Grant Union girls undefeated in Blue Mountain Conference The PAGE A10 Blue Mountain EAGLE Grant County’s newspaper since 1868 Wednesday, January 23, 2019 151st Year • No. 4 • 18 Pages • $1.00 BlueMountainEagle.com AMONG THE BEST Contributed photo/David Zaitz LEFT: Chipping onto a green at The Retreat & Links at Silvies Valley Ranch. ABOVE: The Chief Egan mountain meadow 9-hole golf course at The Retreat & Links at Silvies Valley Ranch. Contributed photo Silvies Valley Ranch Silvies recognized by golfi ng magazines By Richard Hanners Blue Mountain Eagle T he Retreat & Links at Silvies Val- ley Ranch, operating since a soft opening in 2017, has caught the eye of golfi ng professionals across the U.S. The boutique resort south of Seneca recently was recognized by two nation- wide magazines, while the resort’s chef was given a top award by the Oregon Beef Council. Golf Magazine, with a circulation of ‘ I played most of the great golf 1.4 million, recognized the resort’s McVeigh’s Gauntlet 7-hole ridge course as “the best new golf experience of the year.” The 1,177-yard McVeigh’s Gauntlet course includes par-3 and short par-4 holes and features goats as caddies. The leashed goat-caddies can tote a handful of clubs in leather golf bags up and down the course’s steep, rugged terrain. See Silvies, Page A18 courses in the United States, and many in Europe, in my 40 years in golf course management. Nowhere else will you fi nd an experience like this.’ Sean Hoolehan, past president of Golf Course Superintendents Association of America Legal challenges to county measures, ordinance dismissed By Sean Hart Blue Mountain Eagle Mark Webb Legal challenges to two Grant County measures and one ordinance have been dismissed, but the judge did not rule on whether the laws were valid. County resident Mark Webb sought an order from the Grant County Circuit Court declar- ing measures 12-37 and 12-40 and Ordinance 2013-01 invalid because of procedural errors and confl icts with state law and state and federal constitutions. Measure 12-37 declared Grant County a United Nations- free zone, which Webb argued confl icts with the U.S. Constitution. Measure 12-40 directed the county to petition Congress for title to public land within the county, which Webb argued was improper because it compelled an administrative, rather than legislative, act. Ordinance 2013-01 prohib- its road closures on public land without authorization from the Grant County Court and the sheriff, which Webb argued was preempted by state and federal law. Former county counsel Ron Yockim fi led motions on behalf of the county to dismiss Webb’s complaint on several grounds, including that Webb failed to See Legal, Page A18 School board to ask for $700,000 bond By Richard Hanners Blue Mountain Eagle The Dayville School Board will ask voters to approve a $700,000 bond for school improvements in the May election. The cost of the bond is estimated to be $168 per year for a $100,000 home. The board vote on Jan. 8 was unanimous, School Superintendent Kathryn Hedrick told the Eagle. If successful, the bond could raise $1.4 million with an Oregon School Capital Improvement Match grant. The OSCIM grant could match up to $2 million. A needs assessment by Straightline Architects of Boise identifi ed some expensive renovations and remodeling that could have required a higher bond request. The school board, however, pared down the request by eliminat- ing things like parking lot paving and installing lights on the football fi eld, which had never been seri- ously considered by the board, Hedrick said. While the board has not yet specifi ed what needs they hope to address, they will likely include roof repairs to the main building, which was built in 1924, and electrical upgrades to the elemen- tary school, which was built in 1953. It’s possible needed structural repairs to the gym could be paid for through a seismic upgrade grant that the school board will apply for later this year, Hedrick said. The school board has been talking to com- munity members about the importance of these repairs for some time and will actively promote the May bond election, Hed- rick said. “They’re not looking at new buildings,” she said. “They’ll do everything they can to make it cost effective and safe for the students.” Hemp farmers look to Prairie City and Mt. Vernon Plants must contain less than 0.3 percent THC By Richard Hanners Blue Mountain Eagle New state and federal laws that protect hemp farming have come on the heels of a rapid growth in the industry. In the U.S., hemp sales topped $820 million in 2017 while the global mar- ket was estimated to be $3.9 billion. In Oregon, the number of hemp farming permits doubled from 2017 to 2018. Tai Ma Oregon LLC, which has been developing an industrial hemp farm in Prairie City for the past two seasons, plans to grow hemp on a 10-acre hay fi eld just south of the fi re hall in Mt. Vernon. The narrow prop- erty extends along Beech Creek nearly all the way to the city’s sewage lagoons. Mt. Vernon reaction Mt. Vernon Mayor Kenny Delano said the city learned about the compa- ny’s plans in December when Tai Ma Oregon LLC presented the city with a land-use compatibility statement from the Ore- gon Department of Agri- culture to show that they complied with local zon- ing regulations. Hemp growing is reg- ulated, but hemp farm- ers are no longer required to provide a compatibil- ity statement to the state, ODA Director of Com- munications Andrea Can- tu-Schomus told the Eagle. Only hemp handlers, who process hemp products from farmers, are required to provide the compatibil- ity statement, she said. The Mt. Vernon City Council took up the mat- ter at their Jan. 8 meeting, where it encountered some vocal opposition. David Kilpatrick and Chauncey Groves, partners in the Tai Ma Oregon business, attended the meeting. Kilpatrick assured the council that indus- trial hemp does not have a strong odor, like recre- ational or medical mari- juana, and they had heard no complaints in Prairie City. He also said anyone who steals hemp and tries See Hemp, Page A18