LOCAL A2 — THE OBSERVER TODAY On Jan. 22, 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court, in its Roe v. Wade decision, declared a nationwide constitutional right to abortion. In 1901, Britain’s Queen Vic- toria died at age 81 after a reign of 63 years; she was succeeded by her eldest son, Edward VII. In 1938, Thornton Wilder’s play “Our Town” was performed publicly for the first time in Princeton, New Jersey. In 1944, during World War II, Allied forces began landing at Anzio, Italy. In 1947, America’s first com- mercially licensed television station west of the Mississippi, KTLA-TV in Los Angeles, made its official debut. In 1995, Rose Fitzgerald Ken- nedy died at the Kennedy com- pound at Hyannis Port, Massa- chusetts, at age 104. In 1997, the Senate con- firmed Madeleine Albright as the nation’s first female secre- tary of state. In 1998, Theodore Kaczynski pleaded guilty in Sacra- mento, California, to being the Unabomber responsible for three deaths and 29 injuries in return for a sentence of life in prison without parole. In 2006, Kobe Bryant scored 81 points, the second-highest in NBA history, in the Los Angeles Lakers’ 122-104 victory over the Toronto Raptors. In 2007, a double car bombing of a predominantly Shiite commercial area in Baghdad killed 88 people. Iran announced it had barred 38 nuclear inspectors on a United Nations list from entering the country in apparent retaliation for U.N. sanctions imposed the previous month. In 2008, actor Heath Ledger, 28, was found dead of an acci- dental prescription overdose in a New York City apartment. In 2009, President Barack Obama signed an executive order to close the Guantanamo Bay prison camp within a year. (The facility remained in oper- ation as lawmakers blocked efforts to transfer terror sus- pects to the United States; President Donald Trump later issued an order to keep the jail open and allow the Pentagon to bring new prisoners there.) In 2020, Chinese health authorities urged people in the city of Wuhan to avoid crowds and public gatherings after warning that a new viral illness that had infected hundreds of people and caused at least nine deaths could spread further. Health officials in Washington state said they were actively monitoring 16 people who’d come in close contact with a traveler to China, the first U.S. resident known to be infected with the virus. Today’s Birthdays: Actor Piper Laurie is 90. Celebrity chef Graham Kerr (TV: “The Galloping Gourmet”) is 88. Author Joseph Wambaugh is 85. Singer Steve Perry is 73. Country singer-musician Teddy Gentry (Alabama) is 70. Movie director Jim Jarmusch is 69. Actor John Wesley Shipp is 67. Hockey Hall of Famer Mike Bossy is 65. Actor Linda Blair is 63. Actor Diane Lane is 57. Actor and rap DJ Jazzy Jeff is 57. Celebrity chef Guy Fieri is 54. Actor Olivia d’Abo is 53. Actor Katie Finneran is 51. Actor Gabriel Macht is 50. Actor Balthazar Getty is 47. Actor Christopher Kennedy Masterson is 42. Jazz singer Lizz Wright is 42. Pop singer Willa Ford is 41. Actor Bev- erley Mitchell is 41. Rock sing- er-musician Ben Moody is 41. Actor Kevin Sheridan is 40. Actor-singer Phoebe Strole is 39. Rapper Logic is 32. Tennis player Alizé Cornet is 32. Actor Sami Gayle is 26. LOTTERY Wednesday, Jan. 19, 2022 Megabucks 1-3-9-13-26-44 Jackpot: $8.6 million Lucky Lines 3-8-12-16-20-21-27-30 Estimated jackpot: $13,000 Powerball 11-15-43-55-61 Powerball: 10 Power Play: 3 Jackpot: $76 million Win for Life 17-38-40-53 Pick 4 1 p.m.: 3-8-5-2 4 p.m.: 2-2-0-3 7 p.m.: 3-9-7-6 10 p.m.: 9-7-9-6 Thursday, Jan. 20, 2022 Lucky Lines 4-5-12-13-18-24-27-31 Jackpot: $14,000 Pick 4 1 p.m.: 5-1-6-8 4 p.m.: 4-9-0-8 7 p.m.: 2-6-5-2 10 p.m.: 0-6-2-4 SaTuRday, JanuaRy 22, 2022 Power companies announce deal on B2H City set to map out strategy, goals The Observer PORTLAND — Idaho Power, PacifiCorp and the Bonneville Power Admin- istration have reached a nonbinding agreement on the massive Boardman to Hemingway transmission line. The BPA in a press release Wednesday, Jan. 19, announced the agreement clarifies and updates roles and responsibilities for the B2H project. “The proposed agree- ment is an important step for this 500-kilovolt, 290-mile transmission line, which would deliver 1,000 megawatts of reli- able, affordable power in each direction between the Pacific Northwest and Mountain west,” according to the press release. Under the new deal, Idaho Power and Pacifi- Corp will jointly own the B2H transmission line, with PacifiCorp owning 55% and Idaho Power owning 45%. Idaho Power will acquire an ownership interest in PacifiCorp transmission lines and other equipment between eastern Idaho and the Four Corners Substation in northwest New Mexico. B2H and those acquisi- tions amplify Idaho Pow- er’s connections to key energy markets that will help the company meet La Grande council, URA to discuss 2022 priorities during city retreats By DAVIS CARBAUGH The Observer East Oregonian, File A crew works on a transmission line tower outside of Boardman in November 2017. The Bonneville Power Administration on Wednesday, Jan. 19, 2022, announced it, Idaho Power and PacifiCorp have a new deal on the Boardman to Hemingway transmission line that would run through Eastern Oregon. customer demand. The Bonneville Power Administration will transfer its ownership interest in B2H to Idaho Power and will not par- ticipate in construction or have any ownership interest in the transmis- sion line project. Facilities PacifiCorp uses to serve BPA’s cus- tomers in and around southeast Idaho will be transferred to Idaho Power. BPA will acquire transmission service over Idaho Power’s transmis- sion system, including the newly constructed B2H, to serve public utility cus- tomers in Idaho, Wyo- ming and Montana. PacifiCorp will acquire Idaho Power transmission assets across southern Idaho that, combined with its majority stake in Boardman-Hemingway, will increase its contig- uous power transfer capa- bility between its western and eastern systems, and will acquire additional transmission service from BPA to enable it to serve its growing customer base in central Oregon. With the non-binding term sheet developed, the three organizations move into a negotiation phase to finalize the agree- ments and seek regulatory approval. Concurrent with this press release, BPA is issuing a letter to its regional stakeholders and customers that outlines the proposal, describes the background and explains the process for engaging with BPA on this topic. Construction of the line is slated to begin in 2023, and B2H is antic- ipated to come online in 2026. The term sheet and background information about B2H are available at www.boardmantohem- ingway.com. Grant agreement approved for water storage study Two studies on Upper Grande Ronde River Watershed will begin this year By DICK MASON The Observer LA GRANDE —The Union County Board of Commissioners approved a grant agreement on Wednesday, Jan. 19, that will likely help an effort to ultimately improve the flow of rivers and steams in the Upper Grande Ronde River Watershed, which includes Catherine Creek. The commissioners approved a grant agreement between Union County and the Oregon Water- shed Enhancement Board. The agreement involves a $75,000 technical services grant for an Upper Grande Ronde River Watershed Feasibility and Stream Flow study for water storage. The grant, which came from the state’s Oregon Watershed Enhance- ment Board, will pay for a study of the results. The Oregon department of Transportation/Contributed Photo, File Ice jams like this one in 2014 on Catherine Creek east of Union put the city at risk of flooding. The Union County Board of Commissioners approved a grant agreement on Wednesday, Jan. 19, 2022, that may improve the flow of rivers and steams in the Upper Grande Ronde River Watershed, including Catherine Creek. Upper Grande Ronde River Watershed Partnership will use the study in its efforts to determine what steps can be taken to improve water storage in the Upper Grande Ronde River Basin. The Upper Grande Ronde River Watershed Partnership — an organi- zation with a wide range of members, including natural resources professionals, those in the agricultural industry and city represen- tatives — has been meeting since 2016. “Improved water storage is needed to reduce flooding in the winter and spring and to prevent the river flows from becoming very low in the summer in the Upper Grande Ronde River Watershed,” said Union County Commis- sioner Donna Beverage, a member of the partnership and its chair. Water storage options the partnership may con- sider include expanding portions of rivers and streams to prevent the cre- ation of ice jams in narrow stretches that can lead to flooding. Another option could be pumping water in Cath- erine Creek into under- ground caverns in the spring when flows are high and then pumping it out in the summer when flows are lower. “We will explore all options. We want to help all water users without doing harm to any,” Beverage said. The Oregon Water- shed Enhancement Board funding is one of two grants Union County has received for feasibility and stream flow studies in the Upper Grande Ronde River Basin. The county previously received a grant of more than $75,000 from the Oregon Water Resources Department to conduct a water storage study. The water storage study conducted with the grant from the Oregon Water- shed Enhancement Board will complement the one funded by the Oregon Water Resources Depart- ment, Beverage said. Both studies will be conducted by Anderson Perry & Associates, a La Grande-based engineering firm, and will begin later this year. Cove, Imbler, Union schools coping with COVID-19 Some rural districts see fewer absences related to virus By DICK MASON The Observer LA GRANDE — The La Grande and North Powder school districts are being hit hard by COVID-19 but three other Union County school dis- tricts are faring much better. The La Grande School District’s latest COVID-19 statistics, covering the week of Jan. 10-14, indi- cate that 98 students and 17 staff members missed school because of posi- tive COVID-19 tests, close contact with people who are COVID-19 positive or because of symptoms of the virus. The North Powder School District had 11 positive cases among students over a one-week period, which prompted the school district to offer only online Comprehensive Distance Learning starting Wednesday, Jan. 19, although in-person instruc- tion is expected to begin again on Jan. 24. The COVID-19 situa- tion is significantly better in the Cove, Imbler and Union school districts. The Union School Dis- trict on Jan. 17 had one staff member out due to either a positive COVID-19 test or a close contact, and two students were absent because of close contacts with family members who were believed to be COVID-19 positive. Union School District Superintendent Carter Wells feels good about his district’s COVID-19 sit- uation but added that he knows it could change quickly. “We have been very for- tunate,” Wells said. The Imbler School Dis- trict on Jan. 18 had one staff member out due to COVID-19 and four or five students absent due to close contacts. The stu- dents’ close contacts had been with family members, according to Imbler School District Superintendent Doug Hislop. The Cove School Dis- trict had one staff member out due to COVID-19 on Jan. 19 and less than 10 students out due to close contacts. All of the stu- dents’ close contacts were family members, said Earl Pettit, superintendent of the school district. Pettit feels hopeful about his school district’s COVID-19 status and does not foresee having to go to Compre- hensive Distance Learning anytime soon. “We are a long way from CDL,” Pettit said. NEWS BRIEF La Grande sets forum on parks master plan LA GRANDE — The city of La Grande Parks and Recreation Advi- sory Commission is set to host a public forum to discuss the 2022- 2027 parks master plan. The meeting will be held via Zoom beginning at 5:30 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 3. The meeting will gather public input on the final draft of the plan, which will serve as the department’s guidelines for the next five years. The plan was drafted by city staff and parks and recreation advi- sory commission members, as well as through community feedback. It includes suggested improvements to current parks as well as initiatives for the next five years, such as increasing indoor recreation space, restrooms, trails and covered picnic areas. The final draft of the master plan, as well as the meeting’s Zoom link, can be found at www.cityoflagrande. org/parks-recreation. Parks and Rec- reation Director Stu Spence can also be reached at 541-962-1348. — The Observer LA GRANDE — The La Grande City Council and Urban Renewal Agency are set to meet for the annual city retreats, which will focus on exchanging strategies and goals for the upcoming year. The Urban Renewal Agency will meet at 6 p.m. Monday, Jan. 24, and the city council’s retreat will begin at 6 p.m. Jan. 25. The retreats serve as an opportunity for mem- bers of each group to col- laborate on ideas for 2022, which will then become a point of emphasis during budget development for the 2022-2023 fiscal year. The retreats, to be held virtu- ally, are open for viewing on the city’s Facebook page, but public comment is not allowed during the meetings. No official decisions or votes are conducted during the La Grande City Council retreat, but ideas can be scheduled for upcoming regular sessions. Topics that will be dis- cussed in the city council retreat are infrastructure- related needs and priorities, staffing needs among the city’s police and fire depart- ments, housing production strategy and commercial land needs analysis, recent concerns over homelessness at Max Square, increasing diversity and participation in commissions and com- mittees, improvements to the city’s parks, partner- ships with the chamber of commerce and La Grande Main Street Downtown, wildland urban interface and budget priorities for the upcoming fiscal year. City Manager Robert Strope at the council retreat will also relay his top pri- orities: fiscal manage- ment, COVID-19 recovery, economic development, wildland urban inter- face, general fund capital improvements, housing pro- duction strategy, staffing, Federal Emergency Man- agement Agency maps and code amendments. The URA will meet with a similar goal in mind, col- laborating on ideas and creating priorities for the upcoming year. One topic to be dis- cussed is economic devel- opment strategy, which involves the city’s priority industry sectors — recre- ational, manufacturing and retail, timber industry and e-commerce. The agency will also discuss the potential for small-scale manufacturing and micro production in La Grande. The idea involves attracting small manufac- turers that can utilize space in the city and assist in La Grande’s local supply chain. The URA will discuss the potential of a commer- cial land needs analysis and comprehensive plan goal, in order to address the shortage of available lands for large-scale commercial and retail development. Agency members at the retreat will discuss the budget for urban renewal programs, which includes $350,000 toward the non-business park Call for Projects, $200,000 for busi- ness park Call for Proj- ects, $200,000 for the city’s traded sector program and $300,000 for agency-initi- ated programs. The retreat will conclude with a discus- sion of fiscal management related to the city’s urban renewal plan. Both meetings will be hosted on Facebook live at www.facebook.com/ CityofLaGrande.