GO! EASTERN OREGON MAGAZINE | INSIDE Read ‘French Braid’ PAG E 6 APRI L 6–13 , 2022 WWW .GOE ASTE RNO REGO Experience Escape room PAG E 9 Listen Tunesm Night ith PAG E 14 N.CO M MA T TIEL page 8 makes a concer in BAKER C t stop ITY Mattiel/Contri buted imag This artwork e graces the newest album cover of Matt iel’s , April 13, 2022 Georgia Gothic. The band plays , at Churchill School in Bake r City. Wednesday, April 6, 2022 154th Year • No. 14 • 18 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com RISING TO THE CHALLENGE Justin Davis/Blue Mountain Eagle Corum Ketchum has been hired to fi ll the newly created position of community development director for John Day. John Day hires project director By JUSTIN DAVIS Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY — When Corum Ketchum was study- ing community development in college, his mentor, Joe Marushack, told him to “fi nd communities where awe- some happens.” That mind- set has led Ketchum to John Day. Ketchum was hired to fi ll the newly created position of community development director. He started his duties remotely on March 8 and has since relocated to the area. The University of Oregon graduate brings consider- able knowledge and experi- ence to John Day as he takes over the role of community development director for the city’s various grant-funded projects. City Manager Nick Green says discussions regarding the need for the position started several years ago as the num- ber of projects increased. Green said the city can get the funds for these projects but “you still need somebody to do the work” of implement- ing them. Ketchum’s duties will include interfacing with the public about ongoing projects and explaining why the city is undertaking those projects as well as getting feedback from the community. Overseeing Main Street revitalization eff orts, parks development, the Kam Wah Chung infrastructure improve- ments, the aquatic center buildout (if approved by vot- ers) and coordinating with the Ford Family Foundation’s Grow Rural Oregon program are all things that Ketchum will be tackling as community development director. Ketchum says the variety of projects the city is currently undertaking is what brought him to John Day. The 29-year-old already has two years of rural com- munity development work under his belt, using rural community growth strategies much like those proposed for John Day in the rural town of Veneta, west of Eugene. He also has community develop- ment experience in the Salem suburb of Dallas. Ketchum says he wants the community to know he’s “here to help” and that he has experience working in rural communities. Green says there were sev- eral qualifi ed applicants when the position of John Day com- munity development direc- tor needed to be fi lled, but Ketchum’s experience and education in community development set him apart from all the other candidates for the position. The job pays $64,620 per year, half of which will be funded by the Ford Foun- dation’s Grow Rural Ore- gon program for a fi ve-year span. Green says that deal was “hard to pass up” consider- ing the community has a gen- uine need for the position and would only be paying half the cost to fi ll it. Green says he was doing much of the work Ketchum is slated to under- take and hopes that the hire takes a lot of things off of his plate. Green also expects the position of community devel- opment director to continue to be fi lled after the Ford Foun- dation’s GRO funding for the position expires in fi ve years. “I don’t see the projects stopping,” Green said. “I think the position will continue and the need for the position will continue.” Justin Davis/Blue Mountain Eagle Trooper William Blood stands beside his patrol car on Tuesday, April 5, 2022. The Oregon State Police recognized Blood for helping a busload of stranded teenagers in Prairie City. State trooper comes to the rescue with pizza for hungry high-schoolers By JUSTIN DAVIS Blue Mountain Eagle P RAIRIE CITY — A bro- ken-down school bus, hun- gry teenagers and a con- cerned Oregon State Police trooper all crossed paths on the night of Feb. 11, and the outcome was a win for all concerned. Trooper William Blood, working out of OSP’s John Day outpost, was on patrol that Friday when he came across a disabled Union High School bus on the side of Highway 26 in Prairie City and approached to check on the occu- pants, who turned out to be the school’s boys and girls basketball teams. The engine was still running, so the bus had heat, but Blood learned the basketball players would be stuck in the area for some time as their replace- ment bus made its way to their location from Union. He also learned the kids riding the bus were hungry and that no restaurants or convenience stores were open in the immediate area. Blood then drove the 13 miles to John Day and found lights on in The Outpost restaurant, but the establishment was closed. But he saw a woman work- ing inside and knocked on the door. After he explained the situation, the Justin Davis/Blue Mountain Eagle The Oregon State Police challenge coins awarded to Trooper William Blood. woman agreed to turn the ovens back on and make fi ve large pizzas for the stranded kids. Blood paid for the piz- zas — two pepperonis, one Hawaiian, a meat lover’s and a combo — out of his own pocket and delivered the food to the hungry kids back in Prairie City. Blood has worked in law enforce- ment for 20 years. His fi rst posting was as a police offi cer in Cornelius, southwest of Portland, in 2002. From there, he made his way to the Hillsboro Police Department in late 2009. In November of 2018 Blood was hired by the Oregon State Police, and he’s been stationed in John Day since early 2019. Blood has a son on the John Day basketball team, and on Feb. 11 he combined all of his breaks for the day into one in order to go watch him play against the Union team that evening. Following the game, Blood returned to work and spotted the broken-down bus while on patrol in Prairie City. See Challenge, Page A18 County opens 2022-23 budget process By STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle CANYON CITY — The Grant County Budget Committee met on Monday, April 4, to start the process of creating a budget for the 2022-23 fi scal year. County Treasurer Julie Ellison is proposing a balanced budget of just under $93.7 million, up about $6.2 million from $87.4 million in the current fi scal year. The budget proj- ects a county work force of 83.58 full-time-equivalent employees, up from 80.74 FTE in 2021-22. Ellison’s fi nancial plan will be evaluated and discussed in detail by the budget committee, which consists of the three Grant County Court mem- bers and three citizens. Ultimately, the committee will make a fi nal budget proposal which must then be approved Blue Mountain Eagle, File The Grant County Budget Committee has begun meeting to determine the coun- ty’s budget for 2022-23. by the court. While Monday’s discussion did not include the topic of law enforcement funding, the issue loomed large none- theless as the county’s draft budget included a $300,000 contribution from John Day to cover the cost of bring- ing on three more patrol deputies to the Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce — despite the John Day City Council’s earlier rejection of the county’s fee- for-service proposal. Ellison said she had been told that the county could use $700,000 in fed- eral COVID-19 relief funding should city and county offi cials not reach an agreement before the budget commit- tee fi nishes its work, which must be completed before the end of the fi s- cal year on June 30. According to County Commissioner Jim Hamsher, federal dollars from the American Rescue Plan Act can be used for law enforcement. However, ahead of Monday’s meeting Hamsher said he would rather the county present a counteroff er to the city that is similar to Prairie City’s agreement with the Sheriff ’s Offi ce. See Budget, Page A18