PAINTING THE TOWN Dayville students create mural for the park %\&KHU\O+RHÀHU Blue Mountain Eagle D eryl Hoefler The Eagle/Ch h Brown ettinga, Fait l. H ll a d n e K ura ents ayville stud tion of the m From left, D rown work on the sec B and Destiny W EDNESDAY , A PRIL 6, 2016 AYVILLE — Visitors to Dayville will soon see what students at the school have been up to. With assistance of visiting artist-in-residence Carol Poppenga, students in all grades have been creating a “Wel- come to Dayville” mural — a 30x10-foot Dayville-style depic- tion of the four seasons — to be mounted at Dayville City Park. The mural will replace one with handprints that has graced a wall at the tennis courts since 2001. • N O . 14 See MURAL, Page A9 • 20 P AGES • $1.00 www.MyEagleNews.com The Grant County’s newspaper since 1868 Blue Mountain EAGLE RESTORING THE FOREST Eagle file photo A view of the Strawberry Mountains from Keeney Fork Road on the Malheur National Forest in Grant County. An additional $1.5 million — for a total of $4 million this year — has been awarded by the federal government for Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration projects on the Malheur forest. Collaborative awarded $4M in federal funding to treat thousands of acres Alternatives proposed for Forest Plan By George Plaven EO Media Group By Sean Hart Blue Mountain Eagle E fforts by diverse stakeholders to reach consensus on contentious forest management issues has paid off — again. Instead of the $2.5 million in annual funding it has received for several years, the collaborative coalition working to implement restoration projects on the Malheur National Forest recently learned it will be awarded $4 million this year, the maximum allowed in the Collabora- tive Forest Landscape Restoration program. As long as Congress continues to fund the CFLR program, the collaborative could continue to receive the full $4 million each year for the remainder of its 10-year project, which be- gan in 2012. The funding, intended to encourage ecological and economic sustainability and reduce the risk of catastroph- LFZLOG¿UHVZLOOSURYLGHXSWRKDOIWKHIXQGLQJIRUDYDULHW\ of restoration projects. Malheur National Forest Supervisor Steve Beverlin said See FOREST, Page A10 The Eagle/Sean Hart Trent Seager, a Ph.D. candidate at Oregon State University and a Blue Mountains Forest Partners science adviser, speaks at the Forest Partners meeting March 17 in John Day. The U.S. Forest Service is crafting two new alternatives for its revised Blue Mountains Forest Plan, based on a year’s worth of feed- back from the public. Details are sketchy, but supervisors on the Umatilla, Wallowa-Whitman and Malheur national forests say these alternatives will em- phasize restoration in order to keep the woods healthy and lower the risk of potentially devas- WDWLQJZLOG¿UHV Each alternative will be fully analyzed in WKHDJHQF\¶V¿QDO(QYLURQPHQWDO,PSDFW6WDWH ment, due out later this fall. A draft EIS for the Forest Plan was released in 2014, which was so thoroughly criticized that the feds spent all of 2015 re-engaging with local communities on how to improve the documents. Tom Montoya, Wallowa-Whitman forest supervisor, said a recurring theme in those See PLAN, Page A10 Four Imnaha Pack wolves killed By Eric Mortenson Capital Bureau Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife shot and killed four Imnaha 3DFN ZROYHV LQYROYHG LQ ¿YH FRQ ¿UPHG OLYHVWRFN DWWDFNV LQ WKH SDVW month. The “lethal take” order, adamantly opposed by a key conservation group, involves a Wallowa County pack with a long history of attacks on cattle and VKHHSDQGDQHTXDOO\VLJQL¿FDQWLQÀX ence on the growth of other wolf packs in the state. ODFW wolf coordinator Russ Morgan said the four wolves includ- ed an aging alpha male, OR-4, and an alpha female, OR-39, that has limped with a back leg injury for the past cou- ple years. The male is nearly 10 years old, which Morgan said is “very old for a wolf in the wild.” Courtesy photo/ODFW This May 2011 photo of Imnaha pack alpha male OR-4 was taken moments after wildlife agency personnel refitted him with a new GPS collar. Morgan said it’s possible the male’s age and the female’s disability caused the wolves to turn on livestock instead of deer and elk. Two younger wolves, possibly yearlings, were believed to be traveling with them. The four ap- peared to have split off from the rest of the Imnaha Pack, which numbered at least eight at the end of 2015. According to a press release from ODFW, the animals were killed on pri- vate property. In March alone, the group led by OR-4 has struck multiple times on private pastures in the Upper Swamp Creek area of Wallowa County. A calf was killed March 9; a sheep on March 25; two calves were attacked on March 26, with one dead and the other eutha- nized due to bite injuries; another calf was found dead March 28; and a sheep was found injured March 30, accord- ing to ODFW depredation reports. Morgan said Imnaha Pack mem- bers commonly visit the area of the attacks but it’s unusual for them to remain there, as the four have this time. That suggests there’s been some change in the pack dynamics, he said. Morgan said the agency is follow- ing guidelines of the state’s wolf man- agement plan, which is up for review this year. He called the decision unfortunate, but said it is a necessary response to the pack’s chronic livestock attacks. “The (wolf) plan is about conserva- tion, but it’s also about management,” Morgan said. ODFW had not killed any wolves since May 2011, when two Imnaha Pack members were dispatched for livestock attacks. The agency sought to kill two more pack members in Sep- tember 2011, but conservation groups won a stay of the order from the Ore- gon Court of Appeals. See WOLVES, Page A9