NEWS MyEagleNews.com Wednesday, April 21, 2021 A3 Grant County Budget Committee begins diffi cult process Forest patrol, predator control positions among early discussions By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle Grant County’s Budget Commit- tee held its fi rst meetings to make diffi cult decisions to balance this year’s budget. After Grant County Trea- surer Julie Ellison said in the bud- get message that the only way the county could avoid perpetual short- falls would be to cut positions, the committee heard from justice court, the sheriff ’s offi ce and revisited its predator control position. Predator control The committee deliberated on whether it should hire a full-time animal control offi cer after the county lost its federal animal con- trol offi cer in December when Nick Lulay accepted a full-time position in Wallowa County. In December, USDA Wildlife Services District Supervisor Shane Koyle asked the county if it could put in more than $35,000 it had previously contributed for the job. He said he could get a better qual- ity applicant if they advertise it as a full-time position. Budget Committee member Amy Kreger said, when she “steps Eagle fi le photo Eagle fi le photo Justice of the Peace Kathy Stinnett addresses the Court May 27. Grant County Sheriff ’s Deputy Dave Dobler. aside” from her role as a committee member and looks at the program from a property owner’s position, it is a position that 100% benefi ts tax- paying property owners. She said the county has a badger and coyote problem and that Lulay would come out and take care of them in the past. “This is the one thing that every edge of the county benefi ts from,” she said. “Maybe one year they don’t need it, maybe one year they do.” Koyle said he believes it looks good on USDA’s side that they could get funding. However, he said, that is a small portion. He said USDA also relies on funding from the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife and counties. Bob Quinton, Budget Commit- tee president, said the county is just getting into the budget and cannot promise anything yet. Ellison asked rancher Jim Doven- burg if he had collected donations from any of the ranchers. He said he had in the past, but he can no longer do so. work” into the job and should not be punished. Dobler puts in 30 hours a week and, with benefi ts, earns roughly $50 per hour. Ellison said he is one of the most expensive deputies within the sheriff ’s offi ce. McKinley said he would like to see $20,000 from the general fund be transferred to the forest patrol fund. McKinley said he would also like to see COVID-19 stimulus money put toward that fund to get back into the black. Emergency Manager Paul Gray told the Eagle Friday that he pro- posed the county put $100,000 of COVID-19 stimulus money into the sheriff ’s offi ce to cover the offi ce’s budget holes. Sheriff ’s offi ce Grant County Sheriff Todd McKinley said he could not speak to why full-time Deputy Dave Dobler had been patrolling the forest when the position was initially supposed to be a part-time job, budgeted at $14 per hour with no benefi ts. However, he said, Dobler puts in “yeoman’s Additionally, McKinley said the Forest Service opened up $8,000 that was not expended in the previ- ous year to kick into this year’s bud- get cycle. McKinley said forest patrol is funded entirely through the For- est Service’s contract. However, he said, Secure Rural Schools Title III funds will also pay for forest patrol, but the hours cannot be charged to both the Forest Service and Title III. He said part of the reason why there is such a shortfall within the sheriff ’s offi ce budget is that the offi ce had not been billing Title III correctly for Dobler’s position. McKinley again emphasized that none of this was Dobler’s fault. McKinley said he would like to get the hole fi xed in this budget cycle because this occurred in the past cycles. Justice Court Justice of the Peace Kathy Stin- nett said cutting a position in her offi ce would inhibit the county’s ability to collect revenue from traf- fi c tickets and other court fi nes. Quinton said the county is left pay- ing out more than the county is bringing in. “We’re back to paying $2,525 a month, and we’re collecting $1,600,” he said. “I’m not pick- ing on you, but that seems to be the reoccurring theme when we look at all of these recurring budgets and general funds.” High cases, low vaccinations risk Grant County summer events Motorcycle rally canceled, other events in limbo By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle Grant County risks missing out on summer events again this year with the highest COVID- 19 infections per capita in Ore- gon and the state’s worst vacci- nation rate. Grant County Fair Manager Mindy Winegar said in an email Thursday that the BMW Rid- ers of Oregon’s Chief Joseph Rally, scheduled in June to take place at the Grant County Fair- grounds, has already canceled. Winegar said the Grant County Fair, scheduled for August, is being planned as usual. “I am still planning as nor- mal,” she said. “I hope we will get this all under control, and we can move forward.” Steve Schulz, executive director of Cycle Oregon, said they put out a “save the date” for the event, which was ten- tatively scheduled Sept. 11-18, Eagle fi le photo Contributed photo/Cycle Oregon The Whiskey Gulch Gang fi res off shots from their fl oat during the 2017 ‘62 Days Parade in Canyon City. Cycle Oregon will decide by May or June whether to hold a large event in Grant County this year. and are in a “wait and see” mode for now. Schulz said Cycle Oregon very much wants to have the event, but all of the counties they go through have to be “on the same page” when it comes to rates of infection and vacci- nation rates. “All the counties are diff er- ent,” he said. “Grant County doesn’t seem to want to get vaccinated.” He said Cycle Oregon would decide by late May or early June whether the event will go on or not. Meanwhile, Colby Farrell of the Whiskey Gulch Gang, which organizes the ‘62 Days Celebration in Canyon City, said some people in Grant County — no matter what — are not going to get the vaccine. Farrell said, if the vaccine is available to anyone who wants it, people should be allowed to choose for themselves whether they should attend large gatherings. “To me, it seems like it should be about personal responsibility and choice at that point,” he said. “Not everybody is going to get the vaccine, no matter how much some peo- ple may want that. It’s just not reality.” Farrell, 45, has lived in Grant County his whole life. He said he had seen commu- nity events come and go by the wayside over the years. From Monument’s Grasshopper Fes- tival to Kam Wah Chung Days in John Day, community events have gone away under normal circumstances. “We don’t want to lose these events,” he said, “especially ones that are unique like ‘62 Days and the demolition derby you won’t really see anywhere else.” Farrell said he rolled up his sleeve to get the vaccine when it was his turn. He said getting the vaccine is a “personal choice” that people need to make for themselves. Farrell said what drove his decision in getting the shot was so that Grant County “could move forward and get back to a sense of normalcy.” “Getting the vaccine — so that we can get back to getting things going like they need to be — outweighed my fear of it,” he said. 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