BLACK BUTTE FIRE GROWS TO 20,000 ACRES | PAGE A5 Wednesday, August 18, 2021 153rd Year • No. 33 • 14 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com The Eagle/Steven Mitchell MadiLyne Cearns, 11, of Prai- rie City poses with her sheep. Cearns earned a blue ribbon. The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Jonathan Leighty, 12, of Prairie City poses with his sheep. Steven Mitchell/Blue Mountain Eagle Samantha Adams-Choate, 18, of Monument won the Grand Champion in Showmanship. The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Tate Waddel, front, and Simmie Waddel with his market steer. Youth Livestock Auction raises more than $500,000 By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle T The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Buyers Nick and Amy Stiner pose at the Youth Livestock Auction. he Grant County Fair Youth Livestock Auction netted upwards of $500,000, more than $200,000 over last year. Shannon Springer, Grant County Auction Committee treasurer, said while she does not know if this year’s number broke a record, she said this was the most money the auction has brought in since she has been on the committee. Scott Offi cer, who awards a stu- dent in 4-H or FFA with the Delly Offi - cer Memorial for courtesy and sports- manship, presented the award to Parker Manitsas. Offi cer said Manitsas was nominated three times for the honor. Offi cer said a three-person panel interviews each nominee. Typically, he said it is a four-person panel, but this year it was three. The winner is usually presented with a pocket knife and a tro- phy with a hunter safety message, but he could not order it this year. So Manitsas was presented with the award. Offi cer said the award is in memory The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Scott Offi cer, left, presents Parker Manitsas with the ‘Delley Offi cer Award.’ of his “brother and best friend” Delly, who was accidentally shot by a hunter in 1984. Springer shared a summary of the number of animals sold and the total dol- lar amount the auction brought in. 2016: 106 animals, $170,010.30 2017: 122, $198,895.56 2018: 115, $220,204.40 2019: 118, $277,564.50 2020: 114, $302,623.50 2021: 126, $505,545.00 See Auction Page A14 The Eagle/Steven Mitchell From left, Scott Offi cer, Parker Manitsas, Emma Lynne Northway and Treyton Brown. A roaring-good parade Grant County Fair parade rolls through John Day By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Old West Federal Credit Union’s fl oat trots along Saturday during the Grant County Fair parade. It was a “rip-roaring good time” Saturday as horses, kids and many others made their way through downtown John Day for the Grant County Fair parade. The parade left from Grant Union High School at 11 a.m. and made its way down Canyon Bou- levard to Main Street, and ended at Chester’s Thriftway, Grant County Sheriff Todd McKinley led the convoy with the stars and stripes fl apping in the wind on the right side of his rig with his lights fl ashing. Grant County Fair grand mar- shal Bonnie Nance soon followed in a cattle truck driven by the fair board. Various businesses, organiza- tions and groups participated in the parade. A few fl oats and participants protested Gov. Kate Brown’s recent pandemic restrictions, hold- ing up signs reading “Freedom not Force,” “Media is the virus” and other anti-masking messages. The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Dirt bike riders of all age roll through the parade Saturday. DELTA BLUES School offi cials, teachers and parents call on county to fi ght for local control By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle Grant County parents and school district offi cials continued to push back against Gov. Kate Brown’s mask mandate for students and staff in schools during the Aug. 11 session of Grant County Court. Based on Centers for Disease Con- trol recommendations, the governor’s mandate responded to the highly con- tagious delta variant of coronavirus. Like many district leaders across Oregon, Prairie City School District Superintendent Casey Hallgarth was frustrated and puzzled about why the state stripped the district of local con- trol seemingly out of nowhere. “Why are we starting back at Ground Zero?” Hallgarth said. “Why is it a top-down decision?” The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Casey Hallgarth, Prairie City School District Superintendent, at Grant County Court Aug. 11. Hallgarth said last year he and the district would base their decisions on the data and said they have a good relationship with the county’s health department. Hallgarth said Prairie City School District never had a large outbreak last year and leaned on the health depart- ment for guidance. He said the district is frustrated and supports those who choose to wear a face covering and supports those who do not want to wear one. And, Hall- garth noted, he made that “perfectly clear.” “It should be a choice, though,” he said. “And that’s where we stand at the school.” Concerned parents Ryan Courtney told the court that he and his wife have been home- schooling their two kids and had intended on sending them to in-per- son classes in the fall, but now, after Brown’s announcement face cover- ings would be mandated, he and many parents that could not be at county court are having second thoughts unless they see pushback against the “continued madness” from the state. Courtney said he hoped to gain the court’s support in getting local control decision-making back to the districts and out of the hands of the state. “We have smart administrators who have been working tirelessly with their staff , school boards, and parents to create an atmosphere where kids want to learn and want to come to school, but still provide for COVID safety,” Courtney said. Hamsher told Courtney that the Eastern Oregon Counties Association, which represents more than 10 coun- ties, would be sending a letter that Grant County signed to ask for local control of school districts. County Judge Scott Myers told See Masks, Page A14