GRANT UNION TAKES TOP SPOT AT HOME GOLF TOURNEY| PAGE A9 Wednesday, May 19, 2021 153nd Year • No. 20 • 16 Pages • $1.50 Residents voice opinions against COVID-19 mandates MyEagleNews.com First wolf kill of livestock confi rmed in Grant County ODFW: One kill confi rmed, one probable By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Athena Moline tells John Day Mayor Ron Lundbom to read the Constitution at a town hall event May 12 in John Day. 200 people attended and voted almost unanimously to declare a crisis due to lockdowns By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle T wo hundred people attended a town hall at the Grant County Fairgrounds April 12 to express their frustrations with statewide lockdown measures to mitigate the spread of COVID-19. Dubbed a “non-partisan eff ort,” the event organizers stated in a mailer their goal was to let the county’s elected offi cials know where the community stood on Gov. Kate Brown’s COVID-19 mandates. Of particular concern were orders to wear masks in most settings. However, Brown announced Thursday after this event that the state no longer requires fully vaccinated Ore- gonians to wear masks in public. Almost unanimously, the crowd voted for Grant County’s commissioners to adopt Baker City’s Resolution No. 3881, which calls for the declaration of an economic, mental health and crime crisis due to the governor’s COVID-19- related lockdowns and state of emergency. Organizer Bill Newman said the resolution, in his view, does not have enough teeth, but will carry more weight as an offi cial position. “From the bottom of my heart,” he said. “I think it’s the right thing to do.” A Fox Valley rancher became the fi rst rancher in Grant County to lose livestock to a confi rmed wolf depreda- tion this month. An Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife report confi rmed Thursday that wolves killed a cow in the early morning hours of May 8 within the Northside area of known wolf activity. “The location of injuries and sever- ity of trauma was similar to other con- fi rmed wolf attack injuries on cattle,” the report states. The report noted that multiple bite marks and severe mus- cle trauma were present on the upper thighs of both hind legs, groin and left elbow. ODFW investigated fi ve cow car- casses at a ranch in Fox Valley. While the report confi rmed that one of the cows had been killed by wolves, ODFW offi cials deemed another death as a “probable” wolf attack and two as “possible” wolf attacks. The cause of the fi fth death “is unknown, but was not wolf-related,” the report states. In the killing that was determined as “probable,” the report stated that trauma to the hind legs and elbows was similar to other confi rmed wolf attacks. However, the report said the “severity and size” of the wounds did not have signifi cant bite marks and scrapes like those of a wolf. “The scrape marks and associated trauma to the front right elbow indicate a predator attack but lack evidence to conclude wolf,” the report reads. The report notes that, because wolves killed livestock in the same pasture, they determined that wolves could have killed that one. The report stated the “possible” See Wolf kill, Page A16 The Eagle/Steven Mitchell John Day Mayor Ron Lundbom, left, listens as Monument resident Bill Newman addresses the crowd May 12 at the Grant County Fairgrounds. Frustrations According to a mailer that went out to all of Grant County, it is unfair to expect the coun- ty’s elected offi cials to deal with the COVID- 19 mandates without the county’s citizens tak- ing a stand and voicing their opinions. Those in attendance voiced their con- cerns about the mask mandates and what, in their view, was “tyrannical overreach” from the Oregon Occupational Safety and Health Administration and by people who have turned in small businesses to the regulatory agency for not enforcing the state’s masking mandates. Newman said there is nothing worse than turning in small businesses for not making their customers wear masks. Contributed photo See Protest, Page A16 A dead cow found Saturday, May 8, on Roy Vardenaga’s Fox Valley ranch. Anti-animal ag initiative raises alarm among farm groups Initiative Petition 13 would strip away most protections for livestock producers under state’s animal abuse laws By George Plaven EO Media Group Animal agriculture could soon be considered animal cruelty under a pro- posed ballot measure in Oregon. Farm groups are pushing back against Initiative Petition 13, which would strip away most protections for livestock producers under the state’s animal abuse laws. The result would eff ectively crim- inalize everything from slaughtering livestock to basic animal husbandry, including branding and dehorn- ing cattle, castrating bulls and dock- ing horses, sheep and pigs, said Mary Anne Cooper, vice president of public policy for the Oregon Farm Bureau. The initiative also seeks to re-clas- sify livestock breeding and artifi cial insemination as sexual assault of an animal — a Class C felony. “It’s a very diff erent tack than we have ever seen before,” Cooper said. “Basically, they’re looking to ban any- thing with animals that is not doctoring.” Initiative Petition 13 was fi led Nov. 2, 2020, with the Oregon Secretary of State’s offi ce. The chief petitioner is David Michelson, a Portland animal rights activist. A similar proposal, called the Pro- tect Animals from Unnecessary Suf- fering and Exploitation, or PAUSE, Act is also being pursued in Colorado. EOMG fi le photo See Anti-ag, Page A16 An initiative being circulated targets animal agriculture, hunting, rodeos and wildlife management, among other activities.