Wallowa County chieftain. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1943-current, June 22, 2022, Page 17, Image 17

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    RECORDS/LOCAL
Wallowa.com
Rotary Club’s Peace Pole unveiled
By BILL BRADSHAW
Wallowa County Chieftain
FOR THE RECORD
Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain
Grange scholar Destiny Wecks
JUNE 13
8:20 a.m. — Public assist
in Joseph.
3:05 p.m. — Request for
public assist in Enterprise.
3:43 p.m. — Burglary
reported in Enterprise.
6:27 p.m. — Report
of road hazard in rural
Enterprise.
7:32 p.m. — Animal call
in Enterprise.
JUNE 14
10:35 a.m. — Request for
public assist in rural Wallowa.
7:15 p.m. — A fall at Wal-
lowa Valley Senior Living.
JUNE 15
3:09 a.m. — Suspicious
vehicles reported in Joseph.
12:27 p.m. — Traffi c com-
plaint in Enterprise.
in private pastures or graz-
ing allotments legally occu-
pied by the producer’s cat-
tle,” the announcement
stated. “ODFW person-
nel may also participate in
eff orts to reduce wolf-live-
stock confl ict through lethal
removal of some members
of the Chesnimnus Pack.”
If all four wolves allowed
under the new permit are
taken, it would thoroughly
decimate the Chesnimnus
pack. Adam Baylor of the
ODFW said the pack is esti-
mated to have six to seven
wolves including the breed-
ing pair.
Baylor said June 20, that
no wolves had yet been
taken under the new permit.
An ODFW biologist
shot a yearling male wolf
from the pack June 13 and
an agent of Crow Creek
rancher Tom Birkmaier
shot another May 3. Those
wolves were taken under a
kill permit issued April 29
by ODFW. The second kill
ended the validity of the
April 29 permit.
The
ODFW
has
acknowledged
Birkmai-
er’s repeated eff orts to ward
off wolves with nonlethal
measures, including lights,
noise-makers and human
presence.
Birkmaier was unavail-
able for comment June 20, as
he is often out of cellphone
range working his cattle.
2:42 p.m. — A fall at SW
2nd Street in Enterprise; no
transport.
3:50 p.m. — Follow-up at
The Dog Spot in Joseph; no
contact.
JUNE 16
9:19 a.m. — Traffi c com-
plaint in rural Wallowa.
1:24 p.m. — A single-ve-
hicle crash on Highway 82 in
rural Wallowa.
2:48 p.m. — Theft of
property in Minam; extra
patrol requested.
JUNE 17
12:03 a.m. — Traffi c stop
in Enterprise.
9:18 a.m. — Report of
possible criminal mischief
in Joseph. Requested docu-
mentation only
9:59 a.m. — Report of
possible restraining order
violation in Wallowa. Deputy
made contact, no violation.
—
Boat
12:29 p.m.
inspections at Wallowa Lake.
3:04 p.m. — Public assist
in Wallowa.
3:40 p.m. — Hazard in
the roadway in Wallowa; haz-
ard removed.
4:01 p.m. — Gate left
open in a fi eld with horses;
owner was contacted.
5:25 p.m. — Traffi c stop;
citation issued.
JUNE 18
1:19 p.m. — Call report-
ing possible child abuse in
Wallowa.
3:13 p.m.
—
Fraud
reporting in Joseph.
4:04 p.m. — At a traffi c
stop in Enterprise, the Enter-
prise Police Department
issued a warning for expired
registration and failure to
carry and present.
8:22 p.m. — Custody
issue in Enterprise.
Utility Parts Professional
Tri-County Equipment, Enterprise Location, is hiring for a Utility Parts
Professional. This person will be responsible for providing exceptional customer
service and participate in daily department tasks, such as parts lookup, freight,
stocking showroom and keeping parts department clean and orderly.
Margaret Bradshaw/Contributed Photo
Hurricane Creek Grange members congratulate Destiny Wecks on being one of the
recipients of a scholarship from the grange. From left are Elvaree Fine, Wecks, Claudia
Boswell, Mary Kay Pace and Hank Wats. Other grange scholars are Ian Goodman and
Adalene Royes. Each of the scholars were awarded $500 that they’ll received after
completing a semester of college.
IN BRIEF
First suspected
case of monkeypox
in Oregon
SALEM — The fi rst sus-
pected case of monkeypox
has emerged in Oregon.
The Oregon Health
Authority said Thursday,
June 16, that an unidenti-
fi ed man who is believed to
be infected had traveled to a
community with confi rmed
cases. It said he is isolated
and following public health
recommendations.
The federal Centers for
Disease Control and Preven-
tion is conducting a confi r-
matory test, the state said.
It did not release the man’s
name, age or area of resi-
dence; nor did it say were he
had traveled.
The health authority said
it’s working with the CDC,
public health offi cials and
the man’s providers to iden-
tify anyone who might have
been exposed.
The virus does not spread
easily. Health offi cials have
identifi ed 84 cases in 18
states. No one has died.
Enterprise
Public Library
receives grant
ENTERPRISE — The
Enterprise Public Library
received a “Pilcrow Grant”
from the Pilcrow Foundation.
Matching funds mak-
ing it eligible were provided
by Colonel D.Z. Boyd. This
grant provided 127 hard
back children’s books to the
Enterprise Public Library
just in time for the Summer
Reading Program.
Summer Reading began
Monday, June 13 and will
continue until July 22. There
are reading challenges for
infants, children, teens and
adults.
The library is open Mon-
day through Friday from
10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
— Chieftain staff
Qualifications:
• Excellent customer relationship skills
• Ability to use Microsoft, email and other internet functions and computer programs
• Positive, team-minded attitude
• Able to work weekends
• Able to be on call two weeks a month
• Willing to travel to other locations within company
• High school diploma or equivalent work experience
• Valid, clean driver’s license required
Benefits include: Paid vacation, health insurance, 401(k) and overtime
Contact Danny Paluh at (541) 963-7151 or
dpaluh@tcegreen.com, or drop your resume
off at Tri-County Equipment,
911 S. River St., Enterprise, OR 97828
Tri-County Equipment is an equal opportunity employer
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Here for you!
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not just propane!
East Hwy 82
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• 541-426-0320
Energy Community Service.
A17
ODFW OKs killing four more wolves
WALLOWA COUNTY
— Another kill permit
has been issued for four
more Chesnimnus pack
wolves, the Oregon Depart-
ment of Fish and Wildlife
announced Friday, June 17.
The lethal take is good
through July 17 because
of continued depredation
on livestock in Wallowa
County, ODFW said in its
online announcement.
“The newly issued
lethal-take permit will
allow the aff ected livestock
producer or their agents to
remove up to four wolves
from the Chesnimnus pack
From left, Ron Polk watches as Tom Gleason fi nishes unveiling the Wallowa County Rotary
Club’s Peace Pole on the grounds of the Wallowa County Courthouse and Joe McCormack
reads the Nez Perce language portion of the pole Wednesday, June 15, 2022, in Enterprise.
Wednesday, June 22, 2022
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