NEWS MyEagleNews.com Wednesday, October 6, 2021 A3 Pot shops could move into John Day By STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle PUBLIC HEARING JOHN DAY — The John Day Planning Commission will review con- ditional use permits for two retail pot shops on Wednesday, Oct. 6. Haley Olson, whose family owns Rocky Mountain Dispensary, told the Eagle that she plans to relocate to 743 West Street, inside the city limits near Timbers Bistro. Rocky Mountain Dispensary, the county’s only cannabis dispensary, began selling medical marijuana in 2016. Olson said the existing location, which is just outside the John Day city limits, would convert to a distribution and processing center. Olson said currently, recreational sales make up 80% of her business while medical marijuana accounts for 20%. However, she said over the years the ratio has fl uctuated because she and her staff encourage people who might qualify for a medical card to get one. She said the up-front cost in Oregon to get a medicinal marijuana card is $400. Most people are unwilling to cough up that expense, she said, but they end up paying on the back end by way of a 20% sales tax on recreational cannabis. She said the distribution center could move a variety of cannabis products from larger vendors from diff erent parts The John Day Planning Com- mission will meet at 6 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 6, in the city fi re station to consider conditional use permits for two marijuana businesses and other matters. The meeting is open to the public but can also be accessed virtually via Go-to-Meeting at this link: https://global.gotomeet- ing.com/join/891173869. Steven Mitchell/Blue Mountain Eagle Cindy Kidd (left) Haley Olson, owners of Rocky Mountain Dispensary could be relocating their retail marijuana dispensary to John Day should the John Day planning commission approve a conditional use permit. of the state. Such operations are heav- ily regulated by the Oregon Liquor & Cannabis Commission, Olson said. The OLCC requires, among other things, that producers store cannabis in secure locations with security cameras. With a three-year backlog on licens- ing in the state, Olson is seeking a change in location instead of getting a new license. Olson said she hopes to open at the new location in the winter of 2022, but the timeline could change as OLCC has a multi-step inspection and licensing process. Burnt River Farms The Planning Commission will also review an application for a con- ditional use permit from the canna- bis company Burnt River Farms to open a pot shop at 518 S. Canyon Blvd., Heart of Grant County’s for- mer location. The company, headquartered in Huntington and Baker County, also owns a dispensary in Ontario and a farm in Huntington. According to the conditional-use application, the two-story, 750-square- foot building would operate the store People can also dial in by phone at 1 (786) 535-3211, access code 891-173-869. on the bottom fl oor. The application lists Mahogany Ridge Properties as the owner of the location. Representatives of Burnt River Farms did not immediately respond to the Eagle’s request for comment. Cannabis in Grant County The Grant County Court banned weed in the county’s cities in 2015 after 56% of voters in Oregon passed Mea- sure 91, allowing recreational marijuana businesses. An initiative to overturn the ban was narrowly defeated in May 2016, by 1,689 to 1,469 votes. In Sep- tember of 2016, the county amended the ban to allow registered patients to pur- chase medical marijuana. In May of 2018, voters repealed the ban by an almost identical mar- gin, with 1,687 voting to repeal and 1,492 voting to keep the ban in place. Both attempts to overturn the ban were led by Olson and her mother, Cindy Kidd. “Our family literally began knocking on doors,” Kidd said, “and we got out into the community and got people on board.” Kidd said that Olson’s father had cancer, and at the time there were no medical marijuana providers in East- ern Oregon. She said there was a need for medical marijuana, and they opened Rocky Mountain Dispensary just outside the John Day city limits in 2017. In the beginning, they aver- aged fi ve customers a day. Kidd said it was exciting for her and Olson, and the dispensary served a purpose. They invested in a grow room after voters passed the statewide measure to legalize recreational pot, but then the county passed an ordi- nance to ban weed sales inside incor- porated communities. “In order for us to grow,” Olson said, “we were going to have to move or change our local rule. We thought, ‘Well, we’re just gonna try to change the local rule.’” Auction and concert to help local man By STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY — Grant County residents are rallying around a beloved local business owner and longtime resident stricken with an ailment that has bounced him in and out of the hospital since January. A dinner and auction to ben- efi t Tracy Moss will be held on Oct. 22 in the Trowbridge Pavilion of the Grant County Fairgrounds in John Day. Moss, the owner of Rus- sell’s Custom Meats in Canyon City, has long suff ered from a blood infection caused by a bul- let that has been lodged in his back since a shooting incident when he was 15, according to his wife, Kathy. Kathy Moss said the con- dition did not become severe until 2008 after Moss stubbed a toe and doctors amputated it because the infection had spread to the bone. About 10 years ago, the condition fl ared up again and Tracy spent three months in the hospital. When he came out of the hospital, Kathy said, the busy couple processed 400 game animals that hunting season on top of their agricul- tural work. Russell’s Custom Meats, a Grant County staple, has been the go-to place for local and out- of-town hunters to take their big game animals for processing for decades. But Tracy and Kathy HOW TO HELP The benefi t concert and auction for Tracy Moss, which aslo includes a pulled-pork dinner, begins at 5:30 p.m. Oct. 22 in the Trowbridge Pavilion at the Grant County Fairgrounds in John Day. Admission is by donation. Monetary donations to help with Tracy Moss’s medical expenses can be made at the Bank of Eastern Oregon. Contributed photo Tracy and Kathy Moss, own- ers of Russell’s Custom Meats. Moss are not only known as local business owners. Nancy Hitz, a longtime friend of the couple and organizer of the ben- efi t, told the Eagle that Tracy and Kathy are always the fi rst to step up for local causes and community fundraisers. Hitz, who said she regards the couple as family, told the Eagle that while people some- times run in large social circles, at the center of those circles is a small number of core relation- ships. Tracy and Kathy Moss, she said, are at the heart of her center and have been for more than two decades. There’s no doubt that Tra- cy’s illness has put a strain on the couple’s business. But according to Kathy, at a time when many employers are struggling to hire enough staff to maintain regular hours, Rus- sell’s employees are essentially running the business and have been for months now. Tracy’s most recent fl are-up started in January and has seen him hospitalized several times. At the end of August, Kathy said, there was nothing more Blue Mountain Hospital could do for Tracy and he was fl own by Life Flight helicopter to St. Charles Medical Center in Bend for further treatment. Kathy said she would get up, spend four hours at Rus- sell’s, drive to Bend, spend two or three hours at the hos- pital, drive back home to John Day, and then get up and do it again the next morning. But as Tracy’s condition worsened and he lost the ability to communi- cate, get around and feed him- self, she needed to spend all her waking hours looking after her husband. At that point, she said, Rus- sell’s was going to have to close unless the employees could handle all the day-to-day oper- ations by themselves. They chose to step up, she said. “If it wasn’t for (commu- nity support) and my employ- ees,” Kathy said, “I would not be talking to you coherently today. There comes a point in life where you have to do what you have to do, but it does take a village.” Benefi t concert and auction Hitz said the benefi t has come together better than she could have imagined. Singer-songwriter Brenn Hill and Andy Nelson, a cowboy poet and humor- ist, are currently touring in Utah and immediately agreed to make the trek to Grant County to perform at the benefit. Hitz said donations for the auction have poured in and include everything from an African safari to beef from the Crown Ranch Cat- tle Co. She said the orga- nizers have a lengthy list of donations from business owners across the globe. The event will begin with a pulled pork dinner from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m., followed by the auction and concert. Admission is by donation. Showing Movies Since 1940! 1809 1st Street • Baker City  October 8-14  NO TIME TO DIE (PG-13) Friday 3:50, 7:15 Sat & Sun 12:30, 3:50, 7:15 Mon-Thurs 6:45 VENOM (PG-13) Friday 4:10, 7:45 Sat & Sun 1:00, 4:10, 7:45 Mon-Thurs 7:10 ADDAMS FAMILY 2 (PG) Friday 4:20, 7:30 Sat & Sun 1:10, 4:20, 7:30 Mon-Thurs 7:20 **SHOWTIMES SUBJECT TO CHANGE. VISIT OUR WEBSITE OR CALL AHEAD TO VERIFY** S262612-1 www.eltrym.com (541) 523-2522 29 th Annual Carrie Young Memorial Silent Auction & Dinner John Day Elks Lodge Friday, December 3, 2021 Doors open at 5:30 Proceeds benefit several assisted-living facilities and home-bound seniors throughout Grant County. This project was supported by Grant No. 2019-WR-AX-0027 awarded by the office on Violence Against Women, U.S. Department of Justice. The opinions, findings, conclusions, and recommendations expressed in this publication/program/exhibition are those of the author(s) and do not necesssarily reflect the views of the Department of Justice, Office on Violence Against Women. Heart of Grant County 541-620-1342 Grant County Victim Assistance Program 541-575-4026 S263261-1 If you would like more information or would like to help, call me or drop donations at A Flower Shop N More - my number is 541-620-2098 - mailing address is PO Box 192, John Day. We will accept items for the auction or monetary do- nations. We will accept donations up to Nov 10th. This year the event is on Dec 3rd at the John Day Elks Lodge S261926-1