A14 Wallowa County Chieftain OFF PAGE ONE Wednesday, March 3, 2021 Lostine: ‘It’s going to look like a park’ Continued from Page A1 Ellen Morris Bishop/For the Wallowa County Chieftain Wallowa Memorial Hospital’s new ambulance shows off its lights on Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2021. It may look like any other ambulance on the road, but its four-wheel drive, high-tech capabilities and its ability to navigate roads in bad weather elevate it above the rest. Ambulance: A smooth ride like the ‘family van’ Continued from Page A1 to meet the needs of Crit- ical Care Transport. It gives caregivers complete access to the patient critical care including IV therapy, mechanical ventilation and blood work. The new blue-and- white vehicle has the chas- sis, drive train and engine of a Chevrolet K4500 4x4. But that’s where the resem- blance to an ordinary truck ends. This ambulance has a computer-controlled hydraulic suspension called a “liquid spring.” It levels out bumps, adjusts vehicle height automati- cally for road conditions, and can be raised and low- ered with a manual control as well. “The crews keep remarking on the smooth ride and ease of driving — some say it drives like the ‘family van,’ but it’s truly been an important upgrade to patient care as well as safety for everyone onboard,” Peck said. There’s a built-in elec- tric generator that pro- vides ample electric-sys- tem support, including a standalone heating/cool- ing system with UVC light that helps kill airborne viruses, which is especially important now, Peck said. The compartment confi g- uration was designed to meet the needs of Criti- cal Care Transport, with added safety features for patient and crew members. For example, the seat belts and shoulder harnesses for the EMT’s allow them to stretch forward and move to treat the patient while remaining safely seat belted. The new ambulance’s cost was covered by local fundraising efforts, led by the Wallowa Valley Health Care Foundation, includ- ing the Healthy Futures Dinner Auction in 2019 and a $20,000 grant from the Lewis and Clark Valley Health Care Foundation, that raised over $152,000 with a matching grant from the Murdock Charitable Trust for $152,000. The ambulance itself, including the major equipment, cost just over $300,000. Although the hospital has two other 4x4 ambu- lances, this one greatly enhances our transfer capa- bility in extreme weather, Peck said. “We feel very fortunate to serve in a community that supports our mission with equipment that pro- vides safety for the patient and crew, as well as allows the crews to provide the highest levels of prehospi- tal care possible,” he said. “Without community sup- port, our mission would struggle.” Pro Thinning Inc., oper- ated by Zacharias’ sons Tom and Seth Zacharias, has been contracted to do the harvesting. “This number is a ‘total,’ and lumber is only one of numerous forest products that may be produced out of this total,” Moeller said. The smaller logs are going to Schmidt’s IBR mill in Wallowa, while larger “saw logs” will be sold on the open market. Schmidt said some are going to Jim Zacharias’ Jay Zee Lumber in Joseph, some to the Boi- se-Cascade mill in Elgin, some to Woodgrain in La Grande and some to Idaho Forest in Lewiston, Idaho. Nils D. Christoffersen, executive director of Wal- lowa Resources, said the project has been sought for more than 15 years. “When I chaired the county’s fi rst community wildfi re protection plan pro- cesses back in 2005-06, this area was one of four areas that emerged as the highest priorities based on the risk of fi re, and the potential conse- quence that a wildfi re would have on people’s lives, our community and a wide range of environmental val- ues at risk,” Christoffersen wrote in an email. “That risk assessment, and the poten- tial consequences in the Lostine Corridor, have not changed — if anything they have risen. If a fi re broke out in the corridor last summer, when the parking lots were fi lled beyond capacity (from recreationists) and hun- dreds of additional cars were parked along the side of the road, it could have been cat- astrophic. Evacuation routes would have been clogged, and access by fi refi ghting crews blocked.” Howard, of the ODF, agreed. Earlier he noted that it’s not “if” wildfi re comes to the area, but “when.” “We’re a fi re-dependent ecosystem; we have wild- land fi res in this county every year. The Lostine Cor- ridor is not free from that,” he said, noting that “fi re-de- pendent” means fi re helps maintain forest health. “As long as summer thunderstorms keep rolling through, we’re going to have fi res, and fi re’s a normal part of the ecosystem,” he said. “When we say ‘fi re-depen- dent,’ we mean our forests depend on that as part of their normal cycle.” But neither recreationists nor landowners want to see a wildfi re get out of control. In a Chieftain story from February 2020, Michael Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain “It’s going to look like a park,” said Jim Zacharias, after viewing a section of the Lostine Corridor Public Safety Project, that had been cleared of dense timber and underbrush Thursday, Feb. 25, 2021. Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain A forwarder unloads logs to the roadside Thursday, Feb. 25, 2021, to await loading onto log trucks in Lostine Canyon. The forwarder brings the cut logs from where they were felled to the roadside. Eng, of the Lostine Firewise Community, said approxi- mately 110 properties with 120 structures make up about 15 square miles, or 9,600 acres, south of Los- tine. About 45 landown- ers are participants in that Firewise Community. “Fire is good for the eco- system but when you put ‘catastrophic’ in front of it, that’s a whole new formula,” Howard said. But the project hasn’t been without controversy. Earlier in the process, two environ- mental groups — Oregon Wild and the Greater Hells Canyon Council — went to court to stop it because they said they objected to some of the aspects of the then-pro- posed project and to some procedural concerns. Rob Klavins, Northeast Oregon fi eld coordinator for Oregon Wild out of Enter- prise, said the environmental groups — and some area res- idents who opposed the proj- ect — were in favor of the aspects involving removing hazard trees, adding natural fi rebreaks, the helipad and thinning around structures. But portions appeared to be going too far. “Concerned about a majority who seemed more about getting logs to mills than safety concerns,” Klavins said last week. He said the procedural concerns involved includ- ing “really important stake- holders, ourselves included,” in the decision-making pro- cess that he believed were overlooked. As a result, the groups took their objections to court, ultimately seeing an unfavorable decision in the 9th U.S. Court of Appeals. Klavins called the project “a dramatic overreach from their stated purpose.” He also said his group only went to court reluctantly. “If they had done this properly, there were lots of portions of the project we could’ve supported,” he said. Klavins said after they took it to court, the Forest Service scaled back the proj- ect. He said he plans to go up there this week to see what changes were made. Still, the project remains multifaceted. “Everything we’re doing here on the federal side, it fi ts to a ‘T’ into our community wildfi re protection plan … the common pieces are fi t- ting together,” Moeller said. “The primary goal of this project is public safety. Pre- venting catastrophic wildfi re is a piece of that, but that’s not the sole purpose of this project.” Schmidt agreed that the hazard trees remain the most constant danger. He and his family often recreate in the area and told of a time last summer when high winds added to the danger. “It was scary as hell; trees were falling all around us,” he said, adding that a woman packing stuff out on her horse was four hours behind because she had to cut trees that fell across the trail. Jim Zacharias, in his capacity with Wallowa Resources, spoke highly of how the project fi ts into that group’s mission. “Wallowa Resources is really community oriented. We really support what this is designed to do,” he said. “Plus, it’s supporting the local economy in creating jobs. Wallowa Resources is about the human resource, too. With Pro Thinning, there are fi ve people directly on their crew, plus a half- dozen truck drivers who are hauling the logs and David (Schmidt)’s operation that has 30-something employ- ees. Then there’s a trickle effect: They’re all eating at M.Crow store and buy- ing Copenhagen at the Little Store.” Zacharias was pleased with the results he saw in areas that had been completed. “It’s going to look like a park,” he said. March is National Problem Gambling Awareness Month If you or someone you know has a problem, support is available. 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