FROM PAGE ONE Thursday, July 28, 2022 ThE OBsErVEr — A7 Wallowa County schools on track with new budgets By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain WALLOWA COUNTY — The money is in place and the three main school districts in Wallowa County are getting set for a new school year with about $45 million earmarked for edu- cation in Enterprise, Joseph and Wallowa for the coming year. Enterprise Some of that budgeting includes construction work, such as the $8 million bond levy approved in November 2020 for the Enterprise school building, largely to replace the leaky roof and upgrade access to Ameri- cans with Disabilities Act standards, such as remod- eling restrooms and adding ramps and lifts for wheel- chair-bound students and removing asbestos flooring. The $8 million was half the voter-approved levy and half matching funds from an Oregon School Capital Improvement grant from the Oregon Department of Education. Work began on the school this spring as soon as it let out, although it was slated to begin a year ear- lier. The delay was caused by the COVID-19 pan- demic and resulting diffi- culties in obtaining building DEBATE Continued from Page A1 long list of progressive pri- orities including increasing Oregon’s minimum wage, providing paid sick leave and raising business taxes to increase funding for schools. She has raised $3.3 mil- lion and has $454,000 on-hand, in part because she has yet to receive large donations from national groups such as the Demo- cratic Governors Associa- tion. Separately, a political action committee attacking Johnson called Oregonians for Ethics has raised more than $200,000 including from the Democratic Gov- ernors Association, public employee unions and the Oregon League of Conser- vation Voters. Drazan, who won the crowded Republican pri- mary in May, was elected to the state House in 2018 and served as House Republican leader from 2019 until she stepped down in 2021 to run for governor. She led House Republicans in a 2020 walkout to protest Demo- crats’ greenhouse gas cap- and-trade bill, which was up for a vote in the Senate, and united her caucus in 2021 to join Democrats in voting to expel fellow Republican Rep. Mike Nearman for his role let- ting violent demonstra- tors into the state Capitol in December 2020. She has raised $4.2 million and has $1.3 million on-hand. With months to go until the general election, polls have shown the three women in a close race with the most recent pub- licly available poll, paid for by legislative Republi- cans, showing Drazan and Kotek in a statistical tie and Johnson within striking distance. With three serious candidates on the ballot, the winner will need only a plurality of votes to become governor. The slate of debates could provide opportunities for the candidates to distin- guish themselves on issues including abortion access, homelessness, gun violence and other crimes. Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain, File Construction work is ongoing at the Enterprise schools, as was evident Thursday, July 14, 2022. materials. The overall budget for Enterprise for 2022-23 is $19,275,000, according to Karen Josi, business man- ager for fiscal services for the Educational Service District. She emphasized that the amount includes the $8 million for construction work. Tom Crane, Enterprise school superintendent, said he is pleased with the new THE OBSERVER TO LIVESTREAM OREGON GUBERNATORIAL DEBATE LA GRANDE — The three leading candidates in the race to become Oregon’s next gov- ernor will appear live at a forum Friday, July 29, hosted by the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association. Republican nominee Chris- tine Drazan, Democratic nom- inee Tina Kotek and unaffiliated candidate Betsy Johnson are all scheduled to debate starting at 2 p.m. in Welches. The forum is moderated by Pamplin Media Group Presi- dent Mark Garber. Questions will come from editors of news- papers across Oregon. The debate will be live- streamed on The Observer’s website, www.lagrande- observer.com. — The Observer Along with the news- paper publishers and KOBI debates, two of the candi- dates — Johnson and Kotek — have already committed to participate in other var- ious debates. Johnson plans to par- ticipate in a debate hosted by KTVZ, the City Club of Central Oregon and Oregon State University Cascades at an unspecified date, according to Johnson’s campaign spokesperson Jennifer Sitton. She wants her opponents to commit to one televised debate or forum in Medford, Port- land, Eugene, Bend, Pend- leton and Coos Bay. Kotek does not plan to participate in the Cen- tral Oregon debate but has said she will partici- pate in the KGW/The Ore- gonian debate, which will take place in October, and the OPB and Our Chil- dren Oregon debate Oct. 22. Kotek also plans to participate in the City Club of Eugene and City Club of Salem gubernato- rial forums, the dates of which are not yet known. She has called for Johnson and Drazan to join her for a forum that would focus specifically on gun safety but “neither Johnson or Drazan have responded,” Kotek’s spokesperson Katie Wertheimer said in an email. included cost-of-living allowances and $200,000 in budgeting for increased fuel costs. budget, particularly that the district has completed a col- lective bargaining agree- ment for four-year contracts for the teachers. “I think we’re in good shape,” he said. Josi said the only fac- ulty addition is that of a new agriculture teacher for middle school and high school students. Some noteworthy increases in the budget Wallowa Joseph Joseph Charter School adopted a budget of just over $14 million on June 13, Super- intendent Lance Homan said Thursday, July 14. “It’s pretty standard,” he said, adding that the coming year’s budget is much like Continued from Page A1 “I don’t want to throw the county’s dollars at something that will not get results,” the Union County commissioner said. 20 cats on 10 acres Girard feels sympathy for homeless cats that have to fend for themselves. They are in a bad situation through no fault of their own, he said. “The whole reason they were put in this position is because of humans,” Girard said. When someone releases a feral cat on his property Girard begins a three-step process. First, he attempts to capture the feline in a live trap that causes no harm. Once the animal is trapped, he has it spayed or neutered, and after that he releases the cat — unless it is a kitten he might be able to find a home for. He said that since 2020 he has spent about $2,000 a year on spaying and neu- tering the cats that have appeared at his farm. He dick Mason/The Observer Mark Girard operates a piece of machinery on his hobby farm in Union on Tuesday, July 26, 2022. said he can’t continue to do this because the 4 acres he owns and a 6-acre con- nected parcel owned by a neighbor now have a total of 20 feral cats. This is all the feral cats the combined 10-acre area can hold, Girard said. For his daughter Girard does not describe himself as a cat FIRE can catch them when the fires start to go extreme,” said Johnson, who’s a wild- land fire technician for the Vale District. “Any fire that started on your urban interface area, we’re just trying to keep it off federal land and vice versa — if we have a fire on federal land, we really don’t want to push it onto the urban interface,” he said. Fire breaks are cre- ated using tractors with metal disk attachments that remove vegetation and expose bare dirt, which deprives flames of fuel. Workers also mow grass and use herbicides to con- trol grass. When built near roads, the breaks create a 50-foot buffer — a zone where fire crews have a better chance to stop advancing flames. Each spring or summer, typically in May or June, — Toby McBride,Vale Rangeland Fire Protection District, talking about how firebreaks helped stop the Willowcreek fire in late June BLM workers maintain the firebreaks, Johnson said. They bring in heavy machinery to clear out veg- etation in preparation for fire season. Johnson said they completed this year’s maintenance on the breaks in the Willowcreek fire area just two weeks before it ignited on a 100-degree day with gusty west winds. “We’ve been main- taining these man-made fuel barriers over the last two decades,” said Justin Robinson, fuels techni- cian for the Vale District. “We’re making it safer for our firefighters and our communities.” Fire break history The idea for the fire- breaks that helped stop the Willowcreek Fire dates CLOG-FREE GUARANTEE 45 $ /mo * For 12 mos, plus taxes & equip.fee.$10/mo equip. fee applies. Limited availability in selectareas. *Price after $5/mo Autopay & Paperless bill discount (w/in 2 bills). Limited availability in select areas. May not be available inyour area. Call or goto att.com/internetto see if you qualify. Excludes DSL. Based on network availability. Contact your local DIRECTV dealer IV Support Holdings 888-486-0359 INTERNET OFFER: Subj. to change and may be discontinued at any time. 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AT&T INTERNET 100 lover, but he does not have it in him to turn a home- less cat away. “It would harden my heart to throw them aside,” Girard said. “I can’t turn any animal away that is suffering.” The Union farmer is inspired to reach out to feral and stray cats by the memory of his daughter Nicole, who died in 2016 “Being proactive saved us from having a fire twice as big.” Continued from Page A1 Get strong, fast Wi-Fi to work and play throughout your home. ^ Number of devices depends on screen size/resolution. Tammy Jones, super- intendent of the Wallowa schools, said the school board there also adopted its budget June 13. Wallowa approved a general fund budget of $4,116,767 that “addresses our district mis- sions and goals,” she said. Wallowa, like Enter- prise, is undergoing major construction work, having approved a $7 million bond levy that includes a $4 mil- lion OSCIM grant and a $2.3 million seismic grant. The general budget, she said, was able to pare back a little, eliminating a half-time distance learning teacher that was employed because of the COVID-19 pandemic and the need for some students to attend class from home. The district is adding new math curriculum for all grade levels, a half-time physical education teacher for K-8 and a new middle school teacher for grades six through eight. No layoffs have been scheduled, Jones said. She said enrollment went up just a little, which affects the budgeting the state does every two years. Schools are now entering the second year of the two-year budget cycle. “In the second year of a biennium, you expect where you are,” Jones said. “When you get to the end of it, you wonder where the state is going. … Do I wonder about the year after next? Yes I do.” But Jones isn’t worried. “It will be interesting to see where enrollment goes,” she said. “We’re tight but always been solid.” CATS BACKED BY A YEAR-ROUND FEEL THE SPEED, EVEN AT PEAK TIMES. the 2021-22 budget. He said the school is adding a STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics) room for K-6 and has two new teachers coming on board. Cameron Scott will be a new English teacher for the new English language arts program at the college level for junior high and high school students. Also, Hannah Schmidke is a new third-grade teacher. Homan said JCS can expect a new seismic grant of $2.5 million next year. He said the district has until September 2024 to spend it. It will be used to add structural support and a new roof on the main part of the school building. A new heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) system also will be funded separate from the seismic grant, “but it’ll work together,” he said. “That’ll be in the budget so you’ll see an increase next year,” Homan said. A OFF YOUR ENTIRE PURCHASE * FINANCING THAT FITS YOUR BUDGET! 1 Promo Code: 285 1 Subject to credit approval. Call for details. CALL US TODAY FOR A FREE ESTIMATE + 5 % OFF back almost 22 years. In 2000, the Jackson fire burned about 80,000 acres — twice as many as the Willowcreek Fire — of similar terrain in Malheur County. That fire prompted local residents and BLM offi- cials to talk about wild- fires, and residents created the Malheur County Com- munity Wildfire Protection Plan. That plan included building firebreaks across public and private land. Johnson said the system of firebreaks “gives our personnel something to work off of,” but it’s not guaranteed, because of varied weather patterns, that the breaks will stop a blaze dead in its tracks. “It’s all dependent on Prepare for Power Outages & Save Money OFF SENIORS & MILITARY! WE INSTALL YEAR-ROUND! TO THE FIRST 50 CALLERS ONLY! ** LIFETIME REQUEST A FREE QUOTE! WARRANTY 1-855-536-8838 Mon-Thurs: 8am-11pm, Fri-Sat: 8am-5pm, Sun: 2pm-8pm EST For those who qualify. One coupon per household. No obligation estimate valid for 1 year. *Off er valid at time of estimate only 2The leading consumer reporting agency conducted a 16 month outdoor test of gutter guards in 2010 and recognized LeafFilter as the “#1 rated professionally installed gutter guard system in America.” Manufac- tured in Plainwell, Michigan and processed at LMT Mercer Group in Ohio. See Representative for full warranty details. 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She would give up her rent money to help a sick cat, Girard said, and once she ran across a four-lane freeway to get to a feline that needed help. “I’m doing what I do today to keep her passion alive,” Girard said. fire activity, because you can have fire whirls that bring embers across the road,” Johnson said. But with the Willow- creek Fire, the breaks ful- filled their purpose despite the gusty winds. “Being proactive saved us from having a fire twice as big,” said Toby McBride, a volunteer with the Vale Rangeland Fire Protection District who helps main- tain the firebreaks and was on the ground during the Willowcreek Fire. “The wind was blowing pretty good, but the fire burned right up to the lines and went out. I don’t think we would’ve held it at the road without them.” Robinson agreed. “Fuel breaks helped firefighters contain the Willowcreek Fire without bulldozers or other heavy equipment,” he said. “This project’s success shows us how important collab- oration can be to protect local communities from wildfires.”