A16 LOCAL/STATE Wallowa County Chieftain Railroad company fi nishes river work OUT OF THE PAST Compiled by Cheryl Jenkins 100 YEARS AGO May 4, 1922 The railroad company has fi nished its work on the chan- nel of the river between Enter- prise and Lostine. The stream was restored to its old channel in one place and a new chan- nel was created in another, to protect the railroad grade from washing in high water. Nina Warnock took her class of girls in the Methodist Sunday school on a picnic last Saturday, at the river west of town. W. P. Warnock went as chauff eur, and found room for a dozen small girls in his car. A road grader has been grading and smoothing the dirt streets around town. In a few years these streets will be graveled and curbing will be put in. Improvements are being made this spring on many parkings and lawns. Every parking graded and seeded and planted to trees marks a forward step in the town. 75 YEARS AGO May 8, 1947 The grand jury has indicted Albert Matti, driver of the car in which George Zacharias was recently killed, with a charge of negligent homicide. Extensive improvements are planned at the Edelweiss hall at Wallowa Lake. The upstairs will be made into several apartments for year- round occupancy, and several cabins will be erected. At the special meeting of the membership of the Wal- lowa County Grain grow- ers, capitalization of the orga- nization was increased to $150,000 of common stock and $100,000 of preferred stock. 50 YEARS AGO May 4, 1972 Top individual honors at the Wallowa FFA Father- Son Awards Banquet went to: Steve Woodward, John Reish, Brian Temple and Tom Makin. The men’s Thurs- day night bowling league closed out the season with their annual awards ban- quet. Those receiving tro- phies were: Wes Conrad for high game of 245; Alfred Zollman and Larry Jones for high series awards for a 608 series; Fred Carlson’s high average of 171; and Terry Hulse, most improved bowler. Betty Jennings Ward, for- merly of Joseph was killed and Allyn Fisher of Wal- lowa was seriously injured when the cars they were driving crashed head-on at the top of Asotin hill about fi ve miles south of Asotin. 25 YEARS AGO May 1, 1997 The annual Joseph Junior Rodeo featured action from 148 young cowboys and cowgirls from eastern Oregon coun- ties. Zack McVay of Enter- prise and Ethan Lowe of Imnaha tied as all-around pee wee boy. The EHS golf team, coached by Dick Quinn, claimed its sixth consecu- tive Oregon Class 2A cham- pionship in the tournament at Pumpkin Ridge Country Club near Beaverton. Record-breaking perfor- mances by Shannon Ables of Enterprise highlighted the Jo-Hi Invitational track meet held Saturday. Ables dominated sprint events, setting new meet records in the 100 and 200 meter runs. Six women have formed a fi ber arts cooperative, The UnCommon Thread, located on Main Street across from the courthouse. They are: Yasha Hollady, Loring Lamb, Julie Lamb, Sheri Adams, Sally Brandt and Marya Nowakowski. Oregon Court of Appeals overturns $1 billion timber verdict against state By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press SALEM — The Ore- gon Court of Appeals on Wednesday, April 27, struck down a $1 billion jury ver- dict that was intended to compensate 14 county gov- ernments for insuffi cient logging on state forestlands. A law that requires Ore- gon to manage the forest- land for the “greatest per- manent value” does not create an “immutable prom- ise” to maximize revenue for the counties, the appeals court ruled. The appellate court said that “historically, ‘value’ has myriad defi nitions, some of which could relate to revenue production and others that do not relate to revenue production.” The statute also directs that forests be managed for the “greatest permanent value” to the state, rather than to the counties, which means the text falls short of the “clear and unmistakable intent” of making a contrac- tual promise, the ruling said. For that reason, a state judge in Linn County wrongly refused to dis- miss the class action law- suit against the state govern- ment, the ruling said. John DiLorenzo, attor- ney for the counties, vowed to challenge the ruling before the Oregon Supreme Court because it “does not align with the law or the evi- dence we presented at trial.” The ruling doesn’t take into account the economic and social damage that rural communities have suff ered after the state government changed its logging pol- icies without input from the counties, he said in an email. Oregon’s leaders have decided the timber econ- omy is inconsistent with their “urban values,” but Mother’s Day Sale! Up to 30 % OFF All In-Stock Furniture Wednesday, May 4, 2022 MOM! 800 S. River, Enterprise, OR carpetoneenterprise.com 541-426-9228 Picasa The Oregon Court of Appeals has overturned a $1 billion jury verdict against the state government that sought to compensate counties for insuffi cient logging on state forests. the resulting problems must be addressed to bridge the urban-rural divide, DiLorenzo said. “The lack of productive employment in these com- munities has led to sub- stance abuse, violence, lack of educational opportunity and general hopelessness and despair,” he said. After a monthlong trial in 2019, a jury determined the state of Oregon violated a contract requiring it to max- imize revenue from forest- lands donated by the coun- ties in the 1930s and ‘40s. State forests must be managed for the “greatest permanent value” by law, but the 14 counties claimed the Oregon Department of Forestry impermissibly expanded that defi nition beyond its original intent. Under language adopted in the late 1990s, the “great- est permanent value” was changed to include envi- ronmental and recre- ational considerations that restricted timber harvests, shortchanging the 14 coun- ties and tax districts within them of revenues, the plain- tiff s claimed. Attorneys for Oregon appealed the jury verdict on the grounds that the coun- ties didn’t have an enforce- able contract that dictated how state forest offi cials must manage the nearly 700,000 acres of donated property. The law governing state forestlands pertains to “mat- ters of statewide concern” that cannot be challenged in court by the counties, state attorneys claimed. As polit- ical subdivisions of the Ore- gon government, the coun- ties cannot sue over such state policies. Federal environmen- tal laws enacted since the property was donated, such as the Endangered Spe- cies Act, also eff ectively limit how much timber can be extracted from state for- estlands, according to state attorneys. The counties claimed that Oregon forestry offi - cials weren’t obligated to create habitat for feder- ally protected species that resulted in logging restric- tions. In any case, the coun- ties said the state gov- ernment can alter forest management policies but must still pay them damages for breaching the contract. Counties provide health care and other functions under contract with the state government, so they must be able to rely on such agreements being enforce- able, the plaintiff s said. If the counties had known the state government could re-interpret the contract’s terms at will, they’d never have donated such huge amounts of forestlands. The appeals court rul- ing does nothing to allevi- ate the hardships that for- est mismanagement created for rural communities, said Roger Nyquist, a commis- sioner for Linn County, the lead plaintiff . Aside from economic issues, the state’s forest management approach has caused these communities to live with the danger of deadly wildfi res, Nyquist said in an email.