FROM PAGE ONE SATURDAY, JULY 23, 2022 THE OBSERVER — A7 SCHOOL FIRE Continued from Page A1 Continued from Page A1 Lance Dixon. “It will be used for pro- fessional development,” Dixon said. The money will go toward helping staff mem- bers who want to become teachers pay for the col- lege credits they need and compensating mentors assisting new teachers. Dixon noted that new teachers often have many questions about how to do things but may be reluctant to ask them because they don’t want to bother their colleagues. Dixon said that when a teacher who is paid extra to also be a mentor is available, new educators will feel more comfortable going to such a teacher for advice. The North Powder superintendent said he would not want the HB 4030 funding to be spent on things like signing bonuses for new teachers or other recruiting incen- tives. He said this would not be fair to educators who have worked at the school district for many years. The Cove School Dis- trict will also be using the state funding to boost retention — with a twist. Two elliptical exercise machines for staff mem- bers will be purchased with some of the money. both sides of the Grande Ronde River and blanketed the county with smoke, although no lives were lost. Weseman said at its peak, approximately 1,100 personnel were involved in fi ghting the Elbow Creek Fire, “which included a variety of resources such as overhead assigned to the incident management team, ground support and fi refi ghters.” An incident command site was at the Wallowa schools, where fi re offi cials met to plan their assault on the wildfi re and fi refi ghters camped in tents on the school grounds. Weseman placed the fi nal cost to suppress the fi re at $22.8 million. Dick Mason/The Observer, File Cove School District teacher Erich Dressen helps Angel Shields- Marrs with a project on March 10, 2020. The Cove School District in 2022 plans to use funding from House Bill 4030 to boost retention of its staff , including purchasing a pair of elliptical exercise machines for staff members to use and paying for teachers’ tuition for college courses needed to earn endorsements that will qualify them to teach a wider range of subjects, according to the district’s superintendent, Earl Pettit. The exercise machines are meant to provide the opportunity for staff mem- bers who want to work out on such devices but may not be able to get into La Grande enough to use them in its exercise gyms, said Cove Superintendent Earl Pettit. The HB 4030 funding will also be used to help Cove staff members pay tuition for college courses needed to earn endorse- ments that will qualify them to teach a wider range of subjects, Pettit said. The Imbler School Dis- trict will be receiving $48,000 in HB 4030 funds, and fi rst-year Superin- tendent Randy Waite said the money will be used to help maintain its strong retention rate. He said his school district is fortunate to have a staff fi lled with members who want to stay. “We are lucky in this way,” Waite said. Origin The big questions are still about the fi re’s origin. “The goal is to answer the fi ve W’s (who, what, where, when, why and how),” Weseman said. “The order changes in fi re inves- tigation to when, where (origin), how (cause), why (is there intent or mali- ciousness), who (subjects or suspects).” As for its origin, at the time of the fi re it was spec- ulated that it could have been caused by a hot spot remaining from lightning strikes a week earlier or from rafters camping along the Grande Ronde River. But that remains under investigation. She said there is no esti- mated timeline for com- pleting the investigation. “Fire investigation entails determining the origin area, protecting and collecting evidence, photo documenta- tion, acquiring witness state- ments and more to deter- mine the possible cause(s) of a fi re,” Weseman said. “The primary goals in wildland fi re investigations are to pre- serve the scene, determine the origin, determine the cause, determine potential responsible parties, protect evidence and to preserve the interests of all parties as far as possible. Every wildland fi re investigation is unique. Timeliness of completion of an investigation (depends) on a variety of factors such as location, accessibility, evi- dence analysis and resources available.” There also is a level of confi dentiality investigators maintain during an active investigation “to not jeopar- dize the outcome,” she said. Nature or humans? That doesn’t appear to be so necessary when a fi re is obviously lightning caused. The recent Marr Creek Fire, which burned 10 acres east of Joseph earlier this month, was quickly attributed to lightning. Last year’s Bootleg Fire in Southern Oregon, GOSS time within the next year, and is starting to show his daughter, McAndie, and her husband, Kyle, the ropes. Continued from Page A1 one-stop-shop capabilities. “We intend for that to stay the same.” Since the business took root in Union County 100 years ago, Goss Motors has remained a family endeavor. And it has no plans of stopping. Moving forward A solid foundation Milo Jasper Goss III, the com- pany’s founder, was born on Jan. 7, 1888, in Prairieville, Mich- igan. In his late teens, he moved to Fruitland, Idaho, to work as a farm laborer. By January 1917, Goss had arrived in La Grande and found work as a clerk for a La Grande grocer named C. L. Thorne. He met his future wife, Ada Frances Colt, and the couple married in 1918. Goss began working for auto garages in La Grande. During his employment at Inland Motor Co. between 1920 and 1921, he became so successful at selling Studebakers that he earned the name “Studebaker Goss.” Goss bought out the Stude- baker agency in La Grande around December 1922. He estab- lished M.J. Goss Motor Co. at 1115 Washington Ave., and The Observer printed announcements of the takeover in February 1923 — titled “Auto Agency Changes Hands.” The couple had four children in the 1920s — Milodene, Milo Jasper “Bill” Jr., Robert Dale “Bob” and Kenton “Ken.” As the Goss family grew, so did the business. In 1923, Goss relocated the business to the corner of Fir Street and Adams Avenue. He soon branched out from selling Stude- bakers, adding Plymouths, Olds- mobiles and DeSotos to the inven- tory. Unable to staff the garage during World War I, Goss briefl y closed the business. Upon reopening, the dealership moved in 1932 to its present loca- tion at 1415 Adams Ave. Bill and Bob served in World War II. After the war, all three sons became partners in the family business. Bill married Donna Knight after returning from the war. The couple had four children — Garnet, Mark, Susie and Milo. In the 1940s, the dealership began selling Chevrolets. A decade later, they fi nally phased out the Studebaker. Bill and Ken would continue to work at Goss Motors throughout their lives; Bob later moved on to another local dealership, Gateway Motors. Their father passed away in Portland in May 1963 and was buried in Union County’s Sum- merville Cemetery. Outside of his role as “Stude- baker Goss,” the elder Goss also left his philanthropic mark on La Grande. He was one of the early contributors to the Grande Ronde Symphony Orchestra after its for- mation in 1951. “He was really an involved, invested community member in La Grande,” said Mary Groupe, spurred by months of drought and a blistering heat wave in June 2021, was the largest wildfi re of the year, burning more than 340,000 acres — or 530 square miles — of forest and grasslands by the time Elbow Creek got going, according to The New York Times. The U.S. Forest Ser- vice often uses back- burning to suppress fi res, which increases the area of acreage burned, OSU Extension said. Other possible reasons for an increase in total acreage burned include: • An increase in the number of fi res caused by humans. • A history of fi re sup- pression that has led to an increase in the amount of fuels that are connected across the landscape. • A warmer and drier cli- mate that is causing avail- able dead fuels to dry out earlier in the year. • A warmer and drier cli- mate that reduces the mois- ture content of live vegeta- tion. This increases plants’ potential to combust and adds to the available fuels on the landscape. While many wildfi res are started by lightning, the vast majority are believed to be human-caused. Fires can result when people leave campfi res unattended, negligently discard ciga- rettes or commit intentional acts of arson. Classic cars drive through the intersection of Adams Avenue and Greenwood Street on Saturday, July 16, 2022. M.J. Goss Motors held its centennial anniversary celebration on the same day as the annual La Grande Classic Car Show. Shannon Golden/The Observer one of Goss’ grandchildren. Over decades of steady sales, the company now has 32 employees and property on both sides of Adams Avenue. Around 2002, Dolven’s Appliances Inc., which was housed in the building across the street, went out of busi- ness. Goss Motors purchased the building, expanding its offi ces, showrooms and service spaces. The company’s inventory today includes Chevrolet, GMC, Cadillac, Buick and Pontiac prod- ucts. According to McAndie, M.J. Goss’ great-grandaughter who is the company’s electric car repre- sentative, Goss Motors will begin to introduce more electric vehicles in the coming years. All in the family For many of the Goss family members, the anniversary is more than just a milestone for the com- pany’s sweeping history. It’s also an opportunity to walk down memory lane. Goss Motors acted as a second home for a slew of children, grandchildren and great-grand- children. Mark Goss, the cur- rent owner and general manager, began pushing brooms at the busi- ness before he turned 8 years old. Garnet, his sister, recalled the time she spent as a child at Goss Motors, when her father would bring her and her siblings to the garage. “It was my dad’s job to babysit us and keep us out of trouble on Sundays,” she said. Garnet and her siblings took turns raising each other up on the garage’s rotary lifts. She also remembers the dealership’s old Coke machine, and the occasional search to see if mice had gotten into the empty bottles. Mary Groupe, Milodene Goss’ daughter and one of Mark’s cousins, said some of her earliest memories growing up revolved around the new car unveilings in the Goss showroom. In anticipa- tion of the yearly September event, the business would cover its windows, shielding the new models from eager onlookers on the main drag in down- town La Grande. According to Mary, when the day rolled around, everyone fl ocked to the dealership. “It was such a big deal,” she said. “I was so proud he was my grandfather.” She remembered the spectacle of these events, from the elegant 1950s fashion of the women in attendance to the spread of tea, coff ee, apple cider and dough- nuts set out for patrons. Attendees were given what she called “party favors” — accordioned rain bon- nets that came in little plastic cases. Even for the younger gener- ations who only spent snippets of their childhood in La Grande, the familiar smell of the dealer- ship is enough to bring memories rushing back. “Coming to La Grande is like coming home,” said Hayley Pratt, a fourth-generation descendant. “It always will be, and I haven’t lived here since I was a baby.” The newest family member — 5-month-old Remi, daughter of Tayde McAndie and her husband, Kyle — is already chalking up hours at the dealership. According to Tayde, Remi has met the staff and already seems familiar with the environment. “I hope she has great memories here as a kid,” Tayde said. “Like we did.” Passing the torch After attaining a business administration degree in Mich- igan, Mark started managing the business in his 20s, although his father remained active in the busi- ness until his passing in 2006. He Goss Motors/Contributed Photo M.J. Goss III, founder of M.J. Goss Motor Company, opened the motor shop in 1922 and began selling Studebakers like the one pictured in this photo. eventually bought out his uncle’s share of the company and con- tinued to expand Goss Motors into what it is today. Mark has been a Chevrolet dealer for 25 years, and currently co-owns the company with Mark Sherman. He noted that the car industry has grown away from what it used to be. “It’s just become corporate America,” he said, noting that the company is now franchised through General Motors. “You’re just a number out here.” Despite this shift, the company remains grounded in its com- munity focus. They’ve worked to bolster their online presence and connect with customers via social media. They also recently became a participating dealer with Warranty Forever, a mainte- nance-based coverage program. According to Mark Goss, the company has had opportunities to move from Adams Avenue to a perhaps more profi table location. For him, the decision to stay in downtown La Grande prioritized community over the business. “If we weren’t downtown, what would downtown La Grande have?” he said. With more than four decades of co-ownership under his belt, Mark has his sights set on retire- ment — eager for more time to golf. He plans to shift to part- From a childhood full of mem- ories at the dealership to countless hours spent working in the ser- vice department during college, McAndie is now the business devel- opment and marketing manager for the company. “There’s just so much history in this building. I’m probably too attached to it,” Tayde said with a smile. She used to love sitting in the showroom cars with her siblings, Mavric and Caylin. “We weren’t allowed to honk the horns, but we played in them and loved to see all the new rigs,” she said. On career day in ele- mentary school, Tayde chose to shadow her father, fascinated by the ins and outs of the body shop, the service depart- ment and the company’s old computer database. When her mom came to pick her up, she elected to stay with her father until the end of his workday. Now, Tayde and Kyle are poised to pick up the family business, although neither of them expected a career in car sales. Kyle, who initially went to school to be a fi refi ghter paramedic, began working at the company in 2010. Tayde, who graduated with a bachelor’s degree in music, has been at the business full-time since 2014. As employees themselves, they know well the dynamics of a family business. “I wouldn’t work in the car busi- ness other than here,” Kyle said, noting the company’s down-to- earth approach to customer service. Kyle bought his fi rst car, a white 1985 Chevy blazer, from Mark years before he met his daughter. Now as the couple navigates their roles as new parents, Kyle will work closely with Mark to learn how to run the company. “It’s nerve-wracking,” he said, “but exciting too. There’s a lot of responsibility.” Tayde said she never felt pres- sured to step into owning the busi- ness. She just wants to fi ll the role as best she can. “That means that I do well for the business, I do well for the employees, for our customers and the community,” she said. Tayde is unsure who will step into the role after her and Kyle, but she hopes to pass it on in a stable condition, with its legacy intact. With the unique nature of the business’ upcoming fourth-genera- tion ownership, some in the family may be eager to see Remi carry on the family business. But for Tayde, it’s one step at a time. “I want her to follow her dreams,” she said. “Whatever those are, whether that’s here or else- where, I want her to be able to decide that for herself.”