INSIDE TROUT & TRAILS: BLUES ARE PERFECT PLACE FOR A DAY OF MOUNTAIN BIKING AND FISHING | OUTDOORS & REC, B1 July 23, 2022 lagrandeobserver.com | $1.50 WEEKEND EDITION Funds will help schools keep staff FAMILY LEGACY School leaders discuss how they will spend their HB30 money Five generations of descendants ring in the centennial anniversary for La Grande’s M.J. Goss Motors By DICK MASON The Observer UNION COUNTY — The challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic have brought out the best in many of the teachers and staff in Union Coun- ty’s public schools. And now these school districts are stepping forward to show their gratitude. This point is clear based on how school districts are responding to House Bill 4030, which the Legis- lature passed earlier this year. The legislation provides about $70 mil- lion to Oregon school districts to help them recruit new staff mem- bers and retain their current ones, as they recover from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Representatives from Union County’s public schools across the board indicated the HB 4030 money they are receiving will be used to help retain current staff members, not recruit new ones. The La Grande School Dis- trict, which will receive $270,000 in HB 4030 funding, will be using all of it to give teachers and staff members additional training to help them better support students and their families, said Assistant Superintendent Scott Carpenter. The Union School District is set to receive a little more than $40,000 in funding from HB 4030. All of this funding will go directly to the school district’s employees. “We will divert all of it to our staff for retention. We are saying thank you for all the sacrifi ces our staff has made,” said Union School District Superintendent Carter Wells, referring to the chal- lenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic. The Elgin School District will receive about $50,000 in House Bill 4030 funding. Elgin Super- intendent Dianne Greif said all of the funding will be used for staff development. 1930s By SHANNON GOLDEN • The Observer A GRANDE — Surrounded by friends, employees, neighbors and customers, Mark Goss and the fi ve generations of the Goss family are celebrating a century of success. L The M.J. Goss Motor Co., a Union County landmark at 1415 Adams Ave., La Grande, is celebrating its 100th year of serving customers. The Chevrolet, Buick and GMC dealership sells new and pre-owned cars, trucks and SUVs, and provides full-service support for cars of all types. For Tayde McAndie, Mark’s daughter and the great-granddaughter of founder M.J. Goss, a throughline in the company’s history has always been its small-town feel and its ability to give customers a no-hassle buying experience. “Our roots have always stayed the same,” she said of the business’ 1946 See, Goss/Page A7 Goss Motors/Contributed Robert Dale “Bob” Goss, 97, marvels at the cars cruising along Adams Avenue for the La Grande Classic Car Show on Saturday, July 16, 2022. He is the last living child of M.J. Goss III, the founder of the storied La Grande dealership. 1949 Photos HISTORICAL PHOTOS FROM TOP Except for the cars, the storefront of La Grande’s Goss Motors today still resembles this 1930s photograph. The Goss Motors service department crew poses for a photo in 1946 in the dealership’s main building on Adams Avenue. Inventive incentives The approximately $40,000 of funding North Powder School Dis- trict will receive also will all go toward helping current teachers and staff , said Superintendent M.J. Goss III and his son Bill stand next to a shiny Chevy four-door sedan at a new car unveiling in the fall of 1949. Goss Motors had the tradition of hosting new car reveals every September. Shannon Golden/The Observer TODAY » A refurbished 1922 Chevrolet sits outside of Goss Motors, on Saturday, July 16, 2022, highlighting the business’ 100 years of service. See, School/Page A7 Elbow Creek Fire cause remains unknown 2021 blaze torched nearly 23,000 acres in Wallowa County By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain Wallowa County Chieftain, File A fi re line, cut with a bulldozer, crosses the forest fl oor near Promise on Thursday, July 22, 2021, as fi re crews work to stop the spread of the Elbow Creek Fire. A year later, the cause of the fi re — which consumed 22,960 acres before it was contained in mid-August — is still unknown. WEATHER INDEX Classified ......B2 Comics ...........B5 Crossword ....B2 Dear Abby ....B6 WALLOWA COUNTY — As the one-year mark of the beginning of the Elbow Creek Fire passes, Wallowa County residents are still waiting for offi cials to determine a cause. First reported the afternoon of July 15, 2021, about 5 miles northwest of Promise, the fi re consumed 22,960 acres of the Walla Walla Ranger Dis- Horoscope ....B3 Local...............A2 Lottery ...........A2 Obituaries .....A5 Opinion .........A4 Outdoors ......B1 Sports ............A8 Sudoku ..........B5 Full forecast on the back of B section Tonight Sunday 53 LOW 91/56 Clear Sunny trict in the Umatilla National Forest before it was contained in mid-Au- gust, according to Darcy Weseman, a public aff airs offi cer for the Umatilla National Forest in Pendleton, in an email Friday, July 15. The blaze took a few buildings in remote areas and threatened the town of Troy — which at one point was evacuated — as it burned on See, Fire/Page A7 CONTACT US 541-963-3161 Issue 88 2 sections, 14 pages La Grande, Oregon Email story ideas to news@lagrande observer.com. More contact info on Page A4.