LOCAL Wallowa.com Wednesday, March 10, 2021 A3 Smoke management plan goes before commissioners Solar in Wallowa County topic of Zoom Energy Brown Bag Aim is to get the word out of a ‘smoke event’ Virtual event is noon March 17 Chieftain staff By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE — A plan for communities in Wal- lowa County to be able to most effectively respond to a “smoke event” is tak- ing shape and only needs the approval of govern- ment agencies before it can be implemented, the county commissioners learned Wednesday, March 3. “Basically, this is a plan to notify people that there is a smoke event … and here are the things to do to take care of yourself,” Commis- sioner Susan Roberts said. “We have to have this plan in order to do some of the other stuff we’re trying to do.” Lisa Mahon, who with Sarah Silbernagel and the Wallowa County Smoke Management Commu- nity Response Plan design team, produced the plan that Mahon presented to the com- missioners via Zoom. She went through a recap of the plan designed to assist res- idents of the county in the event of a smoke event like last summer when much of Oregon was ablaze. No sig- nifi cant wildfi res occurred in the county, but much smoke did come over the mountains. “There’s not much we can do to stop the smoke (like last year), but we can be ready for it,” Commissioner Todd Nash said. After reviewing the plan, Mahon said the next steps are to present it to the Enterprise City Council on Monday, March 8, have it ready for the commissioners to approve at their March 17 meeting and then get the approval of the Oregon Department of Envi- ronmental Quality. After that approval, “We can begin implementing the action plan,” she said. Partners in the plan include: • The city of Enterprise. • The Wallowa County Board of Commissioners. • The U.S. Forest Service. • The Oregon Department of Forestry. • County emergency services • The Oregon DEQ. • The Oregon Health Authority. • Wallowa Memorial Hospital. • The Northern Blue Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Lisa Mahon gave a presentation via Zoom to the Wallowa County Board of Commissioners on the county’s Smoke Management Community Response Plan during the board’s Wednesday, March 3, 2021, meeting. Mountains Cohesive Strategy. Mahon said the new plan is to better understand and address the vulnerable pop- ulations in case of a smoke event. It also allows oppor- tunities to better manage the forests in case of fi re. The fi nal plan includes: • A description of Wal- lowa County’s smoke-vul- nerable population. • A notifi cation plan to inform those vulnerable populations and the general public. • Action items to protect the vulnerable populations from smoke exposure. • A communication plan to connect the prescribed fi re entities for public health and the general public. Mahon said six commu- nity input sessions were held during fall 2020, reaching all but Imnaha. Of the 327 resi- dents represented from Wal- lowa, Lostine, Enterprise, Wallowa Lake, Flora and Troy, about 80% prefer social media or a website to be used for emergency contact. “We weren’t really sur- prised at that, since with those without cellphone cov- erage, the internet is one of their best tools,” she said. What they learned from the input sessions included a need to prepare for smoke events with advance notice, education on home air purifi - cation, assistance in purchas- ing air purifi ers and educa- tion on the appropriate masks to have. Among the overall bene- fi ts to the county in the plan, Mahon said, is an increased ability to implement pro- scribed burns, which are used for community wildfi re protection and to help with forest health. “It’s better to deal with the forest with proscribed burns than let wildfi res man- age them for us because with the state our forests are in, we can do better good for our forests and our community by having better control of that,” she said. The “action items” in the plan include education and essential assistance they’ll put out for the public; addi- tional notifi cation protocols; working with county emer- gency services to develop a notifi cation system working with Paul Karvoski, emer- gency services director, to allow individuals to sign up for notifi cations in addition to emergencies; additional education with partners year around about smoke intru- sions and what one can do during an event; and more about proscribed fi res and forest management. Nash — a rancher who often deals with agricultural issues on the commission — asked Mahon about agricul- tural burning, although, he added, not much goes on in Wallowa County. “One complaint we got last year had to do with fi eld burning on agricul- tural land,” he asked. “Is that addressed here?” Mahon said it is not, but because of differing regu- lations the state Agriculture Department and Department of Forestry handle that issue. Roberts said fi eld burn- ing can be regulated through Karvoski and emergency services. She said that one concern the plan addresses is how to get the word of a smoke event to outlying areas, such as Imnaha and Troy. She said notices can be put up at local post offi ces or other central gathering places that will say who to contact. “At Troy, they singled out several people and said to get the word to them and the rest of us will get it,” she said. In another matter, the commissioners offi cially received from the state a $13,101 Election Security Grant and already have plans on how they intend to use. “One of the things we need to do is build a fence with a gate around our boxes out here on the side of the building so we have all our electronics enclosed,” Rob- erts said. “We can ask Stan- gel (Industries & Machine Shop) to build an attrac- tive enclosure and gate with keys so we can get in when needed.” Commissioner John Hill- ock added that others, such as the fi re department, can be given keys for when they require access. The commissioners also are prepared to appoint three more people to the Northeast Oregon Economic Devel- opment District Board. Jen- nifer Piper, the new execu- tive director of the Wallowa County Chamber of Com- merce, and Ashley Sulli- van, the new mayor of Enter- prise, have confi rmed that they are interested in such appointments. Roberts said one other representative has yet to confi rm a desire for appointment. Nash said the board can approve the appointments by resolution at its next meeting, March 17. ENTERPRISE — These days, solar pan- els are visible on roofs of homes, businesses and farm buildings as well as in large commer- cial arrays all over Wal- lowa County. That solar energy will be the focus of a Brown Bag lun- cheon on Zoom at noon Wednesday, March 17. Solar panels now qui- etly, cleanly crank out “roughly 6% of the total energy demand in the county” according to Matt King, energy pro- gram manager, for Wal- lowa Resources Com- munity Solutions Inc.. That amounts to 1 mil- lion watts of installed solar capacity or about 1,200mw hours of energy use. And the value of that energy stays local. How this came about and what additional solar can mean to energy resilience of the county will be the topic of the hour long Brown Bag. The zoom link to the free program can be found on the Community Events section of the Wallowa Resources website at wallowaresources.org. The program will touch on the nature of solar to date and a look at the future, including solar combined with bat- tery storage, community scale solar and special solar opportunities for low- and moderate-in- come households, rent- ers and others. The pro- gram also will include time for Q&A. “Solar is part of a diverse local energy mix now emerging that keeps more energy dol- lars working here and contributes to making this county much more energy resilient in times of natural disaster,” King said. Micro-hydro and bio- mass are other local energy-generation opportunities. Upcoming programs in the Brown Bag series include, Micro-Hydro- power, Thursday, April 15, and Community Energy Opportunities, May 20. More information on those can be found on the calen- dar at wallowaresources. org. For more information on this program content, contact King at 605-387- 7194 or matt@walloware- sources.org. Births A son, Harlan Mark VanderZanden, was born Feb. 19, 2021 in Enterprise to Jonathan and Jamie VanderZanden of Enterprise. Grandparents are Melanee Micka, Jesse Micka, Peg VanderZanden and Mark VanderZanden. A son, Ryder James Quinby, was born Feb. 26, 2021 in Enterprise to Austin and Kimberly McQuown of Joseph. Grandparents are Holly McQuown, John McQuown, Wendy Quinby and James Quinby. A son, Ira Wilson Schott, was born Feb. 26, 2021 in Enterprise to Mark and Adele Schott of Joseph. Grandparents are Liza Jane McAlister, Todd Nash, Diane Schott and Kevin Schott. 301 W. Main, Enterprise • 541.426.3177 This week’s featured book The Doctors Blackwell by Janice P. Nimura 107 E. Main St. Enterprise OR 541-426-3351 bookloftoregon.com • manager@bookloft.org Fishtrap workshop series begins this weekend Chieftain staff ENTERPRISE — Fish- trap is offering the fi rst of three spring online work- shops for writers this week- end, according to a press release, with Finding and Using Joy as a Source — A Virtual Weekend Writing Workshop with Perrin Kerns. From 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, March 13, and Saturday, March 20, Kerns will follow in the tradition of Ross Gay by focusing on writing about joy in the midst of pandemic, protest, climate change and solitude. The generative writing class will mostly spend time writ- ing to prompts. At the end of the class, participants will share pieces pulled together from shorter writings and thus explore the lyric essay as a celebration of the frag- ment and the collage. Kerns has been teaching creative writing for over 30 years. She currently teaches literature and creative writ- ing at Prescott College, Port- land State University, Clark College, Sitka Center for Art and Ecology and Portland’s Literary Arts Program. Her own creative work has taken her from lyric essay to dig- ital storytelling to personal narrative documentaries DINE I K N E OR TA T OU Taking Now s Reservation based on her lyric essays. She won the Director’s Choice award for her docu- mentary Between Sasquatch and Superman: Living with Down’s Syndrome and Best Short Animation for her fi lm about her miscarriage from the Oregon Independent Film Festival. Registration costs $270 or $240 for Fishtrappers. Reg- ister at fi shtrap.org. WINTER HOURS Wed. & Thur. 10 Fri. & Sat. 10 am am - 7 pm - 8 pm Sun. 10 am - 7 pm Daylight Saving Time +1 To advertise in the Wallowa County Chieftain contact Jennifer Cooney at jcooney@wallowa.com 541-805-9630 TAKE OUT ORDERS • CALL 541-569-2285 209 NW First St., Enterprise OR • 541-426-4567 • wallowa.com 2021 Home & Garden Section publishes March 17 209 NW First St., Enterprise • 541-426-4567 • wallowa.com Keep an eye out for it!