RODEO KIDS RUSTLE UP SOME FUN Blue Mountain – PAGE A9 EAGLE The Grant County’s newspaper since 1868 W EDNESDAY , J ULY 22, 2015 • N O . 29 • 18 P AGES • $1.00 www.MyEagleNews.com John Day ¿ re hall FonstruFtion to start soon By Dave Fisher and Tim Trainor Fire Hall facts Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY – With $1.2 million in taxpayer dollars to work with, an amount approved by voters in the May 2014 pri- mary election, the John Day city and rural ¿UH SURWHFWLRQ GHSDUWPHQWV DUH PRYLQJ IRUZDUGRQWKHLUVKDUHG¿UHKDOO According to John Day city manager Peggy Gray, demolition, which occurred last week, will be followed by dirt and foundation work. The building’s exterior is expected to start going up in late Au- gust, and the goal is to have the roof on and the walls buttoned up by the time win- ter arrives, said John Day Fire Department chief Ron Smith. Smith said the hall could be fully operational by February. See HALL, Page A8 NOVEMBER BOND RESULTS An artist rendering of the new fire hall. In John Day: 305 approved 198 opposed In John Day Rural Fire District: 242 approved 180 opposed Contributed graphic Crews demolished the building that was formerly El Cocinero Mexican Restaurant to make way for a new John Day Fire Station. Total cost: 1.8 million Total raised by bond: About $1.2 million Cost to taxpayers: At the start of the 20 year bond, 61.5 cents per $1,000 of property valuation, decreasing to about 42 cents per $1,000. The Eagle Cheryl Hoefler JD looks to ‘opt out’ of Measure 91 County could do the same as elected officials mull their options By Dave Fisher Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY – If you were thinking of cashing in with the passage of Oregon’s marijuana initiative, think again. You may have to set up shop somewhere else other than John Day and, perhaps, even Grant County. By a 6 to 1 vote, the John Day City Council at its July 14 meeting decided to move ahead with plans to exercise its local option to draft an ordinance that prohibits the establishment of one or more of the following in the area of the city’s jurisdiction: • Marijuana processing sites, • Medical marijuana dispen- saries, • Marijuana producers, • Marijuana processors, and • Marijuana wholesalers and/ or marijuana retailers. The ordinance, if approved, would effectively negate most of the provisions of Measure 91, the marijuana initiative, ap- proved by Oregon voters in the November 2014 election. City Attorney Jeremy Green advised the city regarding HB 3400, signed into law by Gov. Kate Brown on June 30, which allows “qualifying” cities or counties to adopt an “opt out” ordinance in those localities in which no less than 55 percent of votes cast were in opposition to Measure 91. The measure was soundly defeated in Grant County with almost 65 percent of voters op- posed to the marijuana initiative. See POT, Page A8 Whiskey Gulch demo derby still going strong Story and photos by Angel Carpenter J Blue Mountain Eagle OHN DAY – Fans got what they came for last Saturday at the 26th annual Whiskey Gulch Gang Demolition Derby. Aggressive drivers, 11 of them, had a bang-up good time too, putting on a show for the crowd that packed the grand- stands at the Grant County Fair- grounds. Eric Johnson of Walla Walla, :DVK ZRQ WKH ¿UVWSODFH SUL]H of $1,500, Jason Ward of Burns was second with $1,000, and Ty- ler Nodine of John Day was third with $500. Besides winning third place, See DERBY, Page A8 Cars collide during the derby Saturday. An exciting moment in the first heat of the Whiskey Gulch Gang Demolition Derby had No. 338 Nick Dieter of Burns pushing No. 10 Wayne Saul of Mt. Vernon on the logs. Dieter won the heat with Saul in second place. Both came back for the main event and Dieter was awarded Most Aggressive Driver. S TUDENT ART Lexi Helmick Humbolt Elementary 7riangle 2il Gisputes D(4 ¿ nGings Between 1,000 and 5,000 gallons released, according to agency By Angel Carpenter Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY – After months of in- vestigation and calling Triangle Oil a “possible responsible party,” the De- partment of Environmental Quality (DEQ) is now saying the John Day gas and oil distributor is responsi- ble for the release of 1,000 to 5,000 gallons of “fresh” gasoline into the ground along the 400 to 600 block of South Canyon Boulevard. “The estimate that I came up with was very rudimentary, “ said Bryn Thoms, DEQ’s project manager. “We assume gasoline is a millimeter thick on the surface of the groundwater in an area that covers about two blocks.” When asked about what is meant by “fresh,” Thoms said the ground- water, in speaking of just a few in- stances, smells like gasoline from the pump at a gas station. we’re not responsible for it, and it’s Meanwhile, Triangle Oil, which an ongoing investigation.” has cooperated since the beginning Triangle Oil is located on the east when property side of Canyon RZQHUV ¿UVW QR Triangle Oil’s Boulevard. ticed noxious va- “They’re (Tri- data suggests it angle Oil) cooper- pors emitting from their basements is not responsible ating and doing the and crawl spaces, work,” said Thoms. for the vapor issue “Eventually, Trian- continues to con- duct its own in- on the west side of gle Oil will take vestigation under over on the work in the highway.” a unilateral order the neighborhood. issued by DEQ, ac- We’re just doing a Brooks Foster cording to Brooks control part, asking Chenoweth Law Group, P.C them to do an addi- Foster of the Port- land-based law tional assessment ¿UP &KHQRZHWK /DZ *URXS 3& and cleanup.” that now represents Triangle Oil. That’s, however, if Triangle Oil is “Triangle Oil’s data suggests it is the responsible party, an issue that re- not responsible for the vapor issue mains unresolved, according to their on the west side of the highway,” attorney. said Foster. “So far, our data suggests Meanwhile, DEQ is still waiting “ for additional lab results and the investigation continues at Triangle Oil. Thus far, all groundwater samples taken by DEQ down-gradient from Triangle Oil were contaminated. “None up-gradient (samples) were contaminated. That’s our main indi- cator,” said Thoms. The other indica- tor, according to Thoms, is no other source has that capacity of gasoline, noting they found nothing at Ed Staub and Sons Petroleum to the south. For his part, Russ Young, presi- dent and owner of the company, em- pathizes with those inconvenienced in any way. “As a small, close-knit communi- ty, we are all affected by this situa- tion. Triangle Oil, Inc., is committed to determining whether the recent gasoline odors along South Canyon are in any way related to its bulk plant facility,” Young told the Eagle in an earlier statement.