112TH GRANT COUNTY FAIR ROARS TO LIFE | PAGE A2 Wednesday, August 11, 2021 153rd Year • No. 32 • 14 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com Mad about masks The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Tate Wadell, 10, brushes his steer, ‘Bam Bam.’ He plans to donate the sale proceeds to Blue Mountain Hospital’s Rehabilitation Services Department. Larger service Wadell to donate proceeds from Youth Livestock Auction to hospitals rehabilitation department By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle fi rst-year 4-H’er is living out his pledge to service. Tate Wadell will pay it forward by donating the proceeds of his market steer from the Youth Livestock Auction to Blue Mountain Hospital’s Rehabilita- tion Services Department. Tate was diagnosed with cerebral palsy, and his parents, Wade and Sim- mie Wadell, said because of the hospi- tal’s growing rehabilitation facility with physical therapists with pediatrics expe- rience, they no longer have to make trips to Bend every two weeks. According to the Megan Pass, the hospital’s rehabilitation services man- ager, about 12% of the patients are pedi- atric patients — under 21 — at any given time. She said the hospital is grateful for this idea and everyone who helped make it happen. “Our primary goal in Rehab Ser- vices is to serve all the patients of Grant County, with a specifi c focus in the last several years on bringing in rehab ther- apists that are able to treat the pediatric population,” she said. “These families have so many challenges to overcome, and the best thing we can do is provide the best pediatric physical therapy, occu- pational therapy and speech therapy in our own community.” Wade, a deputy with the Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce, said they want to see the donation to the hospital to ben- efi t other kids and their families. The owners of Pioneer Feed, Old Hickory, Ace Hardware and Helena Agri-Enterprises each pitched in to pay for Tate’s steer. Additionally, Sim- mie said, Associated Feed and Supply, a California-based company, donated the feed. She said 100% of the proceeds would go to the hospital. A See Wadell, Page A14 Parents push back against Gov. Brown’s mandate for masks to be worn in schools By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle Parents railed against Gov. Kate Brown’s decision to mandate masks for students in kindergarten through 12th grades during Grant School District’s Aug. 3 school board meeting. Grant School Superintendent Bret Upt- mor said the governor’s directive went into eff ect on Aug. 2 and would be subject to enforcement on Aug. 12. John Day dentist Dr. James Klusmier read a statement urging the board to resist the mandate. “Over 100 years of our virology informs us that this virus is going to do what it is going to do,” he said. “A mask is not going to stand in its way.” Klusmier said he wears a mask every day at his dental practice and emphasized that he is not “anti-mask.” He said vaccines, natural immunity, handwashing and staying home when sick stem the spread of the virus. Uptmor said the district faces potential consequences for failing to comply with the new state mandate, including Oregon’s Occupational Safety and Health Adminis- tration fi nes, civil penalties, personal lia- bility and teachers putting their licenses at risk. He told the audience that the rule comes from the Oregon Health Authority, not the state’s education department. One of the parents in the audience asked when the board would decide on mask mandates. The person said a group of par- ents would pull their kids out of school if masks would be required in the fall. See Masks, Page A14 The Eagle/Steven Mitchell The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Tate Wadell, 10, walks his steer, Bam Bam. The fi rst-year 4-H’er plans to donate 100% of the proceeds from the sale at the Youth Livestock Auction to Blue Mountain Hospital’s Rehabilitation Services De- partment. John Day dentist Dr. James Klusmier spoke out against a mask mandate for students in schools at a Grant school board meeting Aug. 3. Grant County holds fi rst mandated meeting about joining Idaho Grassroots group leader volunteers to serve on advisory committee By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle Residents met with Grant Coun- ty’s commissioners in a packed county courtroom Aug. 4 to study a plan to fl ip Eastern Oregon counties into Idaho. The meeting came after just over 60% of people who voted in Grant County approved a measure requiring county commissioners to meet three times a year to discuss a proposal to include 18 Oregon counties, includ- ing Grant, as part of Idaho. According to the initiative, the county will meet the fi rst Wednes- day of April, August, and December, The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Sandie Gilson, a leader with Move Or- egon’s Border for Greater Idaho Grant County, during a special meeting of Grant County Court to discuss if it is in the best interest of the county to relo- cate the Oregon-Idaho border. “to discuss whether it is in the best interest of Grant County to promote the relocation of the Oregon-Idaho border.” Shifting the borders would require the approval of both the Oregon and Idaho legislatures and Congress. Sandie Gilson, a county resident and one of the leaders of the grass- roots group Move Oregon’s Bor- der for Greater Idaho Grant County, said Grant is one of seven counties to require county offi cials to study or promote joining Idaho. The others include Wasco, Malheur, Baker, Jef- ferson, Sherman and Union. She said Harney County would vote on the measure in November, and Klamath County voters will see it on their ballots next year in May. Gilson said the idea behind becom- ing a part of Idaho is about having the kind of government they want in the region. She said many issues aff ect many people, whether schools, land use laws or homelessness. One example she mentioned was the Oregon Legislature’s law that mandated that all municipalities, including states, cities and counties, allow homeless camping on public property. Under House Bill 3115, local gov- ernments would be prohibited from making it a crime for people to camp or rest on public property when shel- ters are full and they have nowhere else to go. The bill goes into eff ect in July of 2023. Commissioner Sam Palmer said during the July 28 county court ses- sion that the voters spoke, and he wanted to hear what citizens in the county have to say. Gilson said many people had asked her what would happen to the Oregon Public Employee Retirement System for Oregon’s state employees if they were to become Idaho residents. Gilson said she would be will- See Idaho, Page A14