INSIDE BANISH MENU MONOTONY WITH SIMPLE , SATISFYING DISHES FOR WEEKNIGHT MEALS | HOME & LIVING, B1 New program introduces art of wall climbing $1.50 TUESDAY EDITION February 15, 2022 Fighting the power Idaho Power seeks access to private property ahead of B2H approval La Grande grade school students learn how to scale EOU’s climbing wall By DICK MASON The Observer LA GRANDE — It appeared that winter was in the rearview mirror in the Grande Ronde Valley on Friday, Feb. 11. The mild and sunny weather had an air of per- fection. Still, none of the 24 students in Kylinn Irwin’s fourth grade class at Cen- tral Elementary School were complaining about being indoors. In fact, they seemed to care about only two things — scaling por- tions of Eastern Oregon University’s climbing wall at Quinn Coliseum or helping a classmate during the new La Grande School District program. The climbing wall, com- plete with footholds, looked a bit daunting but that did not prevent each of the stu- dents from scaling at least a portion of it and then rap- pelling down from it. Ruthi Davenport, a EOU education professor emerita, who helped found the new program, was proud of the students’ eff orts, noting that they caught on quickly. “They were dancing on the rock,” she said. The program Daven- port helped found is Team 5C, which is providing all La Grande School District students in grades 3-5 an opportunity to learn how to wall climb during a pair of one-hour sessions. The Team 5C program started in January and will conclude at the end of April. Classes will begin attending their second sessions in early March. Davenport, along with Michael Hatch, EOU’s out- door program director, lead the wall climbing sessions and are working in collab- oration with La Grande School District Superinten- dent George Mendoza and See, Climbing/Page A7 Alex Wittwer/EO Media Group Greg Larkin, along with his blue heeler, Killie, stands outside the home he is building on his property near Morgan Lake Road on Saturday, Feb. 12, 2022. By DAVIS CARBAUGH The Observer L A GRANDE — Greg Larkin has worked for decades to create his dream retirement spot off the grid south of Morgan Lake. That dream could be off the table if proposed electricity lines are installed on his property. Idaho Power Company is attempting to establish a 500-kilovolt line across Eastern Oregon that would extend approximately 300 miles from Boardman to Hemingway, Idaho. For locals like Larkin, the lines present a number of issues such as lowered property value and an overall decrease in the serenity of the land in question. “The site view with the towers going across and the static hiss of the line, I think it will destroy the peace and tran- quility of the lake,” Larkin said. And in Larkin’s case, the line could have serious negative health repercussions. As Idaho Power pushes for- ward with its plans for the B2H transmission line, the company Alex Wittwer/EO Media Group Greg Larkin, owner of a parcel of land off Morgan Lake Road, on Saturday, Feb. 12, 2022, points out a map where the Boardman to Idaho power line project would cross his property. has fi led about a dozen civil petitions in Union County Cir- cuit Court to gain access to pri- vate property in order to con- duct surveys and examinations on the land. The company’s verbiage in the petitions indi- cates that work could begin as early as 2023, if approved. The sound of silence Larkin, a native of La Grande, has owned 160 acres just south of Morgan Lake since 1974. After moving back from The Dalles in the late 1990s, he has spent count- less hours working to build up the land and create an ideal retirement location. In addi- tion, work has been done on the trees and topography of the land to make the acreage as silent as possible. The silence is important because Larkin suff ers from tinnitus, a constant ringing in the ears that makes him sensi- tive to buzzing and loud noises. The crackling and hissing of the B2H power lines could force the landowner into an unlivable situation. “I choose to live off the grid because of my tinnitus,” Larkin said. “It’s as close to the wilder- ness as I can get without fully being in the wilderness.” Larkin spent his professional years as a locomotive engineer, before leaving that job because of the tinnitus. He now tends to his horses and works on his new two-story house and shop as he copes with his hearing issues and seeks to live a peaceful life alongside his dogs — his father owns an adjacent plot of land. If the B2H plans were to go through, Larkin would have no choice but to leave the prop- erty he has spent so many years working on. “If this transmission line were to go through at this loca- tion, I would no longer be able to reside or fulfi ll my life- time dreams and goal of living here,” Larkin said at a public hearing in June 2019. “And I See, B2H/Page A7 Raising bett er readers: Modern methods promise improved literacy The Observer LA GRANDE — By the end of third grade, about half of Oregon students have fallen behind in reading comprehension. Diffi culty reading at this early stage often leads to lower achievement in school, as well as in adult life. A new program developed by Eastern Oregon University’s Col- lege of Education aims to equip teachers with tools and strategies to ensure more children stay on track. Education professor a dual model so pre-ser- Ronda Fritz founded the vice teachers and in-service EOU Reading Clinic teachers receive training at because her undergradu- diff erent times of the year,” ates needed opportunities to Fritz said. practice the structured lit- She partnered with the eracy methods taught in her Oregon Trail Regional Edu- Fritz classes. She discovered that cation Network to incorpo- some in-service teachers weren’t rate the EOU Reading Clinic into using these researched-based prac- teacher training schedules. The tice in their classroom curriculum. network, which covers Morrow, “If we could train teachers, Union, Baker and Umatilla coun- then our students would be able to ties, also agreed to provide a practice in their classrooms. It’s $2,000 stipend to teachers who INDEX Classified ......B2 Comics ...........B5 Crossword ....B2 Dear Abby ....B6 WEATHER Home .............B1 Horoscope ....B4 Local...............A2 Lottery ...........A2 THURSDAY Obituaries .....A5 Opinion .........A4 Sports ............A8 Sudoku ..........B5 Full forecast on the back of B section Tonight Wednesday 27 LOW 44/22 Mostly cloudy Low clouds SIDES DIVIDED OVER WOLF PROPOSAL attend the clinic. Online instruc- tion allows Fritz to reach rural Oregon’s far-fl ung teachers, many of whom cope with even lower levels of reading profi ciency in their schools. “There’s this inequity in reading instruction that leaves chunks of students unable to read,” Fritz said. “In the U.S. 60% of kids are not at grade level by the end of third grade, and 50% in Oregon See, Literacy/Page A7 CONTACT US 541-963-3161 Issue 20 2 sections, 14 pages La Grande, Oregon Email story ideas to news@lagrande observer.com. More contact info on Page A4. 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