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Sh gin 21 n en Iro 5, 20 Old the day, June Satur E 8 E 3 1219 W com eer. eab id w.s ww 138th Year, No. 2 Wednesday, May 25, 2022 WALLOWA.COM A light snowstorm comes down from the Wallowa Mountains onto a freshly greened-up pasture along Airport Lane just west of Joseph on Thursday, May 19, 2022. Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain Roz McTee Enterprise She enjoys the sense of community here ENTERPRISE — Roz McTee has lived in Enterprise for almost eight years, having moved here from North- ern Nevada. She and husband, Ryan, moved here for “a simpler life and a simpler, quiet, more home-town feel,” she said. One of her favorite things about Wallowa County is the changing of the seasons. Although she got that in Nevada, she likes it here, too. “What I like the most about the county is that everybody is super friendly and it’s a friendly community here, especially with the locals in the off season,” she said. “I know that we welcome the tourists every year, which is great, but I also like the sense of com- munity during the wintertime and the little traditions that we have. “Whether it’s going down to the tavern in Imnaha or skiing at Fergi or going to basketball games on Friday nights. I just like the sense of commu- nity throughout the entire year.” She and Ryan have owned and operated McTee Creations for about four years, where they build and sell barnwood furniture from locally sourced wood that comes from places in the county that people just give to them or they search out and fi nd. “We build anything from enter- tainment centers to barnwood tables to cabinets,” she said. “I also do a little bit of home décor.” They sell some of their items at var- ious shops around the county. “We’re just local artisans trying to fi nd our way,” she said. They have a grown son and daugh- ter, the son lives here. As the weather gets warmer, Roz looks forward to getting out and camping, which she loves. She believes this month’s primary election to be quite important. “I think if you have the means, stick your ballot in,” she said. Roz says the increasing cost of fuel — which she attributes to many causes — is limiting her ability to travel. “I can’t go farther to camp,” she said. “It’s too expensive to venture far- ther out of Wallowa County.” As for people who are thinking of moving here, she has some advice. “Come with the attitude of not changing what it is now,” she said. “Don’t come into the county and try and change it; just take it for what it is.” — Bill Bradshaw, Wallowa County Chieftain A WELCOME RETURN Cool, wet weather has eased drought conditions, challenges remain By JEFF BUDLONG Wallowa County Chieftain ALLOWA COUNTY — Coming off one of the driest and hottest summers in recorded history, Wallowa County and much of Northeast Oregon has benefi ted from a recent run of wet, cool weather. While the central and south- ern portions of the state still are extremely dry, leading to Gov. Kate Brown to use the word “megadrought” in an address last week, Eastern Oregon has seen drought conditions improve. That doesn’t mean eff ects of last year’s dry conditions still aren’t being felt, and fi re season is coming, if not as soon as initially thought. Cooler, wetter weather in April and to begin May has helped improve conditions in northern portions of Ore- gon. Wallowa County has areas of moderate, severe and extreme drought according to the latest drought monitor W Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain The level of Wallowa Lake was inching up on the dam Thursday, May 19, 2022, amid a light snowstorm. released May 17. Most of Uma- tilla, Morrow and Union coun- ties are abnormally dry — the least severe drought ranking. Much of the moisture the north has enjoyed eluded central and southern Oregon where a large area of exceptional drought conditions exist. The combination of mois- ture and cool temperatures can be seen in the local green up, but more importantly is the contin- ued presence of the snowpack on the mountains. “In March, we were seeing the snowpack melting pretty rapidly already,” said Marilyn Lohmann, a National Weather Service hydrologist in Pendleton. With the snowpack at just 70-80% of normal, it was pro- jected to melt between a month to two months early. Fortunately, that is no longer the case. “The cooler weather has allowed the snowpack to stay in place, and in some cases actu- ally build,” Lohmann said. “It will now be melting in a more normal timeframe. We should see stream fl ows last longer into the early summer months, which will help irrigation and just put more moisture back into the soil.” April saw 1.37 inches of moisture and 6.3 inches of snow in Wallowa County, and just over an inch of precipitation and an additional nine inches of snow in Lostine, Lohmann said. Precipi- tation over the last 30 days has ranged from 130-200% of nor- mal, making for a signifi cant dif- ference from just 90 days ago. See Weather, Page A7 County OK’s Road Service District Donates to Wallowa bicycle playground By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE — The ground- work was laid for a new Wallowa County Road Service District and the planned bicycle playground in Wallowa received a donation when the Wallowa County Board of Commissioners met Wednesday, May 18. The commissioners voted to take advantage of a new law approved by the Oregon Legisla- ture that allows counties to direct the state Department of Revenue to deposit money that ordinarily would go into the county Road Fund into the Road Service Dis- trict instead. The funds in question are Secure Rural Schools money under which 25% is apportioned to schools — the Education Ser- vice District — and 75% to the Road Department. It comes from federal funds received as payment in lieu of property taxes that coun- ties have received since the fed- eral government changed its policy on timber harvest in the 1990s and “Lane County gets the most in the came up with a formula to replace whole state because they’ve got the money counties previously more people, although we may received from logging on have more acres (of federal federal lands within their timberland).” borders. Commissioner Todd “It dropped the stump- Nash said the whole “con- age fee to almost nothing,” voluted” problem could Board Chairwoman Susan have been avoided. Roberts said. “It went “We could’ve foregone from $3 million to about all of this by just having Hillock $50,000. So they came an agreement with the feds up with this formula, this that they no longer subtract Secure Rural Schools that that payment, but they’re went through, that would not willing to do that,” he pay for trees they weren’t said. “We’ve got to jump cutting anymore, which through the hoops to make took away almost all the it happen.” income. Then they decided Hillock said he believes that formula would give no other Oregon counties Nash it to places that weren’t have yet taken advantage of getting huge amounts of the new law. He noted that money. They did it on counties in other states have a population basis, too. set up road service districts Although Wallowa County for the SRS money. has a lot more federal land “That’s because their than (for example) Union state allows it and ours did County, they get more not, but now it does,” Rob- money because they have erts said. Roberts a bigger population. It’s The matter must fi rst go convoluted.” before voters. The commis- Commissioner John Hillock sioners and their legal team has agreed. work to do before putting it on “It’s very convoluted,” he said. the November ballot. This elicited concern from the commissioners. “It’s going to be one of those things that is going to be really dif- fi cult for people to understand,” Nash said. “The bottom line is we’ll have a half-million dollars in our general fund that we didn’t have before, and it doesn’t do harm to our Road Department. It’s a win.” Roberts said that under the new district — for which the com- missioners would be the board of directors — nothing would change in how the Road Department oper- ates or is funded. “What it’s going to do is put a little more than a half-million dol- lars (in PILT money) in the general fund, which will allow us to fully staff the sheriff ’s offi ce and that would continue each year rather than us losing half of that money due to that formula,” Roberts said. She agreed that the commission- ers will have to make it clear what voters are being asked to approve. “We’ll need to explain why it’s on (the November ballot),” Rob- erts said. “It doesn’t change any- thing. The Road Department will operate exactly as it always has. See County, Page A7