BAKER CITY HERALD • TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 2022 A5 OREGON Creating a buzz for Greater Idaho BY DICK MASON The (La Grande) Observer COVE — Grant Darrow is a man of letters. The Cove resident has penned so many letters to newspapers over the past four decades about pressing issues that he has lost count. One stands out, however, with the grandeur of 12,662- foot Borah Peak in Central Idaho. It is a letter clipped from The Observer and kept in a black notebook. The let- ter is fading slightly, unlike the movement it helped ignite. Darrow, in his 391-word piece, published in The Observer on June 29, 2015, pushed for a sea change — the moving of Idaho’s border west so that it could in- clude Eastern Oregon and other rural portions of the state. “Imagine for a moment Ida- ho’s western border stretching to the Pacific,” Darrow wrote at the end of the letter. Almost seven years later, many Oregonians are imag- ining just as he hoped they would, which means the the Greater Idaho movement is gaining momentum. “We are gaining support,” Darrow said. “This is an excit- ing time.” Those who have taken note include The Atlantic magazine, which refers to Greater Idaho as “Modern America’s Most Successful Secessionist Move- ment” in a story that appeared in its Dec. 23, 2021, edition. Darrow is not surprised by the growing momentum, espe- cially when he reflects on the Alex Wittwer/EO Media Group Grant Darrow, a retired chimney sweep and Cove resident, poses for a photo outside his home on Saturday, Feb. 26, 2022. Darrow has been leading local efforts in the campaign to change the Oregon-Idaho border and allow Eastern Oregon to become part of Greater Idaho. response his letter received in the days and weeks after it was first published. He said about 40 other rural Oregon newspa- pers printed the letter after he sent it to them. “Some newspapers even called me up and requested a copy so they could run it,” he said. Today, the letter, which stated Eastern Oregon should be part of Idaho because its people are ignored by Oregon’s west-side leaders, is viewed as so integral to the Greater Idaho movement that a copy is reprinted on the website of a leading group pushing for Greater Idaho — Move Ore- gon’s Border, whose leader is Mike McCarter, of La Pine. Darrow credited McCar- ter with doing much of the heavy lifting, which has given Greater Idaho the momentum it now has. “I put into words what peo- ple are feeling, and Mike puts legs under it,” he said. “Even though this has been talked about for 100 years, Grant’s letter piqued the inter- est of a lot of people in Eastern and Southern Oregon,” McCa- rter said. McCarter credited Darrow’s letter with leading to the initial meetings in La Pine of what is today Move Oregon’s Border. “Grant is an integral part of this,” McCarter said. A plea to legislators Since the passage of Mea- sure 31-101 Darrow has been urging the Union County Board of Commissioners to request in writing that State Rep. Bobby Levy, R-Echo, and State Sen. Bill Hansell, R-Athena, work to get Oregon legislators to discuss Greater Idaho. Darrow said he is not re- questing that formal discus- sions about Greater Idaho be- gin at the state capital. Darrow said it could be something as simple as the formation of a committee to try to determine why interest in Greater Idaho is growing. “Getting people at the state level to talk about it is the next step,” he said. “We need to get more dialogue, to get every- body talking about it. We have to get it out there.” Darrow said he has a first- hand understanding of the growing sense of frustration people in Northeastern Ore- gon have about the state’s ur- ban-rural divide because he worked as a chimney sweep in Union, Wallowa and Baker counties for 44 years before retiring in September 2021. “I would work in 12 to 15 homes a week,” he said. The chimney sweep has de- tected a growing sense of dis- enchantment with Oregon’s government during the past decade, noting they believe, like Darrow does, that the needs and concerns of Eastern Oregon are largely ignored by the Legislature. “We have become nothing more than window dressing,” he said. Darrow in his 2015 letter to the editor expressed this point even more starkly. “It would appear to any rural resident or outside ob- server that most of Oregon’s urbanites view Oregon’s ru- ral residents as nothing more than third-world inhabitants occupying their weekend and vacation playgrounds in what they advertise to the world as Oregon’s unique diversity,” he wrote. Regulations are choking businesses Darrow objects to things such as the way state govern- ment is imposing more and more regulations and fees that make it increasingly difficult for Oregonians to start and operate businesses in Oregon. “It has gotten so bad that I could not afford to start a ca- reer as a chimney sweep in Oregon today,” he said, adding that every time government puts in a new regulation or fee it adds to the red tape citizens must deal with. “It gets to be absolutely crazy.” Darrow does not know what Greater Idaho will lead to, noting that it may push to something beneficial to rural Oregon that might not involve moving Idaho’s borders west. “It could morph into any direction,” he said. He believes the Greater Idaho campaign could lead to a positive change in how the Legislature perceives ru- ral residents, the creation of a new state or Greater Idaho. The Cove resident is some- times asked by people who know how much he dislikes Oregon’s urban-rural divide, why he doesn’t move to Idaho. “I tell them, ‘That is what I am trying to do,’” Darrow said. Local legislator makes offer on Vale newspaper of your idea of buying a pa- per to shut it down,” he said. VALE — Greg Smith’s offer “Thanks for the offer. We’ll be to buy the Malheur Enterprise in touch.” came in a postscript. Smith followed-up by clari- An email exchange between fying he would not shut the En- Smith and Les Zaitz, the pub- terprise down if he bought it. lisher and editor of the small “I already have staff in place weekly newspaper that would run the in Vale, over an edi- paper quite well,” he torial led to an offer wrote.” I never said it to take the Enter- would be shut down.” In a response to a prise off the market. According to the request for comment, email chain ob- Smith provided a writ- tained by the East ten statement. Oregonian, Zaitz “The Malheur En- Smith wrote to inform terprise, a privately Smith, the state rep- owned company, pub- resentative for District 57 and licly announced it was for the Malheur County economic sale,” he said. “Gregory Smith development director, that he and Company, also a privately intended to publish an editorial owned company, made an of- critical of Smith and asked him fer to purchase the Malheur for comment. Enterprise. Other than being “I’m preparing an editorial publicly ‘mocked’ by the seller, for next week about the Mal- no reply to our offer has been heur County Court’s man- received. Moreover, Gregory agement of your company’s Smith and Company has not contract,” he wrote. “You will, publicly stated its reason for in part, get a pass because you purchasing the paper. It is un- can’t be blamed by taxpayers fortunate, some speculate to for getting what you can as eas- the negative.” ily as you can. But the issue of your truth telling is another Smith’s history with the matter. You lie. By that, I mean Enterprise you declare as fact something A two-time Pulitzer Prize you know to be false.” nominee with The Oregonian, Smith responded by saying Zaitz, along with his family, he wouldn’t respond to “neg- bought the Malheur Enterprise ative suppositions,” but also in 2015. added Malheur County resi- Zaitz eventually took over dents were “begging” Zaitz to the paper’s editorial operations sell his newspaper and that it and worked toward growing had no support. the weekly’s presence. Zaitz expanded the newsroom and “P.S. … if you need a buyer started collaborations with na- for the paper, I’ll pay $35,000 tional news organizations as cash,” he wrote at the end of the Enterprise collected new the email. “No employees in- accolades and awards. cluded.” Today, Zaitz said the Enter- Later in the chain, Zaitz told prise is profitable and growing. Smith he would share Smith’s As he neared his 50th year in offer with the public. “Let’s see what the commu- the journalism business, Zaitz nity — and the state — thinks said he decided to sell the pa- BY ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian East Oregonian, File Les Zaitz works in 2018 at his newspaper, the Malheur Enterprise in Vale. He put the paper up for sale in early 2022, and Rep. Greg. Smith, R-Heppner, a frequent subject of the Enterprise’s investigative work, sent Zaitz an email offering to buy the paper. Zaitz, however, is not selling to Smith. “The Malheur Enterprise is an essential source of local news and is a role model for local journalism. So its import goes beyond just reporting on Malheur County. Its import is also helping show newsrooms large and small how to do effective local journalism that generates business success.” — Les Zaitz, Malheur Enterprise publisher and editor per because he felt it was the right time to hand over the En- terprise to a new generation. “We’re not going to sell to anyone that shows up with a check or a suitcase full of $20 bills,” he said. “The Mal- heur Enterprise is an essential source of local news and is a role model for local journal- ism. So its import goes beyond just reporting on Malheur County. Its import is also help- ing show newsrooms large and small how to do effective local journalism that generates busi- ness success.” When Smith made an offer to buy the Enterprise, Zaitz said he took it seriously. Elected in 2000, Smith is the longest-serving legisla- tor in the Oregon House of Representatives. Although GARAGE DOORS With Thermospan TM doors, you have your choice of styles, colors and customizing options. N E -H I E NTERPRISES CCB#155399 2122 10th • Baker City • 541-523-6008 his district’s lines have shifted significantly over the years, Smith always has represented a chunk of Northeastern Oregon from his home in Heppner. But being a legislator is only a part-time position. His full-time work involves him serving a number of eco- nomic development positions throughout Oregon, both within and outside his leg- islative district. Some of his titles include being the proj- ect manager for the Colum- bia Development Authority in Boardman, the director of the Eastern Oregon University Small Business Development Center in La Grande and the economic development direc- tor in Malheur County. His status as an influential lawmaker who also is in charge of raising money for local proj- ects and institutions around the state has earned him scrutiny in the media. The Willamette Week referred to Smith as the “best compensated lawmaker in Salem” while also noting his actions were “perfectly legal.” The Enterprise also has done reporting on the connec- tions between Smith’s personal business and his work in the Legislature, in addition to fo- cusing on his work in Malheur County, publishing stories on his contracts with the county and his handling of local eco- nomic development projects. Zaitz declined to provide further details on the editorial that prompted the exchange with Smith before it was pub- lished, but later summarized the Enterprise’s various deal- ings with Smith over the years. “He complained that our reporting on him represented criminal conduct,” he said. “The sheriff looked into that and essentially laughed him out of Malheur County on that allegation. He has pub- licly ridiculed the Enterprise and has made representations that raise questions about whether the Enterprise is pay- ing its taxes. This is a man who has a pattern of taking aggressive actions against the newspaper that is doing no more than reporting on mat- ters of public importance.” After Smith made his of- fer, Zaitz followed through on his promise and shared ex- cerpts from the exchange on the Enterprise’s Facebook page and asked readers what they thought. As of the evening of Thursday, March 10, nearly 70 people have commented on the post. Almost all the comments either opposed Smith buying the paper, expressed support for the Enterprise’s current ownership or both. Many ques- tioned Smith’s motivations. Even if Smith doesn’t get involved in the Vale media business, he’ll continue to be a prominent figure in Eastern Oregon for the foreseeable fu- ture. No one filed to contest Smith in either the Republican primary or the general election, all but assuring him a 12th term in Salem.