GRANT COUNTY FAIR RESULTS AND PHOTOS – PAGES A6-7 The Blue Mountain EAGLE The Eagle/Angel Carpenter Fans dance at the front during Lonestar’s concert in John Day. Grant County’s newspaper since 1868 W edNesday , a ugust 22, 2018 • N o . 34 • 18 P ages • $1.00 www.MyEagleNews.com County finalizes objections to forest plan Court adopts Forest Access For All’s objections Blue Mountains forests National forest Wallowa- Whitman Malheur By Richard Hanners Ochoco Blue Mountain Eagle Ida Wash. Ore. sh. Wa . Ore ho Sn ake e Riv 82 Umatilla r Pendleton 84 82 WALLOWA 395 MORROW UMATILLA Enterprise La Grande UNION 84 395 BAKER Ore. ho GRANT Ida John Day 26 10 miles Sn 26 HARNEY 20 ake Ontario River MALHEUR 395 N 84 Burns 20 Source: library.uoregon.edu Alan Kenaga/Capital Press Using a letter written by an East- ern Oregon group, the Grant County Court formalized its objections to the Blue Mountains Forest Plan revision during a special meeting Aug. 15. The court’s official four-page ob- jection letter originated with a letter from Forest Access For All, a volunteer group founded in April 2012 that ad- vocates for motorized access on public lands and provides online guidance for people who want to participate in the public process related to public lands management. Commissioner Rob Raschio told the court many of the group’s objections made sense. He also noted that the Canyon Creek Complex fire occurred one year after the court submitted its initial comments to the plan revision, and science shows that built-up forest fuels create a public safety problem, which the court is obli- gated to address. The Eagle/Richard Hanners Grant County Judge Scott Myers, center, called the Aug. 15 special meeting back in session to sign a document listing the county court’s objections to the Blue Mountains Forest Plan Revision. Commissioners Rob Raschio, left, and Jim Hamsher, right, joined Myers in signing the letter to the Forest Service. Commissioner Jim Hamsher said he’d like the court to continue accepting public input. The objection deadline is Aug. 28, so the court would need to hold another emergency meeting to adopt public input, Raschio noted. Court’s objections In editing the letter, the county court replaced the group’s name and added See PLAN, Page A18 Grant County experiencing suicide cluster Four people committed suicide in last seven months By Richard Hanners Blue Mountain Eagle Suicide statistics for Grant County are sobering, if not alarming, but two visiting cri- sis line professionals empha- sized personal communication and focusing on positive things during an Aug. 15 suicide fo- rum. Four people completed sui- cides in Grant County over the past seven months when the average has been one per year, Community Counseling Solu- tions Executive Director Kim- berly Lindsay told the Eagle. “There have been more suicides in Grant County this year than homicides,” she said. “It is not a stretch to state that Grant County has experienced, or is experiencing, a suicide cluster.” A suicide cluster is defined as multiple suicidal behav- iors or suicides falling within an accelerated time frame or within a geographical area. In the case of Grant County, it could be called a point cluster, Lindsay said, something that typically occurs within insti- tutional settings such as hospi- tals, prisons or schools. “These are more common in smaller, family-like com- munities,” she said. “Gilliam county experienced this from 2006 to 2011 when they had one youth suicide per year for five years. They were off the charts.” Leading suicide counties in Oregon, 2003-12 ... by suicide rate per 100,000 residents The Eagle/Richard Hanners Dave Dalton of Lines For Life addresses a comment during a suicide forum at the John Day Senior Center on Aug. 15 while coworker Emily Moser listens. Staggering numbers The suicide rate in Grant County is double the national av- erage, CCS clinical director Thad Labhart said at the forum. Finding an explanation for Grant County’s high suicide rate is not simple — Grant County ranks 23rd out of 36 counties for health factors, 15th for health behaviors and 31st for social and economic factors, but it also ranked ninth for clin- ical care, sixth for health out- comes and length of life, 12th for quality of life and ninth for physical environment. Rank/county Rate Deaths 1. Curry 2. Harney 3. Grant 4. Wheeler 36 32.7 32.1 29.1 77 22 22 4 ... by suicide deaths Rank/county Rate Deaths 1. Multnomah 2. Washington 3. Lane 4. Clackamas 15.4 1,084 12.2 639 17.7 612 13.8 523 Statewide 16.4 6,145 Source: Oregon Health Authority See SUICIDE, Page A18 EO Media Group graphic Rapp reaches plea deal in Dixie Campground shooting Sentencing will take place Aug. 23 By Richard Hanners Blue Mountain Eagle The 33-year-old John Day man ac- cused of shooting a Eugene man at the Dixie Campground on Oct. 16, 2017, has agreed to a plea deal. Kevin J. Rapp was initially charged with attempted murder, first-degree assault and unlawful use of a weapon. He was also charged with misde- meanor possession of methamphet- amine. In the plea petition accepted by Malheur County Circuit Court Judge Lung Hung Aug. 13, Rapp pleaded guilty to first-degree at- tempted assault, a Class B felony with a stipulated sentence of 85 months, and un- lawful possession of methamphetamine, a Class A misdemean- Kevin or. Rapp The victim, Kyler Weisenback, was the lone camper at the campground east of Prairie City and was shot twice in the head with a .22 rifle, according to a statement from Grant County District Attorney Jim Carpenter. One shot grazed the back of his head, and the other entered near his right ear and lodged in the occipital area, damaging Weisenback’s eye- sight, Carpenter said. The two men had never met. In accordance with Carpenter’s recommendation in the plea agree- ment, Rapp’s credit for good time in prison would be limited to 20 percent, meaning he would have to serve at least 68 months in prison along with three years of post-pris- on supervision. Rapp would also be required to pay restitution to Weisenback. The state agreed to waive other finan- cial obligations, forgo prosecu- tion for domestic violence crimes against Rapp’s wife, Mallory Rapp, and return property to Rapp’s family, including a vehicle and firearms. The agreement is conditional — Rapp reserves the right to appeal a judge’s denial of motions to sup- press evidence — and the judge is not obligated to honor it. If Rapp prevails in the appeal, he could withdraw his guilty plea. Sentencing is scheduled for 8:30 a.m. Thursday, Aug. 23, in the Grant County Courthouse. During a change of plea hearing on Aug. 14, in which Weisenback participated by telephone, the vic- tim agreed to go along with what- ever the state recommended, but said he believed the sentence was light. Weisenback was awoken in the early morning hours while camping last October and was shot. He was flown to Bend and then Portland for treatment. Rapp was arrested four days lat- er. In the plea agreement, Rapp stat- ed that he “intentionally attempted to cause serious physical injury to Kyler Weisenback by means of a deadly weapon, to wit a .22 rifle.”