NEWS MyEagleNews.com Wednesday, December 8, 2021 A3 County asks lawmakers Paving work adds trail link to take up border move By BENNETT HALL Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY — Contrac- tors last week completed a small but signifi cant piece of the emerging John Day trail network. A paving crew from Tide- water Contractors, working for general contractor Iron Triangle, put down a layer of asphalt on a short segment of trail from Hill Family Park to the Seventh Street Complex by way of the new pedestrian and bicycle bridge over the John Day River. The paved trail segment provides off -street access from the south side of the river to the Seventh Street Complex, which has a paved walking path of its own. The 23-acre property houses baseball and softball fi elds, pickleball, ten- nis and basketball courts, a fi shing pond, children’s play area, a skatepark and a bike park. It is also the site of a pro- posed new swimming pool. While that connection is already providing benefi ts to local residents, the short rib- bon of asphalt can also be seen as a key link in the city’s plan for a future trail system. Parts of that system are already beginning to take shape. From the bridge, an unpaved trail heads west along the north bank of the river. So far, the trail has been roughed out for only a short distance, but plans call for it to be graded and rocked as far as Patterson Bridge Road by June 30. It will also connect with the existing trail network at Davis Creek Park, giving the Charolais Heights neigh- borhood a link to the river- front trail. A good deal of work remains to be done at Hill Family Park, but the parking lot has been paved, restrooms are under construction and a fresh crop of grass is grow- ing. Eventually, a footpath will circle the park, and the city is negotiating with prop- gress. Findley told the Eagle last month during an editorial meeting that the move would be a “heavy lift.” However, Find- On Wednesday, Dec. 1, Grant County ley said he would bring it to the Senate Court members agreed to send state law- floor on behalf of his constituents. makers a letter requesting they bring an Rick LaMountain, a Mt. Vernon resi- initiative to the Legislature that proposes dent, pointed out that it benefits the group moving a large chunk of Oregon into to see the big picture of rural Oregonians’ Idaho. effort to join Idaho within the broader, The plan’s backers believe national political framework. that rural Oregon would fare LaMountain said intel- better in reliably red Idaho. ligent, informed people are Mike McCarter, president becoming convinced that of Move Oregon’s Border, the social and political upheaval grassroots group behind the has brought the country to border shift, said the liberal a tipping point over the last supermajority in Salem has long year. America, LaMountain left conservative Oregonians said, may no longer be a via- behind. ble and functioning polity like “They’ve got a freight train it was before. agenda that focuses on North- LaMountain cited an west Oregon,” McCarter said, excerpt from a book titled “and the heck with rural Ore- “The Stakes: America at gon. If they have already let us the Point of No Return” by Steven Mitchell Michael Anton, writer and for- go, then hey, let us become part Blue Mountain Eagle mer national security official of Idaho.” McCarter told the court that Sandie Gilson, a key in the Trump administration. the group believes rural Oregon backer of the idea to While Anton paints a bleak is better aligned politically with move a large chunk of and pessimistic picture of the residents of Idaho than people Oregon to Idaho, ad- country’s future, LaMountain dresses the Grant Coun- said, he also offers an optimis- in Northwest Oregon. The court’s letters will go to ty Court Wednesday. tic solution. Allow counties, Sen. Lynne Findley, R-Vale, and cities and towns unhappy with Rep. Mark Owens, R-Crane, as their state governments to join an official request to begin the one another. discussion at the state level. Anton’s book notes that Those discussions have there are examples in his- already started at the local level. tory and around the world of Grant is one of eight coun- countries redrawing inter- ties to require county officials nal lines to suit shifts in pop- to study or promote joining ulation and interests, accord- Idaho. The others are Harney, ing to LaMountain. Not only Wasco, Malheur, Baker, Jeffer- would these population shifts son, Sherman and Union. improve civic harmony, Wednesday’s meeting was Anton argues, but they also one of three meetings the county would extend the life of the commissioners are required to republic. conduct each year. “For our county and others Under terms of the initiative in Eastern Oregon,” LaMoun- voters passed in May, the county tain said, “the move to Idaho Steven Mitchell will meet the first Wednesday of might not only help us in the Blue Mountain Eagle April, August and December “to near term, but provide the LaMountain impetus for a new endur- discuss whether it is in the best Rick interest of Grant County to pro- addresses the Grant ing political template that mote the relocation of the Ore- County Court. enhances local autonomy and gon-Idaho border.” popular sovereignty and could Shifting the borders would make America as a whole a less require the approval of both the Oregon polarized, longer-lasting and more peace- and Idaho legislatures as well as Con- ful country.” By STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle Bennett Hall/Blue Mountain Eagle A paving crew from Tidewater Contractors works on a new path linking Hill Family Park to the Seventh Street Sports Complex in John Day. From left are Lee Duckett, Lorin Hodge and Scott Fitzhugh. erty owners to try and secure right of way for a trail that would run south along Canyon Creek to the Kam Wah Chung State Heritage Site, where the Oregon Parks and Recre- ation Department is planning a major package of improve- ments that will include a new interpretive center. “Once that’s fi nished, we will have just over 5 miles of in-city trails,” said John Day City Manager Nick Green, adding that the trails will form a kind of “connective tissue” between downtown and the riverfront. “That entire reach of the John Day was not accessible to the public for about 100 years, and now it’s theirs, lit- erally theirs – it’s in the pub- lic trust again,” Green added. “We gave them back their river. I feel pretty god about that.” Over the winter, the city will work on creating trail markers and informational signs about the history of the area to make using the trail system more enjoyable. City Councilor Elliot Sky is a supporter of expanding the trail system. “I really like the idea of living in a city that has good walkability and bikability,” he said. “That just really adds, I think, to the livability of a city.” But in order to reap the full benefi ts of the trail net- work, people need to be able to get to it easily, Sky added. To make that happen, he said, the city needs to create access points that people can drive to and park their cars. Among other things, he’d like to see Seventh Street extended to the west side of town to improve accessibil- ity, as well as the addition of at least one more pedestrian and bicycle bridge over the river so the trail system could expand still further. “It depends on the outcome of (grant applications) for a portion of that,” Sky said. “My vision for a trail sys- tem would be one that can really weave through the city and provide connections to as many sections of the city as possible.” Showing Movies Since 1940! 1809 1st Street • Baker City  December 10-16  BELFAST (PG-13) In 1960’s Northern Ireland, a nine-year-old boy must chart a path towards adulthood through a world that has suddenly turned up- side down. WHAT’S HAPPENING HAPPENING Friday, Dec. 10 Tuesday, Dec. 7 Grant County Senior Cit- izens Advisory Council • 11 a.m., Monument Senior Center, 269 Main St., Monument The purpose of the semi- annual meeting is to introduce a new member of the coun- cil appointed by the Grant County Court, entertain new business proposed by council Grant Union High School fundraiser • 5 p.m., Elks Lodge, 140 NE Dayton St., John Day This event is a fundraiser for Grant Union’s eighth grade trip. It starts with a spa- ghetti dinner at 5 p.m. and fea- tures bingo starting at 6. There will also be a dessert auction and a raffl e for a smoker and a gun safe. Tickets for the din- ner are $8 per person, and raf- fl e tickets are $5 apiece or fi ve for $20. For more information, call 541-390-5790. Saturday, Dec. 11 Timber Truckers Light Parade • 6 p.m., downtown John Day The annual holiday log truck parade returns with a theme of “Light Up the Night.” The entry fee is $10. Entrants are encouraged Roofing • General Construction Remodeling Fences Decks Storage Sheds Andy Wolfer 541-910-6609 Sunday, Dec. 19 Deck the House 2021 • 6 to 8 p.m., Canyon City Annual holiday lighting contest sponsored and judged by the Whiskey Gulch Gang. First place wins $500 and a trophy, and second place wins $250. To enter, call or text Jenna at 541-620-1673 with your address. Entries will be accepted until Dec. 18. Be sure to have your lights on the evening of Dec. 19. Do you have a community event in Grant County you’d like to publicize? Email infor- mation to editor@bmeagle. com. The deadline is noon Friday for publication the fol- lowing Wednesday. ENCANTO (PG) Disney Animation. Mirabel must save her family’s magic, although she has no special gift of her own. Friday Sat & Sun Mon - Thurs 4:10, 7:10 1:10, 4:10, 7:10 7:10 GHOSTBUSTERS AFTERLIFE (PG-13) A family discovers they have a connection to the original Ghostbusters and the legacy their grandfather left behind. 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