GO! EASTERN OREGON MAGAZINE | INSIDE Wednesday, April 27, 2022 Candidates air their views at commissioner forum ory that housing starts in the city would broaden the tax base for the entire county. JOHN DAY — Contenders Although the Grant County for the open seat on the Grant Court has not formally deliber- County Court made their case ated on the city’s proposal, court Wednesday, April 20, during the members have been steadfast in Blue Mountain Eagle’s their opposition to the candidate forum at the idea of linking county county’s airport. road fund money to During a 90-min- police services. ute session moderated At the April 13 by the newspaper’s Grant County Bud- editor, Bennett Hall, get Committee meet- the three candidates ing, Grant County Webb answered questions Sheriff Todd McKin- on an array of topics, ley requested fund- including how to fund ing for three additional policing in the county, patrol deputies and a how much commis- secretary. sioners should be paid Mark Webb, a for- and how they would mer Grant County dial down the animos- judge and the execu- Knepper ity between the city tive director of Blue of John Day and the Mountain Forest Part- county. ners, a forest collab- Nearly two dozen orative, emphasized people attended the that he would defer to forum in person, and McKinley about how others watched a video to approach the issue. of the event lives- That said, Webb, a treamed on the news- write-in candidate for paper’s website and county commissioner, Rowell Facebook page. added that based on The offi ce of Grant County conversations with people from commissioner is a nonpartisan outlying communities, polic- position. If none of the candi- ing diff ers from city to city. For dates gets more than 50% of the instance, he said he hears from vote, the two highest vote-get- people in Monument that their ters will move on to the general main complaints are drunk driv- election ballot in November. ers, while in Long Creek, it is County commissioners are people exceeding the speed expected to work 13⅓ hours a limit. week. They are paid $2,380 per The speeding issue, he said, month with full benefi ts, includ- could perhaps be addressed ing membership in the Public by installing a photo camera Employee Retirement System. instead of having a full-time employee sitting on the side of Law enforcement debate the road. Hall kicked off Wednesday’s “We do want to provide forum by asking each of the can- safety,” he said, “but we want didates how they would address to do it in a smart way with the law enforcement funding the kind of budget that we can debate in the county. John Day aff ord.” and Grant County offi cials have Webb said that would be been at loggerheads since Octo- how he would start the conver- ber, when the John Day City sation. He said he would also Council voted unanimously to approach the cities to determine suspend operations of the city’s their individual needs and see police force and off ered to pay how the county might address the county $300,000 a year to them diff erently than it has in hire three sheriff ’s deputies to the past. provide law enforcement ser- For his part, Scott Knepper, a vices in the city limits. Prairie City resident and retired As part of that deal, John postal worker, said the city of Day City Manager Nick Green John Day needs to address the laid out a proposal for the policing problem itself and put county to give the city $300,000 a measure back on the ballot to a year from its road fund to reinstate the police force. pay for street improvements Knepper said the Sheriff ’s to serve new housing develop- See Forum, Page A16 ments in John Day, on the the- By STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle 154th Year • No. 17 • 16 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com PRIVATE PROPERTY V S . PUBLIC ACCESS Baker County tries to keep route into Elkhorns open By JAYSON JACOBY and IAN CRAWFORD Baker City Herald A total of 19 Baker County residents took their turn at a lectern and told county com- missioners why the Pine Creek canyon west of Baker City is such a wonderful place to visit and why the county should strive to ensure the public has access to the road and to large swathes of public land it leads to. The speakers, whose personal expe- riences in the Pine Creek area date back more than half a century in some cases, were among those who attended a public hearing called by commissioners on April 19 at the Baker County Events Center. Commissioners were soliciting public comments regarding the county’s eff ort to declare as a public right-of-way the road that follows Pine Creek to its source at Pine Creek Reservoir, high in the Elkhorn Mountains. Although the road passes through pri- vate property for about 2½ miles, the res- ervoir itself is part of the Wallowa-Whit- man National Forest, as is much of the surrounding alpine area that’s popular among hunters, anglers and hikers. Contributed Photo, File David McCarty installed this gate across the Pine Creek Road at his prop- erty boundary during the fall of 2020. A herd of mountain goats lives near the reservoir, and an unoffi cial trail crosses a ridge and leads to Rock Creek Lake, the largest (35 acres) and deepest (about 100 feet) in the Elkhorns. The county’s campaign to formalize public access on the road was prompted by a civil lawsuit that a Pine Creek land- owner, David McCarty, fi led against the county almost a year ago, on April 30, 2021. In September 2020 McCarty bought 1,560 acres in the Pine Creek canyon, the largest chunk of private land through which the road runs. Soon after buying the property McCa- rty installed a metal gate across the road, with a lock, at his eastern property bound- ary, near the edge of Baker Valley. On Sept. 30, 2020, county commis- sioners voted 3-0 to order workers from the county road department to remove the lock. That happened on Oct. 1, 2020. After commissioners contended that the Pine Creek Road is a public route, including the section through McCarty’s property, McCarty asked county offi cials to supply records documenting the road’s status as public. In the lawsuit he fi led in April 2021, McCarty asks for either a declaration that the disputed section of the Pine Creek Road crossing his property is not a public right-of-way, or, if a jury concludes there is legal public access, that the limits of that access be defi ned and that the county pay him $730,000 to compensate for the lost value of the land based on the legal public access and for other costs he has incurred as a result of the county’s actions. In his lawsuit, McCarty says that before buying the timbered property through which the Pine Creek Road runs, he reviewed the title report and other doc- uments, none of which showed a public road through the land. See Access, Page A16 “IT’S A REAL SHAME THAT SOMEONE COMES IN AND SAYS I OWN THIS, AND TO HECK WITH THE REST OF THE COUNTRY. THAT’S NOT RIGHT. WE NEED TO DO SOMETHING TO KEEP IT OPEN FOR EVERYBODY.” — Mike Thompson, speaking to Baker County commissioners about the Pine Creek Road Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald, File The Pine Creek Road, in the Elkhorn Mountains northwest of Baker City, climbs to an alpine zone that includes views of Rock Creek Butte, upper right, at 9,106 feet the tallest peak in the range. John Day passes Grants fuel work of forest collaboratives $30.3M budget Lone ‘no’ vote cast over law enforcement funding By JUSTIN DAVIS Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY — The John Day Budget Committee passed a balanced budget of $30.3 million for fi scal year 2022-23 at its meeting on Tuesday, April 19, but not with- out some dissent. Citizen committee member Sherrie Rininger voted no on the proposed budget, citing concerns the city wasn’t allocating funds to the county to help pay for polic- ing services provided by the Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce to John Day. Funds that could’ve been given to the county for that purpose were moved into the street fund after the City Council rejected the county’s proposal for the city to pay for law enforcement services. Rininger says John Day’s residents shouldn’t have to suff er because the John Day and Grant County governing bodies have issues with one another. The City Council voted unanimously to suspend the city’s police department in October after years of struggling to fund the department. John Day’s police force was comprised of four men and had an annual budget of $450,000, which outstripped the $300,000 the city brings in with property tax revenues by a large margin. A bond measure to provide additional funding for the depart- ment failed in August when it fell short of the election’s double-majority requirement. The county’s proposed budget for the coming fi scal year includes a $300,000 law enforcement contribution from John Day even though no agreement has been reached with the city. Also passed at the city budget meet- ing was a property tax rate of $2.9915 per $1,000 of assessed property value as See Budget, Page A16 By STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle WASHINGTON — Five forest collaboratives in Central and East- ern Oregon have received word they will be getting upwards of $11.6 million in federal funding. The collaboratives, which bring together environmentalists, public and private land managers, and tim- ber industry professionals, seek to fi nd common ground on hot-button forestry issues. The projects were selected by a federal advisory committee and funded through the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Pro- gram, which is intended to encour- age ecological and economic sus- tainability and reduce the risk of catastrophic wildfi res. The Southern Blues Restoration Coalition, a joint eff ort of Blue Mountains Forest Partners and the Harney County Restoration Col- laborative, received $3 million. Both groups are forestry collabora- tives, groups of diverse stakeholders formed to fi nd solutions to stubborn forestry issues that satisfy environ- mental concerns while providing jobs in the woods and generating a steady and predictable timber supply to feed area lumber mills. Backed by the two collabora- tives, the Southern Blues Resto- ration Coalition has been supported by CFLRP money since 2012. The coalition was initially awarded $2.5 million per year and received a bump to $4 million per year in 2016. Malheur National Forest pro- gram manager Roy Walker said a big chunk of the money they will receive would go toward prescribed burning. Some of the funding, he added, would go to pre-commercial thinning throughout the Southern Blues Coalition area. See Grants, Page A16