REGION Wednesday, January 23, 2019 East Oregonian A3 Wallowa Lake Dam reconstruction plans underway New project will allow better fish passage By KATY NESBITT For the EO Media Group With $16 million earmarked in Gov. Kate Brown’s budget to rebuild the Wallowa Lake Dam, irrigators are preparing for its reconstruction in August 2020. The Wallowa Lake Irri- gation District owns the 100-year-old dam, long in need of repair to ensure safety for downstream communities. When news broke that the governor’s budget included money for the dam, the district’s board of directors hired McMillen Jacobs Associates of Boise to manage the project. At a public meeting Jan. 16 in Joseph, Morton McMillen said his timeline is aggressive, but doable, putting shovel to dirt in 18 months and completing construction by the end of June 2021. McMillen said, “We need to implement a schedule that ensures completion within Katy Nesbitt/For the Capital Press The Wallowa Lake Dam will be rebuilt if $16 million in Gov. Kate Brown’s proposed budget passes the legislature. the state funding cycles.” The board has been getting ready for this moment. Dan Butterfield, the district’s board presi- dent, said McMillen first drew a conceptual recon- struction design in 2002, but money was always an issue. “Mort’s been ready for a long time,” Butterfield said. “We got really close a couple times to getting funding and then it fell out.” Now that funding is on the horizon, McMillen said he is focusing on regula- tory and permit issues and refining the conceptual design in order to choose the best alternative by July 1. In February, McMillen said he will present the work plan and schedule to the governor’s office followed by meetings with the office of Oregon Dam Safety and local fisheries managers Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife and the Nez Perce Tribe. “We will have the pre-planning work complete when the full budget is allo- cated,” McMillen said. That starts about a one-year clock for McMil- len’s team to prepare the final plans and specifica- tions for the dam rehabilita- tion, including fish passage. In August 2020 the lake will be drawn down and the dam demolished in September. McMillen said he is leaving the founda- tion of the existing dam because it has adhered to soil, creating a seal, and will build on top of it. The concrete at the base is friction locked and we don’t want to dig it up,” McMillen said. “We will peel off the bad concrete and encapsulate the whole thing — and have a 100-year dam by doing that.” While additional funding may be sought to help pay for screening downstream diversions, McMillen said he anticipates he can achieve all of the rehabilitation goals with the $16 million in governor’s the budget. The dam will be commis- sioned, complete with fish passage in 2021, McMillen said. Fish passage opens the possibility of reintroducing sockeye salmon to Wallowa Lake, a species long extinct from the Grande Ronde River system. Jeff Heindel, project manager for McMillen Jacobs Associates, said the brood stock will likely come from Redfish Lake in Idaho where Snake River sockeye were reintroduced several years ago. “It’s a great system to reintroduce sockeye,” Heindel said. “We know the forest health benefits of anadromous fish — our generation is already seeing the impacts of lakes without salmon carcasses.” Irrigators along five ditches benefit directly from diverted water from Wallowa Lake, but Aaron Maxwell of the Nez Perce Tribe asked if Wallowa River downstream water users were being taken into account. Joe Dawson, the district’s secretary, said a lower Wallowa River Valley irri- gator, Dennis Henderson, requested that he and his neighbors be included in conversations about rebuilding the dam. BRIEFLY Display features zodiac prints HERMISTON — The artwork of Denisia Leon is featured during the month of January at the Hermiston Public Library. While attending Oregon State University, the 2014 Hermiston High School graduate fell in love with print- making. She created a “zodiac series” by carving out the signs on a piece of linoleum and then using a press to print them. Most of the small prints featured in the exhibit are a result of Leon’s senior show. “My goal is to make art that I love and will always be proud of,” she said. The library is open Monday through Thursdays from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Friday/Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. It’s located at 235 E. Gladys Ave. For more infor- mation, call 541-567-2882 or visit www.hermistonli- brary.us. IMAC serves monthly breakfast Photo contributed by Tamastslikt Cultural Institute “Anatomy of Travel (Horse Curiosity)” by Phineas Barker was among the entries for the 2018 ArtWORKz Junior Art Show & Competition. Submissions for this year’s event are due Jan. 30 at Tamastslikt Cultural Institute. IRRIGON — A hearty home-cooked meal is avail- able during the Irrigon Multicultural Arts Center fund- raising breakfast. The event is Saturday from 7:30-10:30 a.m. at Stokes Landing Senior Center, 150 Columbia Lane, Irrigon. The cost is $4.50 per person. The group is dedicated to preserving Irrigon’s 1921 school building and developing a regional art venue. For more information, call Peggy Price at 541-567-3806. Junior art show showcases youth talent Exhibit submissions due Jan. 30 By TAMMY MALGESINI East Oregonian All area artists ages 18 and under are invited to enter the 2019 ArtWORKz Junior Art Show & Compe- tition at Tamástslikt Cultural Institute In addition to showing their work in a professional gallery setting, participants will vie for prize awards, which will be presented during a public reception. Also, artists may offer their works for sale during the show. The artist will set their own price and Tamást- slikt will collect a 30 percent commission on artwork sold. All art media forms are welcome, including digital computer-generated art and traditional tribal artforms. Past entries have included everything from sculptures, paintings and drawings to printmaking, photography and fiber art. Submissions may be an individual’s work or the result of a collabora- tive effort. For group pieces, all artists are to be identified and must be under the age of 19. Each artist may enter one piece into the show. There is no entry fee. Submissions are due by Wednesday, Jan. 30 at Tamástslikt. The show runs Feb. 9 through March 30. Admis- sion to the exhibit is free on the opening day. The artists’ reception, which includes awards presentations, is Saturday, March 9 at 1 p.m. Awards will include grand prizes, awards of excellence and awards of merit in each age cate- gory. In addition, honorable mentions will be presented at the judge’s discretion. Staff from Tamástslikt will select the best emerging artist, and participants will vote for an artists’ choice award. Tamástslikt is located off Interstate 84 Exit 216, near Wildhorse Resort & Casino, Mission. The museum is open Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m to 5 p.m. Regular admission is $10 for adults, $9 for seniors, $7 for students/youths and free for ages 5 and under. For more information, including ArtWORKz entry forms, visit www.tamast- slikt.org. For questions, contact Randy Melton, collections curator, at 541-429-7700 or randall. melton@tamastslikt.org. ——— Contact Community Editor Tammy Malgesini at tmalgesini@eastoregonian. com or 541-564-4539 HAPPY 50th ANNIVERSARY! Harold & Sarah Bruce Married January 24, 1969 St. Anthony Provider Spotligh t Dr Schwartz is now accepting new patients. Local radio station powers up with new turbine By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian The community radio station KBLU now has a better turbine to power its signal. The nonprofit operates from a small office on 413 S.E. Fourth St., Pendleton, but relies on solar panels and a turbine to power its 50-foot-tall antenna atop a blustery hill south of Pilot Rock. Husband and wife Gary Betts and Virginia Blakelock founded the nonprofit Blue Moun- tain Community Radio Inc. to provide local radio. The couple, with the help of KLBU board member Karen Wagner, recently braved the slippery road along West Birch Creek and high winds to install an 11-blade fan on the turbine to improve performance. “I opened my [pickup] door and I thought it was going to rip the door right off the hinges,” Betts said. “It did bend them.” The gusts proved too much, so the trio packed it in and returned the following day. Betts said the weather was about to best them again, but they put their backs and shoulders and legs into hefting the turbine into place and securing it within guidelines. “The three of us walked it up just pushing on it,” he said. “We got it up — I couldn’t believe it. … It was whirring along and putting out the power like anything.” Betts and company had to wait weeks for the parts to upgrade the turbine. The upshot has been the reliably of the solar panels. They are on a 17-degree tilt perpen- dicular to the sun to maxi- mize power during the shorter days of winter. Betts also said the slope is enough that snow falls off the panels rather than piles on. KBLU’s upgrades are not finished. Betts said in the coming weeks they aim to install a more powerful transmitter. Soon enough, he said, the station’s signal should reach into the “brick canyon” of Pendleton’s downtown. Betts explained all the iron oxide in the red brick in many of Pendleton’s historic buildings blocks weaker transmissions. You can tune into KBLU at 90.5 FM and find a variety of programming, from local poets reading their work to old time radio shows to jazz, country and classical music. To find out more about KBLU, visit www. kblu-fm.org/cgi/index.rb. Family Medicine Physician U ndergrad: University of Rhode Island Medical School: Ross University School of Medicine Residency: Family Medicine Residency at Wheeling Hospital in Wheeling WV Post-Residency: Provided both Inpatient and Outpatient care for all ages in Ohio and West Virginia Andrew Schwartz, M.D. 3001 St. Anthony Way Pendleton, OR 97801 Call for your appointment today 541.966.0535 FOR MORE INFORMATION VISIT WWW.SAHPENDLETON.ORG