Inside Lotsa bull Bi-Mart manager checks out, 2A Taxes on beer, wine and cider, 8A In Business & Ag Follow us on the web THURSDAY • March 4, 2021 • $1.50 Good day to our valued subscriber Janelle Marx of Cove Oregon Every county to get 1-shot vaccine this week By GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — Every Oregon county will receive 100 doses this week of the new Johnson & Johnson single-shot COVID-19 vaccine that President Joe Biden said Tuesday, March 2, is a key part of vaccinating all Americans before summer. “We’re now on track to have enough vaccine supply for every adult in America by the end of May,” Biden said at a press confer- ence in Washington, D.C. Biden likened the effort to ramp up vaccine production to the efforts of manufacturers to join together during World War II. The key to cutting the time- line for inoculating the public is the introduction of the Johnson & Johnson one-shot vaccine. Biden announced a deal with pharma- ceutical giant Merck to commit two of its manufacturing facilities to making the vaccine. Biden said he will invoke the Defense Pro- duction Act to help ready Merck’s facilities and to ensure it gets the raw ingredients for making the vaccine. Along with increased orders of the approved two-shot Moderna and Pfi zer vaccines, enough doses will be available to suppress the virus, which has killed more than 515,000 Americans over the past year, including more than 2,200 in Oregon. Scientists with the U.S. Cen- ters for Disease Control and Pre- vention have said suppressing the virus as quickly as possible will limit the continued mutations of COVID-19, some of which have proven to be more contagious and virulent than the original virus. In early February, the time- lines for inoculating all American adults was as long as early 2022 in some estimates. Recently, the increase in Moderna and Pfi zer vaccines shortened estimates to the end of summer. Oregon will receive 34,000 doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. Every county will ini- tially receive 100 doses to famil- iarize health offi cials with the vac- cine, the fi rst new vaccine since December. Alex Wittwer/The Observer A train passes Tuesday, March 2, 2021, off Interstate 84 near Perry, the site of a proposed 250-acre quarry that would ship out 2,000 tons of material per day. Locals are taking steps to oppose the project. ROCK FIGHT Proposal for quarry at popular scenic site has locals expressing alarms By PHIL WRIGHT States. The Union County Plan- ning Commission is holding a public hearing Monday, March 8, starting at 7 p.m. via telecon- ference to consider approving the application. Moyal said he plans on calling in and will speak against the project, which he did back in 2018 the fi rst time the planning com- mission considered the plan. The commission at that time deemed the application to be incomplete. This time, as Moyal put it, the application is more robust — stacking up to about 400 pages. He said he was not aware the project had come back for recon- sideration until Feb. 1 when he received a notice that the plan- ning commission would con- sider the new application plan for the quarry in seven days. But the county postponed the meeting until March 8. That gave Moyal a month to prepare. “So I thought, if I’m going to do anything with that, I’m going to have to do grassroots orga- nizing,” he said. The Observer U NION COUNTY — Locals are lining up against a proposal for a massive rock quarry near Perry and La Grande. David Moyal of La Grande is leading the charge to block the 250-plus-acre Ponderosa Quarry Project that would operate on more than 4,700 acres where Robbs Hill Road meets Interstate 84 near the community of Perry. Locals know Robbs Hill Road as a place to pick huckleberries, Moyal said, ride bikes or just go for a beautiful drive. The quarry would end that, he said, and the effect on Perry would be drastic. “With the dust, and noise and the pollution — it’s unenviable,” he said. But the downside as Moyal painted it does not stop at Perry. Interstate 84 from Pendleton to the Grande Ronde Valley is special, he said, and designated as a scenic corridor. Plunking this large mining site with a crushing facility and railroad access near the interstate and in full view of the entrance to the Grande Ronde Valley, he said, “is just an objectionable idea” with Alex Wittwer/The Observer The site for the proposed Ponderosa Quarry refl ects in the sunglass- es of David Moyal on Tuesday, March 2, 2021. Moyal is a vocal oppo- nent to the project that would sit less than a mile from the community of Perry. “With the dust, and noise and the pollution — it’s unenvi- able,” he said. “absolutely no justifi cation for doing it beyond profi t.” Application makes a comeback James A. Smejkal of Banks submitted the application to the county on Sept. 18, 2020, then provided a pair of updates before the end of the year. According to the site plan application, the project would create the quarry approximately 2.5 miles west of La Grande and about a mile from Perry and involve rock crushing, screening, washing and stock- piling. The project would build a railroad spur to ship aggre- gate across the western United Raising awareness Moyal drafted fl yers to raise See, Quarry/Page 5A See, Vaccine/Page 3A Lostine Canyon project passes halfway point By BILL BRADSHAW A forwarder unloads logs to the roadside Thursday, Feb. 25, 2021, to await loading onto log trucks in Lostine Canyon. The forwarder brings the cut logs from where they were felled to the roadside. Wallowa County Chieftain LOSTINE CANYON — Despite past controversy, hard work and uncertain weather, the Lostine Cor- ridor Public Safety Project is well underway, just past the halfway point in efforts to remove hazard and diseased trees, improve public safety and improve forest resources in the area. “It’ll be completely depen- dent on what the weather Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain INDEX Business ....... 1B Classified ...... 4B Comics .......... 7B Crossword .... 4B Dear Abby .... 8B WEATHER Horoscope .... 4B Letter ............. 4A Lottery........... 3A Obituaries ..... 3A Opinion ......... 4A THURSDAY Spiritual ........ 6A Sports ........... 7A State .............. 8A Sudoku ......... 7B Weather ........ 8B Full forecast on the back of B section Tonight Friday 43 LOW 51/36 Mainly clear Partly sunny DEFUNDING EOU RADIO does for us,” said David Schmidt, owner of Integrated Biomass Resources in Wal- lowa, which successfully bid on the timber harvest portion of the stewardship contract in September 2018. The harvest is slated to conclude Feb. 28, 2023, he said, though it could qualify for an extension. But the logging must be done under “winter See, Canyon/Page 5A CONTACT US 541-963-3161 Issue 27 3 sections, 24 pages La Grande, Oregon Email story ideas to news@lagrande observer.com. More contact info on Page 4A. Online at lagrandeobserver.com