FOR HAWKINS SISTERS RANCH, IT’S CHICKEN FEED Two businesses opening in Joseph | Page 6 Enterprise, Oregon Issue No. 41 Wallowa.com MUSH IN THE SLUSH 2018 Eagle Cap Extreme filled with challenges, fun Morgan Anderson of Enterprise guides her six-dog team toward the Salt Creek Summit check point in the first leg of the 31-mile, two-day race. Anderson finished third overall, with a time of 7 hours, 44 minutes for the two 31-mile courses. T See DOGS, Page A10 $1 Legacy land group has eyes on Hayes Farm Downpayment for $2 million deal due in March By Paul Wahl Wallowa County Chieftain A group of investors is attempting to purchase the 145-acre Hayes Farm west of Joseph but will have to move quickly. A $750,000 down payment is due in March. Roughly $400,000 has been raised by Eastern Oregon Legacy Lands Fund. The organization will pay off the remain- ing $1.75 million price tag over a period of two years or less, according to James Monte- ith, chairman of the fund. “That’s a lot of money but less than we expected to have to put up,” said Monteith, noting a previous selling price of $11 mil- lion. The property has been in flux for the past decade. The farm is a treasure trove of historic, natural and agricultural significance. Located at the foot of the Terminal Moraine just west of Joseph, the property includes a half-mile of Wallowa River front- age as well as Indian Ridge, where Chief Joseph and the Wallowa Band Nez Perce confronted the U.S. Army in September 1876, before their forced exodus from the Wallowa country the following spring. See FARM, Page A9 Good news ahead for road budget By Kathleen Ellyn Wallowa County Chieftain he weather did not cooperate for the start of the Eagle Cap Extreme Sled Dog race. Rain poured down all day Thursday and into the night. The rain on packed snow at lower elevations turned the precious three inches of white stuff into slush and ice, neither great for sledding. Wallowa County was represented by three mushers this year, but Susan Parraga, scheduled to run the 2 day 31-miles-per-day Pot Race with her purebred Siberian Huskies, scratched on Thurs- day morning. “It was not worth getting sick or hurt,” she said. Wallowa County’s other two competitors accepted the challenge. Morgan Anderson, grad- uating from the youth division to run the Pot Race and veterinarian Jereld Rice, who was running his first-ever race in the 200, made it through. January 24, 2018 State funding will be increased 2021-24 By Kathleen Ellyn Wallowa County Chieftain Trevor Warren’s 14-month-old Alaskan Husky, Neptune, is snow-covered but still enthusiastic after winning the 100- mile race. Warren’s team of mostly young, unseasoned dogs, finished in a fast time of 20 hours, six minutes. 2018 Women’s Marchers cheery, resolute By Kathleen Ellyn Wallowa County Chieftain A cheerful crowd of approximately 150 met in Joseph for the Second Annual Women’s March Jan. 20. The group traversed Main Street with signs and flags proclaiming a continued dissatis- faction with the Trump administration and Trump personally and expressing a belief in the dignity of women and all other individuals. Cheerful signals a change in how marchers and their allies are moving for- ward from last year’s event. The march of 2017 saw approxi- mately 300 angry individuals in Joseph. The 2018 Wallowa County group, though smaller, met with more confidence than they had exhibited at the first march. Kathleen Ellyn/Chieftain A year down the road, the anti-sex- ual harassment #MeToo movement also Marchers came in all sizes, ages and descriptions for the Second Annual Women’s March on Joseph Main Street Jan. 20. played a role in setting the theme. The rollercoaster that is the roads bud- get in Wallowa County has hit bottom and is starting another climb. Thanks to new vehicle dealer privilege, public transportation payroll, bicycle and gas taxes and increased registration and license fees, the Oregon Department of Transpor- tation will have double its usual budget for the upcoming 2021-2024 period, raising the four-year total to $2.4 billion. A proportionally increased amount will trickle into Wallowa County. It will take seven years, said County Commis- sioner Susan Roberts, but eventually Wal- lowa County will be getting a bit more than $500,000 a year from the state. That money is meant to make up for the loss of timber receipts and then Secure Rural Schools money. However, $500,000 a year still does not match the approximately $800,000 per year the county was receiving from the federal schools program two years ago, Roberts said. The county received around $825,000 into the road department in 2016, Roberts said. This year Wallowa County received around $200,000 in Statewide Transpor- tation Improvement Program money and $61,000 in 2015 timber receipts that were held over pending congressional approval. Timber receipts are historically split between schools and roads, so not all of that $61,000 went to roads. “It’s a considerable change,” Roberts said. “We lost the timber revenues, we went to SRS, and then lost that, and now over the next seven years, the ODOT money should build us back to $500,000. But that’s still $300,000 less than we had.” As a result, county projects, such as com- pletion of the 39 Road have been placed on the back burner. The road, also known as See ROADS, Page A8