A10 REGIONAL Wallowa County Chieftain Wednesday, June 29, 2022 Wallowa’s Tanzey Northeast Oregon food processors, ties for fi fth place dairy, off er to pay for water testing By RONALD BOND For the Wallowa County Chieftain HILLSBORO — La Grande claimed an individ- ual state championship in the 2A division of the Ore- gon State High School Clay Target League State Tour- nament Sunday, June 26, in Hillsboro. Makenna Shorts hit 97 targets in 100 attempts in trap shooting, with two nearly fl awless runs, to claims the female varsity state cham- pionship. Shorts connected on 49 out of 50 shots in the morning session, and fol- lowed with 48 out of 50 in the afternoon session. Her score was not only the top varsity girls score, but was tied with Canby’s Tyler Schweitzer for the top 2A varsity score, regardless of gender. In fact, for the entire two-day event (includ- ing the 1A teams on June 25) only Rainier’s Tyler Bor- ders, who shot a perfect 100, and Crook County’s Clay- ton Dill, with 98, had a bet- ter score than Shorts. Shorts wasn’t the only winner for La Grande, as Marissa Lane posted a score of 82 to win the girls junior varsity division. All told, La Grande had nine diff erent shooters break into the top 10 in their respec- tive divisions. In the varsity girls division, Dakota Shorts tied for fi fth, Kendra Hens- ley placed ninth with a score of 86, and Kendra Counsell tied for 10th with a score of 85. On the varsity boys side, Austin Higgins turned in a score of 93 to tie for seventh. In the novice girls divi- sion, Keira Counsell placed fi fth with a score of 63, and for the novice boys, Dal- ton Sweet placed fi fth with a score of 72, and Hunter DeCoteau was seventh with a score of 68. In the 1A ranks, Wal- lowa’s Lane Tanzey tied for fi fth place in the varsity boys division. Tanzey had a per- fect score of 50 in the fi rst session, and followed with 46 in the second session. In fact, Tanzey was perfect in his fi rst three runs with 25 out of 25 targets in each before hitting 21 in the fi nal run. Tanzey was the only Wal- lowa shooter to reach the top 10, though Liam Wolfe also broke 90, posting a score of 91 in the varsity boys divi- sion to tie for 26th. Kellan Knifong added an 89 to tie for 34th, and Lucas Hulse and Cash Tanzey both had 87 to tie for 44th. For Union, Gage Mar- tens, like Lane Tanzey, had a perfect fi rst session and, like Tanzey, had a score of 96 to tie for fi fth in the var- sity boys division. James Anderson was close on his heels with a score of 93 to tie for 13th in the varsity boys division, and Dawson Miller placed second in the novice boys with an 84. Coming soon to Old Mill Storage in Wallowa COVERED RV STORAGE! 20 UNITS 12’ wide x 40’ deep x 15’ high Store your RV, trailer, boat, equipment, etc. in our secure, gated, 24-hour surveillance facility Phone: 541-886-3141 www.OldMillMinistorage.com Old Mill Storage, LLC By ALEX BAUMHARDT Oregon Capital Chronicle MORROW COUNTY — In response to the ground- water nitrate emergency in Morrow County, several food processors, an indus- trial farm and an Amazon data center have stepped up to pay for drinking water testing and water distribu- tion for people who rely on wells drawing from a con- taminated aquifer. Amazon Web Services, Boardman Foods, Lamb Weston, Calbee North Amer- ica, Tillamook County Creamery Association and Threemile Canyon Farms are creating a business coalition to help the Morrow County Health Department with its work addressing clean drink- ing water needs, according to a Monday press release from the Boardman Chamber of Commerce. The move comes after Jim Doherty, Morrow County commissioner, launched an eff ort to step up testing and provide water to residents living atop the polluted aqui- fer. He has been seeking money from state and fed- eral authorities to address the emergency. Nearly all of the busi- nesses in the newly-an- nounced coalition operate from the industrial complex managed by the Port of Morrow. The government agency was recently found to have pumped 260 tons of excess nitrogen onto area farms, violating state restrictions. The Oregon Department of Environmental Quality fi ned the port $1.3 million in Janu- ary, then last week increased the fi ne by $800,000 after concluding that the port continued to pump illegal amounts of nitrogen onto area farms even after the Jan- uary enforcement action was taken. That excess nitrogen is “likely to cause additional adverse impacts” to the groundwater nitrate levels, according to the revised pen- alty from DEQ. Port offi cials were con- testing the original penalty. Morrow County well users draw on water from the Lower Umatilla Basin, which has become increas- ingly contaminated by nitrate during the last 30 years from farm fertilizers, animal manure and waste- water from the port and area food processors. There are about 1,300 private domes- tic wells drawing water from that basin in Morrow County. Many who rely on those wells for their drinking water are low income and Latino. Water high in nitrates consumed over long periods can lead to stomach, blad- der and intestinal cancers, according to the National Cancer Institute, as well as miscarriages and “blue baby syndrome,” inhibiting oxy- gen from moving through an infant’s bloodstream. An investigation ear- lier this year by the Capital Chronicle found the port’s contamination had persisted far longer than three years, and with little enforcement from DEQ until recently. Many of the companies that have stepped up to help with water testing and with clean water distribution are also sources of nitrate con- tamination in the Lower Umatilla Basin Groundwa- ter Area. The Groundwater Management Area Commit- tee responsible for tackling the nitrate problem estimates that about 70% of the con- tamination is from farms, about 20% from dairy and cattle operations and about 5% is from food processors and the port. One of the partners in the new collaboration is Threemile Canyon Farms, a large dairy that supplies the Tillamook County Cream- ery Association. The dairy, located in Boardman, oper- ates outside the port complex. Boardman Foods started giving away water test kits starting next Monday, June 27 at its onion processing plant at the Port of Morrow. The giveaway will continue each Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. The company will accept water samples to send off for testing. The Boardman chamber provides testing at its offi ces. Eastern Oregon colleges aim to close equity gaps The Observer LA GRANDE — A col- laboration between three Eastern Oregon schools aims to close equity gaps for Eastern Oregon students at two- and four-year colleges and universities by 2030. Gov. Kate Brown announced Monday, June 27, an investment of $1.6 million for Eastern Oregon University, Treasure Val- ley Community College and Blue Mountain Community College to launch an initia- tive called “Moon Shot for Equity.” The three schools will work together as part of a fi ve-year, student-centered comprehensive strategic plan to identify and remove systemic barriers that are preventing access and attainment to a post-second- ary education degree. “Every student in Ore- gon, no matter who they are or where they come from, deserves equitable access to higher education. We must invest and innovate to break down the barriers that have kept too many Oregonians from succeeding in higher education,” Brown said in a press release announcing the initiative. “This initial investment is just the start of a program to deliver last- ing and meaningful change this year and in years to come. Every person in East- ern Oregon — and through- out the state — should be able to attend college and earn a degree.” The initiative is part of Brown’s work with public universities and community colleges to embrace inno- vation and focus on work- ing smarter across education sectors to support students through every stage of edu- cation. The $1.6 million will be funded with federal Gov- ernor’s Emergency Edu- cation Relief Fund dollars, which are reserved for allo- cations by governors through the Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act. “This initial invest- ment is a critical fi rst step to launching this fi ve-year initiative,” Eastern Ore- gon University President Tom Insko said. “Together, I believe we can reshape the future of post-secondary education in eastern Ore- gon, which means eliminat- ing the equity gap and mak- ing sure all students reach their attainment goals in less time and money and set the path to better career outcomes.” The Eastern Oregon Uni- versity Board of Trustees convened via Zoom for a special meeting on June 27 to authorize Insko to enter into a contract with educa- tional consulting fi rm EAB Global, Inc. Board authori- zation is required because VISIT US ON THE WEB www.Wallowa.com the contract exceeds $1 million. EAB Global launched the Moon Shot project in the fall of 2020 with a focus on removing systemic bar- riers to graduation among fi rst-generation students as well as students of color. “Our work with this new cohort of institutions in Eastern Oregon adds a new focus around bridg- ing the rural versus urban divide that too often leaves students from more remote areas with reduced access to higher education and all of the opportunities that go along with that,” EAB Vice President of Partnerships Tom Sugar said. Blue Mountain Commu- nity College President Mark Browning said open and equitable access is what the Pendleton based institution strives for. “We are excited about how Moonshot for Equity can help us reach those goals and deliver even greater suc- cess for students,” he said.