BUSINESS & AG 2B — THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 2021 Grande Ronde Hospital acquires Blue Mountain Associates The Observer LA GRANDE — Grande Ronde Hospital and Clinics, La Grande, is expanding its health system. The hospital announced Friday, March 19, that Blue Mountain Associ- ates, an outpatient treat- ment center in La Grande, will become part of the GRH system. The hospital reported it expects a full transition to a new GRH Behavioral Health Clinic to begin June 1. GRH President and CEO Jeremy Davis in a press release said the acquisition means better care for Union County residents and allows vices for the people for fuller integra- of Union County,” tion of behavioral Davis said. health care into the Dr. Joel Rice, hospital’s system. who started BMA He cited the trend almost 30 years over the last decade ago, echoed Davis’ Rice toward a multi-disci- statement. pline care track that “It’s been a long places the patient at time coming,” Rice the center of a col- said. “The process laborative exper- of integrating behav- tise model designed ioral health care into to treat the whole primary care clinics, Davis patient with medical, hospital wards and mental and behav- emergency rooms ioral services. is the cutting edge of “We believe this inte- innovation in health care gration of services will not only nationally, but help improve coordination worldwide.” and access for a broader The press release did spectrum of health ser- not provide any fi nancial terms of the deal. The integrated team of Blue Mountain Asso- ciates and Grande Ronde Hospital associates will eventually work from BMA’s location at 1101 I Ave., providing a home base as both entities work to ensure a smooth tran- sition. According to the announcement, BMA patients should notice little diff erence in their care. Grande Ronde’s behav- ioral health team will con- tinue to see patients in all primary care locations. However, Rice will have an offi ce in Grande Ronde’s Regional Medical Clinic, 506 Fourth St., La Grande. Davis added that having the fi rst psychia- trist on staff at the clinic gives the organization a key foundational building block for recruiting addi- tional psychiatrists to the GRH team. Notably, the clinic also is the fi rst pri- mary care clinic in Union County to have a pharma- cist on staff . GRH was an early adopter of the Compre- hensive Primary Care Ini- tiative, which the federal government launched in 2012 to strengthen pri- mary care. The plan set the stage for popula- tion-based care manage- ment and cost-savings opportunities and was the foundation for the broader Comprehensive Primary Care Plus, which the Cen- ters for Medicare and Medicaid Services initi- ated in 2017 and referred to as the “largest-ever multi-payer initiative to improve primary care in America.” The program seeks to improve quality, access and effi ciency of primary care. Numerous studies show the integration of med- ical, mental and behav- ioral health services can serve to reduce the demand on emergency services in community hospitals. Guest column: Ag has plenty to teach ANNE MOSS OREGON FARM BUREAU n honor of National Ag Week, March 21-27, I’d like to share a few things I’ve learned while working for Oregon Farm Bureau since 2004. 1. There’s room for and a need for all types of farming. Organic, conventional, biotech, no-tech, small-scale, mid-size, com- mercial-scale, direct-to-consumer, contract for food processors, inter- national exports — all can be found in Oregon and all have an important, vital place in agriculture. The myth that one type of farming is “good” and another is “bad,” and therefore should be pitted against each other, is just plain untrue. I know farms in Oregon that grow organic crops on one fi eld, conven- tional crops on another and biotech crops, like GMO alfalfa or sugar beets for seed, on a third. Other farms stick to just one farming method. Farmers decide what to do based on many factors, including their customer base, market poten- tial, the farm’s location, the crop’s I Susan Montoya Bryan/Associates Press This Feb. 17, 2021 photo shows an empty irrigation canal at a tree farm in Corrales, New Mexico, with the Sandia Mountains in the background. Much of the West is mired in drought, with New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada and Utah being among the hardest hit. The National Oceanic and Atmo- spheric Administration’s offi cial spring outlook March 18, 2021, sees an expanding drought with a drier than normal April, May and June for a large swath of the country from Louisiana to Oregon. DROUGHT Continued from Page 1B agency said. A La Nina cooling of parts of the cen- tral Pacifi c continues to bring dry weather for much of the country, while in the Southwest heavy summer monsoon rains failed to materialize. Meteorolo- gists also say the California megadrought is associ- ated with long-term climate change. The March 18 national Drought Monitor shows almost 66% of the nation is in an abnormally dry condi- tion, the highest mid-March level since 2002. And fore- casters predict that will worsen, expanding in parts of Florida, Texas, Okla- homa, Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming and South Dakota, with small islands of relief in parts of the Great Lakes and New England. More than 44% of the nation is in moderate or worse drought, and nearly 18% is in extreme or excep- tional drought — all of it west of the Mississippi River. Climate scientists are calling what’s happening in the West a “megadrought” that started in 1999. “The nearly West-wide drought is already quite severe in its breadth and intensity, and unfortunately it doesn’t appear likely that there will be much relief this spring,” said UCLA cli- mate scientist Daniel Swain, who writes the Weather West blog and isn’t part of the NOAA outlook. “Winter precipitation has been much below average across much of California, and summer precipitation reached record low levels in 2020 across the desert Southwest.” With the Sierra Nevada snowpack only 60% of normal levels, U.S. Depart- ment of Agriculture mete- orologist Brad Rippey said “there will be some water cutbacks and allocation cut- backs in California and perhaps other areas of the Southwest” for agriculture and other uses. It will prob- ably hit nut crops in the Golden State. Winter and spring wheat crops also have been hit hard by the western drought with 78% of the spring wheat production area in drought conditions, Rippey said. The dry, warm con- ditions in the upcoming months likely will bring “an enhanced wildfi re season,” said Jon Gottschalck, chief of NOAA’s prediction branch. Swain of UCLA said the wildfi res probably will not be as bad as 2020 because so much vegeta- tion already has burned and drought conditions retarded regrowth. Last year, he said, wildfi re was so massive it will be hard to exceed, though this fi re season likely will be above average. Drought and heat breed a vicious cycle. When it’s this dry, less of the sun’s energy goes to evaporating soil moisture because it’s not as wet, Swain said. That leaves more of the energy to heat up the air, and the heat makes the drought worse by boosting evaporation. In the next week or two, parts of the central United States may get pockets of heavy rain, but the ques- tion is whether that will be enough to make up for large rain defi cits in the High Plains from the past year, Nebraska state climatologist Martha Shulski said. The drought’s fl ip side is that for the fi rst time in three years, NOAA is pro- jecting zero major spring fl ooding, with smaller amounts of minor and mod- erate fl ooding. About 82 million people will be at risk for fl ooding this spring, mostly minor with no property damage. That’s down from 128 mil- lion people last year. Flooding tends to be a short-term expensive local- ized problem while drought and wildfi re hit larger areas and are longer lasting, NOAA climatologist Karin Gleason said. Since 1980, NOAA has tracked weather disasters that caused at least $1 bil- lion in damage. The 28 droughts have caused nearly $259 billion in damage, while the 33 fl oods have cost about $151 billion. labor requirements and equipment available. 2. Big doesn’t mean bad. The size of a farm or ranch does not dictate its commitment to a healthy environment, care for ani- mals, treatment of employees, or respect for neighbors. A farmer with 2,000 acres cares as much about these things as does a farmer with 20 acres. Their day- to-day work may be diff erent, but their values and integrity are shared. Nearly 97% of Oregon’s farms and ranches — including commer- cial-scale farms — are family-owned and operated. Some are “corporate farms” that incorporated for tax pur- poses or succession-plan reasons. These are run by families, people raising kids, often living on the farm, who are involved in their commu- nities and are proud of what they do. They’re not in the business of harming their customers, their neigh- bors or themselves. 3. Part of sustainability is profi t- ability. Because eating food is such a personal act, there’s a tendency for consumers to forget that the people growing their food are also running a business. Even the smallest farms must ultimately make a profi t to survive. Few people get into agriculture to get rich quick. It often involves slim WOLVES w op co Town a h de hi O Continued from Page 1B conservation group Defenders of Wildlife, said the deaths were suspicious, though without knowing the cause of death, they cannot say whether poaching may have been to blame. “It highlights the pressing need for a thor- ough investigation, for sure,” Gobush said. Gobush, who is in Seattle, said she has never heard of so many wolves found dead at once in either Oregon or Washington. “We’re all waiting to hear what the cause of death is,” she said. “A lot of this is a mystery.” Rodger Huff man, a rancher in Union, and wolf committee co-chairman for the Oregon Cattle- men’s Association, said the relationship between wolves and local producers remains contentious, due in part to what he describes as “shoddy” management of the species. Oregon’s Wolf Man- agement and Conservation Plan allows for ranchers and wildlife offi cials to legally kill wolves that prey on livestock if they sq fa so So ti un dow “T th Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife/Contributed Photo en A trail camera in January 2016 caught this image of two adult wolves from the Walla Walla Pack in northern in t Umatilla County. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife is investigating the deaths of fi ve wolves in C Union County. reach a certain number of “confi rmed” depreda- tions within a certain time period, and non-lethal deterrents have failed. But Huff man said it is frustratingly diffi cult to “confi rm” a wolf depre- dation, unless it is found and reported immediately, leaving ranchers in a diffi - cult predicament. “The wolf population is not a celebrated thing in cattle country,” he said. “It’s frustration, there’s no doubt about it.” Wolf poaching is not unheard of in Eastern Oregon. Two incidents were reported last year in neighboring Baker County — one in late September, a breeding male from the Cornucopia Pack, and another in late October, a sub-adult female from the Pine Creek Pack. Gobush said apex pred- ators like wolves play an important role in the eco- system, and should be protected. Defenders of Wildlife Outstanding Computer Repair Dale Bogardus 541-297-5831 Call or Text 24/7 Now fixing cell phones and tablets Helping you live Also recycling small your dream this electrics Holiday Season! Phones, tablets, Hours Mon-Fri: 8:00 AM - 6:00 PM Sat: 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM 2306 Adams Ave La Grande, OR 97850 (541) 963-8411 We're just west of I-84 (exit 261) on Adams Ave at 20th St. laptops, towers www.outstandingcomputerrepair.com Refurbished Desktop & Laptops For Sale House calls (let me come to you!) Drop Offs & Remote Services are Available also supports a bill in the de Legislature that would help do crack down on poachers, 2, Gobush said. Senate Bill pa 841 would appropriate $1.6 w million from the state gen- la eral fund to support the Department of Justice’s al Environmental Crimes and Cultural Resources St Enforcement Unit. V The bill, sponsored by do Democratic Sens. James St Manning Jr., Chris Gorsek co and Deb Patterson, is a 7 scheduled for a public and a hearing on April 5. sh ti pe WE’RE Mobile Service All credit cards accepted profi t margins at the mercy of many uncontrollable factors like weather, pests, fl uctuating commodity prices and rising supply costs. This is compounded by the fact that almost every realm of public policy, from transportation to taxes, te directly impacts agriculture. When inspe regulations bring new fees or compli- bu ance costs, it’s very diffi cult for most of t farmers to pass along those expendi- ru en tures to their customers. pe 4. There’s no such thing as a O “simple farmer.” Farmers do more than raise crops ci or take care of animals. Farmers are of f also business owners, accountants, bot scientists, meteorologists, mechanics and marketers. Many are also eager be innovators, always searching for new it’ technology to help them produce H more with less: less water, less fertil- ge izer, less fuel, fewer pesticides. no 5. There’s more that unites agri- ch culture than divides it. ci No matter the amount of acreage of o worked, farming method used or number of animals raised, Oregon L farmers and ranchers share core so values: a deep love for the land, T incredible work ethic and immense w pride in their work. de ——— w Anne Marie Moss is the L communications director for the th Oregon Farm Bureau. fe tio avoid lesschwab.com HERE TO HELP dard pa le an e re ha th fo len