VIEWPOINTS Saturday, November 7, 2015 Quick takes Umatilla river walk turns 30 Pendleton is so fortunate to have the Umatilla running through its heart. Thank you Amy Aldrich Bedford for holding to the passion of your dream to see the River Parkway become a reality. — Travel Pendleton I’d expect no less of E.B. Aldrich’s daughter! Great story. — Brigit Farley This is a wonderful asset to Pendleton. Thank you Amy Bedford and her champions for the insight to something which can make our town something more special. — Janice Harper Gas tax fails in Pendleton I believe the voters were penny wise and pound foolish, in this case. — Micah Engum With gas prices at what they are now, who would have even noticed 5 cents? Also, you do understand a good portion of the money that would have been generated, would have came from nonresidents? — J.j. Bell-Bronson We were given an opportunity to have a large percentage of the roads paid for by the thousands of people driving down the freeway, but since the people are so upset about the senseless spending by the city we will have to ¿nd a way for the people of Pendleton to pay for it 100 percent. — Harold Hess One of the great lessons of the Twitter age is that much can be summed up in just a few words. Here are some of this week’s takes. Tweet yours @Tim_Trainor or email editor@eastoregonian. com, and keep them to 140 characters. T he Owyhee River is an anglers’ paradise. Around every bend, there are opportunities to wet a line and catch a brown trout so big that you’ll start to believe all the ¿shing stories you’ve ever been told. The roughly 14 miles of water below the dam that forms Lake Owyhee is a renowned blueribbon ¿shery, with brown trout, rainbow trout, crappie, and largemouth and smallmouth bass. Upstream, tributaries feature natives like redband trout. Those ¿sh are economic powerhouses. As the largest intact, unprotected expanse left in the lower 48, the Owyhee Canyonlands offer outstanding recreation, including hiking, ¿shing, rafting, camping and hunting. People come to the Owyhee from all over, and that’s a boon for local businesses. As such, more than 100 businesses have joined the growing coalition working for permanent protection of the Owyhee Canyonlands. I joined numerous Oregonians who came together in Adrian recently to discuss the Owyhee Canyonlands Protection Proposal. The proposal supports ranchers and allows grazing of cattle to continue, while also protecting the Owyhee’s outstanding recreation and conservation values. I was glad that the Bureau of Land Management district manager attended on behalf of the agency and the Department of the Interior. The BLM listened intently to the public comment, and I appreciate their genuine consideration of all points presented. The common theme that I heard during the testimony is that the Owyhee is a special place that deserves to be cared for, for current and future generations. The Owyhee Canyonlands include critical wildlife habitat for over 200 species, including California bighorn sheep, mule deer, pronghorn antelope, chukar and the greater sage-grouse. +unting and ¿shing access in the Owyhee would be preserved under the proposal. Page 5A Planning can reduce wild¿re threat and cost By KATHERINE H. DANIELS Department of Land Conservation and Development he 2015 ¿re season was worse than any on record and summertime temperatures are steadily escalating. Increasing the average summer temperature by just one degree Fahrenheit results in an increase of 420 wild¿res in the state annually, according to estimates by the Oregon Department of Forestry. Research and news articles have focused on the need for forest fuels reduction, creating defensible space around rural dwellings, and improving ¿re¿ghting methods. However, effective land use planning has perhaps the greatest potential for reducing wild¿re threat. The USDA Forest Service de¿nes transition areas just outside communities as the “Wildland-Urban Interface.” Since 1960, the population in these areas has jumped from 25 million to 140 million people. Today, about 60 percent of all new homes across the nation are being constructed in the Wildland-Urban Interface, despite one historic wild¿re season after another. The result is skyrocketing ¿re¿ghting costs that are ultimately borne by the public. The Oregon Department of Forestry estimates that the average cost of $319 to protect an additional home in an T already developed area jumps to a whopping $31,545 to protect an additional home in a more rural area. Dwellings in remote and rural areas put ¿re¿ghters at added risk. Historically trained in basic wildland ¿re behavior and safety, using ¿reline construction and tools, ¿re¿ghters today must have numerous specialized skills geared toward protecting homes — establishing ¿re perimeters, conducting burnouts around homes and dealing with the dangers of propane tanks, gas and electrical lines. When the focus has shifted from ¿ghting ¿re to saving homes, forests are left to burn. Oregon’s statewide land use planning program discourages the kind of development that imperils ¿re¿ghters and homes in this way. Implemented by communities statewide, it has signi¿cantly reduced the number of dwellings built in our Wildland- Urban Interface since the mid-1980s, when compared to other states. While over the course of a decade Oregon lost almost Protecting Owyhee Canyonlands would boost ¿shing, recreation economy By BOB REES Association of Northwest Steelheaders East Oregonian Activities like rafting, hiking and camping would also continue. Major legal roads and routes would remain open to safeguard these time-tested traditions. Wildlife management can continue unimpeded. Grazing would be grandfathered in. Mining, oil and gas interests are all outside of the canyonlands and not affected. As a professional ¿shing guide and sixth-generation Oregonian whose grandfather fed his family on trout, the redband trout habitat is of particular interest to me. These are warm-water adapted desert redbands, an important genetic strain whose habitat is worth protecting. They are one of a number of unique wildlife populations in the Owyhee Canyonlands that draw anglers and their wallets to the region. The Owyhee Canyonlands Protection Proposal is a win-win-win for wildlife, people, and businesses in Malheur County. The research backs it up, too. According to Headwaters Economics, Malheur County has 4.6 million acres of public lands, almost four-¿fths of its land base. Nearly two million of these acres possess unique natural and recreational values that are not formally protected. Economists compared Malheur County with similar counties around the West that had more formal protections for their public lands, and the data show that the other counties with permanent federal land protections on average grow faster, sustain agricultural employment better, have less economic hardship, and bene¿t from greater travel and tourism business activity. So, in other counties, wildlands protections have helped not only the tourism sector of the economy; they even boost the agricultural sector. Protecting lands for wildlife and recreation helps the long-term economy and quality of life of local communities. But what’s also so valuable about the Owyhee proposal, is that current uses of the land will be able to continue. Anglers and ranchers and hunters can all be out there together, enjoying Oregon’s bounty. Ŷ Bob Rees is executive director of the Association of Northwest Steelheaders. The Owyhee Canyonlands Protection Proposal is a win-win-win for wildlife, people and businesses in Malheur County. Be heard! Comment online at eastoregonian.com AP Photo/Elaine Thompson Flames pour from a structure fully engulfed in fire in a wildfire Aug. 21 in Tonasket, Wash. Increasing the average summer temperature by just one degree results in an increase of 420 Oregon wildfires annually. three times as much acreage to wild¿re as did Washington, the number of dwellings destroyed was signi¿cantly greater in Washington, according to the Geographic Area Coordination Centers and the National Interagency Fire Center. In the 2014 and 2015 seasons alone, seven times more dwellings were destroyed in Washington than in Oregon. The presence of dwellings in wildland areas further increases the risk of wild¿re. In the 2015 ¿re season four times as many acres burned in Washington as in Oregon where wildland dwellings resulted in ¿res with “human causes.” Over nine percent of Oregon’s homes are currently at high or extreme risk for wild¿re, according to 2015 data from Verisk Insurance Solutions. Current limits on dwellings and other development on forest land is paying off for Oregon by minimizing wild¿re risk to new development, reducing ¿re¿ghting costs, and protecting human lives. Ŷ Katherine H. Daniels is the farm and forest lands specialist for the Department of Land Conservation and Development. She can be reached at 503-373- 0050 Obama should not name Owyhee a national monument W e’ve seen public. The Obama this movie administration needs before. A to come clean about lame duck president what is has planned uses the Antiquities for these millions Act to declare huge of acres of land in swaths of public Eastern Oregon. lands off limits Those of us so he can have familiar with Eastern Greg an environmental Walden Oregon know that legacy. Right up the Owyhee River Comment until the night before canyon in Malheur he declared the County is home to Grand Staircase Escalante some of the most beautiful a national monument, the landscapes in the country. Clinton White House told We also know that these the Utah congressional lands are an important part delegation no such plans of the economic base for were in the works. And in Malheur County, which his ¿nal month in of¿ce, generates more than President Clinton declared $370 million annually seven national monuments. in agriculture business I fear the Obama according to Oregon State administration — urged on University, of which $134 by outside interests groups million comes from cattle. and wealthy corporations The Bureau of Land seeking a marketing niche Management and other — is up to the same “dark- federal agencies manage of-night” declaration on the 4.5 million acres, or 73 Owyhee River canyon in percent of the land in the Eastern Oregon. county, making public Last Thursday night, in lands grazing an integral Adrian (population 177), part of most local family more than 500 people turned ranch operations, many of out to a public meeting whom have cared for this organized by state Rep. high desert country since Cliff Bentz to voice their the 1860s. For generations, deep concerns about this these local families have possibility. Extra chairs had been good stewards to be brought in to the local of the lands. They’ve gymnasium, and people worked cooperatively and were still standing in the collaboratively with federal aisles. agencies to manage these One person who wasn’t lands with an eye towards there? Secretary of the the long-term viability of Interior Sally Jewell. the range and their family’s Although I called on her livelihood. or a senior representative Much like thinning an to attend the meeting, no overstocked forest, grazing senior members of the helps reduce the amount administration attended. of fuel available to large If they had, they would rangeland ¿res that threaten have heard a message watersheds and sage grouse loud and clear: Residents habitat in the arid climates of of Eastern Oregon don’t southeastern Oregon. want another “Washington, When ¿res do start, the D.C. knows best” federal volunteers in the Rural designation that would Fire Protection Association further destroy our way of are positioned to respond life. promptly and are highly Yet, despite this public effective, thanks to their outcry, I believe the intimate knowledge of local administration is playing terrain and weather. hide the ball from the Over the years, these ranchers have developed springs and other water sources that have supported their cattle, but also countless numbers of wildlife that share the range. The latter bene¿t has been particularly valuable during recent droughts. In towns like Adrian and Jordan Valley, ranching is the base of the community. Whether through hiring employees, or buying needed supplies for the ranch or their family, they are injecting money into the local community. A monument designation larger than the states of Rhode Island and Connecticut would greatly restrict or eliminate grazing and other productive uses of the land. It will shake the foundation of these communities and cause harmful economic impacts to the county and the surrounding region. I’ve worked with my colleagues in the House to include language in the funding bill for the Department of Interior prohibiting the creation of this national monument. Our farmers, ranchers and rural communities are most affected by the decisions made on public lands. I will continue to work to return the focus on locally driven management efforts, and stop these unilateral actions that lock up our public lands and negatively impact our communities. The Obama administration has done enough damage to the West through their overzealous regulations. We don’t need a presidential declaration locking up more of our public lands and choking our local ranch economy. Ŷ U.S. Rep. Greg Walden represents Oregon’s Second Congressional District, which covers 20 counties in southern, central and Eastern Oregon.