INSIDE NEW ADAMS AVENUE BARBER SHOP OFF TO BUSY START | BUSINESS & AGLIFE, B1 Day “Pioneer that t is an even look to allows us past toward the e the iat to apprec present.” August 18, 2022 INSIDE WW W.G AUG . 17-2 OEA STE RNO REG ON.C OM te Celebra Cove ry Fair Cher 4, 2022 lagrandeobserver.com | $1.50 THURSDAY EDITION PA GE 3 Taste Melon Fest r Pione y e Da E H ER ITAG N STAT IO M ’S M US EU L AN N UA EV EN T S RE TU RN PA GE 8 Police make arrest in hit and run Elijah Ward arrested in connection to weekend death of Maison Andrew By ISABELLA CROWLEY The Observer LA GRANDE — Law enforcement arrested a La Grande man Tuesday, Aug. 16, in connection with the hit-and-run death of Maison Andrew, according to a press release from the La Grande Police Department. Elijah Ward, 26, was arrested after offi cers located the car parked out- side his residence at 609 Y Ave., according to Police Chief Gary Bell. During the course of the investigation, police connected the hit- and-run with a white 2009 Mitsubishi Galant. The investigation began after La Grande police responded to a report at 5:30 a.m. Aug. 13, of a dead male on the side of 16th Street. La Grande police offi - cers responded and imme- diately confi rmed the indi- vidual had died. The investigation revealed that a vehicle traveling south on 16th Street struck Andrew as he was walking on the street sometime during the night, according to La Grande police Lt. Jason Hays. The driver fl ed without con- tacting emergency services. Ward was taken into cus- tody without incident and booked in the Union County Jail, according to Bell. He has been charged with sec- ond-degree manslaughter and failure to perform the duties of a driver to an injured person. So far, Ward has cooperated with the investigation, Bell said. The investigation is ongoing and additional charges may be fi lled. La Grande police also urged anyone with pertinent infor- mation to contact Sgt. Ryan Miller at 541-963-1017. KEEP HISTORY ALIVE ON PIONEER DAY AUG. 20 PA GE 7 Listen Jazz Trio PA GE 4 g new omethin at HATCHED to be wild Why Tribes are pursuing a controversial salmon recovery strategy By COLE SINANIAN Columbia Insight E LGIN — Rick Zollman stands at the edge of a rectangular, concrete pool, peering into the water below. Tens of thousands of juvenile chinook salmon rush toward him, their speckled backs and silver bellies glistening in the afternoon sun. Zollman waves and smiles at the fi sh as they leap from the water to greet him, condi- tioned to expect food when they sense the presence of their loyal caretaker. Each of the 18 pools — or raceways — at Northeast Ore- gon’s Lookingglass Hatchery, outside of Elgin, holds roughly 65,000 juvenile chinooks, totaling nearly 1.5 million fi sh. The fi sh were hatched here in January from parents collected in one of fi ve of the region’s rivers, then transferred to the raceways in spring. They’ll remain here for a year, growing and maturing until ready for release into the wild. Shaded by towering lodge- pole and ponderosa pines, Look- ingglass Hatchery sits along Lookingglass Creek in the his- toric homeland of the Nez Perce Tribe. The Nez Perce have exclu- sive fi shing rights to Looking- glass Creek, one of the Tribe’s traditional fi shing spots. For cen- turies, Nez Perce families have gathered here to harvest salmon returning from the Pacifi c. The tribe uses the hatchery to restore the area’s natural pop- ulation of wild chinook, in the Cole Sinanian/Columbia Insight Rick Zollman checks in on a pen full of broodstock at Lookingglass Hatchery, outside of Elgin. hatchery. The goal is to ensure that the fi sh released from the hatchery are from the same genetic lin- eage as the wild stock, so they can return to spawn natu- rally, eff ectively making their off spring a part of the wild population. Many scientists and hopes that they may one day reach levels that support consis- tent harvest. The hatchery dilemma In a controversial practice known as “supplementation,” Lookingglass managers take mature wild fi sh from the area’s streams and spawn them at the conservationists have pointed to hatcheries as a contributing factor to the demise of wild salmon stocks in the Pacifi c Northwest. Releasing hun- dreds of millions of domes- ticated hatchery fi sh into the watershed each year allows for See, Salmon/Page A7 Johnson submits petitions in bid for Oregon governor By GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — Oregon governor candidate Betsy Johnson sub- mitted petitions to the Secretary of State on Tuesday, Aug. 16, to qualify her insurgent bid for governor in the Nov. 8 general election. Johnson The campaign for Johnson, the former Democratic state senator from Columbia County, delivered boxes it said contained petitions with 48,214 signatures to Sec- retary of State Shemia Fagan at noon Tuesday. The county by Johnson’s cam- paign would be twice the min- imum number of valid signatures required and even with the usual attrition of invalid signers would be “well over the number nec- essary to qualify,” said Johnson campaign spokesperson Jennifer Sitton. Democrat Tina Kotek and Republican Christine Drazan won their parties’ May 17 primaries and will also be on the ballot. Fagan’s offi ce is in the Public Administration Building in Salem while the nearby Capitol under- goes extensive renovations. Oregon Public Broadcasting WEATHER INDEX Business ........B1 Classified ......B3 Comics ...........B7 Crossword ....B3 Dear Abby ....B8 Horoscope ....B4 Lottery ...........A2 Obituaries .....A5 Opinion .........A4 Spiritual ........A6 Sudoku ..........B7 Weather ........B8 reported Johnson made a brief appearance at the event, thanking supporters for the eff ort. “Why did they do this?” she said. “They love Oregon. They want a better Oregon, free from partisan paralysis.” OPB reported Johnson did not take questions from the press who had gathered to cover the peti- tion drives’ ending. Aug. 16 was the deadline that Fagan had set to give her offi ce enough time to validate the signatures by the Aug. 30 deadline to add Johnson to the November ballot. The next step will be for Elec- tion Division offi cials to validate Full forecast on the back of B section Tonight Friday 63 LOW 93/58 Partly cloudy Very warm signatures by checking a random sampling suffi cient to show any problems with the overall signa- ture eff ort. If Johnson were to win elec- tion, she would be only the second governor elected without a major party nomination. Julius Meier, an indepen- dent, was elected to one term in 1935. Johnson (or Drazan) would be the fi rst non-Dem- ocrat woman elected governor. Gov. Barbara Roberts was the state’s fi rst woman elected gov- ernor, in 1990. She and Kate Brown, the current governor, are Democrats. CONTACT US 541-963-3161 Issue 99 3 sections, 20 pages La Grande, Oregon Email story ideas to news@lagrande observer.com. More contact info on Page A4.