JOHN DAY NATIVE IMPROVES IN NATIONAL EVENT | PAGE A9 KATE PAGE Wednesday, August 4, 2021 153rd Year • No. 31 • 14 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com City responds to criticism over police levy proposal Opposition argues city should close greenhouse, lay off an offi cer By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle Contributed photo/U.S. Forest Service The 2015 Canyon Creek Complex fi re. Fire danger heats up Conditions far drier than 2015, when Canyon Creek Complex destroyed over 40 homes By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle C onditions on the Malheur National For- est are vastly drier than before the Can- yon Creek Complex fi re of 2015 that destroyed over 40 homes. In 2015, July rainfall was 1.35 inches, but this year it was only 0.12 inches. Average July temperatures were 10 degrees hotter than they were in 2015. Average July humidity was 23% in 2015 but only 16% this year. Given the extreme drought conditions of historic proportions, the Malheur requested the assistance of the National Wild- fi re Prevention Education Team to let the public know how serious wildfi re risks are in the national forest. Malheur National Forest Supervi- sor Craig Trulock said 2021 is turn- ing out to be an “extraordinary year” Craig Trulock when it comes to wildfi re risk. With the forest in its most restric- tive public use restrictions, the idea of bringing in the prevention team was to “up” their messaging and communicate to the public the tinderbox of fuels in the forest that, if ignited by a moment of carelessness, could be disastrous. Resources are stretched thin with wildfi res tearing through the west, including the Bootleg Fire in South- ern Oregon, which continues to be the largest in the U.S. Trulock told the Eagle the likelihood of closing the forest — which the Umatilla National Forest has already done — is all dependent on signifi cant fi re activity. Trulock said, if the Malheur does not see a sharp increase in fi re activity, the forest has a good 2015 COMPARED TO 2021 Conditions on the Malheur National Forest were far drier in July than in 2015 when the Canyon Creek Complex destroyed over 40 homes. July: 2015 2021 Rainfall: 1.35 inches 0.12 inches Average temp: 77 degrees 87 degrees Average humidity: 23% 16% Fuel moisture: 7% 5% Citizens express concerns chance of remaining open. “Bringing on the prevention team is all about try- ing to keep us open,” he said. “We want to keep peo- ple out there using the forest, but we want them to do it in a very responsible manner.” Precautions and evacuation Evacuations in Grant County fall under Sheriff Todd McKinley. After watching Prairie City avoid a fast-moving moving fi re last month, mainly due to favorable wind conditions and speedy response from fi re crews, McKinley told the Eagle every resident in the county needs to have an evacuation plan. McKinley said, in addition to preparing for evac- uation, he advises people to take simple steps around their homes that too often go overlooked but can make all the diff erence when a fi re hits. See Fire, Page A14 File photo Clinton Shaver, with the Molalla Rural Fire District, watches as a tree goes up in fl ames on the Canyon Creek Complex south of John Day in 2015. ODFW employees kill two wolf pups Five attacks confi rmed since mid-July By Jayson Jacoby EO Media Group Employees from the Oregon Depart- ment of Fish and Wildlife, fi ring rifl es from a helicopter, shot and killed two wolf pups from the Lookout Mountain pack on Sunday. On Thursday, the agency’s director authorized either ODFW employees, or a Baker County ranching couple or their designated agents, to kill up to four sub- adult wolves from that pack, which has attacked their cattle at least fi ve times since mid-July. ODFW biologists have confi rmed the fi ve attacks by wolves from the Lookout Mountain pack, which consists of an estimated nine wolves, but poten- tially as many as 11. The attacks all happened northeast of Local offi cials faced criti- cism from people who oppose a proposal for a temporary tax levy to fund the John Day Police Department in a town hall July 27 at the Grant County Fairgrounds. The meeting, moder- ated by Seneca rancher Jack Southworth and attended by roughly 40 people, prioritized questions and comments sur- rounding the city’s fi ve-year proposed tax levy of 45-50 cents per $1,000 of assessed p r o p - erty value for police funding. A l o n g with John Day City Manager Nick Green Frances and Mayor Preston Ron Lund- bom, City Councilors Heather Rookstoool, Elliot Sky, Paul Smith and Dave Holland took questions during a wide-rang- ing session after ballots for the levy special election arrived in mailboxes last week. Contributed photo/Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife A trail cam photo from May 30 of one of the two yearling wolves in the Lookout Mountain pack. Durkee, generally in the Manning Creek area east of Lookout Mountain. The two wolves killed Sunday are 3 1/2-month-old pups, accord- ing to Michelle Dennehy, an ODFW spokesperson. The agency confi rmed earlier this year that the pack’s breeding female and male — neither of which can be killed under the permit issued Thursday — produced a litter of seven pups this year. During the helicopter fl ight on Sun- day, ODFW employees saw at least fi ve pups and the two adults, Dennehy said. They didn’t see either of the two year- lings wolves, which were born in the spring of 2020. ODFW employees and the ranchers, Deward and Kathy Thompson, also tried to fi nd the wolves on Friday, but they saw only the two adult wolves, both of which have tracking collars. The permit issued Thursday is valid through Aug. 21, or until up to four wolves have been killed, whichever happens fi rst. Dennehy said the permit is intended to stop chronic attacks by wolves on livestock “by reducing the pack’s food See Wolves, Page A14 While the decision on the levy rests only with John Day voters, members of surround- ing communities also pro- vided feedback. “It’s all about principle,” Prairie City resident Frances Preston said. “Everyone in Grant County has an opinion on this.” She said the city should have made the police depart- ment a priority a long time ago. Now, she said, the city has created a scenario where they can put the blame on those who vote against the police levy as those who chose to do away with the police department. Preston handed out fl yers at the meeting that listed sev- eral concerns. Preston said Bob Pereira came up with the lion’s share of the content in the fl yer, but others contrib- uted as well. Instead of a tax, they pro- posed two alternatives to keep the city’s police force. The fi rst, which they said does not fi t the city’s “narra- tive,” would be to close John Day’s greenhouse. The other, they say, would be to lay off one of the department’s patrol offi cers. Lay off a patrol offi cer They argued that laying off one patrol offi cer would give the department a surplus. However, John Day resi- dent Darrin Toy asked Police Chief Mike Durr what eff ect laying off one patrol offi - cer would have on the police department. Durr said, including himself, the police depart- ment has four patrol offi - cers. He said operating with See Levy, Page A14