WOMAN SELLS GOAT MILK SOAP WALLOWA GIRLS OVERCOME FROM WALLOWA HOME SLOW START TO TOP IMBLER INSIDE BUSINESS, A6 FE BR UA RY 2–9 , 20 22 ST ER NO RE GO N.C GO EA SPORTS, A9 OM ig The B ad Re features e Hous ‘The Mango ’ on Street 8 WW W. $1.50 Join m A dru circle 7 PA G E n Liste ow ic sh Mus at EOU 12 PA G E h Watc e@ ‘Prid ice’ d Preju PA G E 14 page ed featur is the 22. neros b. 16, 20 age d im ra Cis Fe tribute by Sand virtually r/Con off eet” o Str emille kicks Dann on Mang , which ad Keith House Big Re “The for The book 137th Year, No. 43 Wednesday, February 2, 2022 WALLOWA.COM FROSTY FRIDAY Annette Bernier Lostine County is simple, home, quiet to her ENTERPRISE — Annette Ber- nier has lived in Lostine for nearly 32 years and wouldn’t live anywhere else. “I have six kids. Three were born here and three weren’t,” she said of her family. “They all went to Wallowa (schools).” Retired from homemaking and raising her kids, she also worked with kids in Head Start and preschool. Although she’s been here more than three decades, she still has ties to the Central Washington area, where siblings live. “I only have one kid who lives in the county,” she said, adding that she has four grandchildren. She recently shared her thoughts about living in Wallowa County. What’s your favorite thing about Wallowa County? It’s simple. It’s home. The nature here is beautiful. I don’t care if it’s slow. That’s the way I like it. I like the outdoors, the people, collect- ing rocks for gardens. It’s a beauti- ful county and I wish more people would appreciate it. What are you looking forward to in 2022? I’m just wait to get through the snow — and it’s still coming in for a while. Are you getting cabin fever yet? Just the normal thing. I get bored. I plan on eventually going to visit my family. I have lots of broth- ers and sisters in the Yakima, Wash- ington, area. Do you have plans for Valentine’s Day? All I know is my second-young- est son was born a few days after that, but I don’t plan on doing any- thing. I did have a chocolate-cov- ered candy with salted caramel in the middle the other day that my roommate came home with. What’s your advice for people who are thinking about moving here? Patience. Mellow. A little bit of silence and some adventure. There’s a lot out there. — Bill Bradshaw, Wallowa County Chieftain Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain ABOVE: The freezing fog advisory that has loomed over the Enterprise area recently did not come without its benefi ts, as seen Friday, Jan. 28, 2022, in this frost-covered tree along Northwest First Street. Such trees and shrubs were all over the area. INSET: Freezing fog made for a frosty windmill Jan. 28 at the Wagner Street home of Jake and Kathy Wolfe of Enterprise. Meat of the Matter By JAYSON JACOBY Baker City Herald BAKER CITY — Curtis Martin doesn’t expect a problem that was decades in the making to be solved by a single announcement from the White House, even one that comes with a billion-dollar pledge. But Martin, a North Powder cat- tle rancher and a past president of the Oregon Cattlemen’s Associa- tion, is nonetheless encouraged by the Biden administration’s eff ort to increase competition in the meat- packing industry, which is domi- nated by four corporations. “I think it’s wonderful,” Martin said of the administration’s recent announcement that it would divert $1 billion from the 2021 American Rescue Plan Act to address prob- lems in the meat-processing system and try to encourage the construc- tion of smaller, regional meat-pro- cessing operations and, potentially, curb a recent rise in beef, pork and poultry prices at the retail level. “It’s really a positive report, and I think the best thing ranchers can do is engage in it and help Tom Vil- sack,” Martin said. Vilsack is the U.S. agricul- ture secretary, and one of the fed- eral offi cials who met with Biden recently in a virtual meeting to dis- cuss the situation. The resulting plan, which was announced Jan. 3, has among its goals enforcing existing competi- tion laws and making the machi- nations of the cattle markets more transparent. That new federal focus is wel- come news for Martin, who has been concerned for many years about what he considers an unfair “IT’S SOMETHING WE IN THE INDUSTRY HAVE BEEN TALKING ABOUT FOR A LONG TIME, THE NEED TO HAVE A MORE VIBRANT AND COMPETITIVE INDUSTRY.” — Matt McElligott, Baker County cattle rancher manipulation of beef markets by the four companies that control about 85% of the country’s cat- tle processing — Cargill, Tyson Foods, JBS and National Beef Packing. While retail beef prices have risen by 21% over the past year, according to the U.S. Depart- ment of Agriculture, that trend hasn’t been refl ected in what ranchers are receiving for their cattle, Martin said. Tom Sharp, former Oregon Cattlemen’s president, addressed the rise in beef prices in an Octo- ber 2021 interview with the Pacifi c Northwest Ag Network when he still was president of the OCA. “Those profi ts have largely gone solely to the major beef pack- ing companies that dominate boxed beef production here in the United States,” Sharp said. “There’s really four multinational companies that produce 83% of the total boxed beef for retail consumption here in the United States.” Martin said he believes one way to reduce the dominance those four companies have is to encourage more local and regional processing of beef. That would also give ranch- ers more options for marketing their cattle, and boost consumer choice, potentially aff ording them the option of buying beef raised, and butchered, in the same county where they live. Martin said there is a suffi - cient number of beef cattle in East- ern Oregon and Western Idaho to support processing plants with a capacity to handle 250 to 500 head per day. But now, he said, “we have absolutely no competition in the Northwest. There’s no negotiation. You take what is given to you (in terms of prices).” See Meat, Page A7 Dean attorney disputes resignation By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain WALLOWA COUNTY — An attorney for the Bob Dean Oregon Ranches reached out Monday, Jan. 31, to dispute the circumstances by which former ranch manager B.J. Warnock left his job there, say- ing Warnock’s departure was a “dismissal.” Attorney J. Logan Joseph, of the Joseph Law Firm in La Grande, confi rmed in an email that Katie Romero, who comes from New Mexico according to her website, is the new manager “of all Dean family cattle operations in Wallowa County,” and said that Warnock’s “dismissal” was “on or about Jan. 17 of this year.” Warnock has not returned a request for clarifi cation on the matter. Romero has stated that her boss, Bob Dean’s wife, Karen Dean, has forbidden her from speaking to the press. Bob Dean is suff ering men- tal trauma following a surgery in June, Karen Dean said in early Jan- uary, so she is speaking for him. Joseph said he knows noth- ing of Wallowa County Sheriff Joel Fish’s investigation for pos- sible animal neglect other than the investigation is ongoing. Fish confi rmed Jan. 31 that he is still investigating. The case involves hundreds of cattle that were trapped in heavy snows in the Upper Imnaha area late last fall and the cows were unable to get themselves or their calves to safety. It is believed at least two dozen mother cows died, some of which “literally ‘milked themselves to death,’ in an attempt to provide for their calves,” Wal- lowa County Stockgrowers Presi- dent Tom Birkmaier said Jan. 19. Numerous rescued calves were taken in by area ranchers and cared for. It is still uncertain how many cattle were involved, but Warnock originally said there were more than 1,500 on summer pasture that they were trying to bring out last fall. Birkmaier and others rallied fellow ranchers to try to rescue the cows and calves over the past month. The eff ort included tak- ing hay to the animals by snow- mobile or dropping it by helicop- ter. It also included bringing cattle out on a trailer pulled by a tracked vehicle that was able to get into the animals after private and public eff orts to open backcountry roads. Joseph added in his email the Dean family’s appreciation for the help of locals in rescuing the cattle and calves. “The Dean family would like to thank all of the local ranchers and any other persons that assisted in the location and retrieval of these cattle,” Joseph wrote. “It is truly encouraging to see a community come together in such a fashion under such circumstances.” Paul Pelley/Contributed Photo Howe: Received lack of support Wallowa principal leaving post March 8 By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain WALLOWA — Another Wal- lowa County school administra- tor is leaving, and not under the best of circumstances; Wallowa High School Principal David Howe will leave March 8 after submitting his letter Howe of resignation to the Wallowa School Board at its meeting Jan. 12. In a telephone interview Thurs- day, Jan. 27, Howe said he is leav- ing because there is “a lack of sup- port from the superintendent and the board. … It is unfortunate that it has come to this. Despite my best eff orts I can no longer protect my staff or students from those who are bent on tearing us apart. I am saddened that I can no longer promote Wallowa High School in which I have poured out my last six years and still care deeply for.” Accomplishments Howe said much of his time at the school has been productive. “We (the high school staff and I) have been able to accomplish some amazing things at Wallowa High School during my time. There are a few things I am most proud of that we were able to accomplish,” he said. “First, we were able to come together as a staff and focus on doing what is best for students. For example, we increased college course selections for students result- ing in savings of time and money during their college careers — a recent graduate was able to enter Boise State University with fi rst-se- mester credits completed. Second, prior to the last year and a half, we were able to improve the school cul- ture and spirit in the high school and we were able to return Wallowa bas- ketball teams to competitiveness. We were able to increase the num- ber of electives in the high school by building a business education See Howe, Page A7