NORTHWEST East Oregonian A2 Saturday, November 27, 2021 Minam River project adds 4,600 acres The Observer LA GRANDE — The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, along with the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation and Manulife Invest- ment Management’s timberland business, completed the first phase of the Minam River Wildlife Area project, adding more than 4,600 acres of public land to the state’s wildlife area system. “The significance of this acqui- sition cannot be overstated,” said Curt Melcher, director of ODFW. “An opportunity to protect such a large swath of diverse habitat does not come along very often. ODFW has pursued opportunities to perma- nently protect this property since the 1960s. This acquisition would not have been possible without the leadership and funding from RMEF, as well as a strong partnership with Manulife.” The first phase funding primar- ily came from RMEF and the Wild- life Restoration Program, a federal excise tax on guns and ammunition. To complete the second phase, ODFW is working to secure addi- tional funding through a U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Legacy program grant, which will be matched with previously secured RMEF funds to purchase the remaining 10,963 acres. “We thank and congratulate our partners for conserving this land- scape that is so important for elk, mule deer, birds, fish and other wild- David Jensen/Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation Flowers bloom along the Minam River just before sunrise in this undated photo. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife announced in November 2021 the completion of the first phase of the Minam River Wildlife Area project, adding more than 4,600 acres of public land to the state’s wildlife area system. life,” said Kyle Weaver, RMEF pres- ident and CEO. “While we pause to celebrate this accomplishment, we know there is still much to do to complete Phase Two of the proj- ect that covers nearly 11,000 more acres.” This project will permanently protect crucial winter range for elk and deer. It will also continue to provide habitat for salmon, bull trout and other Oregon Conserva- tion Strategy species, including white-headed woodpecker, Rocky Mountain tailed frog and several priority bat species. Once completed, the 15,573- acre property will be managed by ODFW as the Minam River Wildlife Area, the fifth-largest wildlife area in the state. The Fish and Wildlife commission approved the purchase Forecast for Pendleton Area | Go to AccuWeather.com TODAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY Cloudy and mild Partly sunny and warm Cloudy and mild with a shower Considerable cloudiness A stray afternoon shower Storytelling critical for ranching, journalist says By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 57° 50° 64° 46° 53° 37° 56° 44° 61° 43° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 55° 50° 62° 45° 59° 42° 57° 43° OREGON FORECAST 61° 41° 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 56/52 48/46 48/42 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 56/50 Lewiston 57/56 53/52 Astoria 57/52 Pullman Yakima 48/46 56/53 54/49 Portland Hermiston 58/54 The Dalles 55/50 Salem Corvallis 57/50 Yesterday Normals Records La Grande 50/43 PRECIPITATION John Day Eugene Bend 58/50 58/52 52/44 Ontario 47/33 Caldwell Burns 60° 42° 46° 31° 67° (1933) 4° (1993) 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 58/52 Trace 1.14" 0.92" 5.06" 3.94" 7.39" WINDS (in mph) 49/32 50/32 Trace 1.24" 1.21" 7.27" 12.25" 11.53" through 3 p.m. yest. HIGH LOW TEMP. Pendleton 50/39 59/53 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 57/50 53/47 59° 45° 45° 31° 71° (1892) 1° (1993) PRECIPITATION Moses Lake 56/53 Aberdeen 47/44 43/40 Tacoma Yesterday Normals Records Spokane Wenatchee 55/53 Today Medford 57/44 Sun. ESE 3-6 S 6-12 Boardman Pendleton WSW 6-12 WSW 6-12 SUN AND MOON Klamath Falls 55/31 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today 7:11 a.m. 4:15 p.m. 12:00 a.m. 1:14 p.m. Last New First Full Nov 27 Dec 3 Dec 10 Dec 18 NATIONAL EXTREMES Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) High 86° in Fallbrook, Calif. Low -7° in Gothic, Colo. NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY earlier this year. Located about 30 miles northeast of La Grande in Wallowa and Union counties along the Minam River, the property is currently managed by Manulife Investment Management. In addition to creating new public recreational access for hunting, fish- ing and other activities, the Minam River Wildlife Area will also improve access to Wallowa-Whit- man National Forest and Bureau of Land Management lands. “ODFW will manage the prop- erty as a working landscape utiliz- ing limited livestock grazing as well as active forest management in partnership with the Oregon Department of Forestry to improve forage conditions for wildlife,” said Nick Myatt, ODFW East Region Manager. Recreation opportunities on the new property could include hunting, fishing, hiking, birdwatching, horse- back riding, kayaking and other activities. The proposed Minam River trailhead will be established on the border shared with the Minam State Recreation Area and the wild- life area. A footbridge over the Minam River is being considered to facilitate improved public access to the historic Minam River Trail, which travels for 6 miles through the property. The trail connects recre- ationists to the Wallowa Mountains and Eagle Cap Wilderness in the neighboring National Forest. Public access will be allowed from April 1 to Nov. 30 so distur- bance on deer and elk is limited during the sensitive winter period. Access along the Minam River Trail will be allowed year-round. As with other state wildlife areas, ODFW will pay fire protec- tion fees and “in-lieu” of property taxes to maintain county tax reve- nues. Future management will be determined through the adoption of a Wildlife Area Management Plan. PENDLETON — By her own admission, Ashley Ahearn is all hat and no cattle. A journalist for National Public Radio, Ahearn has lived and worked in major cities, including Boston, Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., while covering the envi- ronment and natural resources. Four years ago, she and her husband moved to rural East- ern Washington, where she now helps move cows for local ranchers in her spare time. But Ahearn insisted she is no rancher. Her passion is storytelling, and she is produc- ing a podcast series about women ranchers for Idaho Public Radio. Ranchers need to tell their stories, Ahearn told the annual Oregon Cattlemen’s Associa- tion convention, which ran Sunday through Tuesday, Nov. 21-23, in Pendleton, espe- cially as more consumers veer toward vegetarian and vegan diets they see as more environ- mentally sustainable. “The story that needs to get out is the other side of ranch- ing, and the commitment to the land,” Ahearn said on Nov. 22. Since swapping city life for sagebrush country, Ahearn said she has witnessed first- I see journalists coming into hand how ranchers care for the community — who will be their land and animals. Riding the ones who talk to the jour- through pastures, they can nalists?” identify by sight which areas Often, she said, the ones are grazed and which aren’t, who talk may have extreme and adapt manage- views that don’t reflect ment practices on the the broader reality. It fly. can be harder to find It has influenced other voices on the her own reporting, ground to challenge causing her to see their claims, without knowing where to find ranching through a different lens. Yet for them. some reason, she said Ahearn “There are so not as much of that many divisions in this story seems to get through to country right now, and I do the media clearly. think the media has contrib- Part of the issue, Ahearn uted to that,” Ahearn said. With the narrative on beef said, is most journalists are based in cities — that’s where changing in the country, and the jobs are, after all. But they startups in Silicon Valley don’t often venture into rural investing in alternative meat areas except during a natural technology, Ahearn said it disaster, or a crisis like the 2016 is “game on” for ranchers, occupation of the Malheur who need to be active tell- National Wildlife Refuge in ing their stories through the southeastern Oregon. mainstream media and social The practice, known as media. Ahearn said she sees food “parachute journalism,” can lead to instances where as an opportunity to rebuild news and communities are some of the broken connec- presented out of context to tions between ranchers and millions of people. consumers — highlighting “You show up as an outsider their commitment to steward- in a strange community, you ship. don’t necessarily speak the “I think we’ve lost some of language and you’re on dead- that connection,” she said. “I line,” Ahearn said. “Now that do think it starts with story- I live in a rural community and telling.” IN BRIEF Oregon lifts outdoor mask mandate SALEM — Oregonians no longer must wear masks in public outdoor settings, state health officials said Tuesday, Nov. 23, lifting a COVID-19 pandemic mandate in place nearly three months. The state has since late August required that everyone wear a mask in a public, outdoor space where social distancing isn’t possible, regardless of vaccination status. The decision to lift the mandate reflected the state’s success cutting cases and hospitaliza- tions, said Oregon Health Authority Director Patrick Allen. But, Allen made clear, the road to a full recovery is still long. People should expect to keep wearing masks indoors “for some while,” Allen said, at least into next year. “We don’t know enough to be able to set a useful target at this time.” “We are not yet at a point where we can consider relaxing mask guidelines for indoor settings,” Allen said. “We’re still dealing with limited hospital capacity for all patients.” — EO Media Group Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. -10s -0s 0s showers t-storms 10s rain 20s flurries 30s snow 40s ice 50s 60s cold front E AST O REGONIAN — Founded Oct. 16, 1875 — 70s East Oregonian (USPS 164-980) is published Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, by the EO Media Group, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801. 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