A8 NEWS Wallowa County Chieftain Wednesday, May 22, 2019 A Texan takes the reins at Wallowa Lake State Park By Ellen Morris Bishop Wallowa County Chieftain There’s a new manager at Wallowa Lake State Park these days. Mac Freeborn arrived in April, and has picked up the management reins at one of eastern Oregon’s most pop- ular and revered state parks. The 216-acre reserve serves more than 400,000 day-use visitors per year, and its pop- ularity is growing. It’s cur- rently the 12th most popular place to camp in all of Ore- gon’s State Parks, serving almost 90,000 campers in 2018, up 6% from the previ- ous season. Freeborn hails from Texas, where he worked in and managed a number of parks and recreation areas. Most recently, that included the Guadalupe Mountains National Park, as well as other state and local facil- ities. Most were parks that included water and boating, which makes him a natural Ellen M. Bishop/Chieftain Mac Freeborn, the new manager at Wallowa Lake State Park, inspects the foundation for the park’s new micro hydro power generation plant. for Wallowa Lake. Freeborn is enthusias- tic about his new position and about being in Wallowa County. “It just seems like a place where I belong,” he said. “Everyone has been friendly and helpful. The staff here is really connected to this place, and so for now, I’m just listening and learn- ing from them. They are really the ones who know the park and are running it.” Freeborn and the park will be undertaking two major projects in the next year. There is the realign- ment of the Wallowa Riv- er’s channels, which will include re-allocating about 30 percent of the river’s fl ow to an old and soon-to- be-refurbished channel that runs through the central por- tion of the day-use area. That will include construc- tion of new pathways and pedestrian bridges to cross the stream, establishment of riparian vegetation, some re-sizing of parking areas, and new interpretive signs, all of which are presently being designed. Freeborn is enthusias- tic about this project. “It’s going to be great to connect our visitors more closely with the kokanee and the river,” he said. Establishing a new “micro-hydro” power plant is another “green” project that has just started at the park and will be completed under Freeborn’s tutelage. Developed in collaboration with Wallowa Resources and Pacifi c Power, the proj- ect will pipe the park’s water from its source higher on Chief Joseph Mountain into a turbine located near the park’s old amphitheater. The turbine will be housed in a small log cabin and will be visible to the public, complete with an interpretive sign that explains its functions. The 150 kilowatts per year that this micro hydro project pro- duces will save the project’s owner, the Wallowa Lake Service District, a municipal water and sewer entity man- aged by Wallowa County, about $15,000 a year in energy costs. Freeborn is looking for- ward to learning more about his park and enhancing its roles in Wallowa County. “We are one of the major attractions here,” he said. “We can help people con- nect better with this incred- ible landscape.” Gov. Brown reverses state’s position on wolf delisting warranted. Brown has now sent a letter to Interior Secre- tary David Bernhardt, who oversees the Fish and Wild- life Service, to “clarify and correct” ODFW’s position by opposing the delisting proposal. Although the “success of wolf recovery is unques- tioned” and ESA listing within Oregon isn’t neces- sary, the state’s efforts “can- not protect imperiled wild- life beyond our borders in other states,” which necessi- tates federal listing, accord- ing to Brown’s May 15 letter. “Unlike salmonids and sage grouse, the principal reason for the decline of the wolf across the West- ern United States was delib- erate extirpation,” she said. “We are not yet far enough from that cultural history to warrant confi dence that wolf recovery is inevitable.” By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI EO Media Group Oregon Gov. Kate Brown is urging the federal govern- ment not to lift Endangered Species Act protections for wolves, contradicting an ear- lier position taken by state wildlife regulators. Gray wolves are currently classifi ed as threatened or endangered across most of the country but the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has proposed delisting the spe- cies because it’s “thriving on its vast range” and doesn’t face imminent extinction. The decision initially won the support of Curt Melcher, ODFW’s director, who wrote in a May 9 let- ter that Oregon’s wolf pop- ulation is projected to con- tinue expanding regardless of federal ESA status and that a federal delisting is WALLOWA COUNTY Health Line ‘THEY’LL WORK FOR A TIME BUT THEY’RE JUST NOT REALISTIC.’ Jerome Rosa, executive direc- tor of the Oregon Cattlemen’s Association, on non-lethal wolf control measures Courtesy of ODFW/Capital Press Two adult wolves from the Walla Walla Pack in northern Umatilla County, Ore. Representatives of the Governor’s Offi ce and ODFW did not respond to requests to explain the dis- crepancy between Brown’s and Melcher’s positions. Brown is known to meet regularly with the heads of state agencies, so it’s not likely Melcher’s support for delisting was a surprise, THE ONE STOP SHOP FOR YOUR HVAC... said Jerome Rosa, execu- tive director of the Oregon Cattlemen’s Association. “I would fi nd that highly unusual for her not to be aware of that.” It’s more likely that Brown’s thinking was swayed by the outcry from wolf advocates, who recently held a rally against delisting, PARTS S & SERVICES MAINTENANCE 72 INSTALLATION as well as public criticism of Melcher’s decision by Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D-Ore., Rosa said. Blumenauer rep- resents Portland. “I think this occurred because of pressure from the environmental community and some in the Oregon con- gressional delegation also,” he said. Oregon is currently esti- mated to have at least 137 wolves that primarily inhabit the northeast corner of the state, though some have become established in cen- tral and southern portions as well. The species is already delisted at the federal level in the eastern third of the state. Ranchers support federal delisting because the state government has more staff and resources available to devote to wolf management, and because the change in status would allow for lethal control of wolves that attack livestock, Rosa said. PET OF K THE WEE Non-lethal measures aren’t effective across vast landscapes, particularly in Western Oregon where dense underbrush impedes the visibility of wolves, he said. “They’ll work for a time but they’re just not realistic.” The Center for Biolog- ical Diversity, an environ- mental group, is pleased by Brown’s decision to retract support for the “premature and unlawful” proposed del- isting, said Collette Adkins, the organization’s carnivore conservation director. “It’s clear wolves haven’t recovered nationwide and recovery has just begun in places like Oregon,” Adkins said. Adkins said she doesn’t know what led to the incon- sistency between Brown’s and Melcher’s positions but said the governor’s tone indicated she was “taken aback” by the letter, which was presumably sent with- out her authority. A similar proposal to del- ist wolves in 2013 was with- drawn due to public opposi- tion, so the Fish and Wildlife Service will hopefully aban- don the plan again due to the letter from Brown and oth- ers like it, Adkins said. “Time will tell, but the same legal fl aws that existed then exist now,” she said. Brought to you by, 519 W. North Street, Enterprise 541.426.3413 Mon-Thurs 9 to Noon/1-5pm; Fri. 9-1 Ed Staub & Sons Energy Community Service. 201 East Hwy 82 Enterprise, OR 97828 541-426-0320 Wallowa Lake Lodge Opens Friday May 24! E st. 1923 Meet Linus A male, Tuxedo kitty, 3 - 4 years old, was left behind last winter when his owners moved. When we found Linus, he could barely walk with two of his paws frostbitten. 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