LOCAL TEAMS PREPARE FOR DISTRICT The TOURNAMENTS – A9 Blue Mountain EAGLE Grant County’s newspaper since 1868 W EDNESDAY , F EBRUARY 15, 2017 • N O . 7 • 18 P AGES • $1.00 www.MyEagleNews.com H ANGING UP HIS WINGS Former forester retires handmade plane The Eagle/Rylan Boggs Dave Feiger, 80, stands in front of his retired plane, which now hangs in JD Rents. Feiger built the plane, seen flying in the photo below, in his garage and recently decided it was time to give up flying. By Rylan Boggs Blue Mountain Eagle D ave Feiger was just beginning to fl y over the Ochoco Mountain Range when he heard a bang. The propeller on his homemade plane stopped, leaving him 7,500 feet in the air, moving at 135 mph. Thankfully, his instructor had been a World War II fi ghter pilot. Feiger kept his wits about him and was able to glide six miles to a nearby airstrip on a ranch. The malfunction that crippled the plane also left his windshield covered in oil, meaning he had to roll the plane onto its side to see the airstrip out of the side window. He successfully landed the plane and lived to fl y another day. That was in 2015. Feiger rebuilt the plane’s engine last winter and took it out for a test fl ight in the spring. However, he could tell something was wrong. He decided he was done pushing his luck, and retired the plane. See WINGS, Page A18 Have gun, can’t travel Rep. Walden promises change under Trump Lawmaker discusses land management, education at Mt. Vernon town hall By Rylan Boggs Blue Mountain Eagle U.S. Rep. Greg Walden ad- dressed a wide range of issues during a community meeting at the Mt. Vernon Community Center on Thursday, Feb. 9. The Republican represent- ing Eastern Oregon assured cit- izens he would take their con- cerns, voiced on issues ranging from education to forest man- agement, back to congress. He said his offi ce has been regu- larly occupied by protesters as well as inundated with phone calls, emails and letters from those he represents. A reoccurring concern brought up throughout the meeting was land management by the federal government. Many citizens at the meeting showed distaste for current management plans on forest and grazing lands, which they said had led to catastrophic fi res. John Day resident Mark Rogers said many federal agencies were heavily litigated See WALDEN, Page A18 Debate emerges on rule for Oregon employees By Jayati Ramakrishnan and Phil Wright EO Media Group The Eagle/Rylan Boggs U.S. Rep. Greg Walden (R-Ore.) addresses concerns on issues ranging from forest management to education during a town hall meeting in the Mt. Vernon Community Center Thursday, Feb. 9. New forest commission petition fails requirements Petitioners plan to try again By Rylan Boggs Blue Mountain Eagle A new petition to establish a new Grant County Public Forest Commission was struck down for failing to meet state constitutional requirements. Grant County Clerk Brenda Percy made the determination Feb. 10 after she and county counsel Ron Yockim reviewed a prospective initiative fi led by chief petitioners Jim Sproul and Dave Traylor Feb. 7. When a prospective petition for a local initiative is fi led, the Contributed photo/Dave Feiger county clerk has fi ve days to make a determination if the petition meets requirements of the Oregon Constitution and state statutes to concern only one subject, to include the full text and to be legislative, not administrative, in nature. “After thorough review, I have determined that the prospective petition does not include the full text ...,” Per- cy said in her determination. “Further, with the information that is included in the pro- spective petition, I have de- termined that the measure is administrative in nature and is therefore not a matter that can See FOREST, Page A18 Jan. 6 marked the last day most state em- ployees could bring personal guns and weap- ons to work. The Oregon Department of Administra- tive Services that day unveiled its new policy on “weapons in the workplace.” Gun rights advocates consider the policy unconstitu- tional and a danger to state worker safety. Supporters of the ban view it as a reasonable safety measure. The state says it brings clar- ity to murky waters. Policy No. 50-010-05 “prohibits weapons in the workplace unless an employee is per- mitted to carry, handle, operate or transport a weapon as part of the employee’s assigned duties in the course and scope of the employ- ee’s employment. A permit to carry a con- cealed handgun does not give an employee the authority to use or carry a handgun into the workplace.” Firing back Kevin Starrett is the director of the gun- rights nonprofi t the Oregon Firearms Feder- ation and alerted state lawmakers about the policy. He said it infringes on the constitu- tional rights of state workers to carry guns like other Oregonians and in effect relegates state workers to second-class citizens. “Clearly, the infringements are pret- ty severe,” he said. “Now those people are being told they’re sitting ducks. This is not crazy speculation on my part, this has happened.” Starrett referred to the December 2015 San Bernardino attack, in which a San Ber- nardino County Department of Public Health employee and his wife shot and killed 14 people and wounded 22 others at an offi ce Christmas party. He said the federation heard from people concerned how the policy affects them. The spouse of one state employee, Starrett said, is worried about his wife EO Media Group/E.J. Harris having to walk three blocks to work in the dark without a weapon to protect herself. Still, Starrett said he believes the gover- nor has the authority to make lack of weap- ons a condition of employment, based on court rulings from two cases the federation brought: the 2007 lawsuit to support a Med- ford teacher’s ability to bring a gun to work to protect herself from an abusive ex-hus- band; and a 2009 lawsuit challenging the Oregon University System’s rules banning guns on campus. The federation lost the Medford case but prevailed against the state universities. Starrett said the two decisions “form a fairly bright line” governing guns in Oregon, but the new policy raises questions. State legislators, for example, determine the rules for the Capitol in Salem, not the governor or Department of Administrative Services. The department, however, oversees the parking garage under the Capitol. Can a legislative staffer with a gun and concealed carry permit have a weapon in the garage or another state building? “Frankly, I don’t know what happens,” Starrett said. “I don’t think anybody does.” James Leuenberger was the attorney in the Medford case, representing Shirley Katz, the high school teacher who wanted to carry a gun to campus for self defense. Leuenberger said he hasn’t handled any cases related to gun rights recently, but takes issue with the state’s ban. See GUN, Page A3