THE WEEK IN PHOTOS The Back Page, A12 136th Year, No. 50 WALLOWA MEMORIAL MAKES AMBULANCE SERVICE TOP 100 LIST AGAIN ANSWERS THE CALL FOR FIRES LOCAL, A3 $1.50 BUSINESS, A6 Wednesday, March 24, 2021 WINNER OF THE 2020 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD For complete coverage of Wallowa County sports, log on to www.wallowa.com Leisa Stewart Joseph Seeking lower student-teacher ratio for son ENTERPRISE — Leisa Stewart and her family moved to a home outside of Joseph about a year-and-a-half ago seek- ing a low student-teacher ratio for the school their 6-year-old son would attend. “We came from a rural community but it had a really high student-teacher ratio,” she said of their former home in Kimberly, Idaho. “It was like 30-to-one.” Her husband, John, worked at the University of Idaho Kimberly Research and Extension Center. “It was supposed to be for three years but it turned out to be fi ve,” she said. Currently, John Stewart works from home as an irrigation engineer and an ecologist. Leisa is a landscape designer. While qualifi ed as a landscape architect, that title requires a license in Oregon she has yet to obtain. She recently shared her thoughts about living in Wallowa County. What’s your favorite thing about Wallowa County? I like the low population numbers here. I don’t like driving, period, and I don’t have to drive that far to the store here. How has the COVID-19 pandemic aff ected you? We’re in the middle of building a house. We would’ve been done by now, but there have been problems getting materials because of the pandemic. Also, I’ve learned about refrigerators, freezers and dishwashers and how it’s hard to get parts. Do you plan to get the vaccine against COVID-19? I did get the vaccine. Which vaccine did you get? Moderna. It went good. The fi rst shot I didn’t feel at all. The second one, I had fl u-like symptoms for a day or a day-and- a-half, which was expected, and other than that, it went good. What have you learned from living in Wallowa County? I learned from COVID and living in the county. Because of COVID, I haven’t met too many people yet. I’m a bit of an introvert and I never thought I would be the one to say I’m lonely, but I am. I guess I’ve learned about myself with COVID and the lower population. What’s your advice for people who are thinking about moving here? The pace of life is slower, so the last house we built only took about three months. Even if COVID had not come, we still would’ve been a lot slower. Also, you have to be patient about things. — Bill Bradshaw, Wallowa County Chieftain Ellen Morris Bishop/For the Wallowa County Chieftain A $7 million bond measure on the May 18, 2021, ballot in Wallowa would provide funding for a much needed new heating system, electrical system upgrades and other improvements to school facilities. It would be matched by another $4 million of state funds. Going to the ballot Voters will decide on $7M bond with $4M ODE match By ELLEN MORRIS BISHOP For the Wallowa County Chieftain W ALLOWA — It’s been in the plan- ning stage for two years. On May 18, voters in the Wallowa School Dis- trict will decide whether to fund critically needed new heating, elec- trical and other updates to its high school, elementary school and gym. If passed, the $7 million bond measure would be matched by $4 million from the Oregon Depart- ment of Education. “The bond is very important to the school,” school board Chair- man Woody Wolfe said. “Our intent was to make (the school ren- ovations) as aff ordable as possible. But with the matching grant and the bond, that puts us at what we esti- mate updating the main systems, especially the heating and cooling Ellen Morris Bishop/For the Wallowa County Chieftain Wallowa School maintenance head Jake MacDonald looks at pipes that carry hot water through the school buildings for heating. The pipes are corroding and rusting out internally, and are increasingly unreliable. Most of the heating system pipes are between 77 and 99 years old. systems that are really essential, will cost. The money really doesn’t go very far at the cost of prevail- ing wages.” The school district is planning to provide tours of the school and the proposed work beginning soon, and will also be posting information on the district’s Facebook page. The school’s heating system relies on a boiler that is close to failure, according to the school’s head of maintenance Jake McDon- ald, and the technical report pre- pared by Pivot, the consultants that assisted the school board in evalu- ating needed repairs. This winter, the elementary school went two days without heat, Wallowa Super- intendent Tammy Jones said. Replacement costs for a new school would be $54 million, Wolfe said. The board got estimates for everything from a totally new school to a number of smaller proj- ects that included installing an ele- vator to ease accessibility in the high school, remodeling some classrooms into more learning friendly spaces and upgrading sci- ence labs. “We really felt that the $7 mil- lion bond plus $4 million matching number was trimming out as much as we could and still address the major concerns relative to the age of the infrastructure,” Wolfe said. To keep expenses as low as pos- sible, Wolfe said, the board lim- ited the proposed work to things it considered absolutely necessary. Those were the accessibility issues, heating and cooling, and electrical. The $11 million total of the $7 mil- lion bond and $4 million match- See Bond, Page A11 Commissioners give $10K to four groups Scholarship organizations hurt by pandemic By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE — In an eff ort to help local organizations make up for losses experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic, the Wal- lowa County Board of Commis- sioners voted Wednesday, March 17, to give $10,000 each to four groups known for their charitable eff orts. The commissioners agreed to give funds from video lottery pro- ceeds to the Ag Resource Founda- tion, the Enterprise Elks, the Enter- prise Veterans of Foreign Wars and Broncs & Bulls. Commissioner Todd Nash, him- self a rancher, explained the rea- son the Ag Resource Founda- tion was included. He said the foundation came out of the Wal- lowa County Stockgrowers as a Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Enterprise Elks Secretary Randy Morgan stands in the lodge’s main hall on Thursday, March 18, 2021. The previous day, the Wallowa County Board of Commissioners voted to award $10,000 each to four groups — the Elks, the Ag Resource Foundation, the Enterprise Veterans of Foreign Wars and Broncs & Bulls — in light of the hardship their scholarship programs suff ered during the COVID-19 pandemic. 501(c)(3) so it could provide ag-related scholarships. “They tried to put that empha- sis on sophomore-plus ag stu- dents, but they have given scholar- ships to non-ag students, they have given scholarships to freshmen,” Nash said. “They have given out $7,000-$10,000 in scholarships a year for some time. The fundraiser they have in the winter has raised upwards of $10,000, but they were unable to have that (this winter).” Commissioner Susan Roberts discussed the other three groups. The others weren’t 501©(3) and couldn’t apply for the money as such, though she did ask groups to put in applications. She said the county just received another $30,000 payment for its video lot- tery fund and if they gave each group $10,000, the county would still have $100,000 in that fund. “When you look at it, the Ag Resources Foundation from the Stockgrowers gives out a lot of scholarships, the Elks do that, the VFW does that and the Broncs & Bulls works with the other two entities to provide more fund- ing for that,” Roberts said. “These four entities would, for Wallowa County, probably bring in under tourism that we use to … fi ll our transient room tax, so it helps our bottom line. I think we have the funding and I really would like to See Commissioners, Page A11