WEEKEND EDITION Police chase in Pendleton ends with crash into OSP car | REGION, A3 JUNE 4 – 5, 2022 146th Year, No. 72 $1.50 WINNER OF 16 ONPA AWARDS IN 2021 MEASURE 110 BLUE MOUNTAIN COMMUNITY COLLEGE Auditors identify problems in grants Negotiations with grant winners to take until late July, early August to complete By EMILY GREEN The Lund Report SALEM — State auditors issued a “risk” letter flagging issues even as the drug decriminalization act’s oversight council finished approving grant applications. After nearly six months of delays, funds are closer to reaching addic- tion services providers in Oregon. The council overseeing Measure 110′s rollout finished approving grant applications on Thursday, June 2, and grantees should have their money by the end of the summer. The milestone comes one day after the Oregon Secretary of State’s Office, which is conducting an audit, sent a letter to Oregon Health Authority calling out “areas of risk” in the way the program has been administered so far. OHA Director Patrick Allen noted his agency’s “missteps” on Measure 110 in presentations to legislative committees on June 1 and 2. “There’s been some chal- lenges, and not least of which we’ve certainly made some mistakes as we’ve done this work,” he told the Senate Judiciary and Ballot Measure 110 Committee on June 1. He said the agency “vastly underestimated the complexity” of reinventing the behavioral health system and the pandemic has placed additional stresses on the agency’s workforce, which led to competing priorities. Oversight council ‘optimistic’ on review process When voters passed Oregon’s landmark drug decriminaliza- tion law in November 2020, they diverted about $300 million in mari- juana tax dollars to pay for drug and alcohol treatment and recov- ery services every two years. The bulk of this biennium’s Measure 110 funding, about $276 million, was initially stalled as the inexperienced community council tasked with distributing the funds struggled to design and execute a complicated grant program with little assistance from the state. Then, after more than 130 Oregon Health Authority staff stepped in to take over application reviews, bureaucratic processes further delayed the release of funds. See Grants, Page A8 Kathy Aney/East Oregonian About 100 Blue Mountain Community College faculty, students and community members gather Wednesday, June 1, 2022, on the Pend- leton campus to protest proposed budget cuts before a meeting of the BMCC Board of Education. Layoff decision postponed Faculty supporters rally before meeting on 2022-23 budget By JOHN TILLMAN East Oregonian P ENDLETON — The Blue Moun- tain Community College Board of Education at its meeting Wednesday, June 1, postponed action on a 2022-23 budget proposing faculty layoffs. The board’s reading of state law requir- ing seven day public notice was responsi- ble for the delay, BMCC President Mark Browning explained. The board plans to reconvene in a special meeting June 6 to consider approval of the budget. The budget committee agreed to the BMCC Faculty Association’s request to resume talks on teacher layoffs June 3. “I don’t ever want to close that door,” Browning said. “We have a plan, but of course (the administration) is willing to listen. The (BMFA) came up with some good ideas before talks broke down. I give them credit for that.” Before the final decision to delay the budget vote, the faculty union went ahead with its rally outside Pioneer Hall. The demonstration of support for teachers attracted about 120 attendees, according to new BMFA President Sascha McKeon. She Kathy Aney/East Oregonian Greg Schulberg, Blue Mountain Community College math and science instructor, plays drums with a faculty band during a rally Wednesday, June 1, 2022, on the Pendleton cam- pus to protest the college administration’s budget proposal that would cut several teach- ing positions. has been on the union executive team for two years and a biology instructor for 10. “The other faculty and I are grateful for the extraordinary support we have had from our students, alumni and the community at large,”she read in a state- ment to the board. “As of this afternoon, our petition to save BMCC faculty has garnered over 1,900 signatures between our Google sheet and Change.org.” The event featured sign-carrying union supporters in blue T-shirts emblazoned with “Save BMCC” in yellow, a band of instructors playing classic rock and stacks of pizza boxes and water bottles. Public speakers’ comments began at 5 p.m. See BMCC, Page A8 Profits on the line Local farmers, orchardists paying premiums for necessary petroleum-related goods By JOHN TILLMAN East Oregonian UMAPINE — Agricultural producers are paying record-high tabs for crucial fertilizers. The agricultural data analysis service DTN reported import- ant fertilizers doubled from the first week of May 2021 to 2022. Anhydrous ammonia reached an all-time high of $1,534 per ton in April and stayed the same in May. Urea also hit a record of $1,031 per ton in April then dropped slightly to $1,001. Anhydrous was barely above $400 in September 2020, but has zoomed upward more than 250% in less than two years. Fertilizer inf lation has outpaced even gasoline, diesel and natural gas price hikes. Producing nitrogen fertilizers ammonia and urea requires natu- ral gas feedstock. Despite high prices for fuel, fertilizer and other petroleum products, though, some local farmers and ranchers remain cautiously optimistic. “As long as wheat prices stay up, I’m OK with high inputs,” Wheat and cattle rancher Tim Leber of Umapine said. “Where I get nervous is if wheat crashes, while we’re stuck with high inputs, as happened in 2008 to 2010.” In 2008, soft white wheat prices were almost as high as 2022. Leber already has top-dressed his fields, to take advantage of the See Profits, Page A8 Kathy Aney/East Oregonian Umapine farmer Tim Leber on May 31, 2022, leans against the Case Quadtrac tractor he uses to fertilize and seed his crops. Fertilizer prices have doubled in the past year.