NEWS MyEagleNews.com Wednesday, April 7, 2021 A3 John Day looks to convert greenhouse operations to a cooperative By Rudy Diaz Blue Mountain Eagle John Day’s greenhouse may soon be a co-op. John Day City Manager Nick Green gave a presenta- tion on the greenhouse to the city council during a study ses- sion on March 31. Green said they recom- mend the greenhouse con- vert into a cooperative forma- tion to reduce operating costs and open up revenue opportu- nities that are not available to cities such as grants specifi c for co-ops. “It’s really more about accessing other revenue sources and helping the com- munity feel like this is their asset and not some government project,” Green said. Transitioning to a co-op would not heavily impact the current employees, but would require a manager for the operation. Green said that entering a co-op would allow the green- house to hire additional staff at normal wages without needing to pay PERS and the added cost of a government employee. This also provides a chance for members of the co-op to volunteer their time to do the harvest in exchange for pro- duce, if they want. “There’s options, and we can start looking into how we can structure the co-op to include other users and other groups,” Green said. “If we go down this road, we just need to start exploring these vari- ous interest groups that could participate.” Laurabeth Wallenstein, the ism in the summer because of COVID-19, which they had not anticipated. “We’ve averaged about $2,500 in net sales a month, and we’re growing quite a bit more food than that,” Green said. Tomatoes and leafy greens continue to be the most requested items from the green- house in their lineup of 24 prod- ucts. Online, 261 customers Eagle fi le photo have been acquired since the A variety of produce at the John Day greenhouse can be bought start of the online website nine online. months ago, but Green said the increase in customers would project manager at the green- the co-op,” Wallenstein said. slowdown as they run out of house, said she loves the inter- “It would help with the fund- product. est that people have in the ing, the structural issues that “We’re already starting to greenhouse and the work they we have and getting a little bit lose customers because they see do. She added that there is more help with the work.” sold out on almost every prod- a lot of work to be done, and Green said, in the past uct line when they come to our the additional help would be year, sales have been consis- website,” Green said. “That’s a appreciated. tently low due to the restaurant function of how much space we “I’m totally in support of restrictions and lack of tour- have and several other factors.” The greenhouse completed their fi rst internship program with Zachary Ostberg, a high school student who started his freshman year. Ostberg worked with the greenhouse crew for a month in August. Jesse Doug- las, a junior from Grant Union, just started his internship at the greenhouse and works closely with Wallenstein, learning about hydroponic crop production. The city also met with East- ern Oregon University and the Rural Engagement and Vitality Center to partner up and create an academic opportunity and internships, according to Green. Modifi cations continue to be made at the greenhouse to accommodate issues with cli- mate controls, keeping bugs out of the produce and redesign- ing several aspects of the grow operations for effi ciency. DEQ creates additional hurdles for wastewater treatment plant project By Rudy Diaz Blue Mountain Eagle Eagle fi le photo Fourth Avenue in John Day is in need of repairs after spring fl ooding in 2019. City requesting funding from county for Fourth Street repairs John Day is sending the Grant County Court a let- ter asking for money to help fund repairs of Fourth Street, which leads up to the Grant County Regional Airport. The Federal Emer- gency Management Agency approved the scope and cost report on March 30 for the Fourth Street repairs and estimated the cost to be $1.6 million. FEMA will cover 75% of the cost with a 25% match, $398,281, required, accord- ing to the letter sent from John Day City Manager Nick Green. The city is requesting the county budget $398,281 in the coming fi scal year for the match for construction. The letter states that John Day obligated $270,000 for the initial design and con- struction oversight and plans to cover the fi nal design, per- mitting and single-scope audit for the federal cost share. The design for the proj- ect is a 95-foot soldier pile retaining wall. This design would drive steel into the ground until it reaches bed- rock to where the soldier piles are stable and a con- crete slab could be placed on top. A portion of the road base would have to be cut back, but this design will avoid closing the road to emer- gency traffi c between the hospital and airport. “Preliminary design is complete, and the environ- mental permits have been approved for the project to be constructed within the in-wa- Eagle fi le photo City Manager Nick Green stands in front of a holding pond for John Day’s wastewa- ter treatment plant in 2017. water permitting documents for two diff erent types of sys- tems: the National Pollution Discharge Elimination System and the Water Pollution Con- trol Facility. The site says that NPDES-permitted facilities discharge pollutants from any point source, such as a pipe, to state waters. If a facility dis- charges to land, it is a WPCF facility. The U.S. Supreme Court directed the EPA to develop new rules that defi ned when a regulatory agency may use a state-issued WPCF permit or when the federal permitting path for an NPDES permit is required, according to a letter submitted by Long. To renew the permit, the city needs to show DEQ that the future disposal method for the new treatment plant will not create the functional equiva- Haven House Retirement Center Apartments available! S238172-1 Mtn. View Mini-Mart 211 Front St., Prairie City 541-820-4477 Weekly Specials Sunday - Family Style Joy’s Choice | Thursday - Asian | Saturday - Sushi ter work window, July 15 to August 31,” Green said. The council said they hope Grant County can cover the match since it is the main road used to access the Grant County Regional Airport and the industrial park. Fourth Street repairs were also discussed between the city and county last Novem- ber in a study session, but no decision was made afterward. “The reality is that that road is not only in the city of John Day, but that is the arte- rial road going to the Grant County Regional Airport,” Councilor Paul Smith said. “They have a stake in the maintenance of that road.” S234723-1 By Rudy Diaz Blue Mountain Eagle The Department of Envi- ronmental Quality is request- ing a third groundwater site analysis at the location of the future wastewater treatment plant in John Day. The city is currently work- ing with an expired Water Pol- lution Control Facilities per- mit, which needs to be renewed for the future wastewater treat- ment plant. Bob Long, a consultant from CwM-H2O, said this is an interesting permitting chal- lenge for the city on this project due to a recent Supreme Court decision from Maui, Hawaii. “This is a brand new per- mitting system that DEQ has not run through their agency yet,” Long said. “The Supreme Court made a decision last year, and the EPA then prop- agated some guidance to the states.” Long said the Maui deci- sion was based on a situation on the island where the state issued a WPCF permit, which allows for wastewater to be discharged to land. “Unfortunately, they were discharging directly to a lava tube, which ran down to a coral reef and acted like a pipeline,” Long said. The Oregon state website defi nes two types of waste- lent of a direct discharge to state water, or DEQ would have to issue an NPDES permit accord- ing to the agenda. This would cause a problem due to the lack of preparatory work with the city’s reach to the John Day River. The city council motioned to award a contract not to exceed the amount of $150,000 to CwM to perform the site inves- tigation to proceed with permit- ting, provided DEQ approves the scope of work and agrees that this will be the last site investigation required. John Day City Manager Nick Green said the water/ wastewater loan and grant can be amended to remove the cost of the site investigation from the design and place the funds into the permitting or site analysis line item. “We’re setting the bar very high being the test case for DEQ,” Green said. “This is going to cost our ratepayers almost $300 per account holder, just to do this study. ... We’re going to take almost $200,000 right out of the gate and shift it from engineering to permitting, but we’ve got to do to it because our ability to spend that $5.2 dollars (from grants) hinges on DEQ issuing a permit so we can operate the facility. 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