INSIDE FROM HORSES TO CARS, THE HISTORY OF THE EAST END OF ADAMS AVENUE | HOME & LIVING, B1 lagrandeobserver.com | $1.50 TUESDAY EDITION July 12, 2022 Joyful return Poll shows a reason for GOP optimism New leadership for the Union County chapter of Special Olympics Oregon and athletes preparing for regional games Republican State Leadership Committee poll suggests GOP has chance to win in November By RONALD BOND By JULIA SHUMWAY For The Observer Oregon Capital Chronicle L A GRANDE — With very little being said in recent years about the Union County chapter of Special Olym- pics Oregon, Lis and JT Thorne noted there was some concern that the program had dropped altogether. But the couple, who a few months ago took over as the local program coordinators for the orga- nization, said the program is up and running once again after a hiatus that saw the group face the passing of a man who was the face of the organization for decades, Doug Trice, and a long pause due to COVID-19. “With Doug passing, a lot of people are assuming that the pro- gram is gone,” Lis Thorne said. “It’s defi nitely a regrowth year, and we are trying to do the best we can. We’re full steam ahead.” The Thornes, whose daughter, Dani, has been a Special Olym- pics athlete for about nine years, See, Olympics/Page A3 SALEM — Republicans haven’t con- trolled any branch of Oregon government since Barack Obama’s fi rst campaign for president — but they’re bullish this year about their legislative chances. An internal poll memo produced for the national Republican State Leadership Com- mittee and shared with the Capital Chron- icle suggests that Republicans have a “rare opportunity” to win in November, thanks to low opinions of President Joe Biden and Ore- gon’s Democratic leaders. “Voters across Oregon have had enough and view Republican state legislators as the remedy to get the state out of a downward spiral and back on the right track,” com- mittee spokesperson Zach Kraft said in a statement. All 60 House districts and 30 Senate dis- tricts are new this year following last year’s post-census legislative redistricting. Leg- islative Democrats controlled redistricting, and independent analyses like Dave’s Redis- tricting website suggest the new districts disproportionately benefi t Democratic candidates. But polls, both the internal poll released by Republicans and earlier public surveys, show that a majority of Oregon voters aren’t pleased with the state’s direction. More than 57% of the 600 likely voters surveyed by national GOP polling fi rm Cygnal between June 28-30 said the state was on the wrong track. When asked about generic legislative can- didates, nearly 35% said they would defi - nitely vote for a Republican, and another 12% said they would probably vote for the Republican. The same numbers were 10.5% and 32% for Democrats, giving Republicans a nearly 5-point lead on generic legislative ballots. About 52% of respondents said they dis- approved of the job legislative Democrats were doing, and 57% said government would work better with a more partisan balance. “There’s defi nitely a path for Republicans to a majority, and I don’t think that path has been there for the last 20 years,” said Senate Minority Leader Tim Knopp, R-Bend. The Republican nominee for governor, Christine Drazan, had a 1-point lead over Democratic nominee Tina Kotek, with 32.4% of respondents saying they would vote for Drazan, 31.4% choosing Kotek and 24.4% opting for nonaffi liated candidate Betsy Johnson. Johnson released her own poll Isabella Crowley/The Observer JT Thorne high-fi ves Dennis Adams during practice at the Eastern Oregon University track in La Grande on Wednesday, July 6, 2022. The Special Olympics athletes are training to compete at the regional games in Hermiston for track on July 16 and in Oregon City for golf on July 17. Special Olympics athletes, from left, Jennifer Coppin, Autumn Rush, Dennis Adams, Ranne Werner, Pete Crowell and Tommy Boren practice their softball throws at the Eastern Oregon University track in La Grande on Wednesday, July 6, 2022, in preparation for the upcoming Special Olympics Oregon regional games. Isabella Crowley/The Observer See, GOP/Page A3 Remnants of Hot Lake’s fi refi ghting legacy remain A hillside reservoir once fed a hydrant system at Hot Lake H ot Lake Springs, whose story as a hotel and a medical center dates back more than a century, has a history as rich as its min- eral-fi lled water. The site, DICK not surpris- MASON THE ANSWER MAN ingly, is filled with remnants of this past, including some that are keeping embers of a bygone firefighting era alive — two small hydrants that have been shut off for many decades. See, Hot Lake/Page A3 WEATHER INDEX Classified ......B2 Comics ...........B5 Crossword ....B2 Dear Abby ....B6 The hydrants are survivors of an era when Hot Lake virtu- ally had its own fire department. The system included a network of approximately 14 hydrants, all installed by Hot Lake’s owners about a century ago. This put Hot Lake in select company since at the time most fire hydrant systems were typically found only in incorporated towns and cities. “Hot Lake was like a small munic- ipality,” said Dick Roth, of Orting, Washington, a historian and author who has written six books about Union County’s history. Home .............B1 Horoscope ....B3 Local...............A2 Lottery ...........A2 Obituaries .....A5 Opinion .........A4 Oregon ..........A6 Sudoku ..........B5 Vance Orchard/Contributed Photo Dick Roth, right, drives Hot Lake’s old Model TT fi re engine in 1968 at the Eastern Oregon Livestock Show parade in Union. Full forecast on the back of B section Tonight Wednesday 66 LOW 88/57 Mostly cloudy A t-storm around CONTACT US 541-963-3161 Issue 83 2 sections, 12 pages La Grande, Oregon Email story ideas to news@lagrande observer.com. More contact info on Page A4.