NORTHWEST East Oregonian A2 Thursday, May 5, 2022 John Day greenhouse may be headed to private managers By JUSTIN DAVIS Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY — After losing $122,000, the city- owned greenhouse in John Day soon could be under new management. City Manager Nick Green said he plans to propose that a private corporation run the greenhouse at the Tuesday, May 10, city council meeting. Green declined to disclose the name of the company at this point but said that infor- mation will be made public at the meeting. The greenhouse cost the city $155,000 to operate in fiscal year 2020-21 and produced $33,000 in reve- nue. Green said the corona- virus pandemic put a lot of the plans the city had for the greenhouse on hold, contrib- uting to the $122,000 deficit for the fiscal year. There are no plans to recover the funds lost on the greenhouse to date, but Green said the greenhouse played an integral part in securing some of the grant funding for the city’s planned $17.5 million wastewater treatment plant. “It was a proof of concept to show that we could grow hydroponic crops in the valley,” Green said. “And (as a) result of having that and having economic value- added traded-sector indus- Justin Davis/Blue Mountain Eagle The city-owned greenhouse in John Day on April 20, 2022. The city could lose the greenhouse after running a $122,000 deficit for the fiscal year. try that can benefit from the reclaimed water, we gained about $6 million in grants for the water treatment plant.” Green said he doesn’t see the greenhouse as a failure. “Next month we’ll be announcing the $3 million award for the reclaimed water system, which is going to give us all the purple pipe and the storage capability to provide water to the green- house, golf course, Malheur Lumber and our parks,” he said. “I’m not counting that with the $6 million we’ve already gotten. This is $3 million on top of that.” Green said the firm taking over the greenhouse will benefit from the purple pipe and water treatment facili- ties as well as provide private sector jobs and sell produce locally. “The greenhouse is abso- lutely not a failure,” Green insisted. “It did exactly what we intended it to do. I would Forecast for Pendleton Area | Go to AccuWeather.com TODAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY Cloudy, brief showers; cooler Periods of rain Cloudy, a shower or two; windy Windy in the a.m.; cloudy, cool A couple of showers 58° 48° 58° 44° 62° 50° 61° 48° 51° 40° 52° 39° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 60° 41° 57° 42° 59° 43° 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 54/45 58/44 60/40 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 61/49 Lewiston 55/47 64/52 Astoria 54/46 Pullman Yakima 62/48 52/42 66/50 Portland Hermiston 57/49 The Dalles 62/50 Salem Corvallis 56/47 Yesterday Normals Records La Grande 62/45 PRECIPITATION John Day Eugene Bend 57/49 61/44 60/45 Ontario 69/48 Caldwell Burns 74° 41° 73° 43° 90° (1966) 29° (2011) 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 57/49 0.00" 0.25" 0.10" 4.14" 1.99" 3.65" WINDS (in mph) 72/49 59/38 0.00" 0.30" 0.16" 5.92" 3.81" 5.50" through 3 p.m. yest. HIGH LOW TEMP. Pendleton 64/40 57/49 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 58/48 60/49 75° 41° 69° 44° 92° (1966) 22° (1897) PRECIPITATION Moses Lake 52/42 Aberdeen 55/42 60/44 Tacoma Yesterday Normals Records Spokane Wenatchee 52/44 Today Boardman Pendleton Medford 62/49 Fri. SW 6-12 WNW 6-12 WSW 7-14 W 7-14 BAKER CITY — Manne- quins, fortunately, don’t mind getting soaked. They’re immune to hypo- thermia, too. Those attributes helped keep a major search and rescue training exercise going last weekend despite heavy rain on Saturday afternoon and evening, April 30, in the forest near Phillips Reservoir. About 50 search and rescue team members from six Eastern Oregon counties gathered for the annual train- ing, said Ashley McClay, public information officer for the event’s host, the Baker County Sheriff’s Office. Baker County search and rescue members were joined by their counterparts from Union, Wallowa, Malheur, Gilliam and Umatilla coun- ties, McClay said. Those six counties, along 55/40 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2022 Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today 5:37 a.m. 8:07 p.m. 8:33 a.m. 12:26 a.m. First Full Last New May 8 May 15 May 22 May 30 NATIONAL EXTREMES Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) High 96° in Thermal, Calif. Low 11° in Bodie State Park, Calif. NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY 0s showers t-storms The rain also delayed the rope rescue since the showers made the rock cliff slick. Instead, searchers, after finding the two manne- quins during the ground search April 30 in the Old Auburn Road and California Gulch area, north of High- way 7, returned to the camp- ground and welcomed meals provided by retired Baker County Sheriff Terry Speel- man. On May 1, with the skies having cleared, the rope rescue exercise took place, but the second planned ground search was canceled, McClay said. In addition to the ground searchers, teams from Umatilla and Malheur coun- ties brought aerial drones to participate in the training. The annual exercise shifts among the 10 counties in the region. This was the first time Baker County has played host since 2015. IN BRIEF Walla Walla park to become more walkable WALLA WALLA — Pioneer Park’s accessibility and “walkability” just got a boost from Walla Walla city leaders. The Walla Walla City Council recently accepted a $300,000 grant to build addi- tional sidewalks, ramps compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act and cross- walk enhancements around the well-used park between Alder and Whitman streets just west of downtown. The proposed improvements would cost a total of $600,000, half of which the city or other funding sources would need to cover. The project will build more than 1,000 feet of sidewalk infill along Whit- Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. -0s with Grant, Harney, Morrow and Wheeler, constitute the Eastern Oregon Search and Rescue group. Participants spent the weekend at Union Creek campground, on the north side of Phillips Reservoir about 17 miles southwest of Baker City. The initial plan was to have a ground search, involv- ing a live “victim,” as well as a rope rescue, involving a mannequin, both on April 30 followed by a second ground search on May 1, McClay said. But with rain forecast, organizers decided to replace the live subject of the search with a pair of mannequins, simulating a father and son who failed to return from a trip to the woods, McClay said. “We didn’t want to have someone sitting out in the cold and wet for several hours,” she said. SUN AND MOON Klamath Falls -10s “We knew that up front,” he said. “What we didn’t know was COVID. So we lost time having to adapt to a very dynamic marketplace with changing customer preferences and needs as a result of that pandemic. That happened to every enter- prise.” The COVID-19 pandemic probably accelerated the timeline for moving the greenhouse to private owner- ship, according to Green, but Soggy Saturday no deterrent to search and rescue training By JAYSON JACOBY Baker City Herald PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 53° 39° do it again. I think we should do it again, probably with a private partner out of the gate this time, but we didn’t have that luxury in 2017. Nobody was growing anything hydro- ponically in the valley four years ago.” Green added the plan always was to take the greenhouse private or move to a co-op arrangement because the facility wasn’t ever going to work with government labor. he added that things happen for a reason. “We probably would’ve kept growing had the pandemic not happened. At the end of the day we’re not worse off for it,” he said. “It brought our timeline forward a bit, but having a private operator who is less constrained about what they can grow, where they can sell, who they employ and at what prices — I don’t have much choice. I have to pay all government employees PERS and public benefits. They don’t have that restric- tion.” Despite the monetary loss, Green said it would have been “highly unlikely” that the city would have gotten as much grant funding as it did for the wastewater treatment plant if the greenhouse had not been tied to the proposal. “What is the story without it? We’re building a wastewater treatment plant, so give us money?” Green added he thinks the new owners of the green- house will be successful if the council approves the proposal to transfer opera- tions. “They’ve got a turnkey facility, the staff is ready to roll, they’ve got the seeds,” he said. “We’re going to parti- tion the facility off into its own lot, lease the lot with the buildings and let them roll.” 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. Periodicals postage paid at Pendleton, OR. Postmaster: send address changes to East Oregonian, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801. Copyright © 2022, EO Media Group 90s 100s warm front stationary front 110s high CORRECTION: In the Page A4 letter to the editor, “Susan Bower has Umatilla County’s best interest at heart” published Saturday, April 30, a sentence should have stated: “She is a team player, but one who is willing to take charge and work in a trans- parent method when the situation merits.” The East Oregonian works hard to be accurate and sincerely regrets any errors. If you notice a mistake in the paper, please call 541-966-0818. low Circulation Dept. For mail delivery, online access, vacation stops or delivery concerns call 800-781-3214 ADVERTISING Classified & Legal Advertising Regional Sales Director (Eastside) EO Media Group: Classified advertising: 541-564-4538 • Karrine Brogoitti 541-963-3161 • kbrogoitti@eomediagroup.com 211 S.E. Byers Ave., Pendleton 541-276-2211 333 E. 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