FROM PAGE ONE THURSDAY, MAY 27, 2021 THE OBSERVER — 5A BUDGET Continued from Page 1A deputies on duty at the jail are as highly trained as the new offi cers who would be hired, Bowen said. The sheriff said having the addi- tional offi cers he is asking for would help reduce safety concerns. The addition of the four corrections offi cers would cost more than $326,000 but only a net of just over $146,000. Bowen attributed this to the $180,500 in sav- ings the additional offi cers would generate because of reduced overtime costs and other factors. The reentry offi cer would help prepare inmates for life outside jail. The offi cer would work with inmates being released to help them fi nd housing and employment. “Hopefully this would help them get back on the right track,” Bowen said. The reentry offi cer would not cost the county money from its general fund because it would be funded by a grant, Burgess said. The $50.01 million proposed spending plan presented to the budget committee is about $1 million less than the cur- RISK Continued from Page 1A Afterward, they can party until midnight. The comparisons underline the new reality in Oregon this week: COVID-19 cases are no longer the only measuring stick for how tight restric- tions are placed on counties. The new key to opening up: vaccination rates. Get a shot of vaccine into the arms of 65% of eligible resi- dents age 16 and up and any county could be dropped to the least restrictive level of rules. “This disease remains dangerous for those in com- munities with high rates of unvaccinated individuals,” Gov. Kate Brown said May 25. “That’s why I’m encour- aging all Oregonians to roll up your sleeves, take your shot, and get a chance to change your life.” The new format explained why some coun- ties with high vaccination rates but less than stellar marks on COVID-19 cases could be in the lower risk DROUGHT Continued from Page 1A Reading from the res- olution, Roberts said the ongoing severe drought means “the emergency seems to be of such mag- nitude as the economic impact to many livestock producers, farmers and agriculture-related busi- nesses and the county economy may be putting them in need of economic assistance.” The resolution stated that a continuous lack of rain with no signifi cant change forecast for the rest of agricultural season could aff ect all businesses in Wallowa County. Nash said that Wallowa Lake — the primary source for irrigation water — hasn’t fi lled up like in the past and the dry conditions have led irrigators to turn on the tap a month earlier than usual. A map of the entire county was attached to the resolution, which was sent as a request to Gov. Kate Brown and a request that Alex Wittwer/The Observer, File Union County Sheriff ’s deputy Patricia Kelly walks through a mobile home neighborhood to serve court papers in Island City on Wednes- day, May 12, 2021. The Union County Sheriff ’s Offi ce is looking to add fi ve full-time positions by next year in addition to restarting its cadet and reserve deputy program. Alex Wittwer/The Observer rent 2020-21 budget. A big reason is many grant- funded projects, including a major one at La Grande/ Union County Airport, were completed in the past fi scal year, Burgess said. She said the county’s budget picture also was hurt by the COVID-19 pan- demic, which reduced activ- ities like travel in the state, resulting in Union County receiving less money from the state’s gas tax. The activity slowdown also reduced fuel sales at Union County’s airport and cut food and beverage sales at the county’s Buff alo Peak Golf Course. Burgess said many of these impacts will likely carry over to 2021-22 due to the continuing pandemic, a likelihood refl ected in the proposed 2021-22 budget. The revenue Union County lost due to the pan- demic was partially off set by federal government funding it received to help it cope with the impact of the pandemic. The Union County Budget Committee is expected to soon submit a proposed spending plan to the Union County Board of Commissioners. The com- missioners must adopt a 2021-22 budget by June 30. group while counties with lower numbers might fi nd themselves still facing mod- erate or high risk levels of restrictions. From May 27 through June 3, the Oregon Health Agency has placed 15 coun- ties in the high risk level, three at moderate risk, and 18 at lower risk. Twelve of the lower-risk counties show smaller num- bers of COVID-19 cases and lower percentages of positive cases. But six of the counties are on the lower risk level because of Brown’s waiver for counties that have put vaccine in just under two out of three adults. Deschutes, Multnomah, Washington, Lincoln, Hood River and Benton counties have passed the mark and will move to lower level restrictions as of May 27. The “one-shot” rule was put in place because most Oregon residents have been inoculated with either the Pfi zer or Moderna vac- cine, which requires two shots given about a month apart. A smaller number of residents have received the one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine. Normally, the risk level changes go into eff ect the Friday after the levels are announced. But the levels announced May 25 will go into eff ect May 27. Brown said that with COVID-19 cases declining in the state and vaccination levels going up, the revision of risk levels — and their associated restrictions — will be made every week instead of every other week. The next risk levels will be announced June 1. Coun- ties where infection rates and cases move them into a higher risk level will not have to immediately imple- ment restrictions. OHA will allow a “caution period” of one week in which to get the metrics back down. If cases and rates stay high, the restrictions would then be imposed for the fol- lowing week. Counties with low vac- cination rates are far from qualifying for the waiver. They will have to live with more restrictions for a longer time. she forward it to U.S. sec- retary of agriculture for consideration. “If you wait longer, it just takes longer,” Rob- erts said, so the state “rec- ommended we move this forward in an expeditious manner.” Nash agreed. “The wheels of govern- ment move slow,” he said. The last time Wallowa County declared drought was in 2007, before any of the current commissioners were on the board. But Commissioner John Hillock said he’s seen the benefi ts of such a declara- tion in other counties. “Umatilla County had this last year and it opened up a lot of diff erent funding sources … low-in- terest loans, grants, a few diff erent things,” he said. “Sometimes … that even drops down to ag-related businesses, for instance if someone doesn’t sell enough fertilizer, they could get a loan to keep going. It just opens up USDA funding for a lot of diff erent things.” The aid can come down to what could seem minor amounts. “If a rancher has to haul water to livestock, there are some reimbursement funds,” Nash said. “There can be an allowance for Conservation Reserve Pro- gram grounds to open them up for grazing.” Roberts said the deter- mination of drought comes mainly from input from county residents. “We determine here as to whether we’re in drought,” she said. “Our producers and people here help us determine that.” Hillock agreed, saying he and the other commissioners have sought that input. “You drive around and you talk to the producers,” he said. “The grass (for grazing) isn’t growing.” But the drought extends beyond traditional agricul- tural areas up into the tim- berlands. Nash told of one resident who conducted a controlled burn recently and was amazed how dry it was. “Those were fi res like we’d see in late July,” he said. “They burned some trees they didn’t intend to.” Make the Hometown Choice! ELGIN ELECTRIC Handling even the biggest jobs! Ask us about home delivery. 43 N. 8th Elgin, OR 541-437-2054 Volunteers, from left, Carolyn Young, Etta Ruberg and Mary Dodds inspect a plaque containing the names of members of the former United Methodist Church on Tuesday, May 25, 2021. The church building is now home to the Catherine Creek Community Center. UNION Continued from Page 1A as Union’s United Meth- odist Church until 2019 when it closed because of declining membership. The Oregon-Idaho Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church assumed ownership of the building plus its fellow- ship hall and parsonage building. It then put it up for sale in 2020. The Friends of the His- toric Union Community Hall purchased the com- plex in February 2021 to save it from possibly being converted into a business or being torn down. Today the complex’s old Meth- odist Church building is a chapel available to all denominations for reli- gious services, weddings, funerals and more. The new memorial area in the chapel will be ded- icated at 1 p.m. Sunday, May 30. Its centerpiece is a trophy case from Union High School’s gym that was installed at UHS in memory of one of its stu- dents, Anna Marie Hall, a cheerleader who died of an illness in 1978 at age 14. She was the daughter of LaVon Hall, one of the leaders of Friends of the Historic Union Commu- nity Hall. People examining the trophy case and other parts of the memorial site will fi nd albums fi lled with photos of past church members, old Bibles, handwritten stories about the church and many doc- uments including Sunday school attendance records from the 1960s and a list of the church’s pastors and lay speakers. The list includes people like A.J. Joslin, a minister more than 100 years ago for a single year; V.A. Bolen, a minister from 1948 to 1958, one of the church’s longest serving leaders; and Ernie Smith, who served from 1994 to 2001, in one of two stints as minister. Visitors to the memo- rial site will later be able to read a story about the Methodist Church’s bell, which was donated by an old church in Union about a 100 years ago, according to Geneva Williams, a member of the Friends of the Historic Union Com- munity Hall. Williams said the Methodist Church could not use it at fi rst because it lacked a bell tower. One was later built with funds raised by a penny drive conducted by children, Williams said. The bell is still in place today and can be rung by pulling a rope hanging from a ceiling in the church’s second story. The May 30 dedica- tion will follow an alumni and community breakfast at Catherine Creek Com- munity Hall. The break- fast will be served from 7:30-10:30 a.m. Following the dedi- cation, a lunch will be served at the Catherine Creek Community Center in honor of three women who worked tirelessly to help create the Cath- erine Creek Community Center but died in the past year before it became a reality — Joy Anne Smith, Gracie Tarter and Marty McKeen. “They were all big sup- porters of this,” Hall said. Hall hopes the memo- rial site will keep memo- ries of these women and other former church sup- porters shining as brightly as the sun does when it pierces the church’s striking stained glass windows. “We want the spirit of the church to live on,’’ she said.