INSIDE A ‘ONE-TANK’ TRIP FROM LA GRANDE TO PALOUSE FALLS | June 5, 2021 OUTDOORS & REC, 1B WEEKEND EDITION $1.50 LA GRANDE SCHOOL DISTRICT Budget looks solid District’s budget committee proposes $44M budget for adoption The Observer, File By DICK MASON The Observer LA GRANDE — The La Grande School District’s budget picture looks solid despite having 140 fewer students since 2020-21 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The La Grande School District’s budget committee voted Wednesday, June 2, to recommend that a total budget of $44.345 million, $3.180 million more than its current year’s budget, be adopted by the school board. The recommended budget would call for no program reductions or lay- off s and a net increase of .55 of one full-time employee position. The district’s budget is solid because of $7.01 mil- lion in federal funding it has available to it to off set the impact of the pandemic. This is funding the La Grande School District has quali- fi ed for and will be reim- bursed for once it is spent, according to La Grande School District Budget Director Chris Panike. A signifi cant portion of this COVID-19 relief funding would be put in the school district’s reserve fund, helping off set the money the school dis- trict lost due to declining enrollment. The school district receives about $8,600 from the state for each student. The loss of 140 students since the pandemic hit has cost the school district about $1.2 million in state funding. Typically, a loss in funding would mean the school district would be forced to make cuts in staff and programs to balance its budget. That is not the case now because the school dis- trict’s reserve fund is strong On the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest over the past half century, lightning — not careless or intentionally destructive people — has sparked almost eight of every 10 blazes. DEVASTATING COMBINATION By JAYSON JACOBY Baker City Herald B AKER CITY — Noel Livingston and Joel McCraw ponder the coming fi re season with not a small amount of dread. In this sense the pair shares something in common with people across Oregon, and indeed across the West, whose task it is to deal with wildfi res. The combination of the drought affl icting much of the region and fresh memories of the fi res that destroyed sections of sev- eral towns and killed 11 people in western and southern Oregon in September 2020 is a troubling concoction. Livingston and McCraw work on the 2.3-million-acre Wal- lowa-Whitman National Forest. Livingston is the Wallowa-Whit- man’s fi re staff offi cer, and McCraw the fi re management offi cer for the Whitman District in the southern half of the forest. Bureau of Land Management/Contributed Photo, File The unpredictability of human-caused fi res — when they might happen, as well as where — is one reason the Forest Service and Oregon Department of Forestry institute restrictions on campfi res, the use of chain saws and other activities when fi re danger is high or extreme. When they consider the threats they’ll likely deal with during fi re season, Livingston and McCraw worry more about what’s going to happen thousands of feet up in the atmosphere, where elec- trical storms sometimes brew on hot summer afternoons, than what will transpire on the ground. On the Wallowa-Whitman over the past half century, lightning — not careless or intentionally destructive people — has sparked almost eight of every 10 blazes. That’s quite a diff erent situa- tion, Livingston said, than what prevails in national forests closer to metropolitan areas — the Mount Hood, for instance, parts of which are less than an hour’s drive from Portland, or the Willamette, a similar distance from both Salem and Eugene. In those forests the percentages are nearly reversed, Livingston said, with human- caused fi res predominant. The Mount Hood and the Wil- lamette national forests have fi re staff who spend much of their time patrolling, particularly in pop- ular areas, such as campgrounds, so as to be ready to douse human- caused blazes, he said. On the Wallowa-Whitman, by See, Fire/Page 5A EOU to mandate coronavirus vaccines on campus By DAVIS CARBAUGH See, Budget/Page 5A contrast, those sorts of “preven- tion patrols” are what Livingston describes as a “collateral duty” for fi refi ghters. “We don’t typically do that except in extreme conditions,” Livingston said. “We don’t have to do it in a normal year.” He conceded, though, 2021 isn’t likely to be a normal year. At least not as that word was defi ned until 2020. Livingston said the pandem- ic-driven trend of more people recreating outdoors in 2020, a phenomenon seen across the West, was noteworthy on the Wallowa-Whitman. “Any time we get more people in the woods, the risk goes up,” Livingston said. “We’re going to pay more attention to that.” Despite bigger crowds at camp- grounds and other recreation sites on the Wallowa-Whitman in 2020 — and the expectation for similar scenes this summer — Livingston said he was “pleasantly surprised that we didn’t get more human- caused fi res than we did.” Indeed, the Wallowa-Whit- man’s 12 human-caused fi res, which burned a total of just 23 acres, was less than half the yearly average of 30 fi res amassed from 1970-2019. Lightning fi res also were rarer than usual, with 60 blazes Lightning starts most fires in Northeastern Oregon, but human-caused blazes pose serious risk as well The Observer LA GRANDE — Eastern Oregon University announced Thursday, June 3, it will require students and employees to be vac- cinated in order to take part in on-campus learning. Eastern will offi cially require COVID-19 vaccinations when the FDA fully approves one or more of the vaccines. Both Pfi zer and Mod- erna have started the months-long process of securing full approval, and the FDA has indicated they’re “highly likely” to be approved later in 2021. But school offi cials don’t want members of the campus com- munity waiting for that, empha- sizing in a news release that it “strongly encourages students, employees and partners to receive a COVID-19 vaccine as soon as possible.” “We are focused on pro- Insko Reynolds Seydel tecting the safety and health of the EOU community and returning to a highly engaged, in-person, on-campus experience that upholds our mission and shared values,” said Eastern Oregon University Presi- dent Tom Insko. EOU will allow students to attend courses virtually if they choose not to receive one of the COVID-19 vaccines. Additionally, the university will make accommo- dations for medical and non-med- ical exemptions as those decisions are made accordingly by program personnel. With EOU’s announcement, every public university in the INDEX WEATHER Outdoors & Rec ...1B Dear Abby .............8B Opinion ..................4A Classified ...............2B Horoscope .............2B Sports .....................6A Comics ....................5B Lottery ....................2A Sudoku ...................5B Crossword .............2B Obituaries ..............3A Weather .................6B TUESDAY state of Oregon now requires the COVID-19 vaccination for on-campus participation. Oregon Institute of Technology made a sim- ilar announcement June 2. Tim Seydel, vice president for university advancement, said the feedback from many students at the school during the last year indicated a desire to get back to an in-person experience. “Students came to college for that experience of living in resi- dence halls, going to football games, seeing live entertainment,” he said. “They’re not able to do that right now.” According to Seydel, Eastern will likely be able to host outdoor events in full next fall, as well as tracking state guidelines for indoor gatherings. Since the 2020 fall semester, Eastern Oregon has been holding classes at roughly 50% capacity. Full forecast on the back of B section Tonight Sunday 40 LOW 70/39 Mainly clear Sunny LHS SENIORS SAY FAREWELL TO HIGH SCHOOL With approximately 3,000 students enrolled, the La Grande univer- sity managed to avoid going fully remote like many other colleges and universities across Oregon and the rest of the country, according to Seydel. Seydel said the conversation with other universities about vaccination requirements has been ongoing at the state level for quite some time. While EOU is the last public univer- sity in the state to mandate vaccina- tions, many students approved of the diligence. “It’s nice that they’re waiting until it’s FDA approved, since a lot of other colleges aren’t doing that,” said EOU junior Anna Kestie. Junior Mary Ellen Buxton echoed Kestie’s sentiment and noted both she and Kestie already have been vaccinated. See, Vaccine/Page 5A CONTACT US 541-963-3161 Issue 65 2 sections, 14 pages La Grande, Oregon Email story ideas to news@lagrande observer.com. More contact info on Page 4A. Online at lagrandeobserver.com