LOCAL A6 — THE OBSERVER Apply for Beth Gibans Memorial Grant up to $5,000 Food producers urged to apply Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE — Slow Food Wallowas is looking for the next winner of a grant to provide fi nancial assistance open to anyone who grows, raises or makes local food products. “Small-scale food pro- ducers are the movers and shakers of Wallowa County,” Lynne Curry, of Slow Food Wallowas, said in a press release. This is the fi fth year of the grant project, which is now named to honor Beth Gibans, the founder of the Wallowa County Farmers Market and owner of Back- yard Gardens, who died from cancer in June. The grant award is for $5,000, a signifi cant jump from previous years, the release stated. “This is a great oppor- tunity to highlight our unsung heroes, celebrate a pillar of the local food com- munity and address why local food production mat- ters to rural areas,” Curry said. The grant award win- ners will be announced at an online celebration on Gibans’ birthday, Jan. 22. The grant is open to small-scale food growers and community innovators in Northeastern Oregon for projects that serve the food community in Wallowa County. Project proposals HOW TO DONATE Joseph council back up to full strength Nancy Parmenter will fill vacant seat By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain JOSEPH — The Joseph City Council is back up to full strength, having unan- imously voted to appoint Nancy Parmenter to fi ll the last vacant at-large seat at the council’s meeting Thursday, Dec. 2. Parmenter and Ryan Swindlehurst had sub- mitted applications for the seat, but Swindlehurst withdrew his application Nov. 29. The council developed vacancies when Councilor Lisa Collier was appointed mayor upon the resigna- tion of Belinda Buswell when she moved out of town and former Councilor Kathy Bingham resigned this summer after being censured. The council still needs to fi ll some committee assignments, which were on Thursday’s agenda as an optional item, but no action was mentioned in an email from interim city Adminis- trator Brock Eckstein. In another matter, the council decided on a new way to handle the city’s annual Christmas lights competition. The two top prize winners will be able to select a local nonprofi t or school organization to receive a donation from the city. The fi rst-place winner will receive a $200 dona- tion and second place will receive $100. The indi- vidual winners also will receive a credit to their water/sewer bills. The win- Union lands federal grant Community awarded $2.2M grant for backup power system Slow Food Wallowas welcomes end-of-year gifts to the pro- gram to build Gibans’ vision for a thriving local food com- munity. Make donations online through gofundme.com or by check payable to Slow Food Wallowas, P.O. Box 78, Joseph 97846. for up to $5,000 are due by midnight Friday, Dec. 31. View the online application at https://tinyurl.com/Beth- Gibans-grant for complete details on eligibility, evalu- ation and timeline. Over the past fi ve years, Slow Food Wallowas has awarded grants to fund a low tunnel system to extend the growing season, a new tiller to improve gardening effi ciency, a special hood for propagating commercial mushrooms and equipment for a bakery with a focus on utilizing heritage grains. This new grant oppor- tunity builds on Gibans’ legacy — a belief that local food production is essen- tial to our health, our well- being and our community. It is designed to provide direct support for new and existing food producers and entrepreneurs to increase their capacity to provide food for the local com- munity. Slow Food Wal- lowas encourages fi rst-time applicants, those with lim- ited access to resources, people of color and others advancing sustainable agri- cultural practices to apply. ners will be announced before Christmas to allow residents to view the homes while the lights are still on display. The council also directed Eckstein to develop two new ordinances. One ordinance will establish clearer water/ sewer rates for all zones in the city with a basic rate applied to each zone irrespective of meter size and make a more accurate charge based on usage. The other ordinance will prevent a business owner with multiple units in one building from being charged a master account. Currently, if a business has two shops located in one building, they are charged three total services: one for each parcel and a “master” charge. The individual shops would be responsible for their bills. Eckstein said in his email that both ordinances are being developed in an eff ort to provide fair- ness to residents and busi- nesses. He hopes to have both ordinances ready for passage at the council’s Jan. 7, 2022, meeting. At that time, the public will have the opportunity for comment. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 2021 By DICK MASON The Observer UNION — The city of Union will enter 2022 with a brighter future. The federal government has notifi ed the city that it has been awarded $2.2 mil- lion from its federal Com- munity Development Block Grant Program to cover the cost of installing a backup power generation system. “This is very good. It will be even better when the project is completed,” said Union City Administrator Doug Wiggins. Electricity created by the backup generator will be used during out- ages to operate the city’s water system, allowing Union residents to continue receiving water if their power ever goes out for an Dick Mason/The Observer, File One of Union’s two water storage tanks stands out against the sky- line on the eastern side of town on Thursday, Oct. 28, 2021. The city has been awarded a $2.2 million grant to allow backup electricity to operate the city’s water system during outages. extended period. Wiggins said that without a backup gener- ator the city is reliant com- pletely on the water in its reservoir when there is a power outage because elec- tricity is needed to pump water from its two wells to its reservoir. Once the water is in its reservoir, which is in an enclosed tank near the top of a hill on the eastern edge of Union, it can be delivered to residents using gravity. The reservoir has a capacity of close to 1 mil- lion gallons. If there were an extended power outage, Union’s water supply could last up to four days, depending upon the time of year and how much water was in its tank at the time of the outage, Wiggins said. The city worked closely with the Community Devel- opment Block Grant Pro- gram throughout the appli- cation process. For example, it prepared a design for the backup generation system with the help of a $200,000 planning grant from the program. The design work was prepared by Anderson Perry and Associates, a La Grande-based engineering fi rm. The city will receive the grant through the Oregon Business Development Department, a state agency also known as Business Oregon, Wiggins said. The state agency will help Union meet the fi nancial requirements of the Com- munity Development Block Grant Program. The city’s next step is to take bids from companies for the project in the winter. After awarding a bid, instal- lation of the backup power system could begin in late spring or early summer of 2022. Storm raises hopes for ski season start By JAYSON JACOBY Baker City Herald NORTH POWDER — Winter remains more of a rumor than reality, but a weekend storm fulfi lled its forecast in the mountains. And although city dwellers will have to wait to construct the season’s fi rst snowman, skiers and snowboarders are getting close to making their fi rst runs at Anthony Lakes Mountain Resort. The potent storm was a perfect illustration of the rain shadow phenomenon, although in this case the precipitation was generally frozen rather than liquid. With winds in the upper atmosphere coming from the southwest, the moun- tains, notably the Elk- horns, intercepted most of the moisture, according to the National Weather Service. Snow showers fell peri- odically in La Grande over the weekend, with minor amounts of accumulation. And higher in the moun- tains, much more snow piled up. Anthony Lakes Moun- tain Resort reported 13 inches of new snow during the weekend, with a snow base of 18 inches on Dec. 13. If the weather forecast for the rest of this week proves close to accurate, with snow likely most days, there’s a “very, very good chance” that the ski area will open for the season on Saturday, Dec. 18, said Chelsea Judy, Anthony Lakes marketing director. “We’re very optimistic,” Judy said. An automated snow- measuring station near Bourne, about 6 miles north of Sumpter, reported 15 inches of new snow, with 16 inches on the ground. Another station, at Eilertson Meadow along Rock Creek on the east side of the Elkhorns, reported about 14 inches of snow fell during the weekend. There was only one inch of snow there before the storm. At Schneider Meadows, in the southern Wallowas north of Halfway, about 22 inches of snow fell during the weekend, bringing the total to 31 inches. The National Weather Service predicts snow to continue in the mountains, with a foot or more during the week in the Anthony Lakes area. NEWS BRIEFS Single vehicle crash kills one on Highway 203 The crash happened about 8 miles south of Pondosa. PONDOSA — A Pondosa man died in a single vehicle crash on snow-covered Highway 203 north- east of Baker City on Friday, Dec. 10. Gwyn Monroe Adams, 68, was found in his overturned 1991 Dodge Neon, according to Oregon State Police. A passing driver saw the car at about 6:50 a.m. near Milepost 31, about 8 miles east of Interstate 84. Pondosa is an unincorporated town along Highway 203 near Medical Springs, near the border between Baker and Union counties. No rules in Enterprise Elementary’s Christmas tree contest ENTERPRISE — It was a “no-rules contest” last week at Enter- prise Elementary School when two groups of students pitted their cre- ativity — and a trick — in a Christmas tree contest. Fourth- and fi fth-graders deco- rated the “North Pole Tree” — com- plete with Grinch — set up at the north end of the main hallway at the school. Second- and sixth-graders countered at the opposite end of the hallway with the “Santa’s Workshop Tree.” “The ‘North Pole Tree’ is winning because we handed out candy,” said Kelly Brown, school reading specialist who helped. “We’re winning by a land- slide, but it was a no-rules contest.” She said the trees were donated by parents. “The kids worked hard and made all their own ornaments,” Brown said. She said the judges were to be the kindergarten through third-graders. The formal announcement of the winner would come today, Wednesday, Dec. 15, during the school’s Christmas assembly. —The Observer A Smarter Way to Power Your Home. REQUEST A FREE QUOTE! ACT NOW TO RECEIVE A $300 SPECIAL OFFER!* (844) 989-2328 *Off er value when purchased at retail. Solar panels sold separately. Turning 65, paying too much or want to compare your options? 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