4A | WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 2022 | APPEAL TRIBUNE Pollen Continued from Page 1A double-edged sword, according to Tra- vis Knudsen, the public affairs manager for Lane Regional Air Protection Agency. The rain is beneficial for the local forests that have endured a drought so far this year, but it also will encourage plant growth and can lead to higher pollen counts, he said. “It could be great now, but then in a couple of days it will sort of double down and see the pollen everywhere again,” he said, noting that grass pollen season tends to start around late May or early June. One basic tip for those who suffer from allergies mentioned by Knudsen was to make sure all doors and windows are closed to prevent pollen or other particles from getting in. He also sug- gested using a HEPA air purifier to im- prove indoor air quality, and noted hav- ing a HEPA filter on vacuum cleaners helps prevent sending harmful particles airborne inside homes. “With any sort of dust or pollen that can be aggravating to people that gets Resignations Continued from Page 1A the condition he takes domestic vio- lence classes and doesn’t enter a bar or use alcohol or controlled substances. Ewing said he left the job because of a dispute over the terms of his employ- ment, which he said included being paid $3,600 for 20 hours of work per week,; concerns about the district’s contract with a design studio to build a new fire station due to ties with a firm his son works for; and a rumor he was trying to end the district’s paramedic response. The district named Chad LaVallee, a volunteer firefighter, as its acting fire chief immediately after. At its board meeting on Jan. 18, board member Walt Collier resigned. On Feb. 23, the board chose Don Tesdal to re- place him, but he wasn’t sworn in. According to the draft minutes of the Feb. 23 board meeting, LaVallee said the board was not going to allow public into the carpet, the moment you vacuum, if it doesn’t have one of those filters on it, it sort of throws it all back up in the air,” Knudsen said. To measure the pollen count, Oregon Allergy Associates uses a vacuum pump that pulls air through a small port on a measurement device, which is directed into the wind. The air hits a greased mi- croscope slide, and afterwards Moran and others use a microscope and count how many pollen grains there were over a 24-hour period to calculate the amount of pollen period per cubic me- ter. Moran noted that grass pollen tends to be more harmful to people in the area with allergies than tree pollen, given the amount of grass seed harvesting in the Willamette Valley. Oregon has some of the highest grass pollen counts in the world, she said, typically reaching its peak in late May and June. “When some of these fields pollinate and you know it’s actually visible to the naked eye,” she said. Louis Krauss covers breaking news for The Register-Guard. Contact him at lkrauss@registerguard.com, and follow him on Twitter @LouisKraussNews. Lane County is experiencing some of the highest pollen counts in the nation. DREAMSTIME/TNS comment, then proceeded to discuss how the district could eliminate one of the two part-time positions, the one held by Lt. Laura Harris, at the end of the fiscal year in June. After community member Vicki Spi- er objected during the meeting to elim- inating the position, she said upsetting comments were made following the January meeting. Spier said she wanted the fire district to move forward and the way to do that is not to call the community members “A**holes,” according to the minutes. LaVallee apologized, according to the draft minutes. Board member Linda Stice said she felt like she was being attacked at the prior meeting, according to the draft minutes. Eric Page, also a Detroit city council- or, then asked for board member Lyn Schultz, who did not return a call for comment, to step down. On Feb. 24, board members Schultz, Stice, Charene Ziebert and Jeff Skeeters resigned. LaVallee said he resigned the same day. Reached by phone, LaVallee said a reporter needed to contact the district for more information. No one left With no board members in office, someone had to appoint new members. According to state law, it fell on the Marion County commissioners to deter- mine who would fill out the board. One at a time at the county’s office in Salem on Wednesday, the three county commissioners gave the names of their four choices from among the five candi- dates for positions on the Idanha-De- troit Rural Fire Protection District board of directors. There were some well-credentialed candidates: two fire chiefs, a mechanic who volunteers to work on the cars and trucks for the district and an accountant who serves in the fire corps. The commissioners gave their rea- soning for their choices. They eventual- ly decided to appoint former Aurora fire chief Gregory Dyke, former Sublimity city councilor and career fire chief Bran- don Hamilton, mechanic Matthew Lof- ton and accountant Serena Morones. The department is still without a fire chief. “There’s just been this (butting heads) up there, and I think they’re go- ing to get the support of community members around them,” Marion County commissioner and Detroit resident Kev- in Cameron said. Cameron said he received a message from state fire marshal Mariana Ruiz- Temple that she was aware of the situa- tion at Idanha-Detroit. The message said she had gotten support for nearby districts to back up Idanha-Detroit if help was needed. All four of the new board members will serve terms to June 30, 2023, when the positions will be up for election. The next board meeting is scheduled for 5 p.m. April 15 at the Idanha City Hall. Bill Poehler covers Marion County for the Statesman Journal. He can be reached at bpoehler@StatesmanJournal.com Dairy Business Journal listed as the account member. Continued from Page 3A Nest egg depleted by bills Taylor. It was in the middle of the week, and the diner was closed during regular business hours. An employee let him in, informing him there was a water leak and Taylor was out of town. While there, Miller noticed a Point of Sale (POS) system on an iPad at the counter — not the same system Blan- chard had used — and snapped a photo of the screen with his cell phone. The screenshot, which he shared with the Statesman Journal, shows gross sales of more than $53,000 for May 12 to Aug. 25. Sales for those three months were about what the restaurant averaged during normal times, accord- ing to Blanchard, and would have been enough to pay the bills. Miller went down to the basement that day and said there were so many boxes of empty beer cans it looked like a frat house. He also saw a bed and mat- tresses. Next to a couch was a five-gal- lon bucket full of mail, most of it un- opened. Miller showed the Statesman Journal photos on his cell phone. It looked like people lived in the base- ment, which the building manager said was not allowed by fire code. Miller said he inspected the walk-in freezer and saw food and produce im- properly stored. He also saw black mold on the wall. He couldn’t believe food from that freezer had been served to customers. He said he called Taylor, who had no idea he was standing inside the restau- rant, informing him that he planned to change the locks. Taylor didn’t argue much, but Miller said he mentioned something about an attorney and that he was in Mexico. Miller told him he’d be happy to talk to his attorney. The next day, Taylor sent Blanchard back-to-back texts, which the States- man Journal saw on her phone. “I will be back home this Weekend. The restaurant is fully stocked with gro- ceries. We need to meet with your attor- ney on Monday. I have worked very hard for the restaurant as you know. We have a amicable settlement. My rent check cleared a few days ago to Keith. And I just paid AutoChlor. Locking me out of the building helps no one. I need a de- fault notice from you. “Then legally I have 30 days to settle. Let’s not fuss. Care too much about you Marlene.” She said she had no clue what he meant by settlement. The building manager told the Statesman Journal Taylor paid only $500 of the $1,500 lease in August. The diner leased its commercial dishwasher from Auto- Chlor System. Taylor and Punley sold the Salem Business Journal last fall, not long after Miller changed the locks at Court Street Dairy. Taylor was last listed as the publisher in the masthead of the September issue. Jonathan Castro Monroy and Jesse Lippold Peone III took over in October as co-owners. Castro Monroy is the pub- lisher. Castro Monroy said Taylor told him during negotiations he wanted to sell because he was retiring, had health is- sues and was moving out of the area. In December, Taylor filed a new busi- ness with the Secretary of State’s office called Mark PR. Perry B. Taylor is listed as the registrant and owner, with both the Salem P.O. Box address he used for the Salem Business Journal and his most recent residential address, a con- dominium in Lake Oswego. Taylor moved out of the condo in early February, according to the neigh- bor next door, and it recently sold. Tay- lor’s wife was listed as the owner. No criminal charges or civil lawsuits have been filed against Taylor in relation to his involvement with Court Street Dairy Lunch. Taylor maintained he owned the res- taurant but never answered the States- man Journal’s emailed questions, in- cluding why he would allow Blanchard to “repossess” it if he had legally pur- chased it or why the lease and utility bills were unpaid. “I did the best I could running the res- taurant,” he said during the phone call. “I owe nobody money.” Blanchard was able to sell the busi- ness in September to Repplinger and a partner. But after bills, her nest egg was gone. Her son consulted an attorney to see if they had grounds for a civil case against Taylor. The biggest concern for the attorney, Miller said, was that Blan- chard did not have a legal document that would hold Taylor accountable. Ev- erything was based on trust. Miller broke the news to his mom, who was embarrassed but more hurt by what had happened. “The story has got to get out about him,” Blanchard said, “so nobody else trusts him.” She continues to battle cancer and may face more chemo and radiation. But she recently received good news. A scan showed the tumor in her pancreas has shrunk. Capi Lynn is a veteran reporter at the Statesman Journal. She can be reached at 503-399-6710 or clynn@Statesman- Journal.com, or follow her on Twitter @CapiLynn and Facebook @CapiL- ynnSJ. This box of business cards was discovered at Court Street Dairy Lunch by former owner Marlene Blanchard's son in late August after the locks were changed on the restaurant. CAPI LYNN / STATESMAN JOURNAL That weekend, Taylor arranged a time to clear out the basement and gather some personal belongings at the diner. Miller said it wound up being a three-day process. Blanchard said Tay- lor took several things belonging to the restaurant, including plates and a pani- ni press. Blanchard never was contacted by an attorney representing Taylor. The restaurant remained closed until it sold to its current owners in Septem- ber. Repplinger was one of the buyers. Unpaid bills, utilities pile up Court Street Dairy Lunch needed some repairs and a deep cleaning before Blanchard could sell. One side of the fryer wasn’t working. When Blanchard contacted the repair company she had used in the past it de- clined to do service, saying it never was paid for work done while Taylor was overseeing operations. That was just the tip of the iceberg. The Statesman Journal saw the stack of unpaid bills and collection agency notices, including $20,000 for the lease, $28,500 to American Express and near- ly $19,000 to Bank of America. The latter two were accounts Blanchard used to buy produce and other groceries from regular suppliers. She doesn’t remember the balances before her cancer diagnosis and doesn’t know if Taylor made charges to the ac- counts because the bills were going to the restaurant. With no payments made for more than a year, she and her son said the bal- ances soared because of late fees and rising interest rates. Both accounts were turned over to collection agencies. Unpaid utilities added up, too. From what Blanchard could piece to- gether, the restaurant was on a CO- VID-19 payment plan for some utilities. But months of electric, gas and garbage bills — about $3,000 worth — still went unpaid and further depleted her pro- ceeds from the sale of the business. Blanchard had to settle with the building owner before the sale could go through. She had a longtime relationship with the Morris family, which had owned and operated the diner for three generations and still owns the building. She always paid the monthly lease on time and was current through March 2020, according to records provided to the Statesman Journal by the Morris family. Keith Morris, 95, the son of Court Street Dairy founder Glenn Morris, is the building owner. His son, Michael Morris, had been managing the building but became ill in 2020 and died in Janu- ary 2021. Keith’s son-in-law, Clyde Tambling, took over and went to work on a forensic analysis of building finances. Records were muddled during that time, according to Tambling. He said he had contact with Taylor, who acted as if he were the owner or at least someone with authority. He said Taylor told him he made payments of $500 in cash to Michael Morris when he could, but never provided proof. Taylor told the Statesman Journal he made those payments weekly. “The rent was only $1,500, and we were paying $2,000,” Taylor said during the phone call. “I have a record of it.” When asked to provide those records to the Statesman Journal, Taylor said: “Who are you to see our records? You’re just a (expletive) newspaper. Are you kidding me?” Tambling informed Taylor he wouldn’t accept cash payments, and Taylor wrote him a check for $500 that day. But Tambling said that was the last he saw for two months. Taylor intermittently made partial payments, Tambling said. But after it was all said and done, Court Street Dairy Lunch was behind $20,000 on the lease from spring 2020 to fall 2021. Tambling knew the restaurant had to be behind on utilities, too. The build- ing’s water was shut off for a couple of days in September. Tambling discov- ered some of Court Street Dairy’s util- ities had been transferred under the Sa- lem Business Journal name. Blanchard showed the Statesman Journal a Salem Electric bill with Salem