CONGRATULATIONS, GRANT UNION 2021 GRADUATES! | PAGES B1-2, B9-10 Wednesday, June 9, 2021 153nd Year • No. 23 • 20 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com The centennial ’62 Days Celebration Eagle fi le photo Can-can girls dance in the ‘62 Days Parade in Canyon City in 2017. Event marking discovery of gold in Canyon City in 1862 celebrates 100th year City’s unique and colorful history will be on display. Colby Farrell, of the Whiskey Gulch rant County’s ’62 Days Cel- Gang that organizes the celebration, said ebration will mark its 100th historical events like ’62 Days are essen- year when the two-day fes- tial in educating younger generations tival about the rich his- kicks tory of Canyon off June 11 at Sels City. Brewery in Can- Farrell said yon City. keeping the The event, “spirit of 1862” which marks the alive by dressing discovery of gold up in costumes in Canyon City from the mid- in 1862, will fea- 1800s and reen- ture vendors on acting shootouts both nights of the and hangings in Contributed photo/Whiskey Gulch Gang the town square is festival. With a parade, The Whiskey Gulch Gang fi res off their cannon about having fun a mock gun fight, in the early 1960s. and remembering a mock hanging in how Grant County the town square, gold came to be — the panning lessons for kids, the 5K Gold discovery of gold in Canyon City. Rush Run and Walk and a cornhole tour- See ‘62 Days, Page A10 nament, the “spirit of 1862” and Canyon By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle G Jack Young to lead ’62 Days Celebration parade McDaniel, Young said, left the com- pany a short time later, and he went on to run the business for over two As Canyon City’s ’62 Days Cele- decades. His youngest son, Russ bration turns 100 years old this week, Young, now runs the business. the event organizers tapped longtime He said Russ had done more with Grant County resident Jack the company than he ever Young to be the parade’s did during his tenure. Iron grand marshal. Triangle started as a lum- Heading up a parade will ber and road construction not be Young’s fi rst rodeo. business, Jack said. He said He and his late wife, Mer- Russ expanded the compa- ilee, served as the grand mar- ny’s reach into oil, restau- shals of the Grant County rants, convenience stores and Jack Young Fair parade in 1999. several properties across the Young and his late wife’s infl u- county. Moreover, Jack said Russ car- ence on the county is far-reaching. ried on the spirit of giving back to the He and former partner Doug community. McDaniel founded Grant Coun- See Young, Page A10 ty-based Iron Triangle in 1982. By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle Employers: Extra unemployment causing labor shortage Economist: Grant County has lowest labor force participation rate in Eastern Oregon By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle As employers in Grant County and across the state scramble to fi ll jobs, some blame the $300 per week sup- plemental unemployment ben- efi t for keeping Oregonians from going back to work. A group of Eastern Oregon elected offi cials that included County Commissioner Jim Hamsher penned a May 25 let- ter to Gov. Kate Brown urg- ing her to end the federal ben- efi ts program for unemployed Oregonians. “Current unemployment recipients, especially those receiving additional federal unemployment benefi ts, are choosing to stay home rather than look for work,” the letter reads. While the Oregon Depart- ment of Employment announced last month that it would resume work search requirements, which had been suspended because of the pan- demic, Oregon does not appear to have any intention of end- ing the supplemental fed- eral unemployment before its scheduled end in September. So far, nearly 25 states — all with Republican gov- ernors — ended the weekly payments. Bill Wyllie Impact on local employers Chester’s Thriftway Opera- tions Manager Bill Wyllie said the company boosted its start- ing wage to $15 per hour, up from $13.50, in John Day and its two other locations June 6. Department managers were bumped up to $20-25 per hour and supervisors to $16-20 per hour. He said the company decided on the wage hike after seeing a drop in applicants in mid-January and early Feb- ruary. Wyllie said the wage increase, coupled with paid vacation, health and dental insurance is intended attract workers. Wyllie said the company received about seven appli- cations in the month of May, and they have already received seven applications in June after announcing the increase. Wyllie said the wage hike comes as infl ation contin- ues to raise prices on virtually everything. “We’re seeing an infl ation rate beyond anything I’ve seen in a long time,” he said. According to the United Nations’ food price index, international food prices rose for the 12th consecutive month in May, up nearly 40%. The labor shortage for restaurant owners follows a tumultuous year as they adjusted to ever-changing shutdowns, slowdowns and restrictions. Brian Hubbard, the owner of both Grubsteak Restaurant and the Ugly Truth Bar and Grill, said a wage increase would get passed on to the customer. He said price increases are more burdensome in rural communities than in more densely populated areas with more money fl owing into the local economies. See Labor, Page A10