PRAIRIE CITY BOYS PLACE FIFTH AT STATE The PAGE A10 Blue Mountain EAGLE Grant County’s newspaper since 1868 Wednesday, March 6, 2019 151st Year • No. 10 • 18 Pages • $1.00 BlueMountainEagle.com G RANTS COULD FUND SIGNIFICANT CHANGES IN Leaders, DOWNTOWN JOHN DAY Len’s Drug may complete $646,000 expansion By Richard Hanners Blue Mountain Eagle ith both applicants’ approval, the John Day City Council agreed Feb. 26 to forward two applications to the state for Main Street Revitalization grants worth up to $200,000 each. Greg and Marla Armstrong requested $200,000 they would match with $446,000 for a major remodel of the Len’s Drug store on Main Street. Plans call for increasing retail space by about 4,500 square feet by expand- ing west. The Corner Cup building, which they also own, likely would be removed. Noting how the store expanded into W A Main Street Revitalization grant from the state to improve the retail space and storefront for Len’s Drug may include removing The Corner Cup coff ee shop. adjacent spaces since 1977, the Arm- strongs said the $646,000 project would create a more uniform retail space with less unusable corners and improve the Main Street storefront with updated energy-effi cient windows and insulated walls. The 1188 Brewing Company, which completed a major interior remodel last year, requested $90,860 with a $23,500 match to create an integrated facade for the original part of the business and the expansion into adjacent space to the west. See Grants, Page A18 Eagle photos/Richard Hanners Greg and Marla Armstrong have applied for a Main Street Revitalization grant from the state to improve Len’s Drug’s retail space and storefront. Conceptual plans call for changing river channel in John Day Green: Army Corps recommends project that will not cost city By Richard Hanners Blue Mountain Eagle The public will get a chance to see conceptual plans for changing the John Day River stream channel where it fl ows through John Day during a March 12 online open house. “Walker Macy is going to call in and show a presentation on the big screen up at the airport,” City Manager Nick Green told the Eagle. “We’re going to live stream the council meeting to Facebook and post the recorded meeting online afterward.” The John Day City Council reviewed the river restoration plans developed by the Walker Macy landscape architect fi rm in Portland during a March 1 work session. Historic gold dredging oper- ations in John Day changed the location of the river and left a straight and narrow channel. The confl uence with Canyon Creek was once several hundred yards downstream from its cur- rent location. The conceptual plans call for restoring a mile-long section of the river from the planned city park near the Canton Street cul- de-sac to the single-lane bridge at the former Oregon Pine mill site. Plans call for constructing the meandering river with side channels and wetlands on city- owned land north of the river and not on private land along the south side of the river. State and federal funds would pay for the project, not city money, Green said. One estimate places costs at $1-2 million. Walker Macy’s conceptual plans include a cross-sectional diagram showing how a 200- foot wide bench could be cre- ated by removing earth about 6 feet deep along the north side of the river. That bench would con- tain spring runoff or other fl ood conditions and reduce the size of the 100-year fl oodplain. Councilor Dave Holland noted that excavating that much earth and fi nding a place to put it could be expensive. Filling in the percolation ponds at the cur- rent wastewater treatment plant once it’s replaced could be one use for the excavated earth. The Army Corps of Engi- neers had suggested making the river channel changes to reduce fl ood hazards, Holland said. The Corps must approve the project before work begins, Green said. Holland also noted that the Seventh Street extension would need to bend north around the meandering river, adding sev- eral thousand feet of con- struction costs to the road project. Green said a possible time- line would include constructing the new wastewater treatment plant in 2020-2021 and starting the river restoration project in 2022-2023. How Oregon’s new rent control law works By Paris Achen Oregon Capital Bureau Oregon on Thursday enacted the nation’s farthest-reaching law limiting rent increases and restricting no-fault evictions, pro- viding immediate protection to roughly 1 million renters across the state. Senate Bill 608 took effect with Gov. Kate Brown’s signa- ture just after noon Thursday, making Oregon the only state in the nation with statewide rent control. A key component of the new law is that most landlords can’t raise rents by more than 7 percent on top of an infl ationary increase tied to the Consumer Price Index. That amount is set at 3.3 per- cent until Sept. 30, when the Ore- gon Offi ce of Economic Analysis will determine a new infl ation- ary increase based on the annual 12-month average change for the West Coast. Rentals built in the past 15 years aren’t subject to limit, a provision added to encour- age construction of rental units. The clock for the 15-year period begins with the certifi cate of occupancy, according to the legislation. Here is a guide compiled by the Oregon Capital Bureau on how the law works for both land- lords and tenants: How do landlords calcu- late the maximum rent allowed under the new law? The state will use 3.3 percent for CPI until Sept. 30, when the amount will be reset based on a 12-month average for the West Coast, according to the Oregon Offi ce of Economic Analysis. The law does not apply to rent increase notices sent out before Thursday. New construction is exempt for a period of 15 years. For instance, a rental home that received a certifi cate of occu- pancy on Feb. 28, 2018, would be exempt from the rent increase limit until Feb. 28, 2033. How does the rent cap pen- cil out? The median rent for a two-bed- room unit in Oregon in 2017 was $1,043 per month. The maximum See Rent, Page A18 residents warn about carbon bill impacts Farm Bureau, ranchers request exemption By Richard Hanners Blue Mountain Eagle Regional opposition to a proposed cap- and-trade carbon bill in the Oregon Legis- lature has not been about the reality of cli- mate change but about whether impacts to rural and agricultural interests are fair or reasonable. Joining the opposition, the Grant County Court agreed Feb. 17 to send a letter to the Joint Committee on Carbon Reduction in the Oregon Legislature expressing their concerns with House Bill 2020. “We are very concerned about the impact HB 2020 will have on our agricultural and rural communities,” the court said. “The Grant County Court is opposed to HB 2020 and we urge an exemption for agriculture from the cap in any version of the bill mov- ing forward.” Attached were letters from Ken and Pat Holliday and from the Grant County Farm Bureau. The Hollidays expressed concern about impacts cap-and-trade legislation would have on agriculture and rural communities, particularly increasing the cost of fuel for vehicles. “As a cattle ranch involved in produc- tion agriculture, fuel is essential to operate tractors, trucks and equipment required to conduct our business,” they wrote. The Hollidays noted that dyed-diesel, which is only allowed in agricultural equip- ment and not on vehicles that use high- ways, will be included under the carbon cap in the house bill. “In order to truly exempt farms and ranches from a cap-and-trade system, the on-road diesel used in farm vehicles must also be exempt from the cap in any version of the bill going forward,” they said. The Hollidays said cattle ranchers “know fi rsthand the potential impacts cli- mate change can bring to their agricultural operations,” but they noted that HB 2020 “will not protect Oregonians from cata- strophic forest fi res, drought and the global impact of CO2 creation.” The Grant County Farm Bureau asked the committee to recognize the positive contributions made by agriculture toward reducing carbon dioxide output and pro- tecting habitat in rural areas and asked that agriculture-related activities be excluded from the HB 2020 regulations. “Quite simply, while everyone else has been philosophizing about sequestering carbon and reducing their carbon footprint, we have been quietly studying, designing and applying adaptive management tech- niques with our agency and university part- ners to implement what everyone else is merely theorizing,” the bureau said. The bureau noted that higher costs resulting from HB 2020 “seriously risks destabilizing our current land tenure and production operations, which are already threatened by an aging population, lack of producer recruitment and competition from outside, monied interests.” See Bill, Page A18 The Eagle/Richard Hanners Agricultural businesses and rural areas may be adversely impacted by House Bill 2020, a cap-and-trade carbon reduction bill.