Lack of feeding ground starving elk, deer By Chester Allen Emorato Reportw Hob Harrell say* hi* electric fence will shock a man off his foot, hut it can't stop 200 starv - ing elk Each night, the elk knock down the fence and shoulder their way through Harrell's herd of Hereford hulls to eat tin* only food they can find for miles around "These elk ure so hungry, they don’t ros|M*ct an electric (eiu e or fear man." said Harrell, a Baker Valley rancher. "Mv hulls eat on one side of the trough, and the elk ore oil the other." A deadly combination of record snowfall and ranchers' takeover of vital winter range will cause alwnit 9.000 elk and 75.(KM) deer to die of starvation and dis ease in Eastern Oregon this win ter. said Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife biologists Elk and deer in the mountains are unable to scrape through the deep snow to find grass and brush to eat. whit h forces them to migrate to lower elevations to find food, said ODFW biologist Jai k Kemp "Historically, the elk and door moved off the Elkhorn mountains to winter range on the Grande Roride Valley floor.“ said Kemp But now all that winter range is ranch land, and the animals have no plan* to go " Once they arrive on the ranch land, the hungry animals break into haystacks and invade feed lots. eating expensive cattle feed and angering ranchers. Kemp said ODFW traps animals eating ranchers' feed stocks and moves them to wildlife feeding areas, where thev are fed alfalfa has until the end of w inter This winter ODFW has trapped more than 2.7(H) elk and deer and taken them to the Klkhorn Wildlife Refuge, where they are fed 3,500 pounds of hay .1 night. Kemp said. •'I've been here for 28 years, and this is the most feeding we've ever had to do." Kemp said "Every district in Eastern Oregon is fmxfinganimals, hut we re still going to lose about 30 percent of our deer and 20 jxment of our elk to starvation " Although some animals are iHiing saved, ranchers and biol ogists said the trapping and feed in# program treats only the symp toms. not the cause of the prob lem Ranchers in the Baker and Grande Ronde valleys said ODFW should allow hunters to kill more deer and elk. reducing the number of animals needing to use winter range. Ranchers should be given free deer and elk hunting tags, w hich they could use to sell hunters guided deer and elk hunts on their ranches, said Baker Valiev rancher Bob Harrell We food the animals all win ter." Harrell said "We should have the right to make a little money from them and reduce the overpopulation problem at the same time." ODFW wildlife biologists said a severe shortage of door and elk winter range, not overpopulation, is causing the problem Although deer and elk popu lations sharply increased during the past few mild winters. ODFW surveys show the animals only need more low-altitude winter ing ground* to survive, said ODFW biologist Dick Humphries. "They're doing fine when we have an easy winter.” Humphries said "But when there's several feet of snow on the ground in the mountains, they need to get down on the valley floors to find food ” Until more winter range is pro vided. massive die-offs of deer and elk will occur during years of heavy snowfall. Humphries said "The young and old animals die first." Humphries said "What's scary this year is we re losing some of the big prime hull elk. which are the toughest ani mals in Eastern Oregon ODFW is exploring ways to get more winter range for the animals, but it will he a long, expensive process, Humphries said. Meanwhile, like it or not. ODFW and area ranchers will continue to feed deer and elk during hard winters Rancher Bob Harrell said he doesn't mind feeding some elk. but with hay at $90 a ton. he’d like ODFW' to pay some of his costs. “I don’t mind feeding them; ranchers have to assume some responsibility for their situa tion," Harrell said. "But feeding 200 elk a day is pretty damn expensive.” House wants to end land development conflict SAlJvM (AC) — Oregon Home Republicans have givon early and forceful notice that (hey wnnl the 1993 Legislature lo resolve a lin gering controversy over rural land develop ment. Oregon's reputation as a social innovator is built in large pari on the land-use planning law adopted 20 years ago. Using statewide guidelines, counties and cities have drawn up plans for orderly and efficient urban devel opment. Rules also protect agriculture and timber. Oregon’s two biggest industries, by control ling rural development But until recently, development on the least productive farm land and tiinlierland was bound by the same rules controlling development of prune tracts The Lind Conservation and Development Commission adopted new rural develop ment rules in December The rules loosen restrictions on developing "small-scale resource lands," property that until now had been referred to as "secondary lands " Restrictions on developing the best farmland and limberland are tightened The new rules have only increased dis content. Opponents say the state retains too much control over local land-use decisions Advocates of state planning, led by 1000 Friends of Oregon, accuse the state commis ‘In our wildest dreams, well never be Southern California Bob Repine, Representative Grants Pass sion of appeasing county planning directors and developers The legislature has tried to resolve the dispute before, with no success But this ses sion. Republicans from mostly rural back grounds who control the House appear determined to prevail They are set against Senate Democrats from mostly urban dis tricts who have long been champions of state planning. Gov. Barbara Roberts. a Democrat from Portland, savs she will veto any land use planning reform that gives away too much. Reviews of the new rules had liareiy begun when Rep. Ray Baum, a La Grande Republi can who heads the House Natural Resources Committee, issued the first threat. He said he would block the budget of the Department of Land Conservation and Development unless satisfactory secondary lands rules were signed into law by the governor The department oversees implementation of state planning guidelines. If the agency does not get a budget, the state rules will remain in place. But there will be no staff to run the program Holding the agency's budget hostage is not a new tactic. But such a direct threat so ear ly in the session is unusual. Baum said urban dwellers who don’t own significant property "are the ones who have been calling the shots controlling how peo ple in rural parts of the state (an manage their property. To me, it's undemocratic." Hep. Bob Repine, a Republican building contractor from Grants Pass, said the agency had kept too much control over local plan ning for too long After 20 N ears of state land use planning, he said, more trust should lie placed in county commissioners to imple ment the law Repine said state planners should shift their focus, developing a vision for how Oregon should look years into the future. "That's the part of the cycle that has not been completed.” he said But county commissioners cannot lie trust ed to make the right decisions when their friends and neighlwrs are the developers, said Blair Batson of 1.000 Friends. Law school mentors will call students By Sarah Clark Emerald Reporter About 20 law students will Ih» (ailing undergraduate stu dents of color during March and April to help those inter ested in going to law school do so. said Jane Gordon, law school assistant dean. The calls are part of a men tor program the law school has for sophomores, juniors and seniors of color. Gordon said. Depending on how interested an undergraduate is in law school, the law stu dent making the call could become the undergraduate's mentor, she said. The law students will tell undergraduates how to apply to law school, how to get financial aid for law school and other information they may need to pursue a law degree, said University law student Shawn Burnett, one of the mentor program's coor dinators. “Unless they happen to have mentors they can go to, a lot of students are lost," Gordon said. Burnett said law school intimidated her when she was an undergraduate stu dent. She said the purpose of the calls is to make under graduates more comfortable with law school. “It's important to de-mysti fy law school to students of color,” Burnett said. Gordon said she'd like to see more people of color practicing law in Oregon. Currently, about 5 percent of Oregonians are people of col or. but only 2.5 percent of Oregon attorneys are people of color. Gordon said. But undergraduates inter ested in studying law out-of state < an also participate in the mentor program. Burnett said. If undergraduates express interest in other graduate degrees, such as business, the law students will give their names to those departments. Continued (rom Page 1 department are complete until the reporter talks to Birr At the time Hall selected Birr, lire departments around the nation were getting Iwd press for not hiring enough minorities The Eugene fire department's relationship with the local media was suffering from a dif ferent problem. The department was in the news a lot and the higher-ranking officers didn't work well with the media. Hirr said. ‘‘It was a hands-off relation ship.-' he said. "The media was told to stay across the street at fire scenes, and few people would talk to them." Hall drafted Hirr in on effort to improve the department's rela tionship with the media. Birr was made the department's part time information officer in addi tion to his other firefighting responsibilities. However. Birr, now the pri mary spokesman for the Eugono Department of Public Safety, is not tin* average public relations man. He said most of the people in his field have some public relations education. Despite his lai:k of experience. Birr said he was glad to become the fire department's informa tion officer in 1979. The public did not see fire fighting as Birr saw it in Report from Engine Co So. 82. He said people didn't understand even basic firefighting procedures "We would cut holes in the roofs of buildings, and people would think it was destructive." he said. "They didn't under stand we had to ventilate the building to put the fire out." Birr said when buildings are not ventilated, the heat and smoke from a fire will build at the highest point until the fire bursts out of control. If there is ventilation, the temperature and smoke are released, and the fire is manageable. After becoming part-time information officer in 1979. Birr juggled his time between fight ing fires and dealing with the media. He was interviewed by the local media at the firehouse and wrote press releases at an old. heat-up metal desk at the fire station. The city manager noticed Birr's work and wanted him as the public information director for the city of Eugene. So in 1984. Birr made the switch to politics. It didn't take Birr long to show he had a knack for politics. After a short time on the job. Birr had to diffuse a public relations nightmare Birr was waiting outside the Valley River Inn for a bus full of representatives from Kakegawa. )apan, a sister city of Eugene. When he entered the hotel lobby to make sure everything was ready. Birr looked up and saw a huge banner that read, "Wel come Pearl Harbor Survivors." Apparently the hotel had scheduled the group from Kakegawa and a group of Pearl Harbor survivors for the same night Birr quickly got the hotel staff to take the banner down before the japanese delegation arrived. Once the travel-weary group from japan arrived, they went to bed and the banner was put back up. Neither group found out aliout the presence of the other. After working for the city man ager. Birr was offered his current position in 1986 when Eugene merged its police and fire depart ments. tie said he took the job because. like his two previous public relations positions, it was something new, and he wanted to see if he could do it Now. after seven years on the job. Birr believes he made the right decision. "The positive feedback I got gives me the sense that I'm in the right piece,"he said. Many of the people who have worked with Birr, now 39. agree he is in the right place. lanelle Hartman, a Register Guard reporter, said Birr is good at his job because he has the firefighter s mentality to help and serve the public. She said Birr's personality and willing ness to help relaxes tension between the media and the office of public safety. At a recent police news con ference. Birr's skills wore appar ent. Before the cameras rolled, he worked the room. He knew everyone's first name and greet ed them with a smile and a press release. As people waited for the news conference to begin. Birr light ened the mood by joking with the officers and members of the medio. The two groups, usually known as adversaries, seemed to lie eased by his present*. Once things got started, Birr sat quietly in the corner os the event he had orchestrated ran smoothly. The police had re opened an investigation of a 15 year-old homicide, and they were hoping media coverage would jog the community's memory and produce some new leads. When the news conference ended, both the police and the media were happy. The police got their information out. and the media got an interesting sto ry. Tim Birr has done his job — a job he never planned on having.