NORTHWEST East Oregonian A2 Thursday, October 7, 2021 Growing demand driving force behind Woodgrain expansion By DICK MASON The Observer ISL A N D CI T Y — A major Union County employer is set to expand its local workforce substantially. Woodgrain Lumber & Composites has announced it will be adding 35 positions at its particleboard plant in Island City over the next six months. This will boost the number of employees Woodgrain has at the plant to about 153, an increase of almost 30%. “We are excited to continue to invest in our particleboard facility, as well as our local community. This is also an opportunity to expand in the markets we serve,” said Tracy Hayes, the human resources manager for Woodgrain’s Lumber and Composites Division. Woodgrain also employs 90 people at its lumber mill in La Grande, bringing the total number of people on its Union County payroll, count- ing administrative staff, to 218. Applications for the posi- tions now are being taken and hiring will begin soon. The 35 new employees will be added in phases through March 2022, Hayes said. Woodgrain is expanding its staff at the Island City plant because home construc- tion is increasing in the West, Alex Wittwer/EO Media Group Scrap wood and recycling products sit outside Sept. 29, 2021, at Woodgrain Lumber & Composites in Island City. The busi- ness is adding 35 positions at its particleboard plant. Alex Wittwer/EO Media Group A forklift operator moves finished plywood product on Sept. 29, 2021, on the shipping floor of Woodgrain Lumber & Composites in Island City. The business is adding 35 positions at its particleboard plant. which is creating a growing demand for particleboard products needed for homes, including furniture and cabi- nets, Hayes said. The particleboard the Island City plant produces is tailor made for specific uses such as airport jet bridges and tables for table tennis. The plant was built in 1966 and was owned by Boise Cascade throughout its history before it was acquired by Woodgrain in 2018. Woodgrain also acquired Boise Cascade’s La Grande lumber mill at the same time. Tom Lovlien, vice presi- dent of Woodgrain’s Lumber and Composites Division, said he is optimistic and excited about this hiring initiative. “It is an exciting time to be a part of Woodgrain,” Lovlien said in a press release. “Our company has continued to invest in its facilities here in Northeast Oregon, and our leadership has complete confidence that the particleboard team will meet this new demand, while maintaining both customer and employee satisfaction. This is a place people want to be and we want them here.” Forecast for Pendleton Area TODAY FRIDAY | Go to AccuWeather.com SATURDAY SUNDAY Hiring for the particle- board plant positions will be conducted for entry level and supervisory positions. No manufacturing experience is needed for the entry level positions, for Woodgrain will provide all the training needed. Wages for entry level positions will start at $18.31 an hour. “All of our positions provide long-term fami- ly-wage careers,” Hayes said. Island City Mayor Dave Comfort said Woodgrain’s announcement is most welcome. “I think it is great news, Mostly sunny 62° 36° 62° 38° Times of clouds and sun Mostly cloudy, a shower in spots An afternoon shower possible PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 65° 46° 53° 33° 61° 39° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 66° 36° 66° 41° 67° 53° 59° 34° 63° 42° OREGON FORECAST ALMANAC Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. PENDLETON through 3 p.m. yest. HIGH LOW TEMP. Seattle Olympia 60/44 58/35 63/35 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 62/40 Lewiston 59/42 66/37 Astoria 58/42 Pullman Yakima 62/35 58/39 64/40 Portland Hermiston 63/44 The Dalles 66/36 Salem Corvallis 63/38 Yesterday Normals Records La Grande 60/29 PRECIPITATION John Day Eugene Bend 63/40 61/36 62/36 Ontario 67/45 Caldwell Burns 65° 52° 72° 42° 88° (2014) 23° (2012) 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date Albany 61/37 0.00" 0.00" 0.12" 2.67" 1.73" 5.79" WINDS (in mph) 64/44 63/31 0.02" 0.02" 0.18" 5.02" 8.82" 9.39" through 3 p.m. yest. HIGH LOW TEMP. Pendleton 58/29 63/40 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date HERMISTON Enterprise 62/36 67/41 61° 47° 70° 44° 89° (1933) 24° (1916) PRECIPITATION Moses Lake 58/39 Aberdeen 58/34 61/39 Tacoma Yesterday Normals Records Spokane Wenatchee 58/45 Today Boardman Pendleton Medford 69/41 Fri. WSW 3-6 WNW 4-8 WSW 3-6 NW 4-8 local businesses are able to broaden their workforce and provide good fami- ly-wage jobs that continue to add vitality and vibrancy to our community,” Moore- Hemann said. Union County Commis- sioner Donna Beverage echoed this sentiment. “This will be a big boast for Northeast Oregon,” she said. “An expansion like this is exciting.” Woodgrain, with corpo- rate offices in Fruitland, Idaho, is a family-owned company founded 65 years ago. Island City and La Grande are among more than 20 cities it has plants and centers in throughout the United States, including Pilot Rock, where Woodgrain also owns a sawmill. Ruling blocks 900-acre logging project MONDAY By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press Partly sunny and cool not only for Island City but for Union County in general,” he said. “I know of people who will benefit from this expansion.” The mayor said there is some concern about how McAlister Road in Island City will hold up under the heavier traffic load it will shoulder as the 35 employ- ees are added. Comfort said he will work to make sure steps are taken to keep McAl- ister Road strong enough to handle the added traffic volume. Su zzanah Moore- Hemann, executive director of the Union County Cham- ber of Commerce, also is encouraged by Woodgrain’s announcement. “We are always very excited when any of our ASH LA N D — A 900-acre logging project in Southern Oregon must be enjoined because its impact on great gray owls wasn’t properly evaluated, accord- ing to a federal judge. U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken has ruled the U.S. Bureau of Land Manage- ment’s approval of the Grif- fin Half Moon project was “arbitrary and capricious,” which means logging cannot proceed until the plan is revised. Aiken has adopted a federal magistrate judge’s recommendation to block the project for violating the National Environmental Policy Act, dismissing the BLM’s objections that the case was analyzed under the wrong legal standards. In 2018, the federal government authorized the vegetation management proj- ect, which is east of Ashland, to generate timber while creating young forest stands and reducing the forest’s vulnerability to wildfire, disease and insects. The Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center, Oregon Wild, Cascadia Wildlands and the Soda Mountain Wilderness Council filed a lawsuit the following year, claiming the project would harm the Pacific fisher, which requires dense canopy closure, and the great gray owl, which relies on older forest stands. Earlier this year, U.S. Magistrate Judge Mark Clarke in Medford agreed with the environmental plaintiffs regarding the great gray owl but rejected their arguments about the Pacific fisher, a carnivore in the same family as the weasel. A broader “resource management plan” for 1.2 million acres of BLM prop- erty in the region dedicates “a large network of reserve lands for great gray owls” and expects their habitat to improve, but the agency didn’t analyze the project’s particular effects on the species, Clarke said. The agency’s decision record “contains no meet- ing notes, memos, reports or other documentation” that it specifically considered site-specific impacts on the owls, he said. “Because the BLM failed to consider an important aspect of the problem of threats to great gray owls, its approval of the project was arbitrary and capricious,” the judge said. As for the Pacific fisher, the magistrate judge deter- mined that BLM’s “consid- eration of impacts” to the species was “clearly and separately identified” in the agency’s environmental assessment of the project, the judge said. The BLM’s analysis of the project’s impacts on the Northern spotted owl, a threatened species, also “properly functions as a proxy” for the effects on the Pacific fisher, he said. SUN AND MOON Klamath Falls 64/31 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today First 7:01 a.m. 6:24 p.m. 8:25 a.m. 7:19 p.m. Full Last New NATIONAL EXTREMES Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) High 97° in Zapata, Texas Low 21° in Yellowstone N.P., Wyo. Oct 12 Oct 20 Oct 28 Nov 4 NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY IN BRIEF Wolf pack kills 12 ewe sheep LA GRANDE — A wolf pack in Union County north of Elgin has killed 12 ewe sheep and injured two guard dogs protecting sheep during the past week or so, according to the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. The attacks are attributed to the Balloon Tree Pack, according to ODFW investigations. That pack’s breeding pair produced pups for the first time in 2020, with at least three surviving through the end of that year. Attack on sheep An employee of a sheep rancher found three dead adult ewes on Sept. 29 on a private, timbered pasture, according to ODFW. Officials from ODFW and from the federal USDA Wildlife Service agency arrived on Sept. 30 and found four more dead ewes. Wildlife Service employees then found three more dead ewes on Oct. 1, and one dead and one injured ewe on Oct. 1. Workers eutha- nized the injured ewe that day. All the sheep were in the same pasture. Officials estimated the sheep were attacked the night of Sept. 28. ODFW employees examined seven sheep carcasses on Sept. 30, three on Oct. 1 and two on Oct. 4. All had pre-mortem wounds, with tissue trauma up to two inches deep and tooth scrapes consistent with wolf attacks on sheep, according to ODFW reports. Attack on guard dogs On the morning of Oct. 1, a sheep herder found two injured Kangal guard dogs on an industrial timberland grazing allotment. The herder told ODFW employees that at about 2 a.m. on Oct. 1 he heard an apparent fight between his guard dog and an unknown pred- ator, with barking and growling. Biologists examined both guard dogs. One had a 6-inch-long area of matted blood on its throat and the left side of its neck that was dripping blood. The dog was agitated and could not be held for further examination, according to an ODFW report. — EO Media Group Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. 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