A5 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, JULY 23, 2022 OBITUARIES Betty Olvey Betty Jane Olvey Astoria Oct. 27, 1928 — June 30, 2022 Betty Jane Olvey was born in Astoria to Richard and Elsie (Strom) Olson on Oct. 27, 1928. She spent her life as a native of Astoria until her passing on June 30 at the age of 93. Betty’s school years were spent in Clatsop County, where she attended Chadwell School from fi rst-through-sixth grade, while the remainder of her school years were spent in Astoria. Betty worked many diff er- ent jobs in her life. As a young woman, she worked at Fort Stevens during World War II, later followed by the fl our mill, two local laundries and vari- ous canneries. She then went to work as a fi lleter at Astoria Seafood in 1958, and retired after 35 years. During her working years, Betty was a senior regent for the Moose Lodge, and member of the cannery union. However, her favorite title was “Cookie Grandma,” given to her by her grandchildren for the deli- cious cookies she always had on hand. In Betty’s free time, she enjoyed dancing, especially to live music, spending time with friends and family and working in her garden. Betty enjoyed talking to people from all walks of life, and was well known for speaking her mind. Many family meals and hol- idays were spent in the Olvey home, which she cooked her- self until she was 91 years old. The most famous of all these meals was her prime rib Christmas dinner. On Aug. 1, 1947, Betty was married to Gordon Olvey, and together they had fi ve chil- dren. Betty is survived by her children, Leroy Olvey, of Astoria, Sonja Fleming (Ger- ald), of Ohio, and Terri Cag- win (Mike), of Astoria; broth- ers, Larry Telen, of Astoria, and Vern Telen (Diane), of Hillsboro; nephews, Jeff Telen (Tracy) and Steve Telen, both of Astoria; nieces, Barbara Hall (Mike), of Beaverton, and Marian Bragdon (Bob), of Hillsboro; and many grand- children, great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren. Betty was widowed in 1992, and also preceded in death by her daughters, Cindy Smith and Lynnie Hayner; her par- ents; and sister-in-law, Shirley Telen. Betty will be laid to rest at Greenwood Cemetery with her family. Her beautiful smile and feisty personality will be remembered by her loved ones. The family would like to thank the staff and residents of Astor Place for their care over the last year. Photos by Steven Mitchell/Blue Mountain Eagle A forklift motors around the Prairie Wood Products yard. Closed for more than a decade, an Oregon sawmill is running again New life for mill in Prairie City By STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle Local residents woke up last week to a sound they had not heard in years. A working sawmill. The Prairie Wood Products sawmill offi cially reopened on July 11 for its fi rst full day of operations. The D.R. Johnson Lumber Co. announced last month that it intended to reopen the mill, which was shuttered 14 years ago. To staff the operation, the company hosted a two-day job fair at Chester’s Thriftway in John Day. Plant manager Tom Moore said the mill hired roughly 25 people. He said once the planer is up and running, he would be looking to hire between 15 and 20 more employees. Prairie Wood Products President Jodi Westbrooks said the company was happy to be able to hire the staff needed to get the mill running again. “They are working hard,” she said. “I’ve been in the mill watching them go as hard as they can.” Westbrooks said there are some kinks the sawmill has to work out with the old equip- ment. But all in all, she said, things are running smoothly at the mill. “It is going,” she said, “and we are thrilled.” Moore, who used to work for the D.R. Johnson-owned Grant Western sawmill in John Day, told the Blue Mountain Eagle that the mill’s moth- balled cogeneration plant has some issues that must be worked through before it can be fi red up again. Craig Trulock, Malheur Dustin Wright, of John Day, is part of the crew at Prairie Wood Products. National Forest supervi- sor, told the newspaper last month that the cogeneration plant could provide a way to remove biomass from the for- est. Currently, he said, there is no market for that material. The biomass, which con- sists of small logs, branches and bushes that would other- wise get burned up in the for- est or left on the ground, could be ground and burned in the cogeneration plant to gener- ate heat and electricity, Tru- lock said. Westbrooks said the com- pany plans to get its tim- ber supply from a combi- nation of public and private lands and will purchase logs from independent loggers and landowners. Brett Morris, the owner of Morris Forestry, said that he had already delivered nine loads of logs to the sawmill. “(Prairie Wood) is really cranking up production,” he said. Morris said he works as an independent logger in the spring, but during fi re season SEVENDAY FORECAST FOR ASTORIA TODAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY he works as a wildland fi re- fi ghter with his logging equip- ment, which makes him good money. With Prairie Wood open, he said he would be running his logging company during fi re season. In the long term, he said running his business would be better for him and his family. “My family will appreciate that I won’t be gone for two to three months in the summer- time,” Morris said. Morris said his com- pany had been about a month behind schedule with the late spring rain, but things are going well now. He said if the mill had not been open in Prairie City, he would have had to haul logs to Elgin or Pilot Rock for mill- ing. With rising fuel costs, there would have been a good chance he would not have been able to operate. “My little company couldn’t aff ord to haul (logs) that far with the way fuel is right now.” Having the mill open ben- efi ts local private landowners WEDNESDAY THURSDAY with respect to fuel reduction and removing wildfi re risks, Morris added. While Prairie Wood hopes to collaborate with the Mal- heur National Forest and other public agencies on forest res- toration projects, Moore said the mill has primarily been working with private land- owners so far. He said the company hopes to build other relationships going forward. Moore said he could not say how many board feet of tim- ber the mill plans to process because it is in its “infancy stages.” Nonetheless, Moore — who worked for Malhuer Lumber before coming to Prairie Wood Products — said that reopening the mill has been a great feeling. “It is not every day,” he said, “that you get to bring something back from the dead.” The Prairie City mill was purchased by the D.R. John- son Lumber Co. in 1976. Two years later, the family-owned company added a stud mill and planer. Then, in the late 1980s, the company installed a cogeneration power plant. The sawmill, which oper- ated successfully in Prairie City for more than 30 years and employed upward of 100 people who worked two dif- ferent shifts, shuttered in 2008 amid a housing market crash that led to a lack of available sawlogs. D.R. Johnson restarted the mill in early 2009 but shut it down permanently by the end of the year. The cleanup of the mill, which sits at the west end of Prairie City, concluded in 2019. Since then, much of the mill equipment has remained on-site, along with the cogen- eration plant. FRIDAY REGIONAL FORECAST Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Seattle 68 55 71 56 Breezy in the Morning drizzle p.m. 73 56 71 59 Mostly sunny and nice Areas of low clouds 70 58 73 59 Low clouds Low clouds breaking 71 58 Rather cloudy Aberdeen Olympia 69/55 77/58 Wenatchee Tacoma Moses Lake 77/53 ALMANAC UNDER THE SKY TODAY'S TIDES Astoria through Thursday Tonight’s Sky: Waning crescent near Uranus. Astoria / Port Docks Temperatures High/low ................................ 67/58 Normal high/low .................. 68/54 Record high .................. 88 in 1928 Record low .................... 44 in 1966 Precipitation Thursday ................................. Trace Month to date ........................ 0.30” Normal month to date ......... 0.62” Year to date .......................... 42.87” Normal year to date ........... 37.79” Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2022 Time 10:54 a.m. 5.4 4:44 a.m. 10:11 p.m. 7.5 4:06 p.m. Cape Disappointment 11:00 a.m. 5.1 4:07 a.m. 9:55 p.m. 7.4 3:30 p.m. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI Hammond SUN AND MOON Sunrise today .................. 5:47 a.m. Sunset tonight ............... 8:56 p.m. Moonrise today .............. 1:32 a.m. Moonset today .............. 5:27 p.m. New First Full Last 11:01 a.m. 5.4 4:22 a.m. 10:01 p.m. 7.6 3:45 p.m. Warrenton 10:49 a.m. 5.8 4:28 a.m. 10:06 p.m. 7.9 3:50 p.m. Knappa 11:31 a.m. 5.7 5:45 a.m. 10:48 p.m. 7.8 5:07 p.m. Depoe Bay July 28 Aug 5 Aug 11 Aug 18 10:19 a.m. 5.3 3:39 a.m. 9:08 p.m. 7.7 2:55 p.m. 0.3 3.0 0.5 3.4 0.4 3.3 0.4 3.1 0.3 2.6 0.5 3.7 City Atlanta Boston Chicago Dallas Denver Honolulu Houston Los Angeles Miami New York City Phoenix San Francisco Wash., DC Today Hi/Lo/W 93/75/t 96/76/s 92/76/t 102/81/s 97/64/pc 87/75/pc 97/79/s 82/63/pc 91/81/t 96/79/s 109/87/pc 67/54/pc 97/76/s Sun. Hi/Lo/W 94/74/c 96/77/pc 84/68/t 103/82/s 85/63/t 87/76/s 98/78/s 80/63/s 90/80/t 98/80/s 101/81/t 69/57/pc 97/80/pc Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow fl urries, sn-snow, i-ice. 92/61 Hermiston The Dalles 93/59 Enterprise Pendleton 86/53 92/58 90/61 La Grande 88/54 83/57 NATIONAL CITIES High (ft.) Time Low (ft.) 83/52 Kennewick Walla Walla 89/62 Lewiston 95/61 78/55 Salem Pullman 92/57 Longview 68/55 Portland 80/59 86/60 Yakima 91/59 78/51 Astoria Spokane 90/66 Corvallis 82/53 Albany 81/54 John Day Eugene Bend 83/54 91/52 91/51 Ontario 97/64 Caldwell Burns 93/48 95/59 Medford 93/60 Klamath Falls 91/49 City Baker City Brookings Ilwaco Newberg Newport Today Hi/Lo/W 88/45/s 70/55/s 67/56/sh 82/55/pc 63/49/sh Sun. Hi/Lo/W 89/47/s 73/55/s 70/57/pc 91/61/s 63/50/pc City North Bend Roseburg Seaside Springfi eld Vancouver Today Hi/Lo/W 66/52/s 86/56/s 68/55/sh 84/53/s 79/58/pc Sun. Hi/Lo/W 65/54/pc 91/62/s 74/56/pc 91/60/s 90/64/s