A10 NEWS Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, May 22, 2019 Drill Continued from Page A1 Communities Irene Jerome. Other assistance came from Interagency Fire Dis- patch, Department of For- estry, Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, Ore- gon Office of State Fire Marshal and Oregon Emer- gency Management. Additionally, Blue Mountain Hospital Home Health and Hos- pice, Grant Soil and Water Conservation Dis- trict and Long Creek Fire Department lent a hand. “It was great to have four SAR rigs take part in the exercise and joined by Sgt. Dan Komning, USFS John Soules and BLM Ranger Jeff Weis,” Dobler said. “It is good Eagle file photo The John Day City Council will apply for a grant to pay for professional planning assistance to determine the future of public swimming pool in Grant County. Contributed photo Staff and volunteers from various emergency management services agencies gather for a ‘hot wash’ evaluation after the Galena fire evacuation exercise. so see the list of partici- pants ... working together to make our communities safer and our team of emergency responders.” first Improvements Continued from Page A1 “The categories of missions SAR has conducted and will likely conduct will require more specialized training and equipment,” he told the court. Dobler said he expected to see more recreational visitors in Grant County as the Central Oregon areas have become more populated. He also noted that his SAR team spent three months planning and preparing for the May 11 evacua- tion exercise around Galena. The SAR team responded to numer- ous flooding threats in April, including three days for Canyon Creek, one day in Mitchell and one day in Mt. Vernon. A recent mission was providing mutual aid for a lost hiker in the Black Canyon Wilderness on April 20. The team also presented informa- tion to students at Humbolt Elementary in May. Dobler listed improvements to the SAR program since he took over. These included monthly meetings with detailed agendas, monthly trainings focused on basic SAR skills, increased communications between SAR team members, closer coordination with various partners such as air search and amateur radio operators, better commu- nication with 911 dispatch, increased SAR recruitment and new efforts to find revenue sources, such as fundrais- ers and grants. Equipment needs cited by Dobler include a four-by-four off-road Forecast Continued from Page A1 “You use one-time money for one-time pur- poses,” Rayfield said. Sen. Chuck Riley, D-Hill- sboro, who sits on the Sen- 1809 First Street • Baker City • (541)523-5439 BARGAIN MATINEE IN ( ) Adults $7 ALL FILMS $6 ON TIGHTWAD TUESDAY MOVIE SCHEDULE MAY 24 - MAY 30 $9 Adult, $7 Senior (60+), Youth 121034 ALADDIN (PG) A kindhearted street urchin and a power-hungry Grand Vizier vie for a magic lamp that has the power to make their deepest wishes come true. FRI - SUN (4:00) 7:00 9:40 MONDAY (4:00) 7:00 TUES - THURS 7:00 JOHN WICK: CHAPTER 3 - PARABELLUM (R) Assassin John Wick is on the run with a $14 million price tag on his head and bounty-hunting killers on his trail. FRI - SUN (3:50) 6:50 9:35 MONDAY (3:50) 6:50 TUES - THURS 6:50 POKEMON: DETECTIVE PIKACHU (PG) In a world where people collect Pokémon to do battle, a boy comes across an intelligent talking Pikachu who seeks to be a detective. FRI & SUN (4:10) 7:10 9:45 MONDAY (4:10) 7:10 TUES - THURS 7:10 Vote Continued from Page A1 The county court would be the governing body of a county service district, Green said. The governing body would begin by deciding which facilities would be constructed, maintained and operated, and how the construction, maintenance and operation would be financed. Financing could be accomplished by a variety of methods, including assessments on property in the ser- vice district, sale of bonds, ad valorem taxes, a local option tax or any combination of these methods, Green said. The planning grant would be used to pay the non- profit Special Districts Association of Oregon Advisory Services LLC to help guide the city through the pro- cess, Green said. If the city’s grant application is unsuccessful, the city could continue the process on its own, Green said. The city has already spent money on consultants and acquir- ing new parkland as part of the overall pool project, he said. Pool costs The Eagle/Angel Carpenter Grant County Search and Rescue volunteer Kim Kell shares tips with elementary students on how to stay safe if they become lost. wheeled or tracked vehicle, off-trail snowmobiles, a lightweight litter for steep slopes, a lightweight rescue sled for snow, rope rescue equipment, hand- held radios, iPads for mapping or mis- sion planning and additional medical gear, including an automatic external defibrillator. He noted that Forest Ser- vice and Bureau of Land Management personnel use iPads for maps. Dobler told the court he’s been ate Finance and Revenue Committee, responded cau- tiously to Brown’s wish list. “Those are all good things, and yeah, OK, sure, we can always use money in those places,” Riley said. “But I’m a bit of a real- ist and understand we’re going to have that (eco- nomic) downturn. We need to make sure that we have everything covered for that downturn.” Riley and his committee chairman, Sen. Mark Hass, D-Beaverton, want to put as much as they can into the state’s reserves. “In public finance, when you have a tempo- rary phenomenon — a his- toric windfall — the posi- tion is you sock it away,” Hass said after reviewing Wednesday’s report. Oregon has run up about $27 billion in PERS debt. Pension costs are growing as more public employees looking for revenue sources that don’t require a match from the county, such as fundraisers and grants. The Oregon Community Foundation can provide grants up to $15,000, and grants from the Firehouse Subs Foundation range from $15,000 to $25,000, large enough to cover the cost of the four-by-four vehicle, Dobler said. He said he also is looking at a USDA Rural Development grant that could require a match. reach retirement age. While there’s no way for the state to erase its debt with a sin- gle move, the Legislature could put some of the over- age toward paying it down. It’s “very likely” the budget will include extra money for the PERS fund to help pay down the debt, Kotek said Friday. That would be an appropriate use of the windfall, Hass and Rayfield agreed. Brown and Kotek also floated a less likely idea: diverting money from the personal income tax kicker itself. At $1.4 billion, next year’s kicker would be the largest in state history. Kotek has proposed spending about half of it on transportation initiatives, including grants to replace or refit old diesel engines to reduce pollution, seis- mic upgrades to the Inter- state 205 bridge between Oregon City and West Linn, and a new program to build electric vehicle charging stations and other infra- structure for low-emission vehicles. Brown hasn’t embraced Kotek’s kicker proposal, House Bill 3440. She said Thursday that if the kicker were diverted, it should be for something that benefits the entire state. The Legislature usu- ally leaves the kicker alone. Oregon only cashes the rebate out to taxpayers in good economic times, when tax collections over a two- year period are at least 2% higher than economists expect. Brown said she’d sup- port using kicker money to pay down more of the PERS debt, if the Legislature can cobble together a plan that has bipartisan support. “I think that is good fiscal sense,” said Brown. We are forever grateful for those who have risked their lives to protect our freedoms Negotiations between the city of John Day and the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department for the sale of city park land adjacent to the Kam Wah Chung Historic Site and Gleason Pool have not concluded. Sale of the land would support the state’s plans to build a world-class interpretive center at the historic site. The council has recognized in the past that the new interpretive center would boost the local tourism econ- omy, but it also could mean closing the Gleason Pool for good at the end of the 2020 season. The Gleason Pool is 61 years old and the second old- est public pool in Oregon. During a public informa- tional meeting hosted by the John Day swim team April 2, John Day Councilor Dave Holland, the city’s former public works director, addressed whether the pool could be rehabbed economically. Supply and drain pipes were likely steel or galva- nized steel, he said, with a typical lifetime of 10-30 years. To replace rusted-out pipes, concrete decking, pool buildings and even the pool bottom would need to be demolished, he said. Estimated costs for a replacement pool were pro- vided at the April 2 meeting. The target figures are $4.5 million for construction of a new six-lane, 25-meter outdoor pool with related buildings and about $100,000 per year for operation, maintenance and a future pool replacement fund. Election options One option raised in the past as a way to increase annual revenue to meet the target operating costs was to expand the current John Day-Canyon City Parks & Recreation District to include Mt. Vernon and Prairie City. Board member Lisa Weigum, however, said at the April 2 meeting that the Parks & Rec board was defi- nitely opposed to that idea. If the city was forced to take over the pool’s opera- tion when the Parks & Rec contract ends in 2020, the city might be forced to consider a local option levy in order to meet the pool’s annual costs, Green said at the April 2 meeting. That would place an unfair burden on John Day tax- payers, Mayor Ron Lundbom noted at the time. People who don’t live in the city should pay higher pool fees to make it fair, but that might deter outside-district users from coming to the pool. Green suggested to the city council May 14 that cre- ating a service district including properties within 15 miles of the pool may be necessary to provide sufficient annual revenue for a public pool. The planning grant would support a careful evaluation of that option. The best approach for the city is to put all the ele- ments together, from master plan to financing mecha- nisms, and present the package to the voters possibly as soon as next spring, Green said. It’s smarter for the city to take its time developing a pool plan rather than rush something for this fall’s election, he said. Councilor Paul Smith agreed, saying this was a pro- fessional approach. Lundbom also agreed, noting that if the city does all it can to keep a public pool in Grant County and the voters turn down the service district and construction bond, then at least the city had done its job. 120 E Main St. John Day 541-575-0629 www.lensdrug.com 119347 Community Connection invites you to Celebrate Older Americans Month Monday - Thursday 7am- 6pm Friday 8am - 5pm Develop a Fitness Plan with Healthy Meals Visit the John Day, Prairie City, or Monument Senior Center Mendy Sharpe FNP Apppointments available 541-523-6377 541-963-6577 541-573-6377 541-576-2160