FROM PAGE ONE THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 2022 THE OBSERVER — A7 BUILDING Continued from Page A1 to the structure. The sheriff wants to determine exactly what options are available for the one-story public safety building, which was constructed in 1979. For example, he wants to know for certain whether the building could with- stand the addition of a second story. To fi nd out, Bowen is proposing that an architecture and design fi rm, Mackenzie, which has offi ces in Portland and Seattle, be brought in to evaluate the condition of the current public safety building. “We would be hoping to get some concrete answers,” Bowen said. Mackenzie’s staff would also look at how space could be used more effi - ciently and provide cost estimates after doing a 10-week examination of the building. Mackenzie’s evalua- tion of the building would cost just under $40,000, Davis Carbaugh/The Observer A Union County Sheriff ’s Offi ce vehicle sits on Sixth Street outside of the county’s law enforcement building on Tuesday, April 26, 2022, in La Grande. according to a proposal it has prepared. “This would be a crucial step to keep the ball rolling in a way that would not be as expensive,” Bowen said. The sheriff may come before the board of com- missioners later and request funding for the study by Mackenzie. Paul Anderes, a member ANDERES HILL Continued from Page A1 Continued from Page A1 Reelection goals experience to good use as a county commissioner. “I want to help all of our businesses prosper and experience success,” Hill said. Projects Anderes wants to help complete include improvements at the La Grande/Union County Airport, where extensive repaving of its runway was conducted in 2021. Anderes is now leading an eff ort to help the airport make $1.4 million worth of additional improvements. These improvements would include adding a 10,000-gallon fuel storage tank. Anderes said more storage capacity is needed now in part because an increasing number of jet aircraft are now used to fi ght wildfi res. “Jets use a lot more fuel,” he said. Other improvements the $1.4 million package would cover include the purchase of a generator so that fuel can still be pumped when the electricity goes out, an additional hangar for fi re- fi ghting aircraft and a new building for equipment storage. A second project Anderes wants to help see through involves the Blue Mountains Forest Plan, which will guide the U.S. Forest Service in managing the Wallowa-Whitman, Umatilla and Malheur national forests. Anderes is chair of a committee overseeing a study of the socioeconomic status of the people living in area of these national forests, those who reside in Eastern Oregon’s Union, Wallowa, Baker, Umatilla, Mal- heur, Grant and Harney counties and Southeastern Washington’s Walla Walla, Columbia, Garfi eld and Asotin counties. The results of the study, being conducted by Eastern Oregon University’s Rural Engagement and Vitality Center, will be released in June. The study’s fi ndings will reveal how federal policies aff ect local econ- omies. Anderes, as chair of the committee over- seeing the study, hopes to help the Forest Service use the results of the study as a guide when the agency writes the Blue Mountains Forest Plan. A third project Anderes will continue focusing on if reelected is helping the Union County Public of the Union County Board of Commissioners, sup- ports Bowen’s plan. “This will be a great way to separate facts from opinion,” he said. Anderes said the poor condition of Union Coun- ty’s law enforcement building has been a con- cern of his for some time. “It has been a priority for me since our last sheriff was in. It is a signifi cant issue,” he said. Union County Com- missioner Matt Scarfo also likes Bowen’s pro- posal, noting that it would Scarfo provide an information base about the building that would be welcome. “The more information we have the better,” Scarfo said. Bowen said that reno- vating and adding to the current building based on recommendations by Mackenzie would be any- thing but a temporary Band-Aid approach. “We would want to see if it could suffi ce for the next 50 years,” Bowen said. Business background The Observer, File A LifeFlight and an Amerifl ight plane sit on the apron in front of Runway 16-34 Monday, June 29, 2020, at the La Grande/Union County Airport. PAUL ANDERES Anderes, 60, lives in La Grande and is former teacher at La Grande High School, where he taught agricultural science, forestry and fi refi ghting for 23 years. He was elected to a four- year term on the Union County Board of Commissioners in 2018. Anderes is a graduate of Oregon State University. Works Department mod- ernize its equipment. “The public works department has a lot of very old vehicles,” Anderes said. Accessible meetings The commissioner said he is enjoying the oppor- tunity to again participate in meetings open to the public now that the COVID pandemic has subsided. He much prefers talking to people in person rather than virtually, something he had to do almost exclu- sively at meetings during the pandemic. “I like to be able to see the body language of people when I’m talking to them,” he said. The Union County Board of Commissioners was able to resume in-person meetings in March. Before then, the public could listen and participate only online or by phone. Union County has continued to off er people the option of par- ticipating virtually even after personal attendance was allowed. Anderes said he wants people to con- tinue having the online and phone options. “This allows more people to take part in meet- ings,” Anderes said. He also said he would also like to see the county begin conducting meet- ings outside La Grande and in the evening to make it WYDEN Continued from Page A1 also pushed for a middle-income housing tax credit (MIHTC). “We’re going at every single level of this,” he said. In La Grande’s Housing Needs Analysis report, single-family homes were pointed out as the most vital form of housing needed in the coming years. According to the 2019 analysis, La Grande will experience a pro- jected growth of 1,392 new resi- dents in the next 20 years — 800 new units will be needed to com- easier for more people in outlying areas to attend. “There will be logistical issues but I think it is a good idea,” Anderes said. He noted that a June 8 meeting of the county commission, which will be conducted to discuss the Greater Idaho issue, will be held in the eve- ning, beginning at 6 p.m. in La Grande. MERA management Anderes, when dis- cussing the Mount Emily Recreation Area and steps being taken to manage it so that it is less vulnerable to wildfi res, said he feels good about the two-year management plan put in place by the county. The fi rst phase of management work was completed ear- lier this year. “We are striking a good balance for multiple uses. We are getting to the place where we are protecting it and making it more resil- ient to wildfi re in the long run and improving forest health,” Anderes said. MORE ELECTION INFORMATION What: Election for Position 1 on the Union County Board of Commissioners. When: Ballots for May 17 mail election are now in the process of being delivered to registered voters in Union County. Deadline: Election ballots must be returned to the Union County Clerk’s Offi ce by 8 p.m. Tuesday, May 17. pensate for the growth. In La Grande, roughly 25% of households are under severe rent burden due to spending over 50% of household income on housing — these totals qualify the city for a housing crisis. Fur- thermore, the study showed that renters in La Grande are nearly twice as likely to be cost bur- dened as homeowners. La Grande is currently looking at ways to ease these burdens, with the Housing Production Strategy in place through the city’s plan- ning commission. Several areas of focus include lowering minimum lot sizes for single-family detached Hill, who grew up in La Grande, is a grad- uate of La Grande High School and Western Busi- ness College in Portland. She left La Grande in the early 1970s and moved to the Portland area where she worked for the Oregon Department of Transporta- tion for three years. Later she worked for two real estate development fi rms for a total of fi ve years in Seattle, Washington, and then was employed in the mortgage banking business for fi ve years in Southern California. Hill returned to La Grande in 1991. Her experience in Union County, in addition to her private business work, includes a second stint with ODOT from 2010 to 2018, where she served in an executive support role for the agency’s District 5 and Area 5 managers. The candidate believes that through her expe- rience with ODOT she developed skills that would guide her as a county com- missioner. She explained that during her tenure with ODOT she helped inter- governmental agencies and the business sector come together and complete projects that benefi ted communities, businesses, agriculture and schools. Hill said she fi led to run for a position on the Union County Board of Commis- sioners not only because she believes she has the necessary background and skills but also because there is a need for commu- nity members to lead. “I believe that in the times we are living in it is important to step up, help where I can, and use my strengths to benefi t my community,” she said. Accessible meetings Hill wants to make it easier for people to attend meetings of the Union County Board of Commis- sioners. She said if elected she would strive to have homes and reducing barriers to developing cottage-style housing and accessory dwelling units. Similarly, the planning com- mission and La Grande Eco- nomic Development Department both have future plans in place to emphasize the use of underuti- lized buildings in downtown La Grande for housing and retail opportunities. Wyden emphasized the Decent, Aff ordable, Safe Housing for All Act, a bill he introduced in 2021, as a means to combat housing aff ordability. The bill aims to house homeless individuals within fi ve years through housing The Observer, File Mature ponderosa pines epitomize the wild beauty of the Mount Emily Recreation Area, outside La Grande, on Wednesday, Nov. 10, 2021. LISA HILL Hill, 68, is a La Grande resi- dent and a business owner. Her recent work experience includes an eight-year stint with the Oregon Department of Transportation in La Grande. She is a graduate of Western Business College. timber and homes. Hill said that she doesn’t want to comment further on the MERA management plan, which caused controversy in 2021, because she does not have fi rsthand information on how the decision to put it in place was made. Election goals the board conduct one of its two regular monthly meetings in the evening. Presently both of the coun- ty’s twice-a-month meet- ings begin at 9 a.m. on Wednesday in the Joseph Building in La Grande. Hill would also like to see the board conduct one of its meetings every three months in a Union County town outside La Grande, to make the board even more acces- sible to the public. MERA management When asked about steps being taken to manage the Mount Emily Recreation Area so that it is less vulnerable to wild- fi res, Hill said she sup- ports MERA and appreci- ates the benefi t it provides to the community. The candidate said she can understand why wildfi re is a concern because of the dry weather the region has experienced and because MERA is surrounded by The candidate said if elected one of her goals would be to expand the board of commissioners’ eff orts to make Union County a more popular place for tourists to visit. Hill noted that Uma- tilla County is known for the Pendleton Round-Up, Baker County for the Geiser Grand Hotel in Baker City, and Wal- lowa County for Wallowa Lake, arts and choco- late — but Union County does not have a signature drawing card. “We need some- thing that will get people passing by La Grande to think twice and con- sistently pull off the freeway,” Hill said. She said her fondness for the Grande Ronde Valley runs deep, and she wants more people to experience it. “I love this valley, it is home,” she said. “There is something about this valley that hooks you.” “There’s not a nook or cranny in the state from Portland to the valley or throughout the rural part of the state where people aren’t asking about housing.” — U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden vouchers, expand services to assist families in climbing out of housing poverty, increase production of aff ordable housing for families through investments into LIHTC and MIHTC, increase investment in homeownership in underserved communities and for low-income Americans, and encourage devel- opment strategies that are environ- mentally conscious. “Obviously, you aren’t going to get decent, aff ordable, safe housing for all in the next 15 min- utes. What we’ve been doing is pulling out pieces that touch on shelter beds, the warming sta- tions, housing vouchers and incentives for new construction,” Wyden said. “Every day I look for ways to help us with respect to getting more shelter.”