TEAMS JAM WALLOWA LAKE FOR 7 WONDERS CUP » A7 Standing in the stern, Sweep Dennis Kolb helps steer the Dragons in the Wallowas Grand Masters team through the Slalom races during Sunday morning’s heats of the Seven Wonders Cup. Ellen Bishop/For the Chieftain Enterprise, Oregon Issue No. 19 Wallowa.com August 29, 2018 $1 Dunn remembered as a man of principle By Steve Tool Wallowa County Chieftain Bruce Dunn Wallowa County com- missioner-elect Bruce Dunn passed away from a sus- pected cardiac incident while on a tour of timber stands on the Lower Joseph Creek Project Aug. 21. He was 74. When Dunn came to Wal- lowa County from Idaho in 1986, he looked for work as a forester in a steadily decreasing industry. Upon his death, Dunn was a Wallowa County icon, a commissioner-elect for retiring Paul Castilleja’s seat, chairman of the county’s Natural Resources Advisory Committee and the per- sonification of the county’s strug- gle to maintain control of the utili- zation of its natural resources. Born in Michigan, Dunn attended Michigan Tech, where he obtained a degree in forestry management and went to work for the U.S. Forest Service but ended up in the private sector at a sawmill. He briefly returned to the USFS when the mill he worked for washed away in a dam failure. He eventually landed a for- estry job at the Sequoia Forest Industries mill in Joseph. RY Timber of Boise eventually pur- chased the mill, which closed in 1995. Only Dunn was retained to manage the company’s exten- sive forest lands in the county, a job he held until his death. Among his accomplish- ments while serving on the Wal- lowa County Planning Com- mission were the creation of the Wallowa County and Nez Perce Tribe Salmon Recovery Plan to preclude the endangered species designation of Chinook salmon. Because of the techni- cal demands needed to imple- SCHOOL YEAR BEGINS ment the plan, the commission- ers, along with Dunn, formed the county’s Natural Resources Advisory Committee, which has two facets: A technical committee that reviews projects and makes recommendations and a stand- ing committee that develops rec- ommended policy on natural resource issues for the board of commissioners. See DUNN, Page A8 County TLT plan faces new challenges Suit says state’s open meeting laws violated By Kathleen Ellyn Wallowa County Chieftain Wallowa County Commissioners have been hit with two new challenges to the pro- posed increase of the Transient Lodging Tax in the unincorporated areas of the county. Attorney Benjamin Boyd, representing David Hurley, owner of Eagle Cap Cha- lets at Wallowa Lake, submitted a suit and a challenge with regard to the way the measure was brought forward. See TLT Plan, Page A8 Joseph will vote on marijuana measure Nov. 6 Effort to place it on the ballot in Enterprise fails By Kathleen Ellyn Wallowa County Chieftain Paul Wahl/Chieftain Alyse Shetler, kindergarten teacher at Joseph Charter School, reads from “The Night Before Kindergarten” on the first day of school Monday. Joseph and Wallowa schools both opened for the year Monday, Enterprise schools open Sept. 4. Two measures seeking the repeal of ordi- nances banning marijuana sales in Enter- prise and Joseph met with opposite results last week. Marty Thompson of Enterprise, who had hoped to open a shop on her property on Florence Avenue in Enterprise, collected 257 signatures in the city in favor of putting the measure on the Nov. 6 ballot. She turned them in at the Aug. 13 meeting of Enterprise City Council. See POT, Page A8 Chesnimnus Pack strikes again By Steve Tool Wallowa County Chieftain The Chesnimnus Wolf Pack claimed its fourth victim in a confirmed wolf depre- dation of a calf. A range rider found the five-month-old 300-pound animal on the morning of Aug. 20. Estimates indicate the calf was most like likely killed on Aug. 19. Investigators found that a significant por- tion of the carcass, including all the calf’s intestines, had been consumed. The remains were skinned and investigators found five canine puncture wounds along with assorted scrapes and tooth spacing, which indicated a wolf depredation. Wolf tracks and scat were also found near the kill site. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife said it has had five confirmed wolf depredations in the area since mid- June. This attack, as well as the other four, are attributed to the Chesnimnus Pack. INSIDE ‘Experience the Wallowas’ fall visitor guide Inside