THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2021 146th Year, No. 18 $1.50 WINNER OF 16 ONPA AWARDS IN 2021 DECEMB ER 1–8, INSIDE CHRISTMAS LIGHTS GLOW IN WINTERS NIGHT IN GO! WWW.G OEASTE 2021 RNOREG ON.COM Heritage Lights tes illumina er hts Decemb nig Page 8 Listen PAGE 3 PAGE 4 PAGE S 9 & 18 Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Lynn Tompkins, the co-founder and di- rector of Blue Mountain Wildlife, paus- es alongside a pen Wednesday, Dec. 1, 2021, at the rehabilitation center’s Pendleton headquarters. The organi- zation recently received a $45,000 gift from a trust. Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Randy Severe’s sons Ryan Severe, left, and Jarad Severe look up as they lift their father’s casket atop a horse-drawn carriage Tuesday, Nov. 30, 2021, following his funeral service at the Pendleton Convention Center. By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian REMEMBERING in the world. Nearly everybody remarked on his infectious laugh and smile. PENDLETON — Blue Mountain Wildlife’s weekly newsletter ran through the normal humdrum of the nonprof- it’s work before making a signifi cant reveal: The bird rehabilitation center was brought a screech owl that had been trapped in a chimney, a rescued Cooper’s hawk died before reaching the group’s facility south of Pendleton, and the orga- nization just received a $45,000 check from a trust. The latter item is big news for Blue Mountain Wildlife, which has been reha- bilitating wild birds from across Eastern Oregon since 1990. Compared against the nonprofi t’s $200,000 annual budget, the $45,000 gift will provide a signifi - cant boost to the rehabilitation center. According to Lynn Tompkins, the co-founder and director of Blue Moun- tain Wildlife, all of this happened with- out her meeting the surprise benefactor. The $45,000 is being provided by the Leona B. Ambrose Living Trust, an entity created to carry out the will of the late Ambrose. While Blue Moun- tain Wildlife may not have connected with her during her lifetime, Ambrose decided to donate signifi cant amounts of money to the organization and to other bird sanctuaries in Oregon. Tompkins said Blue Mountain Wild- life’s annual budget should be higher, but she isn’t planning on using Ambrose’s money for operational expenses. Instead, she expects Blue Mountain Wildlife to work with the Blue Mountain Commu- nity Foundation to use the gift as seed money for an endowment she hopes her organization can grow and withdraw from for years to come. Tompkins said she’s recommending these moves with the future in mind. “My goal is to make it sustainable past me,” she said. See Mr. Round-Up, Page A7 See Center, Page A7 MR. ROUND-UP ‘When people thought of the Round-Up, they thought of Randy Severe’ By BRYCE DOLE East Oregonian PENDLETON — The two sons of Randy Severe led the pallbear- ers as they loaded their father into the back of a horse-drawn carriage for the procession through Pend- leton. Atop his casket, adorned by fl owers, rested Severe’s favorite black cowboy hat. It was an overcast Tuesday, Nov. 30, outside the Pendleton Convention Center, where at least 500 mourners gathered for the funeral service of the 70-year-old saddlemaker and former president of the Pendleton Round-Up Board of Directors. Severe contracted COVID-19 shortly after attending the Pend- leton Round-Up. His family does not wish to disclose whether he was vaccinated, daughter Darla Phillips said. He spent nearly two months on a ventilator at a Port- land hospital before succumbing to the disease Nov. 21. “He was so loved and cher- ished by all,” Phillips said. “He knew so many people and touched so many lives. And this shows the respect that he gained. There’s so much love for him.” Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian The cortege for the funeral of Randy Severe proceeds up Southgate on Tuesday, Nov. 30, 2021, en route to Olney Cemetery in Pendleton. Severe, 70, died Nov. 21 following a monthslong battle with COVID-19. Mourners gathered at the service to comfort one another and share their memories of Severe. Many of the men wore cowboy hats, which they tilted low as somber country music fi lled the room. They told stories of Severe’s kindness, selfl essness and how he made you feel like you were the most important person Pendleton bird rehab center hopes $45K gift will set up future Levy proposes $1 million for wolf-livestock compensation State has confi rmed wolves injured or killed 87 animals so far in 2021 By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press SALEM — An Eastern Oregon legislator wants to significantly increase state funding to reimburse ranchers for dead and missing livestock caused by wolves. State Rep. Bobby Levy, R-Echo, plans to introduce a bill in the 2022 Legisla- ture that would provide $1 million during the next bien- nium for the Oregon Depart- ment of Agriculture’s Wolf Depredation Compensation and Finan- cial Assis- tance grant program. The bill comes on b eh a l f of Levy the Oregon Cattlemen’s Association, Oregon Farm Bureau, Oregon Sheep Grow- ers Association and Oregon Hunters Association. “(Producers) didn’t ask for these wolves to be brought in,” Levy said. “It’s a very emotional thing, and it’s getting more costly by the day.” The Wolf Depredation Compensation and Finan- cial Assistance program was created by the Legislature in 2011, and provides grants to counties where wolves are present. Grants may be awarded to cover the losses of dead, injured or missing live- stock, as well as non-lethal prevention. Ranchers, however, argue the program is underfunded. For 2020, ODA awarded $130,164 split among 12 coun- ties, covering just 37% of all grant requests. In 2019, coun- ties were awarded $251,529, or 58% of all requests. State Sen. Bill Hansell, R-Athena, requested $800,000 for the program in the 2021 Legislature. Lawmakers instead approved a one-time allocation of $400,000, on top of what already is provided in ODA’s budget. Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife/Contributed Photo A trail cam photo from May 30, 2021, of one of the two year- ling wolves in the Lookout Mountain Pack in Baker County. State Rep. Bobby Levy, R-Echo, plans to introduce a bill in the 2022 Legislature to increase state funding to reimburse ranchers for livestock losses that wolves cause. Jonathan Sandau, a special assistant to ODA Director Alexis Taylor, said the agency anticipates having a little more than $800,000 total to compensate producers for wolf-livestock confl icts during the biennium, including federal grants from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. See Wolves, Page A7