GRADUATION SPECIAL | PAGES A13, A14 AND A15 Wednesday, June 1, 2022 154th Year • No. 23 • 22 Pages • $1.50 GOODBYE, GLEASON MyEagleNews.com Palmer looks back on U.S. Senate run By STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle Justin Davis/Blue Mountain Eagle A Tidewater Construction crew begins demolishing Gleason Pool in John Day on Monday, May 23, 2022. John day’s aging pool falls to wrecking ball of John Day received to go toward the cost of a new pool. City Manager Nick Green reiterated leason Pool is gone, and it’s that the old pool — which opened in still not clear whether it will 1958 — was past its serviceable life and be replaced. that is the reason the facility was torn Demolition on the site down. began on Monday, May 23, “John Day is not going to operate and was completed on Friday, May 27. a pool that old,” he said. “There isn’t The work to demolish Gleason Pool grant funding to rehab a pool that old; was done by Tidewater Construction. it’s a stupid waste of money. You’re on The Oregon borrowed time as Parks and Recre- it is. You just tear ation Department it out and move purchased the pool on. That’s why property and the there aren’t more neighboring Glea- pools at that age son Park from the city in communities. for a planned expan- They weren’t sion of the Kam Wah designed to last Justin Davis/Blue Mountain Eagle indefi nitely.” Chung Heritage Site. The vote on a $4 Sparks fl y as a worker cuts down a Green said million bond mea- metal lightpost during the demoli- the city currently sure to fund the con- tion of Gleason Pool on Monday, May doesn’t have a struction of a new 23, 2022. contingency plan pool, meanwhile, is to construct a still undecided. The May 17 election new pool in the event the bond fails. remained a tie for two days before the “At this stage ,we’re just waiting on no votes overtook the yes votes, eking the outcome of the pool bond vote,” out a narrow 6-vote lead. But with 16 he said. ballots being challenged by the county On the other hand, he added, the city clerk, the fi nal outcome — and the fate has 36 months from the date the agree- of a new pool — remains in question ment was signed to use the grant funds (see related story, Page A1). to construct a new pool. Also now in question is what will See Pool, Page A16 happen to the $2 million grant the city By JUSTIN DAVIS Blue Mountain Eagle G Bond measure for pool in limbo By JUSTIN DAVIS Blue Mountain Eagle CANYON CITY — Sixteen unopened ballots are holding up certifi cation of the pool bond vote. The ballots are being challenged by County Clerk Brenda Percy due to signatures on the ballot envelopes not matching signatures found on voter registration cards. All 16 of the challenged ballots are from within the pool tax district and would be enough to swing the vote on Measure 12-80, which is currently failing by a six-vote margin. This leaves Percy unable to certify the results of the pool bond vote until the challenged ballots are resolved. Percy said signature challenges are routine in every election and that the signatures are merely being challenged and aren’t “suspicious.” Every voter with a ballot being challenged will get a let- ter from Percy with instructions on how to correct the issue. If the signature issue isn’t corrected, the ballots will remain unopened. The last day to correct challenge issues is Tues- day, June 7. The offi cial and fi nal vote count will come Wednesday, June 8. The count as of Tuesday, May 24, was 798 votes against the bond measure and 792 votes in favor. Voters were asked to weigh in on a $4 million pool bond in the May 17 election. If approved, the bond would add 70 cents per $1,000 of assessed value to property tax bills inside the John Day/ Canyon City Parks & Recreation District. The passage of the bond would allow the CANYON CITY — Sam Palmer’s campaign for the U.S. Senate ended last month and now he is taking a breather to see what comes next. The fi rst-term Grant County commissioner, one of seven candidates who made a bid for the Republican nomination in the May 17 primary, fi nished third in the race with 42,172 votes, or just over 12.19% of the overall tally, in his fi rst run for statewide offi ce. Joe Rae Perkins, the Republican candidate in the 2020 U.S. Senate general election against Sen. Jeff Merkley, got the GOP nod with 114,341 votes, or just over 33%, while Darin Harbick, owner of Harbick’s Country Inn and Harbick’s Coun- try Store in the McKenzie River Valley, earned 106,277 votes, or 30.72% of the tally, according to the Ore- gon Secretary of State’s Offi ce website. Palmer sought the GOP nom- ination to challenge for the Sen- ate seat currently held by Dem- ocrat Ron Wyden, who won Palmer 413,703 votes, or nearly 89%, in his party’s primary. Wyden has held the seat since 1996. Palmer told the Eagle in a Thursday, May 26, phone interview that what inspired him to jump in the race to unseat Wyden was the Democratic sen- ator’s bill that would give “wild and scenic” status to an additional 4,700 miles of rivers and streams around the state. Palmer said Wyden did not confer with elected offi cials in rural areas about the impact of the pro- posed legislation on their communities when his staff was designating miles of streams and tribu- taries to be included in the River Democracy Act of 2021. “I just felt that I could bring a voice from East- ern Oregon (to the U.S. Senate) that has not been brought forth about what’s happening to our pub- lic lands, our future and our way of life that is being assaulted,” Palmer said. Palmer, who works as a registered nurse in addition to his duties as a county commissioner, said he drove to campaign events all over the state. He said the sheer vastness of Oregon was one of his biggest takeaways. “I’ve driven roads that I’ve never driven before to get to places that I’ve only heard of,” Palmer said. “(Oregon) is just a ginormous state. I’m just in awe.” Another thing that surprised Palmer was how fed up people were with the government and their elected leaders. After campaigning at gun shows and other get-togethers in communities that included Pend- leton, Hillsboro, Salem, Albany and the Portland metro area, Palmer said people in those locales are “fi ghting mad.” Going into the race, Palmer said he thought Grant County was “hardcore” when it came to frustration with the government. After his cam- paign, however, he said other regions put Grant County “to shame” in that respect. “I attended a lot of gun shows and a lot of these people said if America keeps going the way it’s going, we’re going to end up in a shooting war. In a civil war,” Palmer said. See Limbo, Page A16 See Palmer, Page A16 Oregon voters back female candidates By PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — Oregon voters are poised to elect a woman to succeed another woman as governor — a rarity in the United States — as a result of the May 17 primary. Voters also put women in position to win four of Oregon’s six seats in the U.S. House, including the newly created 6th District that winds from Portland suburbs into the mid-Willamette Valley. One of those races could pit a Democratic woman against a Repub- lican woman, although the vote count is incomplete in the Democratic primary for the 5th District seat. Oregon has just one woman in its current congres- sional delegation. Voters also could add to the record number of women, now 40, in the Oregon Legislature. A national expert says that, unlike 1992 and 2018, she does not foresee this election as “the year of the woman” on a national level. That label has popped up from time to time as the nation sees spikes in women running for, and winning, offi ce. “However, you have a unique situation in Ore- gon,” said Kelly Dittmar, director of research at the Center for American Women and Politics, part of the From left, Christine Drazan, Tina Kotek and Betsy Johnson Eagleton Institute of Politics at Rutgers University. “You have more potential for success by women, par- ticularly in the congressional contests, so you have a diff erent situation than has been seen in recent years.” Oregon’s pending gubernatorial race — with Democrat Tina Kotek of Portland, Republican Chris- tine Drazan of Canby and unaffi liated Betsy John- son of Scappoose — would be only the fi fth time in U.S. history that women have gone head to head for governor. According to the center, the others were Nebraska in 1986, Hawaii in 2002, and New Mexico and Oklahoma in 2010. The center does not track third-party candi- dates, so Oregon may be a fi rst with a trio of women candidates. Whoever wins will succeed Kate Brown, a Demo- crat who is barred by term limits from running again. All three candidates have been in the Legislature: Johnson for 21 years, Kotek for 15 years and Drazan for three years, plus two years as chief of staff to the House speaker. Oregon will be the third state where a woman will succeed another woman as governor, following Ari- zona in 2009 and New Mexico in 2019. Meanwhile, voters nominated Democrat Andrea Salinas of Lake Oswego, a state representative, for the new 6th District, and Democrat Val Hoyle of Springfi eld, the state labor commissioner and a for- mer representative, for the 4th District seat being vacated by Democrat Peter DeFazio of Spring- fi eld after 36 years. Incumbent Democrat Suzanne Bonamici of Beaverton was renominated for a sixth full term in the 1st District. Salinas will face Mike Erickson, a Lake Oswego businessman and a two-time GOP nominee in the See Voters, Page A16