carbon fuels. Senate President Peter Courtney, D-Salem, said there were too many politi- cal roadblocks for the pack- age to win legislative ap- proval this late in the 2015 session. “The issue remains to try to find a way through the politics of this building — and the politics outside — to do what I think every- body wants to do,” Court- ney said Thursday. “I’m just so sorry we could not break through… It’s not over. But it is over for this session. We will keep working at it.” Courtney created a spe- cial Senate committee, which heard testimony Wednesday on the elements of the plan crafted by a bi- partisan group of lawmakers in closed-door meetings in Gov. Kate Brown’s office. One of them was Sen. Sen. Betsy Johnson of Scappoose Betsy Johnson of Scap- poose, one of a handful of Democrats who opposed the fuels standard. “It represented the best of what we do,” Johnson said. “It was bipartisan. It took into account urban and rural interests. It took time to craft a plan on this complex subject. Some may quibble with the particu- lars, but I thought this was a good effort.” But environmental groups were firmly against including repeal of a new law, which Democrats sup- ported and Republicans op- posed, requiring the carbon content of fuels to drop by 10 percent over the next de- cade. Brown signed that bill in March. Nineteen House Demo- crats signed a letter to that effect last week, and House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Port- land, added her voice to theirs Wednesday. “Today’s hearing made it clear that the Senate proposal does not live up to the Clean Fuels Program in terms of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and growing Or- egon’s clean economy,” she said in a statement. Environmental groups and others also raised ques- tions about the projected reductions in carbon emis- sions from the alternatives contained in the Senate pro- posal. During the hearing, Matt Garrett, director of the Or- egon Department of Trans- portation, said that an es- timate of reductions from proposed technological im- provements in traffic flows would yield only 20 percent of the amount calculated originally for the bipartisan group. “We had some unex- pected numbers thrown our way,” said Sen. Jeff Kruse, R-Roseburg, one of the ne- gotiators and a member of the Senate committee. “Basically what I think it did was to solidify the po- sition of House Democrats, and some of the Senate Democrats, on this issue. “Given more time, we could have refined the num- bers and shown a carbon reduction that would have beaten the low-carbon fuel standard. But now we have not been given that opportu- nity.” Kruse also said that en- vironmental interests told him a couple of weeks ago, during the closed-door nego- tiations, that they preferred the standard to any alterna- tive package of reductions. Proposed alternatives in- cluded a gradual reduction in carbon content of fuels as they become available com- mercially — to 5 percent — plus conversion of more cars and buses to electric or nat- ural gas, and improvements in bus systems and traffic flows. “Sometimes this building is frustrating,” he said. Environmental groups say there should not be a linkage of the issues. “Oregonians deserve clean air and safe roads. To pit one against the other is a false choice and helps no one. We need both,” said Andrea Durbin, executive director of the Oregon En- vironmental Council. For funding, the plan called for an increase of 4 cents per gallon in the cur- rent 30-cent state tax — plus increases in vehicle registration fees — to raise money for road and bridge repairs and specified state highway projects. Separate tax and fee in- creases would have funded expanded transit service in some districts — TriMet, Wilsonville, Canby and Sandy — and a computer upgrade for driver and vehi- cle records. Courtney said he in- formed Brown in a tele- phone call late Wednesday that “we cannot get to the top of this hill.” Brown said in a state- ment after Courtney’s an- nouncement: “The testimony at the hearing from business lead- ers and local government officials, as well as news- paper editorials and input I have received from many Oregonians, underscores the significant statewide support for investments in transportation. As I said back in March, if it takes longer than this session to accomplish, I’m willing to continue these discussions.” 26 GRANT Seneca N 10 miles 395 20 Burns 20 395 78 HARNEY Wagontire +DUQH\ Crane 0DOKHXU /DNH ain Capital Press Gall said during a recent meeting of the Oregon Wa- ter Resources Commission, which oversees the depart- ment. Preliminary data indicates the basin is experiencing an overall downward trend in groundwater levels, but the agency hopes to gain a better understanding by measuring a larger number of wells and conducting detailed geologi- cal mapping, Gall said. “We have some signi¿ - cant holes in our data,” he said. “We don’t think it’s at a crisis right now, but that’s also based on not a lot of in- formation.” The agency estimates that 201,250 acre feet of Harney Basin Greater Harney Valley area 205 Steen By Mateusz Perkowski $OYRUG /DNH Fields Ore. Nev. Alan Kenaga/Capital Press Crews replace breakers at OTEC site Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY – Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative crews were busy at the John Day substation last week, replacing outdated equip- ment and making other im- provements. Lara Petitclerc-Stokes, OTEC spokeswoman, said the work included routine replacement of two 69-ki- lovolt transmission circuit breakers and some gener- al maintenance work. The equipment being replaced was more than 50 years old. The new circuit break- ers will provide improved protection for transmission lines from John Day to Prai- rie City and Unity and to Seneca and Burns, she said. They also are expected to be maintenance free. OTEC also is painting part of the structure. The work, expected to wrap up July 2, is not re- lated to the plans to erect a new ¿ re station on adjacent property. Greetings, Grant County! THANKS to everyone who made the 5th Annual CASA Golf Scramble A HUGE SUCCESS! To the John Day Golf Club for hosting the event; and to Melissa Galbreath and Ryan Torland our MCs. To all the golfers, everyone who joined us for the barbecue and auction, and special thanks to those that made the fantastic food possible: Ed McCrary – Ribs Extraordinaire, Margie McCrary and Bonnie Britton in charge of the kitchen, Dan Propeck on the grill, fantastic salads by Lori Hickerson, Linda Watson, and Sandie Gilson, delectable brownies and homemade cookies by Alena Smith, Hailey Delaney and Aaron Roth, chips donated by Frito Bob, bottled water donated by Gardner Enterprizes, and Judy Hudson for making her famous cinnamon rolls to kick off the day! EVENT SPONSORS: Debbie Ausmus, COUNTRY Financial Doug’s Motor Vehicle Repair Boyd Britton Welding Mobile Glass of Oregon Iron Triangle, LLC Triangle Oil, Inc. Ed Staub & Sons Petroleum Ed Staub & Sons Shell Stations Cornerstone Surveying, Inc. The Outpost Pizza Pub & Grill True Value Hardware Squeeze In Restaurant Duke Warner Realty Southworth Brothers Ranch Bank of Eastern Oregon Les Schwab Tire Center The Grubsteak Mining Company Nydam’s Ace Hardware JD Rents & Power Equipment Len’s Drug Land Title Company Ferguson Surveying & Engineering Cornerstone Christian Fellowship AUCTION DONORS: Wildhorse Resort & Casino Tidewater Contractors Malheur Lumber Company Redeemer Lutheran Church/ Thrivent Financial Mobile Glass of Oregon John Day Floral John Day Video Shoppe Tourist season is upon us! Your Chamber now has seven-day-a-week coverage for visitors to our county! The bicycle shop that rented space from the Chamber has been busy, and as businesses we like being busy! Since they are also providing visitor services on Saturdays, another volunteer has stepped up to provide coverage on Sundays. This gives us terrific coverage over the summer! The Grant County Greenbacks program is beginning to gain traction. We sold our first batch of $15 and $25 Greenbacks to merchants in June. A separate bank account has been opened at Bank of Eastern Oregon specifically for the Greenback program. Greenbacks that you, as a merchant, take as payment from customers for goods and services, can be redeemed at any time from the Chamber on a dollar-for- dollar basis. This is not a discount program. It is a “shop local” program. Think employee incentives, promotional contests, radio “winners”-- and ask customers who buy from you if they would like a Grant County Greenback in change. Let’s keep it local! It helps businesses, employees and families, and gives visitors one more thing to remember us by. AND A SPECIAL THANKS TO EVERYONE WHO DONATED THEIR PRIZE WINNINGS: This is the one-year mark from when the Chamber accepted its problems, you reached out to help, and we followed through and recovered! Thanks to each and every one of you who had faith in us. Longest Drive Winner: Alex Finlayson and Melody Jackson Closest to the pin: Randy Horner Funds raised will meet all program costs to support volunteer advocacy for the children for a MONTH! GRANT-HARNEY COUNTY CASA 721 W. Main St. John Day, OR 541-575-1850 Just a brief recap of Greenbacks. Think of it as Grant County’s “The Buck Stops Here” program. Anyone can buy Greenbacks at face value from the Chamber. Participating merchants honor them on a dollar-for-dollar basis. Radio Shack Pioneer Feed & Farm Supply GIBCO Ag & Industrial 1 st Choice Auto Body A Flower Shop N More Field’s Grassfed Beef Java Jungle Tropical Tan Jeanette Hueckman Ed Herrera –CASA Volunteer Advocate CASA Board members - Sandie Gilson, Stacie Holmstrom, Lori Hickerson, Linda Watson and Aaron Roth 1 st Place Winners: Roof Creek Guttering Team – Scott Myers, Mitch Saul, Colt Carpenter, and Alex Finlayson JOHN DAY AUTO NAPA Grant County Chamber Members Advertise Here Contact the Grant County Chamber for more information 541-575-0547 The end of June also marks the time that I rotate out as president. The turnaround has attracted new board members who bring a lot to the chamber and work well together. Staying on another year would have been a joy, but book two of my Armageddon Story novel series will be out next month! The series has three more books remaining, so I will be busy! Jerry Franklin takes his turn in the president’s hot seat beginning in July. And I think someone new may be looking at that spot for next year. Craige McMillan, President 02285