BAKER CITY HERALD • TUESDAY, JULY 26, 2022 A5 OREGON Closed for 15 years, Prairie Wood Products is back BY STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle Prairie City residents woke up last week to a sound they had not heard in years. A working sawmill. The Prairie Wood Products saw- mill officially reopened on Monday, July 11, for its first full day of opera- tions. The D.R. Johnson Lumber Co. an- nounced last month that it intended to reopen the mill, which was shut- tered 15 years ago. To staff the oper- ation, the company hosted a two-day job fair at Chester’s Thriftway in John Day. Plant manager Tom Moore said the mill hired roughly 25 people. He said once the planer is up and run- ning, he would be looking to hire be- tween 15 and 20 more employees. Prairie Wood Products President Jodi Westbrooks said the company was happy to be able to hire the staff needed to get the mill running again. “They are working hard,” she said. “I’ve been in the mill watching them go as hard as they can.” Westbrooks said there are some kinks the sawmill has to work out with the old equipment. But all in all, she said, things are running smoothly at the mill. “It is going,” she said, “and we are thrilled.” Moore, who used to work for the DR Johnson-owned Grant Western Steven Mitchell/Blue Mountain Eagle A forklift motors around the Prairie Wood Products yard on Thursday, July 14, 2022. sawmill in John Day, told the Eagle that the mill’s mothballed cogenera- tion plant has some issues that must be worked through before it can be fired up again. Craig Trulock, Malheur National Forest supervisor, told the newspa- per last month that the cogeneration plant could provide a way to remove biomass from the forest. Currently, he said, there is no market for that material. The biomass, which consists of small logs, branches and bushes that would otherwise get burned up in the forest or left on the ground, could be ground and burned in the cogen- eration plant to generate heat and electricity, Trulock said. Westbrooks said the company plans to get its timber supply from a combination of public and private lands and will purchase logs from in- dependent loggers and landowners. Brett Morris, the owner of Morris Forestry, said in a Friday, July 15, in- terview that he had already delivered nine loads of logs to the sawmill. “(Prairie Wood) is really cranking up production,” he said. Morris said he works as an inde- pendent logger in the spring, but during fire season he works as a wildland firefighter with his logging equipment, which makes him good money. With Prairie Wood open, he said he would be running his logging company during fire season. In the long term, he said running his business would be better for him and his family. “My family will appreciate that I won’t be gone for two to three months in the summertime,” Morris said. Morris said his company had been about a month behind schedule with the late spring rain, but things are go- ing well now. He said if the mill had not been open in Prairie City, he would have had to haul logs to Elgin or Pilot Rock for milling. With rising fuel costs, there would have been a good chance he would not have been able to operate. “My little company couldn’t afford to haul (logs) that far with the way fuel is right now.” Having the mill open benefits local private landowners with respect to fuel reduction and removing wildfire risks, Morris added. While Prairie Wood hopes to col- laborate with the Malheur National Forest and other public agencies on forest restoration projects, Moore said the mill has primarily been working with private landowners so far. He said the company hopes to build other relationships going for- ward. Moore said he could not say how many board feet of timber the mill plans to process because it is in its “infancy stages.” Nonetheless, Moore — who worked for Malhuer Lumber before coming to Prairie Wood Products — said that reopening the mill has been a great feeling. “It is not every day,” he said, “that you get to bring something back from the dead.” The Prairie City mill was pur- chased by the D.R. Johnson Lum- ber Co. in 1976. Two years later, the family-owned company added a stud mill and planer. Then, in the late 1980s, the company installed a co- generation power plant. The sawmill, which operated suc- cessfully in Prairie City for more than 30 years and employed upwards of 100 people who worked two different shifts, shuttered in 2008 amid a hous- ing market crash that led to a lack of available sawlogs. D.R. Johnson restarted the mill in early 2009 but shut it down perma- nently by the end of the year. The cleanup of the mill, which sits at the west end of Prairie City, concluded in 2019. Since then, much of the mill equip- ment has remained on site, along with the co-gen plant. Oregon economy nears full recovery Economist says construction sector is booming BY PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau ODFW A trail camera photo shows an adult wolf with pups in the Upper Deschutes Wildlife Management Area in Central Oregon. ODFW has designated a new Area of Known Wolf Activity in the area, including parts of Deschutes and northern Klamath counties. New group of wolves seen in southern Deschutes County BY GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press A new group of wolves has taken up residence in Cen- tral Oregon, including parts of Deschutes and northern Klamath counties. State wildlife officials des- ignated an Area of Known Wolf Activity in the Upper Deschutes Wildlife Manage- ment Unit, which extends from near Bend south to Crescent along U.S. High- way 97 and west to the Pacific Crest Trail. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife creates wolf activity areas in locations where the same wolves — not wolves passing through — use an area repeatedly over time. The designation also helps alert livestock produc- ers about wolf presence. Ranchers in the area should consider nonlethal measures to protect their live- stock, according to the Ore- gon Department of Fish and Wildlife, such as hiring range riders or using flashing lights and alarms to scare away wolves. ODFW also recommends removing any carcasses or bone piles that might attract wolves. Other deterrents may include guard dogs, electri- fied fencing of small pastures and fladry. While Oregon’s wolf man- agement plan does allow for killing wolves in the event of repeated attacks on livestock, this does not apply west of highways 395, 78 and 95, where wolves remain feder- ally protected under the En- dangered Species Act. That includes the Upper Deschutes area. The minimum known wolf population in Oregon based on verified evidence was at least 175 at the end of 2021, though ODFW acknowledges the actual population is likely higher. Biologists began monitor- ing reports of a single wolf in the area in August 2021, and one wolf was counted during ODFW’s annual winter sur- vey. Earlier this year, tracks of four wolves were found in the area, though it wasn’t im- mediately clear if they came from a new group of wolves or from the Indigo Pack, which occupies territory just to the south. On July 4, a trail camera in the area snapped a photo of an adult wolf with five pups, confirming the new group. Depending on how many wolves are in the group by year’s end, it may be desig- nated the Upper Deschutes Pack, with a pack being de- fined as having at least four wolves traveling together in winter — typically with at least two adults and their off- spring. ODFW says additional surveys will be conducted to learn more about the Up- per Deschutes wolves’ home range. Wolf sightings from the public can be reported to ODFW online at www.dfw. state.or.us/wolves. With summer here, there is lots of traveling. Be safe & have fun! The addition of 8,700 jobs in June moves Oregon a little closer to full recovery from the pandemic downturn in spring 2020, when the official unemployment rate shot up to 13.2%. Oregon’s gains kept the statewide unemployment rate in June at 3.6%, essentially unchanged from the previous month (adjusted to 3.5%) and identical to the national aver- age. The record low of 3.4% prevailed from November 2019 through February 2020, at the onset of the coronavirus pandemic. “We continue to have a strong labor market,” Gail Krumenauer, economist for the Oregon Employment De- partment, said Wednesday, July 20, in an online brief- ing for reporters. “Large job gains have been reported over many sectors of the economy. No broad sector of Oregon’s economy had large job losses in June.” According to the June re- port, also issued July 20, con- struction led monthly gains with 2,800 jobs. Its 118,700 but high unemployment rates persisted longer. On Monday, July 18, the Employment Department released its second-quarter report on job vacancies. The agency has compiled such re- ports since 2013 — and the 106,500 vacancies in the new- est report means that Oregon has now exceeded the 100,000 mark for a full year. Employ- ers told the agency that three of every four vacancies was hard to fill. (Counting spring 2021, vacancies ranged be- tween 97,000 and 107,000 for a record five quarters.) “The need for workers was widespread,” Krumenauer said. “Businesses are looking to fill a variety of jobs in more than 280 occupations. That means it’s still a tight labor market where employers are having trouble trying to find enough workers.” In Oregon and the nation as a whole, she said there are two job vacancies for every unemployed person. Kru- menauer said employers have raised pay, added bene- fits, increased job flexibility, changed job requirements, and advertised vacancies more widely, including the statewide network of Work- Source centers run by the Em- ployment Department and partner agencies. Big housing development planned in Pendleton BY JOHN TILLMAN East Oregonian PENDLETON — The city plans development of com- mercial and residential prop- erties on about 250 acres south of I-84 between Exits 210 and 216, within its urban growth boundary. A road connecting High- way 11 near the Red Lion with Highway 30 at the Exit 216 intersection is estimated to cost $8 million. Given el- evation changes, the project will require a $3 million wa- ter boost station, according to City Manager Robb Corbett. “It’s probably the biggest ever in Pendleton,” Corbett said. “It’s three times the size of the Sunridge subdivision south of the middle school, but with an arterial road, al- lowing access to neighbor- hood streets. There could be 1,000 homes, plus commer- cial development in the west- ern parcels.” McDonald’s, Super 8 by Wyndham and Holiday Inn Express currently adjoin the planned commercial zone on its west. Eastern Oregon Regional Airport covers nearly 3000 acres, not counting develop- ments off Airport Road on N.W. Avenues A through N. But homes and businesses south of the airport and north of Westgate cover less area than the planned project. The Umatilla County Board of Commissioners ap- proved a $2 million revolv- ing fund to Pendleton for the road in November and De- cember last year. The city is applying for state and federal grants for the water and road projects now. “Pendleton’s policy is that developers have to pay their own way,” Corbett said. “The city is trying to put the money together, with the understanding that the de- veloper would pay us back. We’re doing just enough right now, then we’ll create a reimbursement district, al- lowing property owners to repay us, based upon their development. There are huge upfront costs. We’ll partner with developers to jump start the project. Once repaid, the money will be reinvested.” The city used its $2 mil- lion from the county to make a loan to another developer building house on S.W. Nye Ave. “The houses will be built and the loan repaid before the (Highways 11 and 30 con- nection) project gets off the ground,” Corbett said. The properties are still be- ing farmed. They belong to the Rees and Goad families and Jim Whitney, Corbett re- ported. 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Monthly growth also oc- The Oregon Office of Eco- curred in other services, such nomic Analysis, which pre- as auto repairs pares the state’s and hair salons, quarterly eco- “We have seen 1,600; health care nomic and rev- some sectors still enue forecasts, and social assis- tance and leisure has projected that struggle to get and hospitality Oregon will see a (bars, entertain- back to their pre- complete recov- ment, hotels and ery of jobs by the pandemic levels.” end of this year. restaurants), 1,300 each. When that oc- — Gail Krumenauer, “We have seen curs, the recovery economist for the some sectors period of two- Oregon Employment still struggle to and-a-half years Department get back to their from the down- pre-pandemic turn will have levels,” Krumenauer said. been relatively short — far She said the health care and shorter than the seven years social assistance sector has re- Oregon required to recover bounded strongly in the first from economic downturns in half of this year, after lagging the 1980s and 2010s. Those through the end of 2021. earlier recessions did not see The leisure and hospitality a record one-month jump in sector also has added 28,500 the unemployment rate from jobs between June 2021 and 3.4% to 13.2% during March June 2022, or 16.4% growth. and April 2020, unlike what But Krumenauer said recov- happened in the pandemic — 3705 Midway Drive • Baker City