OFF PAGE ONE Saturday, April 2, 2022 East Oregonian Forum: Grazing: Continued from Page A1 Continued from Page A1 in the wake of the passage of Measure 110, the law that decriminalized the personal possession of small amounts of hard drugs. Pullen said Umatilla County is his home and talked up his 10 years in county management and 20 years in government overall. He also is serving a three-year term on the Tillamook County Fair Board, which expires June 30, 2023. He said he would make improving county roads a priority. While some are fine, others are in serious need of repair. “They look like they’re on the moon,” he said. And the county needs to be ready to help farmers due to the 2022 Legislature pass- ing a bill to establish overtime pay requirements for agri- cultural workers in Oregon after 40 hours per week. He said that bill is going to have devastating effects on local farmers and the county needs to get ahead if what is coming. Barton, owner of Barton Laser Leveling Inc., said his decades in business give him the skills the county board needs. He said he considers homelessness a major hurdle for the county, which faces challenges to increase hous- ing and providing enough services. In a similar vein, he said, the county needs to find a way to confine people suffer- ing from mental illness to protect them and the public. He also said he wants more for the county’s youth, such as a virtual recreation center. Umatilla County, he said, afforded him the opportunity to have a good life, and he wants to pass that on. Bonifer said as commis- sioner he would take hard stances again state mandates for masks and vaccines. “We are a charter county. We don’t have to listen to the state,” he said. He also said he would cut “unnecessary” county jobs to free up more funds to help with mental health and homelessness. be barred from the pastures for research, he said. “It’s hard to accept the permittees were somehow caught by surprise,” Lacy said, noting that the plan to stop grazing was enacted seven years ago, while the ranchers were formally notified two years ago. Attorneys for the BLM and Cahill Ranches, which intervened in the lawsuit, a rg ued a tempora r y restraining order isn’t justi- fied because livestock graz- ing won’t cause irreparable harm to sage grouse popu- lations, the environment or the nonprofits. Ba r r i ng l ive s t o ck would be an “extraordi- nary remedy” that would be far more detrimental to the ranch than any harms to the environmental plain- tiffs if grazing continues another year, the defen- dants argued. “At core, the plaintiffs’ argument is one of impa- tience rather than harm,” said Arwyn Carroll, attor- ney for BLM. “They have not identified any data that would be lost or not collected if the closures don’t happen this season.” Kathy Aney/East Oregonian Umatilla County commissioner candidate Jesse Bonifer speaks to the audience during a can- didates forum on Thursday, March 31, 2022, at the Pendleton Convention Center. UPCOMING FORUMS Kathy Aney/East Oregonian Umatilla County commissioner candidate Susan Bower speaks to the audience during a candidates forum on Thurs- day, March 31, 2022, at the Pendleton Convention Center. Bower said as commis- sioner she would focus on the roll the county plays in regional economic develop- ment and working on ways to improve mental health services, perhaps through grants but also through private-public partnerships. The county’s organiza- tional health also is of impor- tance, she said, and voters need to support commis- sioner candidates who have professional backgrounds. That way, she explained, the county would not have to go down the road of hiring a professional manager. During a question about what the candidates know on the defunct Blue Moun- tain forest management plan, Bower said as a commis- sioner, she would not have to know the ins and outs of that kind of sweeping plan, but she has to know who the experts are to call about the topic. Timmons touted her work serving on the Blue Mountain Community College Founda- tion and as vice-chair on the Umatilla County board for CAPECO. “I think it’s important to be involved because that’s how you have the thumb on the pulse of the community and know what’s going on,” she said. As commissioner, she said, she would want to take on homelessness as well as push for helping local busi- nesses keep their doors open while recruiting new busi- nesses to the county. The county also needs to address the rising use of drugs, she said, and focus on elder care. Beers, Pullen and Bonifer admitted they knew nothing of the Boardman to Heming- way transmission line, the project to build a massive 500-kilovolt line across from Boardman to Western Idaho. The Umatilla County Republican Party hosted energytrust.org If you missed the Umatil- la County commissioners candidates forum on Thursday, March 31, you still have a pair of oppor- tunities to learn more about those running for the positions: • April 7, 6 p.m. at the Oregon National Guard Armory, 900 S.E.Colum- bia Drive., Hermiston. • April 8, 6 p.m. at the Milton-Freewater Com- munity Building, 109 N.E. Fifth St. For questions about the April 7 forum, email val- erie.bradley@gmail.com or josiahbarron.pcp@ protonmail.com. For the other event, contact Suni Danforth, Umatilla Coun- ty Republican Central Committee chair, at 541- 215-9389 or ucrpchair@ gmail.com. the forum at the Pendle- ton Convention Center, and Vance Day, a former Marion County Circuit Court judge, served as moderator. Day was on a swing through Eastern Oregon campaigning for a seat on the Oregon Court of Appeals. Perhaps as many as 50 people were in the audi- ence when the event began at 6 p.m. The Oregon primary elec- tion is May 17. The last day to register to vote in the primary is April 26. For more informa- tion about voter registration, visit bit.ly/38lxaHk. BLM insists on bureaucratic processes According to ONDA, grazing must be prohibited in the 13 pastures to allow for research on the sage grouse under a broader 2015 conservation plan for the species across the West, where its populations have been falling for decades. These 13 “research natu- ral areas” were originally required under a conserva- tion plan developed during the Obama administration but dropped from a revised version enacted by the Trump administration. However, a 2019 federal court order in a separate case reinstated the origi- nal conservation plan that required grazing to end in the 13 pastures. The envi- ronmental groups then filed the lawsuit alleging A9 the federal government has unlawfully failed to imple- ment the livestock-free “research natural areas.” The BLM counters that it must follow bureaucratic processes before halt- ing grazing within the 13 pastures, such as studying the environmental impacts of building necessary fences to keep cattle out. “Fences don’t spring into existence at the stroke of a pen,” said Carroll, noting that fences are “not the most environmentally friendly way” to close pastures due to the effects on wildlife and plant species. For that reason, BLM is studying alterna- tive methods. Ending grazing permits requires additional regula- tory steps that take time, but the agency hasn’t issued new ones, accord- ing to BLM. The delay in implementing the “research natural areas” hasn’t been unreasonable in light of those hurdles. “BLM has complied with that requirement and has not issued any new permits for those pastures,” Carroll said. “The plan does not create a deadline. It doesn’t use the manda- tory language one would expect to see in a deadline.” The environmental plaintiffs want to block grazing in pastures that have met rangeland health standards, so contin- ued livestock grazing is unlikely to cause popu- lation-level effects on the sage grouse, according to BLM. Invasive weeds and other fuels for wildfires are also reduced by grazing, benefiting the public inter- est. Meanwhile, halting grazing would force Joe Cahill, the ranch’s owner, to take drastic measures, such as reducing his cattle herd, feeding expensive hay, finding other forage ground, or disrupting irri- gation schedules, the defen- dants said. “We don’t know what the options are until he knocks on doors to find alternative pasture,” said Caroline Lobdell, the ranch’s attorney.