LOCAL Wallowa.com Wednesday, June 9, 2021 A7 Commissioners still concerned over drought Irrigation district chief not so much By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE — As Wallowa County moves into warmer weather, the outlook for the drought dec- laration the county commis- sioners approved May 21 isn’t getting any brighter, they said after their meeting Wednesday, June 2. Commissioner Todd Nash said the county has a D1 drought designa- tion, which is not nearly as severe as some neighboring counties. “In Union and Baker counties, they’ve tripped into D3 in one little por- tion of their counties in the southern portion. They’re already there,” he said. “The north end of Wal- lowa County did not get those last rains that we got. Most of the county got nine- tenths to 2 inches and the north end got about a tenth and they’re extremely dry. We’re looking at what the next weeks in the Drought Monitor might show.” The U.S. Drought Moni- tor daily updates the drought outlook for regions all over the country. Maps can be found at https://drought- monitor.unl.edu. Nash said a 90-person board reads the Drought Monitor weekly and rotates its members “so there’s a fresh set of eyes on it.” But, he said, online maps don’t always tell the whole story on the ground. “One of the things in our conversations with (the USDA’s Farm Ser- vice Agency) is they’re not equating all the cold nights we’ve had for grass growth. A lot of these guys have been through their pas- tures one time. Now we’re getting to a point where it doesn’t grow back any- more,” he said. “I was just talking to a guy from Wal- lowa this morning and some of Wallowa didn’t get those rains. Now he’s going out to the Divide country and it’s been so cold up there he’s still got snow. He said there isn’t any feed.” He said he told the FSA, “You guys can read what- ever map you want, but we’re in a critical spot right now.” The higher the “D” rat- is aware that producers in Umatilla and Morrow coun- ties are grazing on CRP land because of the drought conditions there. “They were in tough shape. It was just brutal dry over there,” Nash said. “We’re still in better condi- tion than almost any county in the state, but it’s not good (here). The guys who are “THEY WERE IN TOUGH SHAPE. IT WAS JUST BRUTAL DRY OVER THERE.” — Todd Nash, Wallowa County commissioner ing, the more federal fund- ing is available. Also, reg- ulations can be eased, such as allowing emergency grazing on Conservation Reserve Program land that is otherwise set aside to not be used agriculturally. Nash said he’s aware Wallowa County isn’t in as poor shape as some Ore- gon counties. He said he taking water out of Wallowa Lake are already on a rota- tion. It hasn’t been warm enough early enough and then they started pulling out of the lake earlier than nor- mal so it never had a chance to back up.” But Dan Butterfi eld, president of the Wallowa Lake Irrigation District, said he’s confi dent the lake will stand up to any drought. “We are in what I would consider to be a really lucky situation because we have a reservoir,” he said, add- ing that an engineering fi rm the district contracts with is giving positive assurances. “We’re set to fi ll the lake by July to our maximum levels,” he said. In fact, just Wednesday, the lake showed a 2-inch increase. Butterfi eld said it needs to fi ll another 5 feet to reach it maximum level. He agreed that many irrigators turned on the tap May 1 — the earliest allow- able date — which was two to three weeks early. But he’s not seeing that so abnormal. “Last year we got 10 inches of rain and didn’t irrigate too much,” he said. Butterfi eld said this year the district will be putting that water to use. Farm- ers are both irrigating from ditches that run from the lake and from pipes installed to keep water from Enterprise Cemetery Memorial Day Decorations evaporating, making that water more effi cient. “Right now, we’re using our water instead of sending it out of here muddy to the ocean,” he said. “Almost every year we end up dump- ing a lot of water. With the fact that people have started irrigating, we may not have to dump as much. But the commissioners remained concerned. Nash and fellow Commissioner Susan Roberts agreed there needs to be rain along with the warmer temperatures. “It isn’t the same as when you have snow and then you get rain up there to bring the snowmelt down,” Roberts said. “It’s kind of dou- ble-jeopardy,” Nash added. “If it warmed up and then it rained at the same time, they wouldn’t be pulling out of the lake for all they’re worth and it’d be accumu- lating in the lake. I think we’re going to see this thing just keep going to where we don’t get caught up.” WC Humane Society DOG WASH Please retrieve bouquets or other decorations you’d like to keep no later than Sunday, June 13th. After that date, the cemetery maintenance crew will remove and dispose of items in the way of trimming headstones and mowing the grounds. We appreciate your understanding and cooperation. Thank you! Sat June 12 • 11AM-3PM In the alley behind new Enterprise Fire Station Big Little dogs dogs $10 $5 Shampoo and towels provided. You wash or we wash but the price is the same Enterprise Cemetery District and Friends of Enterprise Cemetery Contact Jennifer Cooney • jcooney@wallowa.com • 541-805-9630 Call 503-621-7352 for more information 209 NW First St., Enterprise OR • 541-426-4567 • wallowa.com BRING THE FAMILY, ENJOY MORE FUN! BOWLING - ARCADE - FOOD COURT - AND MORE! Reserve your lane online today! 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