Business AgLife B Thursday, April 29, 2021 The Observer & Baker City Herald Trade pact gives U.S. beef, wheat a boost in Japan By RICHARD SMITH For the Capital Press Alex Wittwer/The Observer Construction site superintendent Bill Schmidt looks over the lot on Tuesday, April 27, 2021, for the forthcoming Dollar General in Elgin. Construction began this week, starting with excavation that uncovered water mere feet from the surface Dollar General breaks ground in Elgin By ALEX WITTWER The Observer ELGIN — Elgin is joining the ranks of Eastern Oregon communities with a Dollar General. Construction began this week along the Wallowa Lake Highway near the edge of the small town to build a new store covering more than 9,000 square feet. Response to the construc- tion has been mixed. Some saw it as a boon to local business. A few locals saw it as a way to give residents access to a con- venient way to stock up on cheap household goods without making a trip to La Grande. Others saw immediate issues with the construction. “The more stores, the better,” said Teresa Martin, owner of All For You Salon & More. “People don’t stop for just one store on their way to Wallowa Lake. They have all those little stores because there’s so many things to look at — if there’s only one or two things you just keep driving.” Arie Rysdam, whose family once owned the property where the franchise is going up, said that lot sits above marshland that is unsuitable for building. The family sold the land years prior, but it had been in the family before then since the 1910s. “I told them from the start it was wrong,” Rysdam said. “It’s a wetland, and you got springs.” After one day of digging, it seems Rysdam might be right. The construction site found Alex Wittwer/The Observer A sign on Tuesday, April 27, 2021, along the fencing at the lot in Elgin advertises the construction of a Dollar General in the Northeast Oregon town. water seeping through the soil after digging just a few feet below ground level. The site had once been nearly 30 feet lower than where it stands today, Rysdam said, and filled in decades ago, burying a barn and old cars. Rysdam said he believed the artifacts remain underneath the lot. The Hatch Group Inc., a Cal- ifornia-based construction com- pany, is handling the building project, and the difficulties of the site do not faze Bill Schmidt, the company’s site superinten- dent. He said he is no stranger to opposition or challenges, having built hundreds of retail locations throughout the country. “We’ll fill it in the morning,” Schmidt said. Molli Angelos said the new construction will have a neg- ative effect on her business, Leaning Haystack Produce and Retail, which grows food next door. “I’m losing half my garden because of it. I’m disappointed to see Elgin bring this kind of store, when we have family businesses here that it will affect,” she said. “It’s a detri- ment to the community.” Dollar General has 17,177 stores nationwide as of Jan. 29, according to the company’s latest annual report and proxy statement. Construction began in Jan- uary on a branch in Milton-Free- water, and the East Oregonian in December 2020 reported Uma- tilla is on Dollar General’s list for consideration. And the EO in February reported Heppner resi- dents opposed having one of the stores there. The Dollar General would be the first of its kind in Elgin — a major franchise with new con- struction alongside buildings that have stood in the rural town for nearly a century. Angelos, along with other local residents, took their con- cerns to the Elgin City Council and voiced their opposition to the construction, to no avail. “A group of us tried, and went to the city, but because it’s commercial we had no voice,” Angelos said. Dollar General stores have been thriving in small towns that would otherwise lack a gro- cery store. The Tennessee-based company, which has planned more than 1,000 new stores across the country, operates in a geographically niche market that targets Walmart stores normally operating in larger towns. “The Dollar General people are under the impression that this store is going to be a pretty busy store,” Schmidt said, citing the major tourist attractions down the road at Joseph and Enterprise. Locals also brought up another issue — the ability to find people to fill the new jobs. Martin said as a business owner, she is OK with Elgin getting a Dollar General. “I wish there were more busi- nesses coming in,” she said. TOKYO — It still is too early to assess the total impact the U.S.-Japan Trade Agreement has had on Japan’s imports of U.S. beef and wheat. Market watchers do see a positive impact from the trade deal, in effect since January of last year, but point out the COVID-19 pandemic has complicated matters. Because of COVID-19, the past year would have been an especially bad time for U.S. beef to face a sig- nificant tariff disadvantage in its top export market, U.S. Meat Export Fed- eration Japan director Takemichi Yamashoji said. “So the U.S.-Japan Trade Agree- ment delivered important benefits for both Japanese consumers and the U.S. beef industry,” Yamashoji said. Although the trade pact did remove the mark-up on U.S. wheat, the commodity only suffered a min- imal loss of market share during the See, Trade/Page 2B Orders for big-ticket manufactured goods rebound By MARTIN CRUTSINGER The Associated Press Orders for big-ticket manufactured goods rebounded 0.5% in March as U.S. factories recovered from Feb- ruary weather disruptions. How- ever, the recovery was not as strong as most had expected due to ongoing supply chain disruptions that continue to ensnare U.S. manufacturers. It was the tenth time in the past 11 months that factory orders have increased with February being the exception, when orders declined 0.9% as severe winter storms raked much of the country. Orders in a closely watched cate- gory that tracks business investment plans also rebounded, increasing 0.9% after having fallen 0.8% in Feb- ruary, the Commerce Department reported Monday. Excluding the volatile transporta- tion sector, orders would have risen 1.6% in March after having dropped 0.3% in February. Orders in transportation fell 1.7% as a 5.5 advance in demand at auto plants was offset by a 46.9% plunge in orders for commercial aircraft, a sector that has been hit hard by plunge in air travel since the pan- demic started a year ago. There have also been a string of cancellations for See, Rebound/Page 3B Bringing a version of Hollywood to Enterprise Grady Rawls’ business produces videos ranging from weddings to advertisements By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE — Holly- wood in Enterprise? Well, not quite, but some of Grady Rawls’ work with Paper Street Enterprise might rival it. Tucked in a basement studio under Sugar Time Bakery along North River Street, Rawls has com- puters, cameras and lenses of all types and pretty much anything he needs to create an audio/video production. “We can take anything on now, but I cut my teeth on doing wedding cinema from 2008 to 2012 and that is a dynamic, live event, so we specialize in live events,” Rawls said. “For half the year, I’m filming hunting television. These are guys who have shows or have once-in-a-lifetime hunts and they want to have it filmed. Growing up here, I spent time in the moun- tains and now I get to — for the past 13 years — I get to follow people in the woods doing hunts and then pro- ducing films on that.” Mostly a one-man oper- ation, Rawls occasionally contracts with freelancers and farms out some of his editing work online to people around the world. “I have a web of people we farm work out to. I can’t do all this on my own,” he said. “I can shoot it way faster than I can edit it, so we have people around the world who are helping do this.” He’s also planning some expansion. He hopes to move his current studio to a location on Main Street, but he also is con- sidering expansion beyond Enterprise. “Here we are in Enter- Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Grady Rawls, owner of Paper Street Enterprise, edits one of the weddings he shot recently Thursday, April 22, 2021, in his studio in Enterprise. prise, Oregon. I think I’ll have a Paper Street Boise, a Paper Street McCall, a Paper Street wherever,” he said. Rawls said the name of his video company comes — not surprisingly — from a movie. “Paper Street Enter- prise got its name from the movie ‘Fight Club,’ and those boys went down on Paper Street and had a company called Paper Street Soap Co.,” he said. “How ‘Fight Club’ sat with me is, you’ve got a guy who says he became part of the system and … he doesn’t have any happi- ness but he’s going about all this stuff. He meets this counterpart who ends up being himself, if you’ve seen the flick, but … he releases his mind; he gets to not worry about the world and starts to worry about living and happiness. … I don’t agree with what those boys were up to, but it’s just the underlying details of it.” While his company has branched out, one of Rawls’ specialties remains wedding videos. “We still rely on wed- dings — I’ve shot over 100 weddings in my life and we do photo and video,” he said. “We specialize in what we call a same-day edit and that is where the film is shown at the recep- tion. … It’s a very niche thing, but it’s something where we get to show off our talent under super stress to blow everybody away about 10 o’clock at See, Video/Page 3B