NEWS Blue Mountain Eagle School Continued from Page A1 “This is an old school,” she pointed out. “It was built long before (a poten- tial school shooting) was a concern. We have short- and long-term goals regard- ing safety at the school. It’s ongoing, and I think it will continue to be ongo- ing. We’re going to have to be constantly upgrading our systems to keep up with security.” Talk of securing schools has led some critics to state that schools are start- ing to look more like prisons and less like places of learning for kids. Attles- perger says the beauty of Humbolt is its design. “The nice thing about the way our school is set up is that if the outer campus is secure, the kids can move freely throughout the rest of the cam- pus. The playground is in the middle of the school. The way we’re confi gured, we can still have a very secure perimeter and move about freely.” School shootings are a concern everywhere, according to Attlesperger. “I spent some time in Central Pennsyl- vania and there was an Amish school shooting. Somebody passing through, and you think that something like that could never happen. They don’t believe in locking doors, they don’t have fences around their schools. It just takes one person drifting by.” Attlesperger said she is in favor of teachers being armed but not with any type of lethal force. “Accidents hap- pen,” she said. Tasers and other non-le- thal weapons would be acceptable, but Attlesperger said she doesn’t want to introduce the option of lethal force to an elementary school. Another concern for Attlesperger is the amount of things schoolteachers are already responsible for that go beyond their normal teaching duties. “What we ask of teachers already is draining. It takes every ounce of their being to be the best that they can be all day, every day for our kids. To put that on them I would never ask. Which is why we would like an SRO. They’re trained for that. Their primary job function is safety and security. That is not a teach- er’s primary job function,” she said. “It’s been a diffi cult couple years with COVID, and I would never ask them to do anything more. Teachers don’t clock out at 5 o’clock. When they aren’t work- ing with the kids they are planning for working with the kids, and the kids are always on their minds. It is a 24-hour, seven-day-a-week job.” Grant School District Superinten- Sawmill Continued from Page A1 said loggers under con- tract to harvest Douglas fir dent Bret Uptmor said anytime there is an incident like Uvalde, school admin- istrators across the nation are on “high alert.” “We don’t know how this will tran- spire,” he said. “This happened so close to the end of our school year. A lot of our kids were focused on end-of-the-year studies, sports and things like that. For administrators, it means your eyes are going everywhere. One, to make sure that kids are doing what they need to do to fi nish the year out, as well as to make sure there is good safety in the buildings. That is always our top concern. Are we doing everything we possibly we can to make sure when kids come to school they are going to have assurances that it is a safe environment for them?” Uptmor said the district is already in talks with the Sheriff ’s Offi ce to have a resource offi cer and it is just a matter of completing that process. “The school board is on board,” he said. “They want to have somebody rep- resenting our law enforcement so that sense of safety and security is pres- ent. I believe that next year you’ll see something in our schools. We wish we could’ve gotten it done this year, but it wasn’t in the cards.” Uptmor is confi dent local law enforcement would come to the aid of schools if needed. “Am I comfortable that we will have good representation? Yes. My concern always is, can they be there fast and be present in a short amount of time at any of our schools?” Uptmor declined to comment on the question of arming teachers with lethal or non-lethal force as a deterrent to school shootings, saying only that the school board discussed the issue in 2018. Uptmor said security measures are in place in the district, but it’s impossible to plan for every possible scenario. “What I worry the most about is we don’t know what other ways things could happen. That is always what wor- ries me. What we don’t know could hap- pen,” he said. “I’ll just add that I’m always very impressed by our teachers, our staff , our board and our school administration, as well as right here in our own district offi ce. We always have the safety of stu- dents in mind. We may not always end up with the same resolve when we talk about how to do things, but we come together as a team and we make it a safe place for our kids. I think as a county we do that, too, as superintendents. We’re always talking and making sure we sup- port each other. That’s a really import- ant trait to have in a county this size,” Uptmor said. trees would no longer have to haul the logs to Elgin or Pilot Rock for milling. With the rising cost of fuel, he said, selling those logs to Prairie Wood would be JOHN ROEHM CONSTRUCTION, INC. General Contractor LICENSED AND BONDED RESIDENTIAL Wednesday, June 8, 2022 Police As for state troopers, Bigman added, during an active shooter event, OSP troopers are trained to respond immediately to the threat (as opposed to Continued from Page A1 assembling a tactical team to enter a school building with a shooter inside). from an active shooter in a school or something else. The reality, McKinley said, is that it could take a sig- “I’m the one that’s expected to stop them and lay my nifi cant amount of time before the state’s SWAT team life on the line so that no one else gets injured,” McKin- members arrive to provide backup. Local law enforce- ley said. “This is what I’m doing. This is dangerous, ment — the short-staff ed Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce and state troopers patrolling in the area — will be the this is scary, but that’s what I’m here for.” McKinley said what happened at Robb Elementary fi rst responders to arrive in shooter situations. That’s all the more reason local law enforcement School stepped up the sense of urgency to ensure that local law enforcement offi cers are prepared to handle a needs to continue to receive SWAT training and have the equipment, such as protective shields, to respond in similar scenario. He said the Sheriff ’s Offi ce would be bringing in an emergency, McKinley added. “We need our local people to be able to be the trainers from the state’s Department of Public Safety ones that make a diff erence Standards and Training for instead of waiting hours an active shooter training “WE NEED OUR LOCAL for that kind of response,” with students and teachers at a school within the county PEOPLE TO BE ABLE TO BE the sheriff said. “If you’ve got something going on in that requested the training. THE ONES THAT MAKE A a school, we need to be the McKinley said other fi rst responders from agencies in DIFFERENCE INSTEAD OF ones that deal with it.” the school’s district would also take part. WAITING HOURS FOR THAT First line of defense During the Wednesday, The Sheriff ’s Offi ce KIND OF RESPONSE. IF June 1, session of County plans to have a school resource offi cer stationed YOU’VE GOT SOMETHING Court, McKinley said he knows that things are a little at Grant County schools GOING ON IN A SCHOOL, diff erent in Grant County. this fall, which McKinley he said, after believes will be a deterrent WE NEED TO BE THE ONES However, watching what happened to a potential shooter. in the Uvalde shooting and McKinley said the offi - THAT DEAL WITH IT.” talking to school offi cials cer will be someone the Sheriff Todd McKinley from around the county, he kids can build a strong rap- has huge concerns for the port with and feel comfort- able enough to go to for help instead of someone who is safety of local schools. That concern, he said, brings up the staffi ng short- there to catch them committing a crime. “I don’t like it when people see us and say, ‘I want age at the Sheriff ’s Offi ce. Since the John Day Police Department was shut you to scare my kid,’” McKinley said. “We’re not there down in October, enforcing the law within the city lim- to scare your kid. We’re here to help your kid.” The “scared straight” approach, he said, is the wrong its has fallen primarily to the Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce, which has just four patrol deputies covering the kind of policing. “I want them to respect us,” he said, “and see us as entire county. McKinley has repeatedly told both the John Day City Council and the County Court that he somebody they can come to.” needs additional deputies to provide adequate coverage. Coordinated response The John Day City Council off ered to pay the The Oregon State Police has a special weapons and county $300,000 a year to hire three deputies to pro- tactics team with members scattered across the state vide law enforcement services in the city limits. But that would respond with tactical assistance to Grant that proposal also called on the county to give the city County law enforcement agencies in an active shooter $300,000 a year from its road fund to pay for street incident. According to the OSP web page, the SWAT improvements to serve new housing developments in team has 24 tactical members, 12 crisis negotiators and John Day, on the theory that housing starts in the city would broaden the tax base for the entire county. two medics. While the County Court never formally deliber- Capt. Stephanie Bigman, OSP’s media and public relations representative, said in an email that she pre- ated on the city’s proposal, court members have made it ferred not to give out specifi c locations and numbers of clear that the idea of linking county road fund money to police services is a nonstarter. SWAT team members. The city and county still have not come to an agree- Bigman said each case is evaluated based on the cir- cumstances. Still, she said, generally a local jurisdic- ment on law enforcement funding. Nonetheless, Grant tion would request SWAT team assistance through the County’s draft budget included a $300,000 contribution chain of command and the SWAT commander, in con- from John Day. One way or the other, McKinley said, the Sheriff ’s junction with OSP Operations, would determine if OSP Offi ce needs more staff . SWAT is needed. “It’s not like we’re asking for the moon,” McKin- “Usually,” she said, “we can have the offi cer in charge on the phone with a SWAT commander within ley said. “There just needs to be a few more people that stand between evil and and the innocent.” a few minutes.” a better option all around. “We will fill that void,” Westbrooks said in her email. She said local log- gers and landowners can contact the company to learn more. Prairie Wood also hopes to collaborate with the Malheur National Forest and other public agencies on “important” forest res- toration projects. Currently, Trulock said, Prairie Wood does not have a contract with the For- est Service, but the mill’s mothballed cogeneration plant could provide a mar- ket for biomass coming off the forest. The biomass, which is essentially small logs, branches and bushes CCB # 217672 SPECIALIZING IN: MANUFACTURED HOUSING EXCAVATION WORK SITE CLEANUP & DEMOLITION DRIVEWAYS STRUCTION, LL N O C C AW Featuring: SERVING EASTERN OREGON PHONE: 503-341-1796 • • • • • EMAIL: ROEHMJOHN66@GMAIL.COM Roofing • General Construction Remodeling Fences Decks Storage Sheds Andy Wolfer Preventive, Restorative & Endodontics Pharmacy • Hallmark Cards • Gifts • Liquor Store Condon Boardman (541) 676-9158 (541) 256-1200 (541) 481-9474 208 NW Canton John Day 541-575-2725 mbddental@live.com michaelbdesjardinmd.com A MAN WAKES UP in the morning after sleeping on... an advertised bed, in advertised pajamas. 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In Friday’s email, West- brooks added that the com- pany had been hoping to reopen the mill for years as the family had always wanted to return to Grant County. “We are excited to be back and bring much- needed jobs back to the area,” she said, “reduce wildfire risk and promote forest health.” New Patients Welcome! www.MurraysDrug.com He will bathe in an ADVERTISED TUB, shave with an ADVERTISED RAZOR, have a breakfast of ADVERTISED JUICE, cereal and toast, toasted in an ADVERTISED TOASTER, put on ADVERTISED CLOTHES and glance at his ADVERTISED WATCH. He’ll ride to work in his ADVERTISED CAR, sit at an ADVERTISED DESK and write with an ADVERTISED PEN. Yet this person hesitates to advertise, saying that advertising doesn’t pay. Finally, when his non-advertised business is going under, HE’LL ADVERTISE IT FOR SALE. Then it’s too late. AND THEY SAY ADVERTISING DOESN’T WORK? DON’T MAKE THIS SAME MISTAKE Advertising is an investment, not an expense. Think about it! CCB#186113 Michael B. 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