Eagle Cap Extreme Dog Sled Race events begin Wednesday. Schedule of events, page A16 www.wallowa.com Enterprise, Oregon January 21, 2015 $1 Lear returns as Enterprise mayor Lear says city should consider making mayor’s term four years, suggests changing the form of city’s government three council members, Laura Miller, Jenni Word, and Dave Elliott, who were sworn in as a group. Among the trio, only ENTERPRISE – Steve Lear, who was Elliott is new to Enterprise government. sworn in as Enterprise’s mayor for a sec- Lear, who was previously mayor from RQGWLPHÀRDWHGDIHZLGHDVIRUPDNLQJ 2011 to 2013, and before that served four major changes to the structure of city years as a councilor, spent the past two government as a new governing group years outside of government after being assembled Tuesday night, Jan. 13, in the defeated for re-election in 2012. Enterprise City Council chambers. In his return to the gavel last week, At the outset of the monthly regular Lear spoke for several minutes about his meeting of the Enterprise City Council, vision for city government, mentioning Michele Young, city administrator, ad- certain concerns he said he periodically PLQLVWHUHGWKHPD\RUDORDWKRIRI¿FHWR heard from residents “on the street,” but Lear, and then the councilor’s oath to also extolling Enterprise as “a wonderful By Rob Ruth Wallowa County Chieftain Walden talks plans at meeting city” that compares favorably “to anyone in the state.” Additionally, Lear talked about the possibility of changing the form of city JRYHUQPHQWVXJJHVWLQJWKDWFLW\RI¿FLDOV should explore the merits of “a city man- ager or a strong mayor system.” While Lear’s comments about the structure of government included no UHFRPPHQGDWLRQV KH ZDV PRUH GH¿QLWH Rob Ruth/Chieftain about another change he’d like the city to consider: lengthening the term of mayor Enterprise Mayor Steve Lear, right, began his term of office at the Jan. 13 meeting. At left is City Administrator Michele from two years to four. See MAYOR, Page A3 Young, who administered oaths of office to Lear and to three city councilors elected in November. A triple threat Musician delights as a singer-songwriter-instrumentalist By S.F. Tool Wallowa County Chieftain L By S.F. Tool ocal musician Heidi Muller comes from WKHIDUÀXQJODQGRI New Jersey. “Rural, northwest New Jersey, not near the cities. We were near Pennsylvania, where it’s all farm- land,” Muller said. A triple threat as singer-song- writer-instrumentalist, Muller’s love of music goes as far back as she can remember. “I was told I walked up to the piano and played a little tune when I was three years old. I grew up in the ’50s and my older brother and sister had a record player with 45s which we’d play getting ready for school and I’d just sing harmony to them,” Muller said. Muller learned to play guitar when she was 11 and her exper- tise is mostly self-taught. “By the end of high school, I was doing folk songs like Joan Baez and Joni Mitchell and by college I was performing with friends and it just kind of grew from there.” She attended a small college near Boston and majored in psychology. “I worked a bit in WKH¿HOGZKHQ,JUDGXDWHGEXW I couldn’t get far without an ad- vanced degree,” Muller said. Muller left the East Coast to work in Texas for a few years and didn’t like it. She had traveled WKH3DFL¿F1RUWKZHVWLQKHU college days and heard its call. She moved to Seattle with the idea of obtaining her master’s in social work from the University of Washington. Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE – An en- thusiastic crowd of two doz- en Wallowa County citizens forsook football and crowd- ed into the community center to greet Dis- trict 2 U.S. Represen- tative Greg Walden at a Jan. 18 Walden town hall meeting. Walden, casually dressed in a plaid shirt and jeans, spent a congenial period of well over an hour answer- ing questions and bantering with audience members. Walden opened the forum with an obligatory mention of the Oregon Ducks loss in the national championship game before getting down to business informing the audience of congressional activities in Washington D.C., and answering audi- ence queries on subjects ranging from forest management to U.S. foreign policy. See WALDEN, Page A3 C HIEFTAIN WA L L O WA C O U N T Y Wallowa County’s Newspaper Since 1884 Volume 132 Issue No. 40 © 2015 EO Media Group S.F. Tool/Chieftain See MULLER, Page A3 Singer-songwriter-instrumentalist Heidi Muller plays dulcimer in the living room of her Enterprise home. Joseph street repair plan still has bumps By S.F. Tool Wallowa County Chieftain JOSEPH – Nearly 25 Jo- seph residents attended a Jan. 15 town hall meeting to offer the city council their opinions and solutions addressing the city’s street repair quandary. The council, Mayor Den- nis Sands, and Brad Baird, president of Anderson Perry & Associates, the engineering ¿UPWKDWFUHDWHGWKHSURSRVDOV already under consideration, listened, answered questions and took notes from citizens whose demeanors ranged from congenial to nearly hos- tile. Sands opened the meeting with a rundown of the city’s preferred alternatives of fund- ing the street repair through either a property tax increase or a transportation utility fee. S.F. Tool/Chieftain Mayor Dennis Sands (standing) leans forward to listen to an audience member’s comment regarding the funding of Joseph street repair. While a transportation util- ity fee, which would amount to approximately $14 per month added to the sewer/ water bill of Joseph resi- dents, gained some traction within the audience, others complained those who owned lots without hookups would escape the fee. The council offered to investigate the pos- sibility of collecting fees ret- roactively. The transportation utility fee is, in fact, the $1.2 million bottom rung of three alterna- tives to repair the streets. The other alternatives include a $2.55 million street repair bond levy voters torpedoed and sank in November, and a $4.2 million comprehensive UHSDLU SODQ ZLWK XQLGHQWL¿HG funding. Town hall attendees pro- posed a number of alterna- tives, one calling for the city to purchase the road repair equipment and perform the work itself, and then selling the equipment after the proj- ect ended. Baird proposed the city establish talks with the Wallowa County Road De- partment to minimize the re- pair costs. See REPAIRS, Page A7