A8 LOCAL Wallowa County Chieftain Wednesday, August 10, 2022 Commissioners OK funding for public land projects Work to be funded with SRS Act money By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE — The Wallowa County Board of Commissioners approved $588,675 worth of projects on public lands Wednesday, Aug. 3, with Title II money received through the federal Secure Rural Schools Act. The act provides critical funding for schools, roads and other municipal services to more than 700 counties across the U.S. and Puerto Rico, funding that comes mostly from public lands. Commission Chair- woman Susan Roberts explained the three parts of the act. She said that Title I is money that comes directly into the county, 75% of which goes to the road department and 25% goes to schools. Title II is money that goes to proj- ects on public lands. Title III can be used for such things as the sheriff’s office and work they do on the national forests. “Years ago when this first came about, Title III was so hard to deal with, it was just onerous and so Wallowa County chose at that time not to do Title III, so all of our money is split between Title I and II,” Roberts said. Each year, the county will have to decide on how to divide money up. That would be affected by a hear- ing later that morning on the Road Service District vot- ers will be asked to create in November. “If folks pass that, we will be able to separate that money … this way, the money goes to the Educa- tion Service District and the Road District, not the county,” Roberts said. “They won’t do their formula any- more and our PILT (pay- ment in lieu of taxes) money should increase for the next couple of years and then we’ll see after that, because none of it is set in stone.” Katy Nesbitt, the county’s director of natural resources and economic development, discussed the process with meaning we’ve allocated out the commissioners. “The county has tradi- money to the projects that tionally run these projects … have been ranked so there’s and we vet them … and then a zero-dollar amount,” she give recommenda- said. “We had dis- cussed keeping tions to the commis- sioners,” she said. some back for next “This year, the For- time and decided not est Service came out to do that.” with the announce- Nesbitt men- tioned the vetting ment at a differ- ent time of year and process that happens Hillock gave us too short a prior to it going to time period to get all the commissioners. the projects queued “When some- thing goes through up for the tech com- mittee, but the stand- the RAC — the RAC ing committee was being the Regional able to look at all Advisory Commit- tee which Commis- the projects on the sioner (Todd) Nash Wallowa-Whitman Nash is a part of,” Roberts (National Forest) interjected. “That except for two.” Umatilla forest Nesbitt said proj- ects aren’t ranked weed piece we have because they came always done, so that in after the standing is something to indi- cate to our mem- committee met. One bers that we would project is for weed like to see that move control in the Uma- tilla National Forest, Roberts forward if it comes Nesbitt said. through the RAC.” “What we have done Nesbitt said there should is zeroed out the (approx- be a surplus on requests imately) $588,000 for the made for the Umatilla Wallowa-Whitman side, National Forest. “On the Umatilla side, there’s about $85,000 to spend and we only have an application for about $19,000,” Nesbitt said. Roberts was encouraged by that news. Referring to the weed control project in the Wen- aha Wilderness and Grand Ronde River area, Roberts said she hopes that although it was not ranked because it was submitted late, “I would encourage our board mem- bers on the RAC to see if they can husband through out of some of the remain- ing money that was left for the Umatilla.” Of the projects submitted, nine received a No. 1 prior- ity ranking. The projects and their Title II requests are: • Miller/Tyee Fence 2: $47,700. • Buck Creek Allot- ment-Sled fence: $48,972. • Wallowa County Can- yonlands noxious weed management: $51,092. • Lower Jo riparian moni- toring: $27,560. • Youth Trails Conserva- tion Corps: $30,000. • Eagle Cap/Hells Can- yon volunteer trail mainte- nance: $29,700. • Dougherty Campground well locate survey: $15,900. • Tepee Elk Allotment, Elk Pasture, Peavine Ripar- ian Exclosure: $55,544. • Horse Creek/Cache Creek roads: $61,525. Receiving a No. 2 rank- ing with their requests are: • Hells Canyon mainte- nance and weed treatment: $27,805. • Aspen Exclosure main- tenance: $20,145. • Swamp Creek-Bennet Pasture fence: $44,461. Receiving a No. 3 rank- ing with its request is: • The cleaning of 22 cat- tle guards: $13,992. The three items not ranked because they were submitted after the Forest Service’s newer deadline and their requests were: • Road drainage: $84,279. • Wallowa Resources youth crew: $30,000. • Wenaha Wilderness/ Grande Ronde River nox- ious weed control: $28,514. More complete descrip- tions of each project is avail- able at the courthouse. Oregon Department of Forestry withdraws fire-risk map County objected to method used to create it By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain ENTERPRISE — Action to automatically appeal the listing of any property in Wallowa County as having a “high” or “extreme” risk of fire danger by the Ore- gon Department of Forestry seems to have been heard in Salem. On Aug. 3, the Board of Commissioners decided that any properties designated as having high or extreme fire risk would be automatically appealed in hopes the ODF would reconsider. “There’s a lot of concern over the fire maps that have been put out and the way they were developed,” Com- missioner Todd Nash said. “There’s concern that peo- ple have been put in ‘high’ or ‘extreme’ categories and wrongfully so and, in many cases, susceptible to fires.” Nash said Aug. 8 that it appears the actions of Wal- lowa County and some legis- lators prompted the state for- ester to re-do the fire risk map posted online on June 30. Cal Mukumoto, Oregon state forester and director of the ODF, issued a statement the day after the commission- ers’ action. In the statement, Mukumoto said, “In response to input received since post- ing, we have decided to remove the current iteration of the wildfire risk map from the Oregon Explorer and withdraw the notices sent. We will immediately begin working with Oregon State University on some refine- ments to improve the accu- racy of risk classification assignments based on what we’ve heard from property owners thus far.” Mukumoto also said the appeals process, which gave landowners until Sept. 21 to appeal their designation, would “become moot.” Any appeals that have been filed will be reviewed, the forester said. Nash said Aug. 8 that he is unaware of any Wallowa County landowners who have appealed the designation. He said Aug. 3 that the random way in which the ODF came up with the risk designation could have many unintended consequences. He said it opens landown- ers to fines from the state fire marshal, puts insurance com- panies on a heightened alert and those companies — in some cases — raise rates or cancel policies. Nash was particularly crit- ical of the methodology by which the fire maps were cre- ated to support Senate Bill 762. He said ODF contracted with OSU to create the maps, which used satellite imagery to map areas rather than send- ing out people to see the land firsthand. “The map, itself, where people have houses in mid- dle of irrigated pasture and because it’s all one tax lot, it’s all lumped together,” he said. During last week’s meet- ing, Nash suggested land- owners visit the ODF website where they can type in their address to see how their prop- erty is rated. He said a more on-the- ground approach should have been used and the current maps should be withdrawn and reconfigured. The commissioner said he does not know if OSU will actually send out indi- viduals to view the sites of potential high or extreme risk designations. “We’ll find out, won’t we?” he said. Nash remains concerned for the risk of fire in the county, but has faith in land- owners to mitigate that risk, such as with the Firewise Communities that have been created here. “Our state doesn’t think we have common sense … they’re going to map it out from a satellite and declare what category you’re in,” he said. “This is typical of the current dynamic of the leg- islative makeup. The impact it has is 100% on rural communities.” Commission Chair- woman Susan Roberts asked Nash for a motion on the matter and he moved that the county automat- ically appeal any “high” or “extreme” designa- tions by the state, a motion approved unanimously. G RAIN WALLOWA COUNTY G ROWERS IMPORTANT NOTICE To: Wallowa County Grain Grower True Value Customers I would like to inform all of our customers, that due to a labor shortage with-in the True Value Store, we have decided to close the store for business on Sundays until further notice. This is a necessary step to help keep our current employees from burning out. Short staff and more days worked for each of them has been the trend for a long period. This will go into effect on Sunday August 21st 2022. We apologize for this inconvenience and hope that the labor pool will get better in the future. Thank you for your understanding. Stacy Beckman Stacy J Beckman General Manager SAVE THE DATE Labor Day Picnic Celebrating Community walloa lake state park Monday, September 5th 12 Noon - 3pm Coleman Oil Wallowa Cardlock is NOW OPEN For more information contact Chris Geyer at cgeyer@eoni.com • Conveniently Located • Accepting all Major Credit/Debit and CFN Cards • Easily Accessible for Semi trucks, Campers and RV’s • Non-Ethanol Premium • 24/7 Fueling 71051 HWY 82 Wallowa, OR 97885 888-799-2000 www.colemanoil.com