REGIONAL Wallowa.com Wednesday, March 16, 2022 Border: Continued from Page A16 making it possible for people to civilly voice their frustra- tion. Darrow explained that when people believe they are disenfranchised they can react either violently or peacefully. Measure 31-101 and similar initiatives are providing people an oppor- tunity to do the latter. “These are pressure valves that allow people to react in a positive manner,” he said. Darrow collected more than 700 signatures of reg- istered voters to get Mea- sure 31-101 on the ballot in Union County. “I could not believe it when we got on the ballot,” he said. Darrow said based on what people told him, most everyone who signed the Union County petition sup- ports Greater Idaho, but he knows of several who did not. “One woman signed it because she wanted to see it get on the ballot so that she could vote against it,” Dar- row said. Such responses did not bother Darrow, who said his ultimate objective is to give the people a chance to decide about Greater Idaho. “That is what citizen gov- ernment is all about,” he said. “It is about dialogue.” Darrow said that while he was collecting signatures for Measure 31-101 he told peo- ple, “I am not here to argue or convince you. I am here to give you a chance to vote.” A plea to legislators Since the passage of Measure 31-101 Darrow has been urging the Union County Board of Commis- sioners to request in writing that state Rep. Bobby Levy, R-Echo, and state Sen. Bill Hansell, R-Athena, work to get Oregon legislators to dis- cuss Greater Idaho. Darrow said he is not requesting that formal dis- cussions about Greater Alex Wittwer/EO Media Group Grant Darrow, a retired chimney sweep and Cove resident, poses for a photo outside his home on Saturday, Feb. 26, 2022. Darrow has been leading local eff orts in the campaign to change the Oregon-Idaho border and allow Eastern Oregon to become part of Greater Idaho. Idaho begin at that state Cap- itol. Darrow said it could be something as simple as the formation of a committee to try to determine why interest in Greater Idaho is growing. “Getting people at the state level to talk about it is the next step,” he said. “We need to get more dialogue, to get everybody talking about it. We have to get it out there.” Darrow said he has a fi rsthand understanding of the growing sense of frus- tration people in Northeast- ern Oregon have about the state’s urban-rural divide because he worked as a chimney sweep in Union, Wallowa and Baker counties for 44 years before retiring in September 2021. “I would work in 12 to 15 homes a week,” he said. The chimney sweep has detected a growing sense of disenchantment with Ore- gon’s government during the past decade, noting they believe, like Darrow does, “It has gotten so bad that I could not aff ord to start a career as a chimney sweep in Oregon today,” he said, adding that every time gov- ernment puts in a new reg- ulation or fee it adds to the red tape citizens must deal with. “It gets to be abso- lutely crazy.” Darrow does not know what Greater Idaho will lead to, noting that it may push to something benefi cial to rural Oregon that might not involve moving Idaho’s bor- ders west. “It could morph into any direction,” he said. He believes the Greater Idaho campaign could lead to a positive change in how the Legislature perceives rural residents, the creation of a new state or Greater Idaho The Cove resident is sometimes asked by peo- ple who know how much he dislikes Oregon’s urban-ru- ral divide, why he doesn’t move to Idaho. “I tell them, ‘That is what I am trying to do,’” Darrow said. that the needs and con- cerns of Eastern Oregon are largely ignored by the Legislature. “We have become noth- ing more than window dressing,” he said. Darrow in his 2015 letter to the editor expressed this point even more starkly. “It would appear to any rural resident or outside observer that most of Ore- gon’s urbanites view Ore- gon’s rural residents as noth- ing more than Third-World inhabitants occupying their weekend and vacation play- grounds in what they adver- tise to the world as Oregon’s unique diversity,” he wrote. Regulations are choking businesses Darrow objects to things such as the way state gov- ernment is imposing more and more regulations and fees that make it increas- ingly diffi cult for Orego- nians to start and operate businesses in Oregon. Nationally-recognized care, right here in your backyard. Congratulations, Wallowa Memorial Hospital. Wallowa Memorial Hospital has always been committed to providing high-quality care to the people of Eastern Oregon. Now they’ve been honored for it. Wallowa Memorial Hospital named one of the top 100 critical access facilities. Based on factors like quality, outcomes, cost and patient perspective, the Chartis Center for Rural Health has named Wallowa Memorial Hospital a 2022 Top 100 Critical Access Hospital in the U.S. EOCCO and Summit Health congratulate everyone on the Wallowa Memorial team. We are proud that you are part of our network of providers in Eastern Oregon, and we thank you for your commitment to quality care. It’s made you one of the best. A17