NEWS MyEagleNews.com Wednesday, February 17, 2021 A5 John Day seeks county partnership road investments Investments could be paid back by urban renewal agency Eagle file photo Rebekah Rand, director of emergency medical services at Blue Mountain Hospital fills a syringe with the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine last month at the Grant County Fairground’s Trow- bridge Pavilion during a vaccine clinic for educators. By Rudy Diaz Blue Mountain Eagle John Day plans to talk with the Grant County Court on road investments that could lead to housing opportunities. John Day City Manager Nick Green said the county court asked if he could pres- ent to them on Feb. 24 and introduce the topic of how the urban renewal agency could be used to help offset land development costs. Green said the way that could work is if there is a public-public partnership between the city and the county and the URA. Under the proposal, the county would pay to install roads up front, and the URA would pay the county back for the cost of the roads when new develop- ment increased the taxes paid to the URA. “We could do our piece for the utilities, but we couldn’t do the utility and the streets,” Green said. “We would need county road dollars to build roads in the county, and then we would pay back the road reserve funds or any kind of contribution through the URA.” The URA freezes the taxes that all taxing dis- tricts receive from a property at the level they were when the URA began in 2017- 2018, and the tax revenue from any increases in prop- erty value are funneled to the URA for the life of the pro- gram, which cannot exceed 20 years. Green said that before the hospital, school, city and the county taxing districts get Vaccinations moving to those 75 and older By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle Grant County adminis- tered shots of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine to the roughly 60 people in the 80 and over group whom the health department put on the waiting list last week. The county reported three new cases in both the Prairie City and John Day ZIP codes over the week as the county moved back to the “lower risk” category, according to the county’s public health administrator, Kimberly Lindsay. Lindsay said, in addition to moving into the 75 and older age group, the health depart- ment would also be getting booster shots to people who received their first dose four weeks ago. She said the county would administer 100 first and sec- ond doses on Tuesday at the Trowbridge Pavilion at the Grant County Fairgrounds. The clinic is by appointment only and closed to the general public. She said Oregon Health Authority did not send enough doses to vaccinate everyone in the 75 and over age group, but the health department would be administering every avail- able shot. Lindsay said she antici- pates that 60 people in the 75 and over group would need to remain on the waiting list. Lindsay said the county must have 20 doses for any- one that moves into residen- tial facilities or people who move to Grant County and need a second dose. She said the county must vaccinate people in previous groups — health care workers and educators — who now want the vaccine. She said she does not know when the county will get more first doses from the state after this week. How- ever, she said, the county is guaranteed to receive all sec- ond doses. Lindsay said Monday that Grant County is on the lower end for vaccine equity across the state but is among the top five counties receiving the least amount of vaccines per 10,000 people. She said the positivity rate and the number of cases in a county should drive vaccine distribution. According to data Lindsay shared with the Eagle Tuesday, in Grant County, there were 577 people vaccinated per 10,000 during the week of Feb. 2 and 417 the previous week. OHA’s website listed the county’s total case count at 220 and the positivity rate at 5% as of Monday. Eagle file photo The city of John Day is asking Grant County to form a partnership to spur growth in the area. tions,” Green said. Under the URA’s hous- ing incentive program, the city provides a cash rebate equal to 7% of the increase in assessed value and pays for system development charges for new home construction. “It’s a slight change from what we originally pro- posed, but the reason we’re considering it is if we run out of buildable lots, the URA would decline because there’s nowhere else to build, which I think is proba- bly going to happen,” Green said. Green said a good project to work on with the county would be on Ironwood Estates Phase One since much of the preliminary work has been completed. “I think that’s the project I would suggest you do the test case with, iron out any kinks in the development agreement, and once we fig- ure that out, let’s just repli- cate it, adjust on the market and don’t saturate the mar- ket with too much supply,” Green said. Green said, with this sce- nario, the county controls their own investment risk since the county assessor captures the tax before it’s remitted to the URA, and if an individual owner were to default, it’s the county that goes through the foreclosure process. “I just don’t see any way the county doesn’t get their money back,” Green said. “They’re both the lender and the collector by statute.” fraud in Prairie City. Feb. 12: Responded to a theft in Canyon City. Feb. 12: Bryon Freniere of John Day was cited for care- less driving, driving while suspended and uninsured. Feb. 12: Responded to a report of a theft at a business on West Main Street. Feb. 14: Advised of a theft on Bridge Street. • John Day ambulance Feb. 8: Dispatched for an elderly man with possible heart issues on Happy Val- ley Lane. Feb. 10: Along with GCSO, responded for an 83-year-old woman with heart palpitations on North Cozart. Feb. 10: Responded to Prairie City for a medi- cal alarm. The patient was coughing, wheezing and had back pain with painful lungs on Johnson Street. Feb. 11: Dispatched for a woman with an infected tailbone. Feb. 13: Along with Sen- eca ambulance, responded for a 61-year-old man with chest pain. • Prairie City ambulance Feb. 11: Paged for a woman who was not breath- ing on North Johnson Street. The Eagle/Rudy Diaz From left, John Day Councilor Shannon Adair, City Manager Nick Green and Mayor Ron Lundbom during the city council meeting Dec. 8. their share of the underly- ing tax base, the investments made by the city and the county would be paid back. He added that it’s a sustain- able investment model, but it does defer the tax increase for all eight tax jurisdictions a couple of more years. “The idea is that we buy out the negative equity, and then we recover through the URA’s tax base so we all get repaid for our investments, and then we release the URA area to the other tax jurisdic- COPS AND COURTS Arrests and citations in the Blue Mountain Eagle are taken from the logs of law enforcement agencies. Every effort is made to report the court disposition of arrest cases. Grant County Circuit Court Melinda J. Moss, 42, pleaded guilty Jan. 14 to a count of criminal driving while suspended or revoked committed on June 5. She was sentenced to 24 months of supervised probation, 40 hours of community service and ordered to pay a $200 traf- fic fine. Garrett E. Lovell, 24, pleaded guilty on Jan. 7 to a count of second-degree bur- glary and first-degree theft committed on Sept. 11, 2019. He also pleaded guilty Jan. 7 to a count of first-degree fail- ure to appear committed on Feb. 20, 2020. He was sen- tenced to 364 days in jail, 12 months of post-prison super- vision, 24 months of super- vised probation and 40 hours of community service. He was also ordered to pay $1,586 in restitution to Adam Schum- acher. A count of first-degree theft was dismissed. Warrants processed: 2 Assistance/Welfare check: 0 Search and Rescue: 1 Thomas Pfeifer, 51, of Prairie City was cited for a failure to appear warrant. Shawn Kite, 52, of Prai- rie City was cited for driving while suspended and unin- sured and for failure to install ignition interlock device. Grant County Sheriff John Day dispatch worked 125 calls during the week of Feb. 8-14, including: • John Day Police Department Feb. 10: Cited Jessica Thomas, 37, of John Day for Dispatch The Grant County Sheriff’s Office reported the following for the week of Feb. 10: Concealed handgun licenses: 12 Average inmates: 12 Bookings: 5 Releases: 6 Arrests: 0 Citations: 2 Fingerprints: 1 Civil papers: 7 allowing dog as a nuisance on Highway 26. Feb. 10: Jared Bake, 25, of John Day was arrested for furnishing alcohol to a minor. Feb. 14: Advised of snow- mobilers riding on the city streets on Main Street. Feb. 14: Warned a driver for expired license plates on High- way 26 near milepost 162. • Oregon State Police Feb. 10: Responded to a crash between a deer and vehi- cle on Highway 26 near mile- post 163.5. • Grant County Sheriff’s Office Feb. 11: Took a report of TOM CHRISTENSEN CHRISTENSEN TOM CONSTRUCTION Debbie Ausmus 245 South Canyon Blvd. John Day, OR 97845 OPEN WED. & THUR. 9 am - 5 pm (541) 410-0557 • (541) 575-0192 CCB# 106077 541-575-1113 S230448-1 24 hrs/7 days wk Mtn. View Mini-Mart 211 Front St., Prairie City 541-820-4477 Weekly Specials Sunday - Family Style Joy’s Choice | Thursday - Asian | Saturday - Sushi REMODELS • NEW CONSTRUCTION • POLE BUILDINGS CONCRETE EXCAVATION • SHEET ROCK • SIDING ROOFING • FENCES • DECKS • TELESCOPING FORKLIFT SERVICES S228520-1 Blazing Fast Internet! ADD TO YOUR PACKAGE FOR ONLY 19 . 99 $ /mo. where available S229572-1 2-YEAR TV PRICE GUARANTEE 64 99 $ MO. America’s Top 120 Package 190 CHANNELS Offer ends 7/14/21. 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