BROWN ANNOUNCES NEXT STEP ONCE MORE PREMIUM COFFEE ARRIVES 70% VACCINATION IS REACHED IN WALLOWA COUNTY STATE, A5 $1.50 BUSINESS, A6 GRADUATION CELEBRATIONS The Back Page, Page , A18 137th Year, No. 9 WINNER OF THE 2020 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Wednesday, June 9, 2021 Umatilla Co. deputy drowns on Minam River Chieftain staff Andy Singer MINAM — A Umatilla County sheriff’s deputy drowned Saturday, June 5, in the Minam River. The Umatilla County Sher- iff’s Office released the name of the deputy Sunday afternoon, saying in a Facebook post that Senior Deputy Jason Post died during a rafting accident near Minam State Park. According to the sheriff’s where he was honored by law office, Post and three friends enforcement officers and first were rafting when they responders. were thrown from the Wallowa County Sher- watercraft. The 34-year- iff Joel Fish said Tuesday old did not reach shore, that Post was wearing a and his body was found life vest when he and the soon after. three others were ejected A procession of multi- from the inflatable raft in ple regional law enforce- the midst of some rapids. Post ment agencies escorted Fish said it took about an Post from La Grande hour and a half to recover to Pendleton later Saturday, Post’s body, which was found about 300 yards from the site of the accident. According to the UCSO, Post began service as a reserve offi- cer in 2010 and was hired as a full-time patrol deputy in 2013. He was a field training officer and mentor, and in April was hired as a probation officer with Umatilla County Parole and Probation. Post leaves behind a wife and infant daughter. Wallowa Commutes to Elgin from Wallowa Joseph Canyon FIRE SEASON ARRIVES ENTERPRISE — Andy Singer has lived in Wallowa for six years, hav- ing moved here from Payette, Idaho, to be with his fi ancée, Christina. She moved to Wallowa to be with her dad until he died. Andy works driving forklift at the Boise Cascade plywood mill in Elgin. He doesn’t mind the 28-mile drive from Wallowa. “I’m not the only one in town who makes the drive,” he said. Andy recently shared his thoughts about living in Wallowa County. What’s your favorite thing about Wallowa County? It’s pretty quiet. You can get out of town and it’s really quiet. You can get away from everybody anytime you want. What fun plans do you have in the county for this summer? Probably do some swimming and fi shing. I play golf. I usually fi sh in the rivers or the ponds. Every once in a great while at the lake. But there’s usually too many people. How has the COVID-19 pandemic aff ected you? It’s kind of a pain at work. I’ve got to wear a mask. If you have any kind of sickness, you have to call in. If you have to have any fl u-like symp- toms, I think you have to be gone three days to make sure you don’t get a fever and the like. If you go get tested, and you have direct con- tact (with someone with coronavi- rus) you have to quarantine for two weeks or depending on what the doctor says. What have you learned from living in Wallowa County? I like the peacefulness. I can go outside on a Sunday and it’s dead quiet. I live a block off of Highway 82 and it’s quiet. It makes you enjoy life. What’s your advice for people who are thinking about moving here? It’s a pretty good place to live, but it’s kind of hard to make a living in a lot of ways. The price of hous- ing is getting pretty wild right now, but it is everywhere. If you’re going to buy a house, you better be on it. A house goes on the market and it sells the next day. — Bill Bradshaw, Wallowa County Chieftain and Dry Creek fi res have burned more than 9,000 acres By RONALD BOND Wallowa County Chieftain No written complaints issued against council City administrator says all is hearsay so far W ALLOWA COUNTY — The declared start of the fi re season is Wednesday, June 9. But it got under- way in earnest last week, as the fi rst major fi res of 2021 started in Wallowa County. The Joseph Canyon Fire and Dry Creek Fire, which between them have burned more than 9,000 acres, are burning in the northeastern corner of Wallowa County, with the Joseph Canyon Fire spreading into Washington. The Northwest 7 Type 2 Inci- dent Management Team took command of fi ghting the fi res Monday. The Blue Mountain Type 3 Incident Management Team was the initial fi refi ghting lead. According to the Oregon Mil- itary Department fi re dashboard, as of Tuesday morning, the Joseph Canyon Fire had burned 7,575 acres and was 20% contained. The larger of the two fi res has largely been burning between Rye Ridge to its west and Cottonwood Creek to the east. The smaller Dry Creek Fire, burning southeast of the Joseph Canyon Fire, has burned 1,500 acres and was 50% contained, according to the ODM dashboard. The fi re had been reported as having burned 1,600 acres by the Bureau of Land Management Vale District on Monday. That fi re is burning in the Hells Can- yon National Recreation Area. “It’s really gnarly country,” Lar- isa Bogardus, public aff airs offi cer for the BLM Vale District, said. “It’s bad. Getting resources into it safely was a challenge.” Both fi res were fi rst reported Friday morning, and were caused by lightning storms that rolled JOSEPH By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain Andy Hayes/Wallowa-Whitman National Forest The Joseph Canyon Fire is shown from Rye Ridge on Sunday, June 6, 2021. The fi re, as of Tuesday morning, has burned about 7,575 acres. TRIBE CLOSES WILDLIFE AREA WITH FIRES BURNING NEARBY JOSEPH CANYON — The Nez Perce Tribe is closing its Precious Lands Wildlife Area in Lower Joseph Creek to the public to allow fi re- fi ghters to battle the blaze without worrying about members of the public. Angela Sondenaa, Precious Lands Project leader with the tribe based in Lapwai, Idaho, said the tem- porary closure is being done for safety concerns. The closure was eff ective Monday, June 7. “We are asking the public to stay out of the wildlife area,” Sondenaa said. “We want the fi refi ghters to be able to concentrate on the fi re and not be concerned about members of the public being down in the canyon.” Part of the 1,583-acre parcel has been caught up in the 7,575-acre Joseph Canyon Fire that was fi rst reported Friday. It was both exac- erbated and aided with the high winds in the canyon. “Fire has already burned parts of it,” Sondenaa said. “I assume more of it will burn before we get this thing out.” She said of particular concern are the many bear hunters that fre- quent the area this time of year. The closure will remain in eff ect until further notice, Sondenaa said. For more information, call the tribe’s Wildlife Division at 208- 843-7372 or email communica- tions@nezperce.org or angelas@ nezperce.org. JOSEPH — The can got kicked down the road again but not with as much force as might have been expected, Thursday, June 3, as the Joseph City Council heard Pro- Tem Administrator/Recorder Brock Eckstein say he has no documented claims of harassment by council members. This came in open session after an executive ses- sion which he explained to the Council approximately gets 40 residents in down to the audience on business behalf of the Local, A5 council. “I know a lot of you are frus- trated over potential allegations of harassment from council members to city staff ,” Eckstein said. “I can assure you these are being handled in the proper way.” He explained that the “proper way” means that people given due process when accused. He said when a written complaint — not just hearsay — is fi led against any- body, the defendant is allowed two weeks to respond. “The council receives the same correspondence. They’ll get two weeks to think about it,” Eckstein said. “Once that two weeks has passed, both parties will get 15 min- utes in executive session with the council to pitch their side, whether they’re the accuser or the defen- dant. Once both of those 15-min- ute sessions expire, they’ll each get 5 minutes rebuttal and then they’ll both be excused and the council will come to a consensus and their —Chieftain staff See Joseph, Page A16 See Fire, Page A16 A windfall of cash likely for the fairgrounds Fair board may receive a half-million dollars for needed repairs By RONALD BOND Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE — The Wal- lowa County Fairgrounds in Enter- prise have been in need of repairs for years, possibly even decades. A huge windfall of cash that would serve as a major boon to get- ting many of those fi xes completed could be just around the corner. The fair board should receive later this year $500,000 from the American Rescue Plan Act signed in March through new District 58 Rep. Bobby Levy, R-Echo. “It will be used for capital proj- ects around the fairgrounds,” Fair Board Chairwoman Brinda Stan- ley said. “We developed a list early this year. We have not prioritized that list, so we’ll just work our way down through them and see how much each project is going to take. A new roof with moisture barrier on the roof is a high priority for us.” The money comes from $240 million in ARPA funding for the state that was divided between Ore- gon’s 90 state senators and repre- sentatives to hand out for projects in their districts. Each senator received $4 million and each representative received $2 million that they then requested to send to those projects. See Cash, Page A16 Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Wallowa County Fair Offi ce Manager Tera Elliott and grounds Manager Greg Seufer survey the work on the grandstands at the fairgrounds Monday, June 7, 2021. The county is expecting to receive about a half-million dollars that can be used to revitalize the fairgrounds.