INSIDE FORMER ENTERPRISE GIRLS BASKETBALL COACH LOOKS BACK ON 33-YEAR CAREER | SPORTS, A8 April 16, 2022 WEEKEND EDITION $1.50 Transient lodging tax may be in place by July 1 At least 75% of the revenue from the tax will be used to promote tourism in Union By DICK MASON The Observer UNION — Charlie Morden isn’t a fan of a new transient lodging tax the city of Union approved in March. The city approved a 5% tax to be col- lected anywhere people are charged to stay for less than 30 days, such as hotels, recreational vehicle parks and bed-and-breakfasts. Morden, the owner of the city’s lone hotel, the Union Hotel, and the adjacent RV park, said his room rates, which start at $118 a night, are among the lowest in the region but still are high in the minds of travelers. “There is resistance by the public to pay more,” said Morden, who has not raised his rates in three years. Morden said the tax will limit how much he can raise his rates, while attempting to keep up with infl ation. Morden also said the tax will ultimately reduce how much money people coming Morden to Union have to spend in the community. He said, for example, that some lodgers may be less likely to go downtown and buy a meal in a restaurant. “There is only so much money that people have to Wiggins spend,” he said. “You can’t keep raising prices. Folks have a limit.” City leaders are making arrangements with the Oregon Department of Revenue to have the state agency collect the city’s 5% tax. The city is trying to fi nalize that by July 1, the earliest it can start collecting, according to Union City Administrator Doug Wiggins. “The state has a system set up,” he said. “We will be integrating with it.” State law will allow Union to use up to 5% of the tax’s revenue to cover collec- tion costs. Seventy-fi ve percent of the rev- enue from the tax will have to be spent on promoting tourism under state law, Wig- gins said. Wiggins said the money could be used to pay for additions designed to draw in tourists, including the building of bike paths or a welcoming center. It also could be spent on building improvements at sites that attract tourists, including the Union County Museum and the Union Hotel. Alex Wittwer/EO Media Group Firefi ghter Luke Lucero’s turnout coat hangs on a utility door of a La Grande Fire Department ambulance inside the engine bay in La Grande on Thursday, April 14, 2022. The city of La Grande has adjusted hiring practices in order to help the department fi ll fi refi ghter/paramedic positions. Filling shortages Fire department, law enforcement aim to address openings during diffi cult hiring period By DAVIS CARBAUGH • The Observer L A GRANDE — Like nearly any local entity struggling to hire a full staff, the public safety sectors within the city of La Grande have faced similar challenges. While the city’s police and fire departments both have faced staff shortages during the pandemic, hiring incentives and altered training programs have provided a positive trend in getting back to full staff. “I’m excited that we have some new candidates,” La Grande Fire Chief Emmitt Cornford said. “It looks like some good ones based on the applications, so if we can hire one or two that would be great.” The La Grande City Council emphasized the issue of recruiting and retaining employees in the public safety roles at its 2022 council retreat in Jan- uary. In the council’s April meeting, a professional compensation survey was approved to address this issue moving forward. Cornford and La Grande Police Chief Gary Bell both spoke at the La Grande City Council meeting earlier this month detailing the current status of openings in the departments. The police department is Alex Wittwer/EO Media Group, File Firefi ghters with the La Grande Fire Department respond to a structure fi re in the Oregon Department of Transportation sign shop the morning of Monday, March 29, 2021. currently down three offi cer positions, but is in the pro- cess of selecting new hires. Bell stated the department has made one conditional off er to a candidate and is in the late stages with a few other candidates. One new offi cer is cur- rently in the police academy and was due to graduate April 14. “We’ve had successes in See, Hiring/Page A7 See, Lodging/Page A7 ELECTION 2022 State offi cials strive to rebuild trust in elections Survey shows Oregonians are sharply divided over how to describe January 2021 attack on U.S. Capitol By JULIA SHUMWAY Oregon Capital Chronicle SALEM — About one in fi ve Oregon voters, including about half of Republicans, believe voter fraud changed the results of the 2020 election. That’s one result of a February survey from the Oregon Values and Beliefs Center, a nonpartisan public opinion research organiza- tion, which also found that Orego- nians are sharply divided over how to describe an attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. While a majority of Demo- crats describe the incident as an “attempted coup or insurrection,” a plurality of Republicans called it a “riot out of control” and voters unaffi liated with either party were split between those options. WEATHER INDEX Classified ......B2 Comics ...........B5 Crossword ....B2 Dear Abby ....B6 TUESDAY Horoscope ....B3 Local...............A2 Lottery ...........A2 Obituaries .....A5 Opinion .........A4 Outdoors ......B1 Sports ............A8 Sudoku ..........B5 Nearly a quarter of Republicans endorsed the false claim that the violence was perpetrated by polit- ical opponents of former President Donald Trump, and 16% of Repub- licans and 10% of other voters claimed it was a reasonable protest. Respondents were similarly divided along partisan lines when it came to questions about fraud in the 2020 presidential election. About 86% of Democrats sur- veyed in Oregon agreed that there was virtually no fraud or very little fraud with no impact on the Full forecast on the back of B section Tonight Sunday 24 LOW 46/37 Cold Mostly cloudy EOU FILLS ROSTER WITH TRANSFERS results, and a slim majority of independents and other voters felt the same way. Less than a third of Republicans agreed with those statements. Instead, 49% of Republi- cans said major fraudulent voting changed the outcome of the elec- tion. These survey results resemble research that Reed College con- ducted at the behest of the Oregon Secretary of State’s Offi ce in 2020, which found a majority of See, Survey/Page A7 CONTACT US 541-963-3161 Issue 46 2 sections, 14 pages La Grande, Oregon Email story ideas to news@lagrande observer.com. More contact info on Page A4. Online at lagrandeobserver.com