NEWS Wallowa.com Wednesday, January 23, 2019 A5 Fishtrap Fireside The 175-acre conservation easement boundary. Landholder and land trust work to preserve moraine land Working with Wallowa Land Trust, landowner Anna Mae Quint, volun- tarily extinguished all future development and subdivi- sion rights on her 175-acre East Moraine property at Wallowa Lake. “The moraine is very important — there’s nothing like it on earth,” Quint said. The property encom- passes two lateral moraines before rising to the crest of the East Moraine at its west- ernmost boundary. Con- sidered the southern tip of Zumwalt Prairie, Quint’s property is comprised of 53 acres of crop- land and 122 acres of bunchgrass, QUINT including habitat for the wildfl ower Spalding’s catchfl y. It is also a critical winter range for mule deer and habitat for fox, coyote and a variety of grassland birds and raptors, among other species. Quint did reserve the right to graze cattle and farm on the property, cit- ing working lands as a big part of her Wallowa County heritage. Quint, 85, of Redmond, grew up on the south- ern edge of Joseph in a house her parents bought when she was in elemen- tary school. Her father grew up on a ranch outside of Joseph on Walker Lane, she said. Helping conserve the moraine was important to Quint long before Wallowa Land Trust was formed. More than a decade ago, Quint and Wallowa Land Trust began discussing the idea of putting the property into a conservation ease- ment, which is a voluntary legal agreement between a landowner and a land trust which protects a property’s agricultural viability, nat- ural habitat, rural heritage, and scenic open space in perpetuity. The conserva- tion easement that encom- passes the Quint property permanently extinguishes all development and subdi- vision rights while reserving recreation, hunting, farming and grazing rights. February’s Fishtrap Fireside features long time Fishtrap friends, Rick Bombaci and Sara Miller, plus a new and emerging voice in Enterprise High School student Nodya Papin- eau. An open mic fol- lows where audience members have a chance to get up to the podium and share their stories, too. Fireside is a free monthly event for Wal- lowa County writers to read and share their work. The program has enjoyed a tremendous following in Wallowa County and beyond. Fishtrap Fireside takes place the fi rst Friday of the month from October through April at Fish- trap, 400 East Grant Street in Enterprise. Find a seat by the fi re and hear stories writ- ten by your friends and neighbors. January’s Fireside is sponsored by The Bookloft. Firewood provided by Jay Zee Lumber. More about Febru- ary’s featured readers: Rick Bombaci grew up in rural Connecticut. After a brief stint living and working in Portland when, for $125 a month, you could rent a nice apartment with hard- wood fl oors and a view of Mt. St. Helens before it blew up, he moved to Wallowa County, where he’s been ever since. Rick has worked, in order, as a U.S. For- est Service wilderness ranger, a waiter, a bicy- cle mechanic, a high school teacher, a com- puter consultant, a grant writer, a nonprofi t con- sultant, and a USFS wil- derness ranger. That’s known as either com- pleting the circle or spinning your wheels. He has one daughter that he knows of, and a number of obsessions, including long distance hiking. Sara Miller likes to experiment, “What I love about Fishtrap is encouragement to experiment creatively. Being invited to read at Fireside allows me to say, well I better write something then.” Miller is a poet and writer of creative nonfi ction. She has been called a loud talker, ponderer, dis- tractor and over-imag- iner. She appreciates opportunities to create ritual and help with hard work, especially babies and birth, death and love, ranching and wild lonely places. Some- times her audiences per- form unexpectedly. Nodya Papineau is a 19-year-old aspiring poet from Enterprise. She’s been writing and performing poetry for six years now through various Fishtrap pro- grams for students and young writers such as Student Showcases and at Summer Fishtrap both in 2016 and 2017. This is her fi rst Fishtrap Fireside reading. Unions look to take advantage of Democratic leadership, strong economy in 2019 By Aubrey Wieber Oregon Capital Bureau In November, educators and school children got a champion. The homeless got an advocate and environmen- talists got a steward. But per- haps the people most happy with Gov. Kate Brown’s re-election reside in Oregon’s union shops. Brown has long been pro union. She has publicly sup- ported them and even had the president of a national teachers union stump for her during her campaign. Unions have backed Brown as well. Her six big- gest union donors gave nearly $1 million combined in 2018. Now, with Democrats hav- ing a stronger majority in the House and Senate, union leaders say it’s time to push their pro-worker agenda. “It’s time to do something bold,” said Melissa Unger, executive director for Ser- vice Employees International Union Local 503, which rep- resents about 70,000 state workers and caregivers. Unions have weakened through the country compared to their power in decades past but remain strong and active in Oregon. In the 2018 election, SEIU 49 gave House Speaker Tina Kotek $50,000 though she had no serious challenger. SEIU 503 provided $42,000 in in-kind contributions to Future PAC, which covered wages, general expenses and surveys. Future PAC is the House Democrats’ campaign fundraising arm. The Oregon Educa- tion Association gave Sen. Shemia Fagan’s campaign $15,000 and she received $20,000 from the Oregon chapter of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, despite having a large lead in her primary contest. Unions also gave to the Senate Democrat Leader- ship Fund, which then spread money around to various caucus leaders. SEIU gave $15,000 to the PAC in 2018 in the form of travel expenses and wages. The national AFL-CIO gave $10,000. House Majority Leader Jennifer Williamson also got $10,000 from AFL-CIO, as well as $13,500 from Local 48 Electricians. United Food & Commercial Workers Union Local 555 gave Sen. Rob Wagner, chair of the Senate Education Commit- tee, $5,000 in 2018, as did the Oregon School Employees Association. With the Legislature con- vening, union lobbyists will be a signifi cant presence. Unger said her union sup- ports higher taxes for busi- nesses and wealthy individu- als and legislation to improve the cost of housing and to help education. Her primary focus during the session, though, will be the 30,000 caregivers SEIU represents. She said their work, often underpaid, under- appreciated and done by women, can be vital to rural economies. “How do we create sys- tems to really lift up this work?” she said. “It’s often low-wage work, but it is at the core of how families succeed, and something we should really value as a society.” The union wants a smoother regulatory way for home workers to move to jobs in other places, such as a nursing home. She also wants a central background check system. Unger said under the current system, she has seen website advertise- ments for jobs such as com- ing into a home to bathe an adult. That’s unregulated, she said, and isn’t safe for work- ers or clients. Old Gringo BOOT SALE! 25% OFF in store and online SPACE RESERVATION DEADLINES Best for Women Fellowship Award - $2,000 Free Shipping for weekly display advertising is 5pm Friday for the following week. Ad copy is DUE on Monday at 10am. Ads must be approved by 12pm Tuesday Application deadline March 1, 2019 Soroptimist, P.O. Box 127, Enterprise, OR 97828 For More Information call 541-263- 0663 Sale ends Jan 31st Stop by today! To advertise call Jennifer at 541-426-4567 209 NW First St. Enterprise, OR 97828 • www.wallowa.com WOMEN IN BUSINESS Saluting women business owners, managers and employees Contact Jennifer Cooney 541-426-4567 - office 541-805-9630 - cell THE ONE PARTS ARTS S & STOP SHOP SERVICES FOR YOUR HVAC... MAINTENANCE 72 INSTALLATION To place an ad in the January 30th edition of the Wallowa County Chieftain AD PRICING - 2x3 Color - $85 All orders must be in by January 25th! Ed Staub & Sons Energy Community Service. 209 NW First St. • Enterprise, OR 97828 • 541-426-4567 www.wallowa.com Uptown Clothing & Accessories in Downtown Joseph 12 S. Main St. • 541-432-9653 201 East Hwy 82 Enterprise, OR 97828 541-426-0320