A2 NEWS Blue Mountain Eagle Dayville to build new fi re hall By JUSTIN DAVIS Blue Mountain Eagle DAYVILLE — The city of Dayville has secured over $400,000 from various sources to build a new fi re hall. The old building had to be shut down after a fi re truck backed into it in 2020, leav- ing the cement block structure unserviceable. Dayville City Recorder Ruthie Moore said the accident compromised the building’s integrity, which ultimately led to the condemnation of the structure. Eff orts to replace the structure began immedi- ately after the condemnation of the old fi re station. “We knew immedi- ately that we had to fi nd the resources to build a new fi re hall,” Moore said. “Our insur- ance money was not adequate to do that, so we began looking for additional funds — going out for grants, we Moore started hold- ing fundrais- ers and we had some great donations from local busi- nesses and residents, so that started the process.” Part of the funds to replace the fi re hall came in the form of a $32,200 federal grant recently secured by Sens. Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden. Moore said a number of community members con- tacted Oregon’s two U.S. sen- ators to request their help in securing funds for the project. “It was a joint eff ort to receive that additional fund- ing,” she said. “We are very fortunate to receive over $134,000 from the Ford Fam- ily Foundation. We received an additional $79,898 from USDA Rural Development prior to the additional $32,200 we just received.” The most recent federal grant is in addition to just shy of $80,000 the city received previously due to Wyden and Merkley’s eff orts. “When you add those two together, you’re look- ing at $110,000 or so that we received from the senators and their programs,” Moore said. “Without their assistance, we would not be proceeding at all. We’re very fortunate that we had some great federal pro- grams that stepped up.” Moore said the city has also received donations from local businesses in the form of cash or pro bono work. “We had a local business, North River Electric, donate $25,000 in electrical work,” she said. “We were able to receive $35,000 in local dona- tions from fundraisers and just some generous residents.” The total cost to rebuild the fi re hall is estimated at $462,000, and Moore said the city now has all the funds needed for the project. “We already went out to bid,” she said. “We’re await- ing the fi nal steps of signing the bid; the city just has to sign the bid documents.” High Country Contracting, owned by Wayne Overton, will be the contractor for the project. Overton is a local res- ident and will be starting the project immediately. Moore said the city expects to have the project completed before the end of the year. Man dies in horse accident at Thomas Creek Blue Mountain Eagle THOMPSON CREEK — A local man was killed in a horse accident while out moving cattle west of Daniel McKrola May 9, 2022 Daniel McKrola, 80, of Prai- rie City/John Day, died May 9, 2022 at the Blue Mountain Care Center in Prairie City af- ter a long and difficult struggle with Progressive Supranuclear Palsy. A memorial service will be held August 6th~10 AM at St. Thomas Episcopal Church in Canyon City, Oregon. Inter- ment will follow at the Prairie City Cemetery. Family and friends are invited to a recep- tion at Holliday Park after the committal service. It will be a potluck picnic. The family will fur- nish the meat, bread and cold drinks and ask guests to bring side dishes as they are able. Come and visit with the family and share your memories of our “Uncle Dan.”   Danny Jo was born in Burns, Oregon to Duce and Kathryn McKrola of Seneca, Oregon. He was their third son and was fol- lowed many years later by a sister. Several months after his birth, his name was changed to Daniel Joseph. He was a devoted uncle to his three nephews and two nieces and carried that devotion on to his 8 grandnieces and 6 grandnephews. He loved to give gifts and reveled in shopping for unusual items. His great joy was filling the Christmas stockings and preparing elaborate Easter egg hunts.   The McKrola family moved to John Day around Dan’s first birthday. He attended John Day Elementary School and graduat- ed with honors from Grant Union High School in 1960. While he was in high school, he participated in band, football, Varsity Club, class plays, basketball and served as the baseball team manager and as a Senior served as Student Body Treasurer. He was named to the Shrine East West football team as well as the Elks Team. He was also selected as the Elks Outstanding Student.   Daniel graduated from the United States Merchant Marine Academy in 1965 and served as a professional mariner for a little over 25 years before retiring. He had the opportunity to visit over 40 countries. In the early days of his career, he worked on ships delivering supplies to the military during the Vietnam War. Later he worked on ships delivering supplies in the Middle East. For the last several years of his career he worked on S.S Cornucopia traveling up and down the west coast delivering liquid ammonia from Alaska.  Daniel retired when his request for time off for his nephew’s graduation was denied; insuring such conflicts would not arise again. He continued to travel throughout Europe, Russia and vis- ited all 50 states. Daniel returned to college, earning three more degrees, to do genealogical research, shop, follow Grant Union sports and keep up with his nieces and nephews and their chil- dren. He said, “I have many wonderful grandnieces and nephews of whom I am very happy with. Most of them are very literate when it comes to computers and if they’re too little their parents are.”  We are so grateful for the help we received these last 8 years from Bev and Bill Davis of Mother’s Creek Ranch, the staff at Set- tler’s Park in Baker City, Dr. David Hall, Dr. Emily Lieuallen  and finally the tender care from all the staff at Blue Mountain Care Center in Prairie City and Blue Mountain Hospice. We would not have been able to navigate our way through this journey without you.   Daniel was preceded in death by his parents, his brothers Michael Charles and Dale Charles.  He is survived by his sister Beth Spell and her husband Jim of John Day; sister-in-law Mary McKrola and her husband Scott McNeely of Springfield, Oregon; nephews, Jason McKrola of Springfield, Oregon, Shane Spell and his wife Laura Jane of Sea- side, Oregon, and Colby Spell of Newberg, Oregon; nieces, Sarah McKrola of Eugene, Oregon and Mikaela Cloyd and her husband Jerry of Ogallala, Nebraska; grandnephews, Matthew, Logan and Gavin Cloyd, Charlie and Olin McKrola-Dey and Beckett Spell and grandnieces, Alcina, Natasha and Abigail Cloyd, Summer and Kara Spell, Ruby Joey McKrola-Dey, and Claire and Lily Spell.   In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations be made to either Shriners Hospital,  St. Thomas Episcopal Church Cove Scholarship Fund  or to the Grant Union Alumni Scholarship Fund through Tami’s Pine Valley Funeral Home and Cremation Ser- vices, PO Box 543, Halfway, OR 97834. Online condolences can be shared at www.tamispinevalleyfuneralhome.com Paid for by the family of Daniel McKrola. Magone Lake on Friday, July 22, the Grant County Sheriff’s Office announced in a news release. Kenneth “Kenny” Brooks, 64, of Fox was working in a remote sec- tion of Thompson Creek on the Malheur National Forest when the accident occurred, and family mem- bers were with him when he died, according to the news release. Grant County dis- patchers were notified of the incident at 1:41 p.m. and alerted emergency responders. Grant County sheriff’s deputies and Search and Rescue Team members, Blue Mountain Hospital ambulance crews, Oregon State Police troop- ers, Life Flight and U.S. Forest Service personnel all responded to the area. A Life Flight helicop- ter was unable to land near the scene due to the rug- ged terrain. With no road access, emergency medi- cal services personnel rode to the site on horseback. Two miles of trail was cleared into the area, but 24/7 F ORECAST A UTOMATED : 541-575-1122 R OAD CONDITIONS : 511; TRIPCHECK . COM NOAA W EATHER R ADIO FOR J OHN D AY 162.500 MHz LOCAL BRIEFING Malheur fi re danger at high JOHN DAY — The Malheur National Forest has raised fi re danger levels and has begun imposing public use restrictions in some areas. Eff ective Friday, July 22, the agency has raised the fi re dan- ger level from moderate to high in the north zone of the forest (the Blue Mountain and Prairie City ranger districts) but has not yet put any public use restrictions into eff ect. In the forest’s south zone (the Emigrant Creek Ranger Dis- trict), where the fi re danger was already at high, campfi res, char- coal fi res and stove fi res are now banned except in the follow- ing campgrounds: Buck Spring, Delintment, Emigrant, Falls, Idlewild, Joaquin Miller, Rock Springs, Tip Top and Yellowjacket. Other restrictions in the south zone include: • No smoking except in an enclosed vehicle or building, a developed recreation site or an area at least 3 feet in diameter that is cleared of all fl ammable material. • No chain saw use between 1 and 8 p.m. Operators must have a shovel and a fi re extinguisher, and a one-hour fi re watch is required after saw operations cease. • No use of internal or external combustion engines without a spark arrestor. • No use of a vehicle off Forest Service roads except when parking in a cleared area within 10 feet of the roadway. • Generators allowed only in cleared areas at least 10 feet in diameter with approved spark arrestor. Industrial fi re precautions are also being put in place. Industrial Fire Precaution Level II is in force eff ective Fri- day, July 22, in the south zone of the forest and Monday, July 25, in the north zone. Under Level II rules, many activities related to logging and other industrial operations are banned between 1 and 8 p.m. OSU canning hotline open Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce Contributed Photo Emergency medical techni- cians rode horses to get to a man who was seriously in- jured in a horse accident west of Magone Lake on Friday, July 22, 2022. the efforts did not come in time to transport Brooks to a hospital before he suc- cumbed to his injuries. Sheriff Todd McKinley thanked the volunteers and other first responders who worked to save Brooks’ life. “As your sheriff, I am ever humbled by the response of those that try their best to serve and support the citizens of this county, day by day,” he said. CORVALLIS — With canning season in full swing, the Ore- gon State University Extension Service has opened its food safety and preservation hotline, OSU announced. The hotline’s toll-free number, 800-354-7319, will be answered from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday-Friday until Oct. 7. The line is staff ed by master food preserver volunteers from Lane and Douglas counties. Last year, volunteers fi elded 1,487 calls. The most common calls have to do with preserving salsa, tomatoes and tuna. Additional information and resources — including a link to a free canning timer and checklist app — is available on OSU Extension’s home food preservation website at https://tinyurl. com/cjwr4kzt. BEO reports Q2 earnings HEPPNER — BEO Bancorp, parent company of the Bank of Eastern Oregon, had consolidated net income of just over $2.1 million or $1.76 per share in the second quarter, the com- pany announced. The company had total assets of $836 million, net loans of $493.1 million, deposits of $770.8 million and shareholder equity of $45.2 million. “Second quarter earnings are up 12.4% compared to the same period in 2021; earnings per share increased 12.1%,” President and CEO Jeff Bailey said in a news release. “Total assets have increased 15.7%, with deposits up 16.7%,” he added. “Net loans are down 1.2%, but this is attrib- utable to payoff s of (Paycheck Protection Program) loans. Organic growth without PPP loans is 9.0% year over year. With our balance sheet being asset-sensitive, earnings have benefi tted from the increased interest rates.” The Bank of Eastern Oregon operates 20 branches and four loan production offi ces in Oregon, Washington and Idaho, including a branch in John Day. Blue Mountain Eagle Timothy Leland Bailey November 18, 1945 ~ June 30, 2022 Timothy was born in Hope, Maine on November 18, 1945 to Leland L. and Mildred (Smith) Bailey. He grew up in Maine (Jonesport, Bridgeport, South Hope, Both Bay Harbor), Phoenix, AZ, Portland OR, and Gale- ta California. He received his G.E.D. in 1964 in Keitra, Morocco, and he took coursework at Eastern Oregon University. Tim joined the US Navy in 1963 and was discharged in 1969 as a Petty Officer, Second Class. He saw postings in San Diego, CA, Moroc- co, Rhode Island, Antarctica, North Carolina and Vietnam. Over his career, Tim worked for and/or owned various construction, trucking and industrial service companies, including: Peter Kiewit Construction on I-84 improvements; started his own construction firm, Harbor Construction of Kenai Alaska; and worked with Kiew- it Pacific on wastewater treatment facilities in Honolulu Hawaii, among others. He retired in 2011. Tim married Karen K. Suksdorf in 1969 in Baker, OR. Timothy sang and played trumpet in his youth, painted, and etched glass, enjoyed a wide variety of music and movies, rel- ished the opportunity to be outdoors camping, hunting and fish- ing whether in Maine, California, Alaska, Hawaii or Oregon, and occasionally mined in the Mormon Basin, Eastern Oregon. Tim is survived by Peggy Brennan of Kenai, AK; Karen K. Bai- ley (née Suksdorf) - wife; children - Kirk of Sarasota, FL; Mark of Eugene, OR, Erika of Cobb Island, MD; grandchildren - Timothy of Augusta, MT; Richard of Cobb Island, MD; Aven of Sarasota FL. He was preceded in death by Leland L. Bailey - father, Mildred Smith Bailey - mother, Faith Ann – sister. In lieu of flowers, the family invites those who wish to honor Tim’s life to contribute what they can to one or both of these rep- utable organizations serving the needs of all veterans: Veterans Expeditions (https://www.vetexpeditions.com); Wounded Warrior Project (https://www.woundedwarriorproject.org). Paid for by the family of Tim Bailey. Melanoma stands out. Check your skin. You could spot cancer. LEARN MO RE AT START SEEINGMELANOMA.COM Last Week’s Temps John Day ...........................................................HI/LO Wednesday ..................................................... 96/58 Thursday .......................................................... 95/56 Friday ............................................................... 87/53 Saturday .......................................................... 91/55 Sunday ............................................................. 92/58 Monday............................................................ 95/59 Tuesday ........................................................... 99/61 Wednesday, July 27, 2022 W EATHER F ORECAST FOR THE WEEK OF J ULY 27-A UG . 2 Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday Sunny Sunny Mostly sunny Mostly sunny Mostly sunny Mostly sunny Mostly sunny 96 93 90 61 59 56 100 100 101 101 64 65 66 65