IT’S A WRAP Blue Mountain in EAGLE L The Youth rodeo series comes to a close for the season. PAGE B1 Grant County’s newspaper since 1868 W EDNESDAY , S EPTEMBER 30, 2015 • N O . 39 • 20 P AGES • $1.00 www.MyEagleNews.com Salvage operations set to high priority Ochoco Lumber President Bruce Daucsavage said the Malheur Lumber Company, JOHN DAY — Timber mill in John Day will add ex- salvage activity is surging in WHQGHG KRXUV DURXQG WKH ¿UVW the aftermath of the Canyon RI1RYHPEHU He said timber affected by &UHHN&RPSOH[¿UH About 100 landowners, WKH¿UHQHHGVWREHSURFHVVHG loggers and other timber in- quickly, before it loses its dustry representatives attend- value, and the mill is going HG D PHHWLQJ LQ 0W 9HUQRQ to work hard to get the tim- 6HSW WKDW ZDV RUJDQL]HG ber into the mill as quickly as to provide information about SRVVLEOH Daucsavage said at the VDOYDJHRSHUDWLRQV By Sean Ellis Blue Mountain Eagle meeting his company “lost a VLJQL¿FDQW DPRXQW RI WLPEHU ODQGMXVWOLNH\RXGLG:H¶UH going to kick this thing into JHDUDVTXLFNO\DVZHFDQ´ Almost 17,000 acres of private land were burned by the 110,000 acre Canyon &UHHN&RPSOH[¿UH About 91,000 acres of 86)RUHVW6HUYLFHODQGZHUH VFRUFKHG E\ WKH ¿UH DQG WKDW About 100 loggers, landowners and timber industry representatives attended a meeting in Mt. Vernon Wednesday, Sept. 23, centered around the issue of timber salvage activities, which are surging following the Canyon Creek Complex fire. See FIRE, Page A3 Sean Ellis/Blue Mountain Eagle THE STATE OF NEW IDAHO La Grande man pushing for eastern secession By Jade McDowell R esidents in eastern Oregon and Washing- ton have discussed breaking away from their more liberal neighbors to form a new state for years, but a new twist has been added to the conversation: Why form a new state when the rural counties could just j join Idaho instead? Ken K Parsons, a 72-year-old farmer from La *UDQGHVDLGWKHLGHDZDVÀRDWHGRIIKDQGE\VRPH- *UDQ one e else in a letter to the editor in the La Grande Ob- server$IWHUWKLQNLQJDERXWLWIRUDFRXSOHRIPRQWKV serve and an discussing it with friends, Parsons said he has ha decided to try to get input from residents of neighboring counties, including Umatilla and ne 0RUURZ&RXQW\ 0 ³,W¶VDQLQWULJXLQJLGHD´KHVDLG As Parsons sees it, rural Oregon and Wash- ington residents who are tired of being outvoted in by the population centers in Portland and Seattle would be better understood by politicians from WKH PRUH UXUDO FRQVHUYDWLYH ,GDKR /HJLVODWRUV born and raised in the most urban parts of their VWDWH³GRQ¶WKDYHDQ\LGHD´KHVDLGRIKRZHQYL- ronmental lobbyists often hurt farmers, hunters and RWKHUVLQPRUHUXUDOSDUWVRIWKHVWDWH See IDAHO, Page A5 ia Group use/EO Med dy Wrightho by Ran Illustration EO Media Group WHAT DO YOU THINK? We value your opinion and want to hear what you think on this issue. Write a letter to the editor. 9$:$DZDUGNHHSVKHOSÀRZLQJWRYLFWLPV Blue Mountain Eagle CANYON CITY – Local victims of sexual assault and domestic violence won’t have to face a daunting legal system alone, thanks to a major grant awarded to the Grant County 'LVWULFW$WWRUQH\¶V2I¿FH The DA’s Victim Assistant Program obtained the grant – $606,000 over three years – through the federal Violence Against Women Act’s rural pro- JUDPNQRZQDV9$:$5XUDO According to Ashley McClay, Victim Assistance Program di- rector, the grant will keep sever- al staff members, including the full-time deputy district attorney, RQWKHMRE,WDOVRIXQGVVHUYLFHV and education related to domes- WLFYLROHQFHDQGVH[XDODVVDXOW The county’s previous federal JUDQWZDVH[SLULQJVRWKHRI¿FH KDGWRUHDSSO\ McClay noted that while her The need By the numbers The Eagle/Kristina Kreger From left, victim intervention specialist Andrea Officer, Grant County Deputy District Attorney Matt Ipson and victim assistance program director Ashley McClay. RI¿FHKDVKDGVXFFHVVZLWKVXFK applications in the past, “contin- XDWLRQLVQRWJXDUDQWHHG´ She said the VAWA Rural SURFHVVLVKLJKO\FRPSHWLWLYH,Q 2014, 34 programs nationwide – including just four in Oregon – UHFHLYHGWKHJUDQWV The county’s new grant will WDNHHIIHFW2FWDQGFRQWLQXHV WR6HSW “This grant is crucial to pro- viding services to victims of sex- ual assault, domestic violence, GDWLQJ YLROHQFH DQG VWDONLQJ´ 0F&OD\VDLG In addition to funding the See VAWA, Page A10 Here’s a count of incidents reported to the Grant County DA’s office in 2014 related to sexual assault and domestic violence. • 13 sexual assaults reported • 27 domestic violence incidents • 10 reports of restraining order violations • 5 stalking incidents • 19 individuals assisted with restraining orders by Victim Assistance staff and Heart of Grant County Nationally The National Coalition Against Domestic Violence puts domestic violence, sexual assault, and stalking into perspective with these sobering statistics. In the United States: • 1 in 5 women and 1 in 7 men have been victims of severe physical violence by an intimate partner in their lifetime. • 1 in 15 children are exposed to intimate partner violence each year, and 90 percent of these children are eyewitnesses to this violence. • 1 in 5 women and 1 in 71 men in the United States has been raped in their lifetime. • 19.3 million women and 5.1 million men in the U.S. have been stalked in their lifetime. Submitted by Ashley McClay, Grant County DA’s Victim Assistance Program