TRACK CHAMPIONS LOCAL ATHLETES TOP THE PODIUM AT STATE MEET PAGE B1 The Blue Mountain EAGLE Blue Mou ntain Eagle Con gra tu Gra lation dua s, “Sta GRA rt wh NT tes ere y UN ou a ION re Grant County’s newspaper since 1868 We June Prairie City senior Levi Burke won the 1A boys high jump title with a height of 6-05 at the Track and Field State Championships May 17-18 in Monmouth. For the Eagle/Ben Lonergan McK ee Valed ly Mill ictori er an 1, 20 19 • . Us 10 a HIG e w .m. • H S Gran - Arth hat you t Un CHO ion H OL ur A have. D igh S choo she o wh l at yo u ca n.” Mad ison Salu McKro tato rian la Aida CONGRATULATIONS TO GRANT UNION AND HOMESCHOOL GRADUATES | Pages A6-7 Wednesday, May 22, 2019 151st Year • No. 21 • 20 Pages • $1.00 BlueMountainEagle.com Votes next year could determine pool’s future Preparing for disaster City submits application for planning grant Hanners By Richard Blue Mountain Eagle Contributed photos ABOVE: Several emergency vehicles are parked ready to go in the Galena training exercise. LEFT: Dozens of staff and volunteer emergency services people from various agencies gather for an evaluation after the fi re drill and evacuation exercise in Galena. Search and rescue coordinates interagency fi re evacuation drill By Angel Carpenter Blue Mountain Eagle Dozens of staff and volunteers from various emergency services agencies swooped in to “rescue” sev- eral Galena residents May 11 during a mock fi re emergency. Grant County Sheriff’s Offi ce Search and Rescue Coordinator Dep- uty Dave Dobler, who organized the event, said everything went as planned. “We had a good turnout with our SAR team, and this was critical to the success of this exercise,” he said. “SAR worked well with the other Dobler, volunteers make numerous improvements By Richard Hanners Blue Mountain Eagle agencies and worked swiftly and pro- fessionally to achieve our operational goals in a systematic and professional manner.” The residents of Galena were said to have “played along” well in their roles of people experiencing a real wildfi re emergency. A long list of other participants joined the local team, including the county Air Search, Amateur Radio Emergency Service, Emergency Communications Agency (911 Dis- patch) and Emergency Manage- ment, as well as head of Firewise December was a busy month for the Grant County Sheriff’s Offi ce’s Search and Rescue team, with six days on missions in brutally cold con- ditions and two days with debriefi ng after a tough mission on Fields Peak. Deputy Dave Dobler, the coun- ty’s Search and Rescue coordinator, updated the county court on the team’s achievements and presented grant and fundraising proposals May 8. Dobler, Dave Dobler who joined the sheriff’s offi ce eight months ago, also provided a detailed list of SAR needs. See Drill, Page A10 See Improvements, Page A10 John Day area voters likely won’t see a ballot measure to create a new service district for operation of a public swim- ming pool or a bond election for the funds to build a new swimming pool until next spring. New information about the Gleason Pool emerged during the John Day City Council’s discussion about a planning grant application May 14. The council agreed to apply for a 2019 Oregon Parks and Recreation Depart- ment planning grant worth up to $40,000. The city budgeted up to $40,000 for matching funds for the grant, City Man- ager Nick Green told the council. Service district Planning grants can be used to deter- mine and document a project’s viability, including information on the public need and benefi t, types of amenities, locations, activities and likely users, Green said. Alternatives are analyzed and a recom- mendation is made on the best alterna- tive, he said. In this case the city, which owns Glea- son Pool, and a steering committee com- posed of stakeholders interested in the pool’s future have been evaluating state law on county service facilities as an option for operation of an aquatic facil- ity, Green said. Oregon Revised Statutes Chapter 451 authorizes a county to establish mas- ter plans and service districts for a wide range of purposes, including public recre- ation facilities. The Grant County Court could approve a master plan for a service district that supports a recreation facility that includes land outside the jurisdiction of cities in Grant County, Green said. See Vote, Page A10 State revenue forecast dramatically higher than expected Lawmakers debate how to spend $770 million windfall By Mark Miller Oregon Capital Bureau Oregon has come into an unexpected windfall, and now it’s up to lawmakers to fi gure out what to do with it. Personal and corporate income tax collec- tions during the 2019 tax fi ling season were dra- matically higher than state economists expected, according to a report released May 15. While much of that money will go back to taxpayers next year in the form of Oregon’s unique “kicker” rebate, the new forecast gives legislative bud- get-writers about three-quarters of a billion dol- lars more to work with as they decide how Ore- gon will spend its money over the next two years. They aren’t getting too excited, though. “It may seem strange, but the revenue forecast does not change the method in which we’re bud- geting,” said state Rep. Dan Rayfi eld, D-Corval- lis, who co-chairs the budget writing committee. “We are still looking at reduction options. We are still being cautious and prudent about how we spend the resources that the state has.” Decisions on agency spending touch practi- cally every Oregonian. Between general and lottery funds, state econ- omists project that Oregon has $24.8 billion to spend over the next two years. That’s up about $770 million from the previous forecast. Ken Rocco, legislative fi scal offi cer, advises lawmakers on how much their spending ideas would cost the state. His offi ce concluded the state would need to spend about 14% more than the current two-year, $21 billion budget just to keep in place services now being provided, because of the impact of infl ation, pay raises and cost hikes in supplies and services. That calculation doesn’t take into account the larger cash reserves that Rayfi eld and his fellow co-chairs, Sens. Betsy Johnson, D-Scappoose, and Elizabeth Steiner Hayward, D-Beaverton, want the state to have by the end of 2021. It also doesn’t include any new programs or projects that the Legislature approves or jobs it adds. “I think we’re probably much closer to being able to fund the current service level, but that doesn’t mean that the co-chairs, for every agency, they’re going to do that,” Rocco said. “They’re still looking at making some current service level reductions.” That hasn’t stopped key people in the Capi- tol from tossing out ideas for how the newfound $770 million should be spent. Gov. Kate Brown said she expects some of the extra money to go toward mitigating tuition costs for community colleges and universities, as well as investing in foster care and law enforcement. “I have some key investments that I think need to be made,” Brown said. Brown and House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Portland, have also suggested putting some of the windfall into affordable housing, a prior- ity they share. “The more we can do for housing with the additional resources, we should try,” Kotek said. But Rayfi eld and some of his fellow Democrats in the Legislature are leery of any new spending that would have to be covered in future budgets. See Forecast, Page A10