AGRICULTURE DAY SPECIAL | PAGES A11-A13 Wednesday, March 23, 2022 154th Year • No. 12 • 18 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com WOLVES AT THE DOOR Wolves at the door Federal judge has redrawn map for managing wolves in West, and Grant County is at ground zero By STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle A judge’s decision to restore federal protections for gray wolves last month has put Grant County at ground zero for relisting the predators under the Endangered Species Act. The decision drew a dividing line between wolf populations that can continue to be managed by state agencies and those that will once again be governed by more restrictive federal rules. In most of Oregon, the dividing line is Highway 395, which runs right through the middle of Grant County. While the ruling does not change any- thing for wolves in the easternmost part of the state, it does cover wolves in the west- ern two-thirds of Oregon and puts them back on the federal endangered species list. Before last month’s ruling, wolves in Western Oregon had been under the fi rst phase of the state wolf plan, which allowed for killing wolves in defense of livestock and guard animals in limited circumstances. Specifi cally, wolves could be killed if caught chasing or biting livestock or in sit- uations where the state could confi rm that a pack had depredated four times in six months. See Wolves, Page A10 WOLVES IN OREGON A federal judge has redrawn the map for managing wolves in the West, and Grant County is at ground zero Umatilla County 101 84 Portland Pendleton La Grande 5 395 Salem Grant County 20 26 West Murderers Creek 20 101 Eugene Bend Redmond Coos Bay East Murderers Creek 20 20 5 84 John Day Burns OREGON Malheur County 395 78 395 Harney County Grants Pass Medford Klamath Falls 95 Source: Oregon Fish & Wildlife EO Media graphic Areas of known wolf activity – Murderers Creek Federal wolf delisting boundary Federally listed (USFWS) State management (ODFW) A BRIEF HISTORY OF WOLF RECOVERY Gray wolves were once widespread in the United States but were trapped, hunted and poisoned until they were all but extirpated from the Lower 48 by the middle of the last century. The last native wolf in Oregon is believed to have been killed in the late 1940s. In the mid-1990s, however, gray wolves were reintroduced in Central Idaho and Yellowstone National Park, and since then the species has ex- panded beyond expectations, both in population and geographical area. There are now more than 1,600 wolves in the Northern Rockies, including at least 173 in Ore- gon, according to recent estimates. However, wolves were never deliberately reintroduced to Oregon. They came here on their own, dispersing from established packs in neighboring states. U.S. Fish and Wildlife captured the fi rst known returning wolf in Oregon in 1999 near the Middle Fork of the John Day River and returned the radio-collared female, known as wolf B-45, to Idaho. In 2011, Congress removed federal protections for the Northern Rocky Mountains wolf popu- lation, including Montana, Idaho and Eastern Oregon. In 2015, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife removed wolves from the state endan- gered species list, although the federal Endan- gered Species Act designation remained in the state’s western two-thirds. In 2020, the Trump administration removed fed- eral Endangered Species Act protections from gray wolves across 44 states, including Western Oregon. A coalition of environmental groups fi led suit in early 2021 to have federal protections restored, and on Feb. 10 of this year, a U.S. district judge granted their request. Animal rights measure won’t make ballot Alex Wittwer/EO Media Group A gray and black steer grazes on a ranch along Airport Lane, La Grande, on Thursday, March 17, 2022. By ALEX WITTWER EO Media Group LA GRANDE — A controversial pro- posal on animal cruelty laws appears to be off the table, for now, but proponents of the initiative say their campaign isn’t over yet. “We just submitted the initiative for 2024 and are waiting for confi rmation from the state,” an organizer with the Yes on IP13 campaign said. “At this point, it does not look like we will gather enough for 2022. I believe the plan is to shift gears to the newly numbered initiative as soon as we have it.” Initiative Petition 13, otherwise known as the Abuse, Neglect and Assault Exemption Modifi cation and Improvement Act, would remove exemptions to the Oregon animal abuse laws that protect hunters, farmers and anglers from abuse violations. That means hunters could possibly be prosecuted for kill- ing wild animals, as could farmers who send their livestock to slaughterhouses. David Michelson, the author of the initia- tive and the lead organizer for the campaign, acknowledged the proposal’s long road, and said that like other social justice reforms throughout history, it will take time. See Ballot, Page A18 Grant County agencies adjust to rising fuel costs By JUSTIN DAVIS and STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY — Like every- body else, government agen- cies throughout Grant County have been adjusting to the sud- den rise in fuel costs since the start of the war in Ukraine. While some say contin- gency planning has helped them weather the sharp rise in prices so far, others say they may have make signifi cant budget adjustments going for- ward. All of the agencies the newspaper spoke to, how- ever, say they’re continuing to operate normally and pro- vide the services the public expects. Over the past month, the average price of gasoline has risen from $3.52 a gal- lon to $4.27 a gallon nation- ally, according to the Ameri- can Automobile Association. In Grant County the average is even higher, topping $4.50 a gallon. The Grant School Dis- trict has been able to con- tinue bus service despite steep increases in fuel prices over the past month. Assistant transportation manager Rach- elle Simmons says the true fi nancial impact of higher gas prices won’t be known until the end of the budget month. “We did budget higher fuel prices into the 2021-2022 school year budget,” Sim- Steven Mitchell/Blue Mountain Eagle A Humbolt Elementary School kindergarten student gets off the bus Dec. 15, 2021, at Valley View Assisted Living in John Day, where the students held their annual Christmas hat parade. mons said. Superintendent Bret Upt- mor says the timing of the rise in fuel prices is helping schools better cope with the circumstances. “Higher prices in March aren’t going to have the same eff ect as opposed to, say, Sep- tember,” he said. For now, prices aren’t aff ecting school buses or school bus routes, accord- ing to both Uptmor and Sim- mons. If gas prices stay high for a prolonged period of time, however, the school dis- trict would take steps to miti- gate those eff ects. “If gas prices severely aff ect the budget, shortening routes is a possibility,” Sim- mons said. Simmons added that eliminating bus service as a response to high fuel costs “isn’t feasible.” See Fuel, Page A18