A14 NEWS Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, December 29, 2021 Year Continued from Page A8 Grant School District Superintendent Bret Upt- mor said his district, like oth- ers around the state, had been working on a plan to return to in-person learning in the fall when the state took deci- sion-making power away from local schools. Uptmor said local education leaders were in a better position to decide how to conduct classes safely than state offi cials in Salem. Parents railed against the mandate at an Aug. 3 school board meeting, with some say- ing they would pull their kids out of school if masks were required. Casey Hallgarth, superintendent of the Prai- rie City School District, also expressed his dismay at the loss of local control over COVID safety measures in schools. The Grant County com- missioners wrote a letter to the governor asking her to return control of masking decisions to local school districts, although County Judge Scott Myers also noted during a County Court session that the county didn’t have the power to simply take that control from the state. On Aug. 4, the Grant County Court held its fi rst meeting to talk about a plan to make a number of rural Oregon coun- ties part of Idaho. A county bal- lot measure that passed with just over 60% of the vote in the May election requires the county commissioners to meet three times a year “to discuss whether it is in the best interest of Grant County to promote the relocation of the Oregon-Idaho border.” In a special election on Aug. 17, a proposed property tax levy to help fund the John Day Police Department went down in fl ames due to low voter turn- out. The measure actually drew more yes votes (284) than no votes (169), but it fell short of the special election’s double majority requirement because fewer than half the city’s regis- tered voters cast a ballot, so the result didn’t count. SEPTEMBER An eff ort to recall County Judge Scott Myers fi zzled after it failed to garner enough peti- tion signatures to make the bal- lot. Josh Walker of Seneca fi led Bennett Hall/Blue Mountain Eagle, File Didgette McCracken, one of the founding board members of Grant County Cyber Mill, sits in the nonprofi t’s fi rst location in Seneca on Nov. 19. The Seneca Cyber Mill off ers public access to high- speed internet service for area residents. a prospective recall petition with the Secretary of State’s Offi ce in June, accusing Myers of everything from “fi nancial mismanagement” to “refusal to collaborate.” The petition would have needed 578 valid signatures from registered Grant County voters to qualify for the ballot, but no signature sheets were turned in by the Sept. 8 deadline. A push to end cooperative sports agreements between the Grant School District and out-of-district schools came to naught after the Grant School Board was deluged by opposi- tion to the move. The board had appeared poised to do away with the agreements after receiving an Aug. 18 letter from Grant Union High School’s vol- leyball, basketball, wres- tling, track and cross country coaches urging them to end the co-ops amid a fl urry of students leaving the district, with most of them going to Prairie City. But after parents and stu- dents pushed back with pas- sionate testimony in support of sports co-ops, the school board wound up expanding the pro- gram, voting unanimously to allow a cooperative agreement with Prairie City for baseball in 2022. The John Day/Canyon City Parks and Recreation District announced plans to put a bond measure on the ballot next year to help fund construction of a new aquatic center at the Sev- enth Street Sports Complex in John Day. Plans for the $6 mil- lion project call for a six-lane, 25-yard competitive pool with an 8,000-square-foot building to house a lobby, offi ces and locker rooms. The city has received a $2 million state grant to go toward the project, meaning the bond measure would look to raise roughly $4 million. District offi cials say they’re hoping to have the ballot measure ready in time for the May election, but the November election is also a possibility. Grant County Commis- sioner Sam Palmer announced his campaign to unseat Ore- gon’s senior senator. Palmer, in his fi rst term on the Grant County Court, is seeking the Republican nomination for the U.S. Senate seat currently held by Ron Wyden, which is up for election next year. In an interview, Palmer told the Eagle that, if elected, he would work closely with local offi cials and push for stronger measures to pre- vent catastrophic wildfi res, tighter immigration controls, and more eff ective mental health and addiction treatment programs. OCTOBER One of the biggest bomb- shells of the year dropped on Oct. 12, when the John Day City Council voted unani- mously to suspend the city’s police department. It wasn’t a complete sur- prise, of course: The city had been struggling for years to fund the department, whose annual budget is bigger than the city’s entire property tax base, and a proposed levy to help pay for policing failed at the ballot box in August. Still, the end came sooner than expected: The coun- cil had talked about keep- ing it afl oat till the end of the year while it waited to hear whether the city would receive a $375,000 federal grant. But when the grant announcement was delayed, the council voted to pull the plug, and the city’s two remaining police offi cers stopped taking 911 calls by Oct. 14. That put the burden of pro- viding law enforcement in John Day squarely on the Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce, which had just four offi cers to cover the entire county, and touched off a tug-of-war between city and county leaders over law enforcement funding. The city proposed a fund exchange: It would give the county $300,000 a year for three years to help pay for law enforcement in exchange for an equal amount from the county road fund to pay for street improvements in John Day. To date there has been no formal response from the county. Acting on an ethics com- plaint fi led by the Blue Moun- tain Eagle, the Oregon Gov- ernment Ethics Commission decided on Oct. 22 to launch an investigation into whether the Grant County School Board broke the law during an execu- tive session on Aug. 19. (Board member Kelly Stokes, who did not participate in the executive session, was exempted from the inquiry.) The newspaper took the unusual step of fi ling the ethics complaint after the board can- celed a public meeting to dis- cuss requirements to return to in-person schooling, includ- ing the governor’s mandate that staff be vaccinated against COVID-19, then convened a hastily called executive session “to discuss confi dential infor- mation.” Based on a reporter’s observation of the proceedings, the Eagle believed the board far exceeded the legal basis it cited for the closed-door session. State law allows journal- ists to attend executive ses- sions, from which mem- bers of the general public are excluded, but not to report on what is said unless the discus- sion strays from the specifi c parameters cited by the pub- lic body to justify the closed- door session. The ethics panel has 180 days to complete its investigation. The Grant County Con- servatives held a rally on Oct. 30 at the Grant County Fair- grounds, where about 100 people gathered listened to a dozen speakers rail against all levels of government and drum up support for conserva- tive values and political can- didates. The event served as a fund-raiser for the group’s fl edgling political action com- mittee, GCC-PAC. Among the speakers were Paul Sweany, one of GCC- PAC’s directors; Ethan Kow- ing, a state trooper from John Day who was placed on leave after posting a video from his patrol car protesting COVID- 19 mask and vaccine man- dates; Sandie Gilson and Mike McCarter, two of the leaders of the Greater Idaho move- ment; and Alsea School Dis- trict Superintendent Marc Thielman, a Republican can- didate for governor. NOVEMBER November brought news of uncooperative and downright hostile behavior toward con- tact tracers working to slow the spread of COVID-19 in Grant County. Public Health Administrator Kimberly Lind- say and clinic manager Jessica Winegar discussed the prob- lem in detail at the Nov. 10 session of the Grant County Court. Contact tracers increas- ingly fi nd themselves the tar- get of verbal tirades from people who are deliberately fl outing pandemic protocols designed to protect the com- munity from COVID-19, they told the commissioners. One contact tracer has been driven to quit by the abuse, Lindsay said, and another avoids going out in public because of high hostility levels. November also brought word that Dayville had received enough federal fund- ing to fi nish work on two major capital projects. The U.S. Department of Agricul- ture Rural Development Pro- gram awarded the city two grants totaling $170,000 to fi nish renovating the Day- ville Community Hall, a cen- tury-old structure that resi- dents have spent years raising money to repair. Work on the hall includes shoring up the roof trusses, putting on a new roof, install- ing new electrical wiring, blowing insulation into the walls and completely rebuild- ing a rickety 1950s addition. USDA Rural develop- ment also came through with $79,800 to complete the fund- raising to build a new fi re hall for the town’s volunteer fi re department. The old one had to be torn down after a fi re truck backed into it in June 2020, damaging the building beyond repair. Both projects should be fi nished next year. The county’s fi rst Cyber Mill opened Nov. 16 inside a former restaurant in Seneca, off ering free (at least for now) access to high-speed internet service. Fast, aff ordable inter- net access can be hard to come by in the town of 165, one of the more remote communities in Grant County. The facility is the brain- child of the nonprofi t Cyber Mill Grant County, which plans to open two more loca- tions next year in Prairie City and John Day. The project is part of a larger push to extend broadband internet access throughout the county. The Grant County Digital Network Coalition, a govern- ment consortium that includes the county and the cities of John Day and Seneca, is using a $1.8 million state grant to support Cyber Mills in its member cities and help fund Oregon Telephone Co.’s push to extend fi ber optic cables from John Day to other Grant County communities. On Nov. 18, the Justice Department’s Offi ce of Com- munity Oriented Policing Ser- vices announced that John Day had been approved for a three-year, $375,000 grant to help pay the salaries of police offi cers. The only prob- lem was that the city had sus- pended its police department in mid-October. The news touched off a debate about whether the city should accept the grant and reboot its police department, even though the money would not solve the department’s long-term funding issues, or seek federal permission to transfer the money to the Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce, which has been forced to assume responsibility for law enforcement services in John Day since the police depart- ment was mothballed. DECEMBER Like so many other cher- ished community traditions, the Carrie Young Memo- rial Dinner and Auction was forced to go virtual in 2020 due to concerns about spread- ing COVID-19. But, also like many of those other gather- ings, it came back in person in 2021 as restrictions were eased. This year’s shindig brought several hundred people to the John Day Elks Lodge for a spaghetti feed and silent auc- tion to honor Young’s mem- ory by raising money to pro- vide Christmas presents and simple necessities such as groceries and heating oil for elderly Grant County resi- dents. According to prelimi- nary fi gures, the 2021 edition brought in just under $50,000, a new record. As the year drew to a close, Grant County recorded its 17th COVID-related death. The Grant County Health Department announced that the most recent fatality was a 91-year-old man who died at Blue Mountain Hospital in John Day on Dec. 4 after con- tracting the disease. Grant County continues to have one of the lowest vacci- nation rates in Oregon, hov- ering at around 50% of the adult population compared to the statewide average of about 80%. John Morris, an outspoken critic of plans to build a new community swimming pool in John Day, fi led an appeal of a conditional use permit for the project granted by the John Day Planning Commission. Morris claims the commis- sion was biased and prejudi- cial in voting to grant the per- mit because he was not given the same opportunity to pro- vide testimony as the 15 peo- ple who spoke in favor of the proposed aquatic center. In a recent interview, Mor- ris told the Eagle he’s still not sure whether he’s for or against the new pool, but he feels the city and the John Day/Canyon City Parks and Recreation District “have not been up front with the public” about fi nancial details of the $6 million project. We appreciate your business & support. 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