News Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, April 12, 2017 A3 Farm to School funding hangs in the balance Program: Kids eat, learn about local food By Angel Carpenter Blue Mountain Eagle Oregon’s Farm to School and School Garden program, which gives local students an inside look at the area agri- cultural industry and brings local produce to school caf- eterias, is competing with other spending bills in the Joint Committee on Ways and Means. Rep. Brian Clem champi- oned House Bill 2038 to save the Farm to School program after it was removed from Gov. Kate Brown’s proposed 2017-19 draft budget. Clem is also moving to expand grant funding for the program from the current $4.5 million to $5.6 million for the coming two-year budget cy- cle. There are 144 schools districts receiving Farm to School funds, which bring Or- egon produce, meat, fish and dairy products to students. Students who eat breakfast and lunch at Grant School District No. 3 schools — Grant Union Junior-Senior High School in John Day, Humbolt Elementary in Can- yon City and Seneca School — have been served local food through the program. Head cook Natalie Weaver said the funding she receives through the Farm to School grant is determined by the number of students and how Contributed photo Students participating in Humbolt Elementary’s Farm to School Academy enjoyed a field trip last fall to Thomas Orchards in Kimberly. many of them receive re- duced-price or free meals. “You can order anything local, Oregon products or products that are processed here,” she said. Some purchases she’s made for the school have in- cluded fruit from Kimberly and lettuce from Bend. The grant funding also pays for the cut and wrap fees for beef that is donated to the school district. “It is beneficial,” she said. “We’re on a budget crunch, so the extra funding helps.” Some favorites for the stu- dents are the pears and apples grown in Kimberly. “The kids absolutely love it,” she said. “They devour it faster than I can put it out there.” Another part of the pro- gram involves teaching Ore- gon kids how food gets from the farm and ranch to the ta- ble. The Farm to School Acad- emy, coordinated by Elise Delgado of the South Fork John Day Watershed Coun- cil, receives funding through a Farm to School competitive grant. Each month, Delgado and volunteers teach 20-30 Hum- bolt Elementary School fifth- and sixth-graders hands-on lessons, including field trips, about where their food comes from and the work involved to produce it. The group will travel to Seneca April 21 to plant four varieties of apple trees with lessons from Julia Justice whose family owns Better Blooms and Gardens in Prai- rie City. The students visited Thomas Orchards in Kim- berly last fall to see how Jeff The Road to Resurrection Heather Mosley, left, and Carle Wright present the Passover meal to attendees of the Road to Resurrection Saturday during the Spring Roundup at the Grant County Fairgrounds, hosted by 14 local churches. Local churches host Spring Roundup By Sean Hart Blue Mountain Eagle Local churches brought the story of Jesus’ resurrection to life Saturday. Fourteen churches host- ed the Spring Roundup last week, featuring three nights of religious concerts and wor- ship as well as the Road to Resurrection, where attend- ees walked in the footsteps of Jesus through the last week of his life presented by lo- cal volunteers clad in period attire. About 200 people attended the evening musical perfor- mances, said John Day Church of the Nazarene Pastor and one of the event’s organizers Bob Douglas. About as many experienced the story of Jesus’ triumphal entry and the Pass- over meal to prison, the cross and the Resurrection. Torie Coalwell, 16, Heather Mosley, 18, and Carle Wright, 16, presented the Passover meal to the groups of attend- ees as they made their way through decorated path inside Trowbridge Pavillion at the Grant County Fairgrounds. “It’s cool for the people to be able to experience this,” Wright said. Mosley said she hoped peo- ple would better understand the meaning of the events after experiencing them. Coalwell said the Spring Roundup was great for the community by bringing differ- ent churches together. After making their own cross necklaces at the end of the Road to Resurrection, at- tendees said it was a great ex- perience. John Day resident Alma Joslin said it was a “blessing.” Crish Hamilton of Mt. Ver- non said it was a great way to get to know the story. “I loved to see the youth involvement,” she said. “They took it so seriously and did well.” Francis Kocis, an elder at Redeemer Lutheran Church in John Day, said the event was well attended from the local musicians kicking off the event Thursday through Saturday’s finale. He said it was great to see so many come together. “There’s been a lot of sup- port,” he said. A CADEMIC R EPORT Prairie City third-quarter honor roll Seniors 4.0 GPA: Caleb Madsen and Lindsay Wall. Honor roll (3.5-3.99): Brogan McKrola, Sarah En- nis and Devin Packard. Honorable mention (3.0- 3.49): Taci Perrenoud, Wyatt Williams, MaKenzie Jones, and Nathan Maloy. Adolfo Ceja, Deja Amsden and Jonathan Lawrence. Juniors 4.0 GPA: Dorran Wilson and Brianna Zweygardt. Honor roll (3.5-4.0): Jo- siah Hoeffner, Megan Ca- marena, Mariah McClung and Cassie Hire. Honorable mention (3.0- 3.49): Danner Davis and Ai- tor Ansotegui. Eighth grade 4.0 GPA: Aries Bice and Declan Zweygardt. Honor roll (3.5-3.99): Caitlin Willet, Katie Hire and Samantha Workman. Honorable mention (3.0- 3.49): Jayden Winegar, Camry Milesi and Kevin Duvall. Sophomores Honor roll (3.5-3.99): Haley Pfefferkorn. Honorable mention (3.0- 3.49): Joseph Zellner, Ra- ven Maloy, Lane Williams, Gabriela Arias, Levi Burke, Seventh grade Honor roll (3.5-3.99): Marcus Judd, Riley Reames and Dylan Clark. Honorable mention (3.0- 3.49): Austin McKrola and Seth Moore. Freshman 4.0 GPA: Shaelynn Bice. Honor roll (3.5-3.99): JoLynne Ashley, Jessica Reames and Johna Long. Honorable mention (3.0- 3.49): Aleah Johns. Thomas and his family oper- ate their business. Sixth-grad- er Destiny Pelayo said she enjoyed the field trip. “My favorite part has been being with friends and learning so many things with them in a fun way,” she said. In an interview last week, Delgado said the students learn how food is produced on the field trips. Their last trip was a visit in February to Stiner Ranch in Mt. Vernon. “It gives context to the information that is actually applicable to student’s lives,” she said. “They can see how that applies to their world, and they’re not just memo- rizing (from a textbook). It gives them the opportunity to get out to the land and see all that goes into it, not just the land and how it’s being worked and managed but the culture and energy that has to go into operations in Grant County.” She said natural resourc- es are a foundation of local communities. “Here, not only do we eat the food, but we drive by the fields where food is being produced, and our friends come from natural resource families, and it needs to be understood by our students,” she said. “The Farm to School funding is allowing us to do that in this community.” Jeff Thomas traveled to Salem in February for a hear- ing on Farm to School fund- ing. Megan Kemple of Or- egon Farm to School and School Garden Network said in a press release Thom- as testified at the hearing that selling to schools has helped his family orchard stay afloat, and how he val- ues these programs both for the sales and the education- al components. “He emphasized that buying locally helps keep money circulating in Ore- gon communities, and said that investing in farm to school and school gardens is ‘one of the best ways you can spend your dollar,’” she said. Capital Bureau reporter Mateusz Perkowski contribut- ed to this report. Eagle photos Sean Hart Spring Roundup attendees enjoy a meal after being led on a walk through the story of the Resurrection Saturday as part of the Spring Roundup organized by local churches. Torie Coalwell, left, passes out a course of the Passover meal to Road to Resurrection attendees at the Spring Roundup Saturday in John Day. Help is available for victims of sexual assault in Grant County. If you or someone you know has been a victim of sexual assault, please call: Heart of Grant County 541-620-1342 Grant County Victim Assistance Program 541-575-4026 Remember: sex without consent = sexual assault This project was supported by Grant No. 2015-WR-AX-0008 awarded by the Office on Violence Against Women, U.S. Department of Justice. The opinions, findings, conclusions, and recommendations expressed in this publication/ program/exhibition are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Department of Justice, Office on Violence Against Women. Designed by the Blue Mountain Eagle 05462