Illinois Valley News, Cave Junction, OR Wednesday, December 31, 2003 Counties to get $158 mil for schools Oregon counties will receive almost $158 mil- lion through the final in- stallment of the 2003 county payments funds provided by The Secure Rural Schools and Com- munity Self-Determination Act. U.S. Sens. Ron Wyden and Larry Craig (R-Idaho) wrote the law in 2000 to secure a stable source of funding for rural counties; U.S. Sen. Gordon Smith (R-Ore.) co-sponsored the bill and was instrumental in its passage. “At a time when Ore- gon continues to struggle with its finances, I am pleased that my legislation is providing an economic shot in the arm for jobs and our schools,” Wyden said. “This could not have been accomplished without the bipartisan support of Doug Robertson and the rest of our county leaders, as well as the Oregon con- gressional delegation.” “These payments are a lifeline for county govern- ments. They mean jobs and a secure source of funding for rural schools, roads and county services,” said Doug Robertson, chairman of the O&C Counties As- sociation and a Douglas County commissioner. “Sen. Wyden really lis- tened and came through for rural communities with this law.” The county payments legislation directs $1.3 bil- lion during a six-year pe- riod from U.S. Forest Ser- vice and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to Oregon counties for education, roads and county services. The $158 million is the forest service portion of the 2003 funding and represents an almost 90 percent increase in forest service monies from before Wyden’s bill was enacted. The BLM portion of the funding, $110 million, was released to Oregon coun- ties on Oct. 31. The Wyden-Craig bill establishes a locked-in dol- lar amount for rural schools and counties by averaging the three highest receipt producing years between fiscal years 1986 and 1999. Under this pro- posal, 80-85 percent of funding will be reserved for traditional county schools and services sup- ported by federal revenues, and 15-20 percent of mon- ies will be set aside for national forest land or for- est-related cooperative projects. Oregon counties re- ceiving the forest service portion of funds include: Josephine, $2.93 million; Jackson, $6.14 million; Douglas, $21.65 million; and Curry, $5.35 million. Lane County received the most, $32.64 million. The county payments law will provide payments through 2006. Wyden said he is committed to again working with Craig and the entire Oregon delega- tion to reauthorize the bill and maintain a steady funding source. Wyden announces anti-terrorist money U.S. Sens. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Gordon Smith (R-Ore) announced that Oregon will receive $2,549,525 in homeland security funds from the Dept. of Homeland Secu- rity’s Federal Emergency Manage ment Agenc y (FEMA). The grant is made available to aid state pre- paredness activities and emergency management. They include developing, improving, and maintain- ing state and local emer- gency operation plans; supporting and participat- ing in community prepar- edness activities; and de- veloping a state plan to test the emergency system. They include citizen participation and feedback; and providing public assis- 1-541-476-2127 Elementary Schools Menu Sponsored by ‘Illinois Valley News’ 321 S. Redwood Hwy. 592-2541 MONDAY, JAN. 5 *Chicken nuggets, hamburger, cheese pizza, peanut butter & jelly sandwich, chef salad TUESDAY, JAN. 6 *Country fried steak sandwich, cheeseburger, pepperoni pizza, ham & cheese sandwich, garden salad WEDNESDAY, JAN. 7 *Corn dog, hamburger, cheese pizza, tuna salad sandwich, Cobb salad Please don't litter! tance training for state staff. This grant is pro- vided as one of FEMA’s Emergency Management Performance Grants. Earlier this month, FEMA awarded $2.5 mil- lion to Oregon through the Emergency Food and Shel- ter (EFS) Program to sup- plement food, shelter, rent, mortgage and utility assis- tance programs for Orego- nians with non-disaster relat ed e me r gen cie s. FEMA became part of the U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security in March 2003. Page 7 DMV changes noted for ‘04 Oregon residents will see some changes at DMV when they obtain or renew a driver license, instruction permit or identification card starting in 2004. The changes come as a result of laws created by the 2003 Legislature and by DMV’s efforts to tighten the security of li- censes and ID cards. Nearly all new laws and ID-security requirements will take effect Jan. 1. Customers also will see fees increase for many DMV services as part of Oregon’s investment in bridges and highways dur- ing the next decade. Don’t drink and drive. Illinois Valley residents and merchants for your generous donations and caring ways. As a result of your support, the 21st annual I.V. Biker Toy Run was again a success! Every child who visited ‘Santa’ on Christmas Eve day at the I.V. Senior Center received a new toy and walked away with a BIG SMILE!! There are too many names to list… but you know who you are. Again, THANK YOU SO MUCH !!