FROM PAGE ONE A6 — THE OBSERVER FIRE Continued from Page A1 Double Creek Fire, cleared brush and increased defensible space around homes along the Freezeout and Imnaha roads. Firefi ghters secured a pri- vate inholding (Section 36) along Grizzly Ridge between Buck Point and Pumpkin Creek. Dozers cleared vegetation along the power line in the Imnaha River corridor. All the known hunting parties were safely evac- uated from the area. According to a release from the governor’s offi ce, the decla- ration allows the Offi ce of the State Fire Marshal to take uni- fi ed command immediately. Wal- lowa County Sheriff Joel Fish has issued Level 3, Level 2 and Level 1 evacuation orders for homes near the fi re. Firefi ghters on Sept. 5 were scouting for additional options on the northern and southern por- tions of the fi re. Crews will mop up and patrol around structures along Freezeout Road and north along the Upper Imnaha Road. Firing operations will continue along the Upper Imnaha Road to secure the fi re backing down drainages to the east. State Fire Marshal task forces will continue to assist with structure protec- tion along the Imnaha Road and ensuring the protection of life and property in the community of Imnaha. Brown’s declaration cleared the way for the State Fire Mar- shal to mobilize fi refi ghters and equipment to assist local resources battling the fi re and further support a coordinated response. Local mutual aid and federal resources are on scene working to slow the fi re’s progress. An OSFM Incident Management Team assumed unifi ed com- mand Sept. 3 with federal part- ners. OSFM will bring in four additional task forces through the Oregon Fire Mutual Aid System from Lane, Clatsop, Washington and Yamhill counties to assist in the response. The Double Creek Fire is a “full suppression” blaze, which means offi cials are trying to douse it as soon as possible. The Wallowa County Sheriff ’s Offi ce on Sept. 4 modifi ed the evacuation levels for the Double Creek Fire. A Level 3 “Go Now” is in eff ect for the town of Imnaha and south to Freezeout Road. The Upper Imnaha Road, Hat Point Road and Wallowa Mountain Loop Road (Forest Service Road 39) are closed. A Level 2 “Get Set” is in eff ect for the area from the town of Imnaha north to Fence Creek, including the lands east toward Lightning Creek. A Level 1 “Be Ready” is in eff ect from Freezeout south to the Pallette Ranch and Imnaha River Woods. Eagle Cap Wilderness fi res The Sturgill and Nebo fi res in the Eagle Cap Wilderness, by contrast, are “managed” fi res. That means offi cials are using a variety of tactics, monitoring the fi res in some areas but taking actions, such as having helicop- ters drop water and dispatching fi refi ghters on the ground, to try to limit the fi res’ spread in cer- AR-15 Continued from Page A1 The AR-15 has been called “America’s Rifl e” by the National Rifl e Associa- tion. It’s been dubbed “Baby Killer” by gun-control advo- cates for its use in mass mur- ders of elementary school children in Connecticut and Texas. The total number of “AR-15 style” rifl es in the United States is diffi cult to tabulate. An estimate of 20 mil- lion is on the website of the National Shooting Sports Foundation, a fi rearms and ammunition industry trade group. It refers to the AR-15 variants as a “modern sports shooting rifl e.” “They’re popular for home defense, recreational target shooting and hunting,” the foundation website says. Colt fi rearms bought the patents for the AR-15 in 1959 from ArmaLite — the “AR” stands for “ArmaLite Rifl e.” The design was the inspiration of the M-16 rifl e, the standard American mil- itary rifl e since the Vietnam War. The patent for the AR-15 ran out in 1977, allowing The Associated Press, File Three variants of the AR-15 semiautomatic rifl e are shown by the California Department of Justice at a 2012 news conference. companies to build generic knockoff s. But Colt retained the AR-15 trademark, so each of the more than two dozen gunmakers who have built copycat variants has had to come up with its own name. Police call the alphabet soup of brands, names and numbers “AR-15 style.” The gun has proven so popular that no one can buy a new one. With the market fl ooded with competition, Colt announced in 2020 that it would no longer make the AR-15. But it held onto the name. The AR-15 is not a CELEBRATE Continued from Page A1 Celebrate La Grande is supported through sponsors, donations and discounts from businesses and organizations. Lastly, the celebration needed to include entertainment for children. Hot dogs, ice cream and activities for kids have been sta- ples of the block party since the beginning. La Grande Parks and Recreation now orga- nizes all the kid-friendly fun. Along with a planning committee, Lars- en-Hill and Franks organized Celebrate La Grande for years. Franks stepped back WALK Continued from Page A1 The handcarts, loaded with 5-gallon water jugs and personal items in 5-gallon buckets, were pulled by up to four people and pushed from behind by up to four people. Moving a handcart fi lled with supplies is not easy. “You don’t realize how hard it is until you are actu- ally doing it,” Carpenter said. The La Grande stu- dent believes the people pushing in the back have it the hardest because they must generate much of the momentum. “The people in front have people pushing them,” she said. Carpenter said the trek was exhausting under the hot sun, but she noted the pioneers had to travel con- siderably farther and often under much harsher condi- “machine gun.” While the M-16 is capable of fi ring automatically — discharging all bullets with a single pull of the trigger — the AR-15 is semi-automatic. One bullet is fi red with each pull of the trigger, but it also feeds the next round into the chamber. The system allows for a higher rate of fi re than earlier bolt- or lever-action rifl es. Congress eff ectively banned new sales of the AR-15 in 1994, but allowed the ban to lapse in 2004. Having emerged from the prohibition, the AR-15 became a symbol for many from leadership within the committee around seven years ago, according to Lars- en-Hill. A few years later, she started looking for someone to organize the event. “There are really good, young folks taking over,” Larsen-Hill said. Dana Wright and Jeff Crews are the new leaders within the planning committee — but neither is a new face to Celebrate La Grande. Both Wright and Crews were involved in the committee under Larsen-Hill. New location, same celebration The block party has a new location this year — Riverside Park. The decision to move from downtown La Grande to the tions. The rugged circum- stances, Carpenter said, did not rattle many of the pio- neers, according to historic accounts. “I don’t see how they could endure so much and still be so resilient and happy,” she said. The group had to cross the Sweetwater River in Wyoming as part of the trek. Alyson Glabe, a student at La Grande Middle School, said the stream crossing was delightful because the cool water was low and the weather was hot. “It was invigorating,” she said. Carpenter noted that the crossing of the Sweetwater River was much more dif- fi cult for many pioneers who had to cross at diff erent times of the year when the river was higher and had blocks of ice. Greg Baxter, one of the accompanying adults from the La Grande Stake of the Church of Jesus Christ of La GRANDE AUTO REPAIR 975-2000 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2022 tain directions. The Sturgill Fire has burned 12,703 acres and is zero percent contained, according to the Sept. 5 update. There are 31 personnel assigned to fi ght the fi re, which is burning 15 miles southwest of Enterprise. Firefi ghters worked Sept. 4 on structure protection for res- idences in the area. The Wild- land Fire Modules will continue to implement structure protection for private inholdings along the Minam River on Sept. 5. Smoke- jumpers will assist with structure protection eff orts. The Nebo Fire, which is burning 21 miles southeast of Enterprise near Mount Nebo, has burned 7,277 acres and is zero percent contained. There are 50 personnel assigned to fi ght the fi re. Firefi ghters spent Sept. 4 building a control line along the Wallowa Mountain Loop Road (Forest Service Road 39) to the 200 Road. On Sept. 5, addi- tional resources will be assigned to assist with fi reline construc- tion and initiate fi ring operations gun rights groups. It’s often seen during “open carry” gun rights rallies in Salem and elsewhere around the nation. It’s been the prize in Republican rifl e raffl es — known as “rif-rafs” — in Portland and elsewhere. Despite its popularity and high political pro- fi le, the AR-15 is a niche market in the American gun collection. The United States has a population of 333 million people, who collectively own 400 million guns. The AR-15 accounts for less than 5% of the total. Most guns that Americans own are pis- tols. Pistols are also used much more frequently than rifl es or shotguns in crimes. But the AR-15 rifl e has played an outsized role in the highest profi le mass shootings, starting in 2007 when a gunman killed six people and himself in an apartment building in Crandon, Wisconsin. In May 2022, a gunman using an AR-15 “style” rifl e killed 19 children and two adults at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas. In the 15 years in between the two mass shoot- ings, the places and death toll changed, but a version along the Wallowa Mountain Loop (Forest Service Road 39) and 200 roads. Crews and heavy equipment will be used to keep the fi re west of the road. Firefi ghters will also implement structure protection for Forest Service infrastructure, including the Lick Creek Camp- ground, as the fi re continues to move to the north and east. Both the Sturgill and Nebo fi res have surpassed the 2019 Granite Gulch Fire as the big- gest in the Eagle Cap Wilder- ness since the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest instituted a policy allowing lightning fi res to burn naturally. The Granite Gulch Fire burned about 5,500 acres in August and September 2019. There are two other fi res burning in the Eagle Caps, also sparked by lightning Aug. 22 or 23. The Goat Mountain Fire 1 is not active, according to fi re man- agers. The Goat Mountain 2 Fire is about 95 acres, but, unlike the Sturgill and Nebo fi res, it did not grow substantially over the weekend. of the AR-15 was there. The roll call of mass murders includes: • 2012: Sandy Hook Elementary School, Con- necticut: 27 killed • 2015: San Bernardino, California: 14 killed at a Christmas party for health care workers • 2016: Orlando, Florida: 49 killed at The Pulse nightclub • 2016: Sutherland Springs, Texas: 26 killed at a church • 2017: Las Vegas: 58 killed at an outdoor country music concert, shot by a gunman fi ring from a high- rise hotel room • 2018: Parkland, Florida: 17 killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School • 2022: Buff alo, N.Y., 10 black people killed by a white gunman at a grocery store The COVID-19 pandemic has fueled demand for the rifl e. Since 2020, an esti- mated 2.8 million semi-au- tomatic military-style rifl es have been sold, part of a pandemic-driven surge in gun purchases, according to Forbes magazine. Mass shootings have also surged over the same park was made for logistic reasons, said Crews. The park provides plenty of shade, a lot of grassy areas for kids to run around and already has a fun playground. The com- mercial kitchen in the pavilion also means an easier time for food safety and health inspection. There are a few worries about the location for both the old and new leadership. Crews said he’s worried about the parking situa- tion at Riverside Park, but that Parks and Rec Director Stu Spence has assured him the park can handle around 800 to 1,000 people. For Larsen-Hill, her apprehension has to do with attendance. Riverside Park isn’t as central of a location as downtown and she Latter-day Saints, which encompasses Union, Wal- lowa, Baker and Grant counties, said the trek was a transformative experi- ence for many of the partic- ipants in terms of building confi dence. “I heard one boy say, ‘Now I know I can do hard things and achieve good things,’” Baxter said. period. There have been 450 mass shootings in the United States so far in 2022, according to the Gun Vio- lence Archive, a nonprofi t that since 2014 has tracked shootings and gun deaths. The incidents are on track to break the record of 692 mass shootings recorded last year. A pistol is most often used, but the use of fi rearms of all types are on the rise. The Gun Violence Archive defi nes a mass shooting as one where four or more people are shot or killed, not including the shooter. Other organiza- tions defi ne a mass shooting as four people killed, not including the gunman. Oregon voters will be asked in November to vote on Measure 114, a gun-con- trol initiative that backers say would require a gun safety course before the sale of a fi rearm, and ban ammu- nition magazines that hold more than 10 rounds. Police say that the Bend shooter had four 30-round magazines with him when he died. A preliminary investigation shows that the “AR-15 style” rifl e and other fi rearms were legally purchased. worries that not as many people will make it out. There will not be fi re truck rides this year given the tight nature of the roads and parking lot at Riverside Park, something Crews wants to bring back in the future. A lot of things about Celebrate La Grande will remain the same. According to Crews, the committee is ensuring that certain “Di-isms” remain a staple to the block party, such as her famous sauerkraut. He recom- mends everyone give it a try, even those who are not normally a fan of pickled cabbage. Whether you enjoy kraut or not, Crews said, “It’s just great to get people back together.” The trek, which has been conducted every fi ve years by the La Grande Stake since 2007, also had a familial feel because each handcart represented a family unit in a fi ctional sense with adults playing parental roles. Baxter said many times the members of the handcart parties do not know each other at fi rst but become good friends as the journey progressed. Baxter said many of the youths had relatives who made the journey into the Salt Lake Valley by wagon or handcart in the 1800s. Their ancestors were often on their minds. “In a spiritual sense they felt they were walking with their • forefathers,” he said. • Charles & Eileen Stewart • 10304 A 1st St. Island City, OR cstewartpc@gmail.com www.lagrandeautorepair.com Providing peace of mind one household at a time MOST ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY AVAILABLE Joe Horst 541.910.5435 ACDelcoTSS Pay cash or Rent to own Let us take the Turning 65? Turning 65? We’re here to help! We’re here to help! mystery out of Medicare for you! Authorized Dealer Let us take th mystery o Medicare for y 1215 Adams Ave, La Grande Joel Myer (541) 963-3121 Kathy