EAGLE CAP SHOOTERS TO BUILD DEMAND FOR ‘INTEGRATED’ NEW FACILITY HEALTH CARE GROWS LOCAL, A8 $1.50 BUSINESS, A9 THE WEEK IN PHOTOS The Back Page, A16 136th Year, No. 49 Wednesday, March 17, 2021 WINNER OF THE 2020 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Wallowa coach resigns amid offi cial complaint Outcome of complaint fi led by football team in review Casidee Harrod Enterprise By ELLEN MORRIS BISHOP Wallowa County Chieftain Rodeo queen heavily involved ENTERPRISE — Casidee Harrod has lived in Enterprise most of her young life — the past 12 years — and now is a senior at Enterprise High School. After she graduates this year, she hopes to go on to Oregon Institute of Technology in Klamath Falls to become a dental hygienist and return here to prac- tice once she gets her certifi cation. “I just love this county. I like every- body who lives here and I want to help support the community,” she said. Her dad, Ron Harrod, manages the Wallowa Fish Hatchery in Enterprise and her mom, Cheryl Harrod, works at a bank in Joseph. Her older brother, Boone, also lives and works here. She recently shared her thoughts about living in Wallowa County. What’s your favorite thing about Wallowa County? Defi nitely, I’d say it’s the supportive community. I’ve been involved in a lot of things here, actually I’m one of the Chief Joseph Days royalty and everybody’s super-supportive with all of that. I’ve been involved in 4-H with horses and livestock, I’ve played basketball since I was a fi fth-grader and I’ve played vol- leyball and I’m the president of FFA for Enterprise. What challenges do you believe Wallowa County faces? With youth members who sell ani- mals at the fair, I hope we always have enough support of people buying all the animals so that it can keep going. Now that the pandemic has been going on about a year, how has it aff ected you? It’s aff ected me in a lot of ways. Being a senior in high school, it’s aff ected a lot of activities for youths, it’s aff ected all my rodeo seasons, it took away my sports seasons and all that. Do you plan to get the vaccine against COVID-19 as soon as you can? I don’t know. I will defi nitely get it if it means I can go to college, but I don’t know. … It’s super new and kind of risky, so I don’t know. What have you learned from living in Wallowa County? I’ve learned what a small commu- nity can do. There’s not a lot of things for youths to do if you’re not involved with animals and agriculture. I think it’s important for our community to be sup- portive of all the things that the youths can do. What’s your advice for people who are thinking about moving here? It’s a beautiful place to visit. I would love to keep the community small and not turn it into a big area. I am super for people coming to visit to support our small businesses, but I don’t know about people moving here. — Bill Bradshaw, Wallowa County Chieftain On Friday, Sheriff Joel Fish and Deputy Jeff Baty went to Portland to retrieve Bridges’ ashes. They were joined by other local law enforcement and emer- gency vehicles once they arrived WALLOWA — Wallowa High School Principal David Howe resigned his position as the school’s girls basketball coach Monday night, March 15, in the face of an offi cial complaint fi led by the school’s foot- ball team with the Wallowa superin- tendent of schools March 2. The outcome of the complaint is pending and still in review. Head football coach Matt Brock- amp, Wallowa Superintendent of Schools Tammy Jones and Wal- lowa School Board Chairman Woody Wolfe all declined to comment or pro- vide the Chieftain with the text of the March 2 complaint or a second com- plaint fi led with the school board on March 8. “My duties as principal and my duties as the girls basketball coach seem to be in confl ict with each other and therefore I will be resigning my position as girls basketball coach, eff ective immediately,” Howe said in a prepared statement to the Wallowa School Board on Monday, March 15. Howe’s resignation was precipi- tated by the complaint as well as alle- gations of encouraging and support- ing Wallowa High School athletes to participate in high school tourna- ments in Idaho earlier this year. Under Oregon School Activities Associa- tion rules, participation in out-of-state sports events requires student athletes to self-quarantine for two weeks after the out-of-state games. Brockamp had protested Howe’s action, out of con- cern that students who participated in the Idaho basketball games would not be able to play the fi rst, and possibly other games in Wallowa’s short, fi ve- game football season. “As a head coach, I made my con- cerns known to WHS about unsanc- tioned, out-of-state basketball tour- naments jeopardizing our opportunity to play an OSAA-sanctioned football season,” Brockamp stated at an emo- tion-charged school board meeting March 8. At that meeting he called for “… a fundamental change in Wallowa See Honored, Page A7 See Coach, Page A7 Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Wallowa County Sheriff Joel Fish, right foreground, watches as Deputy Jeff Baty hands a bag containing the ashes of late 911 dispatcher and Reserve Deputy Bret Bridges to Bridges’ parents, Dolores and David Bridges, at their Joseph home Friday, March 12, 2021. Fish and Baty escorted the ashes home from Portland, where Bridges died March 2 of COVID-19. Latest COVID victim honored by offi cers Bret Bridges gets ‘last call’ on 911; ashes get police escort By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain JOSEPH — The ashes of a 911 dispatcher and reserve Wal- lowa County deputy were delivered by police escort to his parents’ Joseph home Bridges Friday, March 12, and a spe- cial “last call” over the county’s 911 system was issued for Bret Bridges. The 47-year-old Bridges died March 2 at Portland’s Legacy Emanuel Medical Center after testing positive for COVID-19 on Jan. 25. He reportedly had underlying issues, according to a press release from the Oregon Health Authority. The “last call” was to be Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain An escort of police and other emergency vehicles arrives at the Joseph home of David and Dolores Bridges bearing the ashes of their son, Bret Bridges, a 911 dispatcher and reserve deputy who died in Portland on March 2 of COVID-19. issued at 1 p.m. Tuesday. “It’s a very honorable thing to do in the 911 world,” said Brenda Micka, administrative services director for Wallowa County. “We’ve lost one of our own. It’s nice to do that, to do the ‘last call’ on the radio.” Young gamer is programming his own By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE — While the picture of a young gamer that often comes to mind is a 30-year- old living in his parents’ basement spending all day playing com- puter games, Enterprise’s Shepherd Newton is far from that. For one, he’s a 12-year-old sixth- grader. Second, he not only plays games, he’s already created one and has a business model in mind for how he can make a career of it. “I consider myself a ‘dev’ because I haven’t earned the ‘eloper’ yet,” he said during an interview Wednesday, March 10. “I have to successfully sell a game to earn the ‘eloper.’” He explained he’s working at becoming a developer of com- puter games — and possibly other programs — that could earn a tidy living. In fact, he comes by his interest naturally. His dad, Tim Newton, is a professional, work-from-home pro- grammer who currently is helping school districts around the country — and the world — with software that helps them send their data to departments of education and man- agement. Now, he is working with the California Department of Pub- Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Having already learned much of computer programming on his own and from his programmer father, Tim Newton, Shepherd Newton, 12, already is expecting he won’t have need for college. “All I need is tutorials,” he said. “Actually, I might go to college just to get the degree.” lic Health with COVID-19 support calls. Mom Crystal Newton is a graphic artist and online marketer. Both parents are extremely sup- portive of Shepherd’s endeavors. “It’s very encouraging to see him doing computer development as opposed to seeing just word pro- cessing or just playing computer games,” Tim said. “He’s actually creating something that could be useful or foundational for later on. It demonstrates how early someone can begin developing.” Noting that Shepherd already has a business plan in mind that many independent developers use, Crystal told some of what he’s learned. “It’s not just for games,” she said. “(Developers) will talk about a product they’re developing and post information in videos on You- Tube, they’ll gather subscribers, then they’ll start a Patreon account to get themselves support for what they’re doing. They’ll get subscrib- ers to pay something — normally something low, like $5, but if you get 100,000 people giving you $5 a month, you’re doing well.” Shepherd isn’t far behind fi gur- ing out what that’s worth. “And that’s $500,000 a month,” he said. In January, he participated in a “game jam” — short for game jam session — a contest where partici- pants try to make a video game from scratch working independently or in teams. Contests usually last from 24 to 72 hours. Participants are gen- erally programmers, game design- ers, artists, writers and others in game development-related fi elds. See Gamer, Page A8