OFF PAGE ONE Thursday, February 3, 2022 East Oregonian Motel: Continued from Page A1 Reopening the motel isn’t exactly a turnkey project. Mogg said there are a number of things that will need to be replaced and repaired for a building that hasn’t oper- ated as a hotel in years and was even briefl y rented out as low income apartments by the former owners. When the project is finished, Mogg said the MotoLodge will be themed around the mid-20th century era of auto travel, although not in a “kitschy” way that evokes “Happy Days.” He said Cascadia intends to off er higher quality rooms than the average budget motel but won’t be seeking luxury clientele who might patron- ize chains like Radisson. Mogg said the project will be reliant on obtaining a grant from the city’s urban renewal district. Charles Denight, the associate direc- tor of the Pendleton Develop- ment Commission, said the district already has received an application through the district’s rejuvenation grant program, which provides funding for full-scale reno- vations. Mog g s a id C a s ca- dia expects to open the MotoLodge by Memorial Day, ahead of the summer Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Workers install roofi ng materials Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2022, at the former Knights Inn at 310 S.W. Dorion Ave. in Pendleton event season. In an interview, Chrisman said Cascadia’s project was proof that Pendleton was an “international tourist desti- nation waiting to happen.” He added the MotoLodge should be a good compliment to Moto Stuff, a different business that is in the process of turning the old fi re station at 911 S.W. Court Ave. into a multi-use stop for motorcycle enthusiasts. Chrisman said downtown hotels rely more heavily on local tourism than lodging near Interstate 84, which can draw potential customers from motorists just looking for a quick stop on their way to somewhere else. It’s been a tumultuous two-year period for the hospi- tality industry, and not every hotel has made it to this stage of the pandemic operating in the same way they used to. The owners of the Whis- key Inn sold their property to the Community Action Program of East Central Oregon, which now uses the building as transitional hous- ing and an emergency shel- ter for unhoused residents. The Pendleton City Council recently revoked the busi- ness license for The Mari- gold Hotel, 105 S.E. Court A7 Ave., after a string of calls for service from police that culminated in a shooting on the property. At a city council hearing, The Mari- gold’s owner said many of the problems with staff and customers formed while he was away from the property and focused on his family’s health. But overall, hotel owners and operators see opportu- nity in Pendleton. Besides MotoLodge, Parley Pearce, a former co-owner of Hamley & Co., still is planning to turn the historic Oak Hotel, 327 S.E. First St., into a boutique hotel. Outside the downtown core, a 78-room Radisson Hotel location is expected to open in the spring, the owner of the Pendleton Holiday Inn is planning on building a new motel for the franchise while retaining the building under a diff erent name, and the city continues to pursue a hotel at the Pendleton Convention Center. All of these develop- ments are happening on top of a growing vacation rental industry through services such as Airbnb. Chrisman said Pendleton over-relied on the Round-Up as its main tourist attraction for many years. If the city is able to keep up its trend of starting and maintaining new tourism events each year, he’s confi dent the city will be able to accommodate the boomlet of new lodging options. Elk: Continued from Page A1 going on, that we have staff kind of running frantic on, is we have a lot of elk damage,” McCanna said on a recent wildlife management Zoom. “Elk getting into hay stacks is one of the big ones.” McCanna is an expert on resolving wildlife confl icts with humans for the Wash- ington Department of Fish and Wildlife. He teaches farmers how to set up auto- matic propane cannons to haze them with noise. But elk are smart and sometimes it doesn’t always work. This year, drought has upped the stakes — hay prices are up across the West. “This summer was very hot and dry. And alfalfa and grass hay is at a premium right now,” McCanna said. Peter Nilsson/Contributed Photo Elk in this undated photo gather at Peter Nilsson’s farm out- side La Grande. He says he loves watching the bald eagles and moose that show up on his farm by the river. And he thinks elk are cool, too. But not when an entire herd parties all winter at his spread, eating his hay. programmed to eat big quanti- ties of dried twigs and grasses with a lower energy. “The bug is Clostridium perfringens,” Colin Gillin explained. He’s the state veterinarian for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wild- life. “It’s a bacteria that all ruminants carry in their guts, it’s just you don’t want that Clostridium to get out of control,” Gillin said. “And it’s when you throw corn in there, it starts to have a party.” In this case, the corn is hay. The bacteria break down the walls of the stomach and intestines, so an elk can starve to death with a belly full of alfalfa. Floods and fi res Meade Krosby is a senior scientist at the University of Washington’s Climate Impacts Group in Seattle. “So, one of the primary ways that wildlife respond to changing climate is by moving,” K rosby said. “They shift their ranges — they want to track the change in climate as it happens.” She said now more than ever before, animals will need to move quickly. Climate induced f loods and fi res in the Northwest are dramatically pushing animals around on the land- scape. She said wildlife will need safe corridors to run for it. “They have to move so fast, but they have all this stuff in the way,” Krosby said. “They have roads and highways in the way, they POM: Continued from Page A1 monitoring and DEQ did not provide an agency-approved method until 2021. Measu r i ng n it rogen in plant tissue is “neither an accurate nor a useful measure of the amount of nitrogen removed from fi elds by crops, and the information does not measure compliance with any permit requirement or serve any other purpose under the permit,” the appeal states. Groundwater nitrates are a serious concern in the Lower Umatilla Basin, which was designated a Ground- water Management Area in 1990 to curb contamination from non-point sources like farms and municipal waste- water facilities. Drinking groundwater ‘Elk curtains’ Rajah Bose/Contributed Photo A deer in this undated photo forages through a neighborhood on the outskirts of Spokane at sunset. Deep snow in many parts of the Northwest have driven animals out of higher eleva- tion range toward farms and haystacks. Starving with a belly full of hay ria with the season and what’s available to eat. In the spring and summer, bacteria colo- nies adjust to digest green shoots and high-protein feed. But, in the fall and winter gut bacteria are essentially At the Northwest Hay Expo in Kennewick, mostly men, mostly unmasked, roam around the great hall, slapping hands and check- ing out the latest in twine, balers and tarping technol- ogy. Pamphlets, ball caps and squishy stress-balls shaped like little tractors litter vendor’s tables. A vendor motions to a passing farmer, “Hi, ya, how you? Enjoying your day so far?” Clint Vieu is from Walla Walla. He’s with a major tarping services company called ITC Services out of Moses Lake. He said one solution for growers is to install “elk curtains” that are tarps covering the sides of big stacks. Left unprotected, Vieu said, “Stacks have fallen on elk ‘cause they’ll eat into it so much that it will actu- ally destabilize the stack and it will collapse and fall in on the animals.” ‘It’s life’ Every year, elk bust up Anthony Leggett’s fences to get to his hay and crops. And every year, he fixes them again. “You know if I chase them off my property, they just go to the neighbor’s property and get into their haystack,” Leggett said. Still, Leggett has made his peace with the elk. “We just happen to live in a spot where there’s a trail that they come down on,” he said. “For us, it’s life.” have cities in the way, agri- cultural areas. And all of these form these barriers to wildlife getting to where they need to go to shift their ranges to adapt to climate change.” Making things worse, elk can starve on hay. Elk have four chambered guts that change their bacte- with elevated nitrates can be harmful in infants, causing a condition known as methe- moglobinemia, or “Blue Baby Syndrome.” The management area encompasses parts of north- ern Umatilla and Morrow counties, including the cities of Hermiston, Echo, Stan- field, Umatilla, Boardman and Irrigon, with a combined population of 33,534. Ir rigated agriculture contributes most of the leached nitrogen into the groundwater in the area, esti- mated at 70%. About 12% comes from confi ned animal feeding operations, such as dairies; 8% from livestock pastures and 4.6% from food processing land application. The port acknowledged that most, but not all, of the sites for wastewater appli- cation are in the Lower Umatilla Basin Groundwa- ter Management Area. The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality issued a $1.3 million fi ne against the Port of Morrow for applying exces- sive amounts of nitrate-containing water to some area farmland. The port has appealed the fi ne. EO Media Group, File