REGION TUESDAY, MAY 3, 2022 THE OBSERVER — A3 Forestry collaboratives receive federal grants Northern Blues Forest Collaborative received $3M for project AT A GLANCE Northern Blues Forest Restoration — $3 million: A 10.4-million-acre project to reduce wildfi re risk and prepare the landscape to safely manage fi re. Southern Blues Restoration Coali- tion — $3 million: A project to restore 1 million acres that suff er from drasti- cally changing wildfi re patterns, spe- cies composition, and forest stand densities that threaten to destroy key habitat, old growth, important aquatic resources and private property due to uncharacteristic wildfi res and eff ects of a changing climate. Rogue Basin Landscape Restoration Project — $3 million: A 4.6 million-acre project intended to accelerate resto- ration treatments to meet goals of wild- fi re risk reduction, landscape resiliency, improved wildlife habitat, watershed protection, adaptation, and social and economic resilience. Lakeview Stewardship — $2 million: An 859,000-acre project to create a healthy, resilient and functional forest landscape maintained with fi re to miti- gate the threat of high-severity wildfi res. By STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle WASHINGTON — Forest col- laboratives in Central and Eastern Oregon have received word they will be getting upward of $11.6 mil- lion in federal funding. The collaboratives, which bring together environmentalists, public and private land managers, and timber industry professionals, seek to fi nd common ground on hot- button forestry issues. The projects were selected by a federal advisory committee and funded through the Collabora- tive Forest Landscape Restoration Program, which is intended to encourage ecological and economic sustainability and reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfi res. The Southern Blues Restoration Coalition, a joint eff ort of Blue Mountains Forest Partners and the Harney County Restoration Col- laborative, received $3 million. Both groups are forestry collab- oratives, groups of diverse stake- holders formed to fi nd solutions to stubborn forestry issues that satisfy environmental concerns while pro- viding jobs in the woods and gen- erating a steady and predictable timber supply to feed area lumber mills. Backed by the two collabora- tives, the Southern Blues Resto- ration Coalition has been supported by CFLRP money since 2012. The coalition was initially awarded Blue Mountain Eagle, File The Southern Blues Restoration Coalition, a joint eff ort of Blue Mountains Forest Partners and the Harney County Restoration Collaborative, received $3 million. Both groups are forestry collaboratives, groups of diverse stakeholders formed to fi nd solutions to stubborn forestry issues that satisfy environmental concerns while providing jobs in the woods and generating a steady and predictable timber supply to feed area lumber mills. $2.5 million per year and received a bump to $4 million per year in 2016. Malheur National Forest pro- gram manager Roy Walker said a big chunk of the money they will receive would go toward prescribed burning. Some of the funding, he added, would go to pre-commercial thinning throughout the Southern Blues Coalition area. Walker said the main goal is to reduce wildfi re hazards on the Malheur. “(The funding) is really helping us accelerate our restoration out here in the (Malheur) National Forest,” Walker said. Northern Blues collaborative The Northern Blues Forest Col- laborative received $3 million for a 10.4 million-acre project in the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest to reduce wildfi re risk and prepare California man goes to federal prison for role in Eastern Oregon meth trade East Oregonian PORTLAND — A Cal- ifornia man who was part of a methamphetamine traffi cking ring in Eastern Oregon and beyond is going to federal prison. The federal court in Port- land on Wednesday, April 27, sentenced Noel Lomas Murillo, 34, to fi ve years in prison and another three years of supervised release. According to the press release from the U.S. Attor- ney’s Offi ce of Oregon, the Blue Mountain Enforce- ment Narcotics Team, Oregon State Police and the FBI, Murillo in November 2017 began a drug traf- fi cking organization led by his brother, Abel Lomas Murillo, 28, of Weston. The investigation revealed that, as early as July 2017, Noel Murillo trans- ported drugs from Vacav- ille, California, to Klamath Falls where a courier would deliver them to his brother. Abel Murillo also made mul- tiple trips to Medford to pick up drugs and transport them to Morrow and Umatilla counties for distribution. An OSP trooper in Jan- uary 2018 stopped one of Abel Murillo’s couriers, Luis Alberto Navarro, 33, of Boardman, in a vehicle near Klamath Falls en route to Umatilla County. A search of the vehicle revealed 11 con- cealed packages containing more than 8 kilograms of methamphetamine. In early May 2018, as the investigation continued, Abel Murillo enlisted another courier, Noel Ponce Vil- legas, 28, also of Boardman, to drive meth from Medford to Boardman. Investigators surveilled Abel Murillo as he traveled from Umatilla County to a storage locker in Medford and loaded a trailer pulled by his truck. Abel Murillo paid Vil- legas to drive his truck and trailer while he followed him to minimize his own risk. In the early morning hours of May 6, 2018, investigators from BENT, state police and FBI stopped Abel Murillo and Villegas near mile marker 102 on Interstate 84. Investigators seized 42 packages of methamphet- amine, 36 of which were concealed in the false bottom of a propane tank, according to the press release. The packages contained approximately 17.6 kilo- grams of methamphetamine. Later the same day, inves- tigators executed a search warrant at Abel Murillo’s residence, seizing 29 fi re- arms and body armor. Pur- suant to a separate search warrant, law enforcement seized another 10 pounds of meth and fi ve fi rearms in a Medford storage locker Abel Murillo had visited earlier in the weekend. A federal grand jury in Portland on Dec. 19, 2019, returned a two-count super- seding indictment charging Noel Murillo with con- spiring to possess with intent to distribute methamphet- amine and possessing with intent to distribute meth- amphetamine. He pleaded guilty to the conspiracy charge on Sept. 28, 2021. Navarro in May 2018 pleaded guilty to possessing with intent to distribute methamphetamine. His sen- tencing is May 23. Abel Murillo in April 2019 pleaded guilty to con- spiring to possess with intent to distribute methamphet- amine. He is serving almost 20 years in federal prison for the crime. Villegas in April 2019 pleaded guilty to pos- sessing with intent to dis- tribute methamphetamine. His received a sentence in December 2020 of time served and three years’ supervised release. the landscape to manage fi re safely. Nils Christoff ersen, the executive director of Wallowa Resources, a member of the Northern Blues Restoration Part- nership, said there had been a sig- nifi cant loss of capacity to manage forests on both the public and pri- vate sides since the 1990s. These funds, he said, help off set that disinvestment. Most people, he said, concerned about the landscapes and commu- nities of Eastern Oregon have been arguing for a long time that these forests need additional money and staff to respond to the challenges they face. Christoff ersen said the No. 1 thing in people’s minds is wildfi re. But the funding, he said, is not lim- ited to fi re prevention. “We’re looking at how we can improve the forest’s overall condi- tion,” he said. 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