JOURNEY THROUGH GRANT COUNTY AND BEYOND | INSIDE Wednesday, July 28, 2021 153rd Year • No. 30 • 16 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com Ballots mailed for John Day police levy Five-year tax would fund city police department By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Car No. 12, driven by Josh Pierson of Klamath Falls, crashed into Car No. 29, driven by Rudy Morris of Forest Grove. Demolition derby a destructive delight By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle wo brothers from Idaho placed fi rst and second at the Whiskey Gulch Gang’s Demolition Derby Saturday in front of a packed arena at the Grant County Fairgrounds. Roughly 1,800 turned out to watch Matt and Jake Petero take the top spots in the annual event that was on hiatus last year due to pandemic restrictions, according to Colby Farrel from the Whiskey Gulch Gang. Matt took home $2,000 while Jake earned $1,000. Ed Moulton of Hines took third place and $500. During halftime, Luke Claughton of John Day won the barrel race on his dirt bike, performing a Tanner Morris’ car at the Whiskey Gulch Gang Demolition Derby. wheelie while exiting the arena. Mark Williams of Homedale, Idaho, won the fi rst heat in the wild, smashing start to the derby while Chris Folger, also of Homedale, took the second heat. Moulton took the fi nal heat. The Whiskey Gulch Gang thanked Ace Hardware and John Day True Value for their donations for the drivers’ raffl e and most aggressive driver award. “We appreciate their support every year,” they said. They also thanked the Grant Union High School wrestling team for serving up snow cones and ham- burgers. Additionally, they thanked the Grant County Road Department and Bill Sproul for a water truck and John Day-Canyon City Parks and Recreation for the bleachers. The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Finally, they thanked Iron Triangle and Seth Bar- rietua for using his equipment and all that he does to Luke Claughton of John Day pops a wheelie Saturday on his way out of the Grant County support their events. T Results Heat 1 winner: Mark Williams, Homedale, Idaho Heat 2 winner: Chris Folger, Homedale, Idaho Heat 3 winner: Ed Moulton, Hines Main event First: Matt Petero, Payette, Idaho Second: Jake Petero, Payette, Idaho Third: Ed Moulton, Hines Most aggressive driver Jake Petero Hard luck driver Rudy Morris, Forest Grove Beauty contest winner Josh Pierson, Klamath Falls Half-time barrel racing winner Luke Claughton, John Day Fairgrounds arena after winning the halftime barrel race during the Whiskey Gulch Gang Demolition Derby. The Eagle/Steven Mitchell The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Derby fans await the start of the fi rst heat Saturday at the Grant County Fairgrounds arena. John Day voters will decide whether to approve a tax to keep the city police department next month as ballots go out in the mail today. The John Day City Council April 27 chose to pursue a local option levy of 45-50 cents per $1,000 of assessed property value for fi ve years. A double majority — more than 50% of registered voters need to vote, with more than 50% in favor of passing the measure — will be required. Green said, if the measure does not pass, the department will close, and the remain- ing three police offi cers’ last day of employment with the city will be Aug. 31. The plan would be to consolidate the department with the Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce. The Eagle In the mean- Steven Mitchell time, Green said the city is still A sign in John Day fi scal recruiting for a promotes police chief and responsibility and is still interview- states the city of ing chief candi- John Day should dates to replace amend its budget outgoing John to maintain its po- Day Police Chief lice department, Mike Durr, who rather than try for is retiring in Sep- a tax levy. tember should the levy pass. Green said the city has applied for a Community Oriented Policing Ser- vices grant through the Department of Homeland Security to fund the depart- ment $125,000 a year for three years. He said it is three times the amount they are asking residents to pay to off - set operating costs. Green said the city would not know if the grant is approved until roughly October. Green said they will not make plans to transition anything until they know the outcome of the cops grant because that would allow the city to rehire the laid-off employees at the police department. Arguments for the police levy both of which Robertson submitted electronically. The Eagle obtained both emails. However, neither Kreger nor com- mittee members Rob Stewart and Bob Quinton appear to be on either of the email threads. Robertson emailed the Farm John Day City Manager Nick Green said the most salient argument for the levy would be to have additional pub- lic safety in the community and more responsiveness from law enforcement. Grant County Sheriff Todd McKin- ley told the Eagle in April that the level of service currently provided in John Day would decrease. “It would be essentially what we’re doing for those other cities, which are emergent calls only,” McKinley said. “There won’t be anybody in the inter- section changing the tire. There won’t be a person showing up on the doorstep when there’s a call... Your service level is going to drop signifi cantly.” According to Green, cities that have outsourced their law enforcement tend to complain about a lack of responsive- ness from law enforcement offi cials. “That is what you would proba- bly hear if you talked to residents in any of our Grant County communi- ties,” he said. “But you also hear it from places like Lakeview and other com- munities that have outsourced their departments.” Green said the decision tends to put the community in a position where they do not have many measures to enforce accountability other than pulling their contracts. Green said, though it’s taxpay- er-funded, the police department does contribute to local employment. He said they are local jobs for residents that know the community. Additionally, Green said the stu- dent resource offi cer with the John Day Police Department works directly with business owners, giving them the See Control, Page A16 See Ballots, Page A16 The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Car No. 46, driven by derby winner Jake Petero, of Payette, Idaho, smashes into a car Saturday in the arena of the Grant County Fairgrounds during the Whiskey Gulch Gang Demolition Derby. Farm Bureau clarifi es position on predator control Budget Committee members say they misspoke By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle Members from the Grant County Budget Committee said they mis- spoke when they said the Grant County Farm Bureau would help the county establish a taxing district to fund a predator control program. In a May 19 budget session, com- mittee member Amy Kreger and County Commissioner Jim Hamsher said the Farm Bureau would do the work to establish a taxing district if the county would make a commit- ment to the fund predator control program for two years, as confi rmed by the Eagle’s recording. The committee decided to budget $35,000 for the program. In a June 15 email, Shaun Rob- ertson, Grant County Farm Bureau president, said the Farm Bureau had not contacted the county with a pro- posal to create a taxing district to support the program. He said that would require a vote from the Farm Bureau board of directors. Hamsher said it was his mistake to say the Farm Bureau would sup- port the taxing district. Kreger told the Eagle that she discussed taxing with Hamsher and County Commissioner Sam Palmer in earlier budget meetings. Still, she said she thought the information had come from USDA Wildlife Services District Supervisor Shane Koyle, not the Farm Bureau. She said her comments might have come out wrong. “Maybe I said it wrong because I was over the meetings at that point in time.” she said. “If I misspoke, I mis- spoke. I am going to own it.” Hamsher said it was a “big misunderstanding.” He said he confused Robert- son’s testimony on April 29 with his April 14 Farm Bureau testimony — Eagle fi le photo County Commissioner Jim Hamsher