FROM PAGE ONE TUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 2021 TRIBUTE Continued from Page A1 had dug out and had hoped to pick up. Arnott, 70, says KP led a healthy life. He ate little red meat, plenty of vegeta- bles, never drank alcohol, smoked or used drugs and exercised often. “He did everything right. His idea of a good time was to ride a motorcycle up to Pikes Peak,” Arnott said. Such rides put the skills of motorcyclists to the test, for 14,115-foot Pikes Peak in Colorado is fi lled with hairpin curves and stretches of narrow road with no guardrails. The good health that helped KP ascend Pikes Peak did not prevent COVID-19 from bringing him to his knees. “He was as weak as a kitten. Going from his living room to the kitchen was an accomplishment,” Arnott said. KP got COVID-19 just before vaccines for it became available to the public. He called Arnott not long after his diagnosis. “The fi rst thing he told me was ‘The vaccine came too late for me,’” Arnott said. Unforgettable attitude KP appeared to be recovering in late 2020 until he was found unconscious in his home. Doctors soon determined that there was a malignant tumor on his brain. KP was told that with brain cancer people often live about a year, news that he was buoyed by. “I get a year! Some folks I’ve known have strokes or heart attacks and just keel over. I’m really lucky,” he told Arnott, in a quote that appears in the piece Arnott wrote for the OHA blog. Arnott said that for KP to put a positive spin on news that would dev- astate others was not uncharacteristic. “It was typical KP,” Arnott said. Unfortunately, KP was denied the year he expected. He died in April of 2021 not long after his cancer diagnosis. “I talked to him on the phone on a Tuesday evening and by Thursday he had THE OBSERVER — A5 ONLINE To read Jim Arnott’s contri- bution to the Oregon Health Authority blog post, go to https://bit.ly/3AuIjOW. died,” Arnott said. Arnott believes COVID- 19, not the brain tumor, robbed his friend of the remaining year he thought he had. Arnott noted that KP was on a ventilator at the end of his life, which he believes indicates that COVID was the cause of his death. Many who die of COVID-19 do so because of the pneumonia it often causes. Later Arnott learned that two other good friends he had known for decades, individuals he identifi es as John and Maz, also died of COVID-19. John died in March of 2020 and Maz in October of 2020. He described John and Maz, a couple who lived in Ari- zona, as touchstones of his life history. Arnott, who previously was an aerospace engineer who worked on NASA, the Department of Defense and commercial defense proj- ects, moved to Union 27 years ago with his wife and three children. He hopes that sharing his story about the friends he has lost to COVID-19 will encourage more people, especially those in North- eastern Oregon, to get vaccinated. He believes people have a responsibility to get vac- cinated, not just for them- selves but those they care about. “Do everything you can to make it so your friends and loved ones don’t have to write stuff like what I did here,” Arnott said in his piece for the blog. Arnott is mystifi ed why many are not getting immunized for COVID-19 when vaccinations for it are readily available and free. He added that the side eff ects of the vaccines are typically minimal. Arnott, who received the two-shot Moderna vac- cine, said with the fi rst one he had a sore shoulder for several days and after the second a shoulder was again sore. “I have had a lot worse reactions when I got my fl u shot,” he said. Alex Wittwer/The Observer Children bounce on a bungee jumping ride at the Union County Fair on Friday, Aug. 6, 2021. The fair, which lacked a carnival this year due to Cascade Amusements closing down, drew in nearly 14,000 fairgoers this year. FAIR Continued from Page A1 for the past fi ve years, Gover-Shaw said. The total is particularly note- worthy considering there was no carnival at the fair because Cascade Amuse- ments, a longtime provider of rides and games at the Union County Fair, went out of business. Cascade Amusements had provided rides at the fair for at least a decade. Gover-Shaw said she hopes to get another car- nival company to come in next year but she said it will be diffi cult. She said the number of com- panies providing carni- vals is declining and those now operating have few openings. The fair manager said she plans to try to get the carnival rides back, though, since they are so popular with older children. Gover-Shaw said the expanded infl atables play station the fair had to help make up for the loss of the carnival was very popular among younger children, and many parents and grandparents told her the attraction was a hit with children. “They said they abso- lutely loved it,” she said. The fair’s entertain- ment lineup also helped make up for the loss of carnival rides. It included many local groups and Alex Wittwer/The Observer Kids wait in line to get in Zorb balls at the Union County Fair on Friday, Aug. 6, 2021. performers in addition to the Wasteland Kings and several from outside the region, including Too Slim and the Tail Drag- gers of Spokane, Wash- ington. Gover-Shaw credits their presence to the work of Scott Arnson, the fair’s entertainment director. Arnson, who is paid by the fair to work on its sound system, volunteers his time to work as the entertainment coordinator. B2H PARK Continued from Page A1 Continued from Page A1 While studies completed after the project’s approval provided new information about population counts and the eff ects of transmis- sion lines, the judge said they’re “not signifi cant or seriously diff erent” enough to warrant a supplementary analysis. “The new information about the declining popula- tion of greater sage grouse is not signifi cantly new or diff erent circumstances from what is discussed in the FEIS,” Simon said. Likewise, news articles about the fi nancial feasi- bility of burying transmis- sion lines do not trigger the need for a supplemen- tary environmental analysis because they don’t “rise to the level of signifi cant information,” as would sci- entifi c studies, he said. The judge dismissed claims that BLM relied on improper data about sage grouse numbers and that it was impermissibly vague and confusing in examining the risk of “extirpation” to a local population of the species. “Although not a model of clarity, the discussion is not indecipherable,” he said. The agency wasn’t from city workers and vol- unteers to the installation team at Northwest Sports Turf Solution. Nationwide material shortages have impacted construction projects across the country during the pandemic, but the only major setback for this project has been a delay in delivering the turf. Seeing as the project primarily involves removing dirt and placing rock donated from local companies, Spence does not expect any major hurdles between now and the completion of the work. “The shortages are making the turf come later. Normally it would be a much quicker timeline,” he said. “But, we’re really only waiting on the turf.” EO Media Group, File A crew works on a transmission line tower outside Boardman. A fed- eral judge has rejected a lawsuit seeking to invalidate the govern- ment’s right-of-way for the Boardman-to-Hemingway transmission line across public land. “arbitrary and capricious” in analyzing the indirect eff ects on “leks,” where sage grouse congregate during mating season, within 3 miles of the trans- mission line, rather than using a longer distance, Simon said. The judge found that BLM’s steps for miti- gating the adverse impacts to the species were suffi - cient because “there can be no construction without a detailed plan.” “This is not a case in which the action will com- mence before it can be determined whether miti- gation will be eff ective,” he said. The judge said BLM “worked closely” with the Idaho Power utility com- pany on the project and relied on “suffi cient evi- dence” to decide against burying the line near an interpretive center for the Oregon Trail. The agency wasn’t required to update the FEIS regarding the environ- mental eff ects of alternative routes for the transmission line that it ultimately didn’t choose, he said. While the BLM wrongly failed to “consider grazing in the cumulative eff ects analysis” of the project, that “error was harmless” because it wouldn’t have altered the agency’s conclu- sions, the judge said. Volunteer impact While the project relies on funding from multiple sources, those involved adamantly credit the community’s volunteers for contributing to the renovations. “It really is a La Grande community project,” La Grande High School baseball coach Many other features that helped bolster the fair included horse riding and a bungee jumping station, food vendors and FFA and 4-H competition. Gover-Shaw said it was critical to have a fair this year after the 2020 fair was canceled, except for the FFA-4-H auction, due to the COVID-19 pandemic. “It was important for people to see that the Union County Fair is alive Parker McKinley said. “We’re so fortunate to have a community that supports each other and makes it possible to do things like this.” RD Mac is donating the rock for the prep work underneath the turf and contributing trucks and resources for the job, while Brian Bell is heading the excava- tion process. Rob Lane of Lane Farms donated the dirt to fi ll the outfi eld of Trice Community Field and Hampton Paving is leveling the rock and sur- facing prior to the turf installation. “It’s huge because we couldn’t do it without them,” Spence said. “We’re saving tens of thousands of dollars in equipment and labor costs.” Future opportunities The renovated fi elds will provide La Grande with one of the top base- ball and softball com- plexes in the area and in Oregon. “There are a lot of people around the North- west that have a lot of respect for La Grande baseball,” McKinley said. “If we have a facility like this that can handle again,” she said. Gover-Shaw said the enormous amount of help provided by fair board members and community volunteers are the reason the fair was a success. “We have an amazing team,” she said. The success of this year’s fair, Gover-Shaw said, will help build momentum for 2022, which will mark the fair’s 150th year. a lot of games, I think it’s going to bring people from all over.” Spence also noted that the La Grande School District had a need for the project, having already improved the basketball and football facilities in recent years. “There’s no other turf fi elds around here, so it will make us the premier location and I’m hoping to draw lots of tournaments and activities, along with using the facilities for the school kids,” he said. Expected to fi nish in the fall, the Pioneer Park project will greatly ele- vate the level of local facilities in La Grande. With teams across mul- tiple sports using the fi elds, Optimist Field and Trice Community Field will be centerpieces in the sports community for years to come. For those involved in coordinating the project, the contri- butions from La Grande residents have made the project possible. “We’ve got tons of people that are coming in to help and donate their labor, time and equip- ment,” McKinley said. “It’s going to happen because of the community we live in, which is pretty awesome.”