A4 OPINION Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, August 24, 2022 OTHER VIEWS We must secure our water future O regon agriculture continues to persevere amidst histor- ic drought conditions, worldwide supply chain issues, burdensome and unnecessary regulation and global food insecurity at a level not seen in recent memory. As an industry we can do a lot, but it’s time to recognize that things must change. As droughts increase in severity and intensity, we must position ourselves to be resilient and adaptable when it comes to changing conditions. Our members are consistently looking for innovative new ways to get the work done in an effi cient and sustainable manner while continuing their signifi cant role in feeding and clothing the world and making substantial contributions to the statewide, national and global economy. If we are going to continue to be part of the solution, it is essen- tial that we are able to access our most basic need: water. Recently, our organizations partnered together to form the Ore- gon Agricultural Water Alliance, which will focus on strategic water investments and common-sense policies to promote sound water management and agricultural sustainability throughout our beautiful state. The need for this work has never been greater. Collectively, our organizations represent a broad spectrum of individuals and entities that serve nearly 600,000 irrigated acres and represent over 14,000 producers of food and other agricultural products in Oregon. The future of irrigated agriculture and the survival of fami- ly-owned and -operated farms and ranches in Oregon is at risk like never before. As organizations with diverse memberships throughout the state, we can no longer aff ord to work separately if we hope to bring much-needed change to the state’s water man- agement. We recognize that together we are stronger, and this is how we will operate as we look ahead to a critical legislative ses- sion and key election cycle in the months to come. Our state cannot risk continuing down the path of disinvest- ment in water storage. State and federal agencies must be account- able for eff ective and effi cient water management. Oregon needs outcome-focused partnerships, not regulatory roadblocks that penalize creative problem-solving. As opportunities arise, we need to be prepared to leverage federal funding for state and local infrastructure projects. Moreover, the state must facilitate opportunities as part of its own water resources strategy. Unfortunately, we are already behind on this front. As an alliance, we will work to shift state water policy to pri- oritize maintaining an adequate, safe, and aff ordable food supply, creating more water storage both above and below ground, creat- ing drought-resilient programs and projects, increasing interstate cooperation in water supply and management, demanding more agency accountability, and reducing costly and unnecessary state agency litigation. Together, we plan to create positive change by developing via- ble pathways for water projects implementation, advocating for needed changes to agency processes and administration, conduct- ing tours for legislators and agency staff to highlight opportuni- ties to improve or create water projects, and proactively support- ing innovation. We believe it is critical that the public be informed about the importance of irrigated agriculture for the state’s future health and prosperity. A recent poll asked Oregonians about the importance of the agriculture and livestock sectors to Oregon’s economy; a whopping 70% of Oregonians, across a wide range of ages, politi- cal parties, and geographic areas, responded that the industries are “extremely important.” Without the proper investment in water storage, and a shift in water policy and management, it will be a matter of time before we lose signifi cant portions of our distinctive and diverse agricul- ture industry — a critical piece of what makes our state the excep- tional and unique place that it is. To learn more about the alliance, please visit: www.oawa.info. Signatories to this column are: Todd Nash, president of Oregon Cat- tlemen’s Association; Mike Miranda, president of Oregon Dairy Farm- ers Association; Angi Bailey, president of Oregon Farm Bureau; Josh Robinson, president of Oregon Association of Nurseries; Jake Madison, president of Northeast Oregon Water Association; Rex Barber, president of Water for Life Inc.; and Brian Hampson, president of Oregon Water Resources Congress. Blue Mountain EAGLE Published every Wednesday by OFF THE BEATEN PATH Flour mill fi re sparks memories lames fi lled the structure in the photo a friend sent. News of the fi re at the Pendleton fl our mill followed. My response: shock and sadness to see this over 100-year-old land- mark structure in fl ames. A thankful note — no injuries reported. I recall my visit to the fl our mill years ago. At that time, the mill accommodated retail customers. I was deep into my interest about wheat, grains in general, and bread baking. At the mill offi ce, I met a staff person I considered the ultimate expert on wheat fl our. The list of available fl ours included several dif- ferent blends just for making bagels. I learned about hard red winter wheat (good for breads), white spring wheat (grown in the Northwest) and durum wheat (grown in Montana and popular for making noodles and pasta). Pallets held sacks with a vari- ety of fl ours. After getting a shrink- wrapped covering, the bundles of fl our were loaded into railroad cars — the train tracks visible in photos of the fl aming mill. At the mill, I chose fl our blends to purchase. The trunk of my car sagged when I left. Later I heard that the mill stopped selling retail. Perhaps it was a time issue — customers mull- ing over sacks of grain like shoppers debating additions to their summer F wardrobes. My earlier inter- est in wheat and bread-baking devel- oped when our chil- dren still lived at home. My goal: fi x tasty, nutritious Jean Ann meals, and bake Moultrie wholesome bread for the family, the aroma of loaves fresh from the oven pulling the fam- ily together at the kitchen table. My fi rst attempts at bread bak- ing — the bread possessed the tex- ture and taste of hockey pucks. Skilled bakers off ered me baking tips. I didn’t get the hang of baking bread until a friend shared an instruc- tion sheet put out by a yeast company of how to bake bread complete with ink-drawn illustrations and time- worn enough that the stove pictured was a wood-burning model. I needed more practice. I wasn’t working outside the home. New goal: bake all the bread and grain products for our family of seven children for a year. That included many types of breads, muffi ns, cakes, calzones, noodles, etc. My bread never advanced to county fair, blue ribbon status. I shifted to attainable goals — no one eating our meals or my bread developed scurvy, rickets, etc. Through the years, I paid more LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Courage in the face Grant County does need a pool. fee (John Day), $25,000 condi- And law enforcement. And a whole tional use permit & preliminary of opposition design, $20,000 SDAO Consulting lot of other things. What we don’t To the Editor: Charlene Morris, an active mem- ber of the Grant County Conser- vatives PAC that campaigned in opposition to the pool ballot mea- sure this spring, has fi led a recall petition against Lisa Weigum, a longstanding Parks and Recreation District board member. The basis for this petition is Mrs. Morris’s claim that Ms. Weigum violated public meeting laws and public records laws. Here’s the nice thing about liv- ing in the United States in the 21st century, as opposed to 18th century France. We don’t have public exe- cutions by guillotine just because Madame DeFarge has knitted your name on her political kill list (and has an insatiable appetite for revenge). Lucky for us, Mrs. Morris has not been appointed judge, jury, and executioner in this matter. The only body determining whether a violation of public meetings law occurred is the nine-member Ore- gon Government Ethics Commis- sion appointed specifi cally for that purpose — and they have made no such ruling. We are better than this. I’ve had a few policy disagree- ments with Ms. Weigum myself. Some of them included a bit of voice infl ection and some salty language that would make a sailor stand up and take notice. But here’s the thing about Lisa. She has integrity. She’s an unpaid volunteer who contributes her time (hundreds of hours a year) to serve on numerous boards and commit- tees. And she has been unfairly treated and targeted for having the courage to stand behind her convictions. need ... is more of this. Targeting public offi cials by weaponizing public records requests, fi ling recall petitions, and obstructing them in the conduct of public meetings may be in vogue in certain circles, but in reality, it accomplishes nothing. This recall petition says more about the per- son who fi led it than the person it was fi led against. Send a message to the Grant County Conservatives PAC to class it up a bit. Don’t sign this unwar- ranted petition. Nick Green John Day Facts and fi gures about pool bond To the Editor: The city of John Day and the John Day/Canyon City Parks and Recreation District was approached by the Yes to JDCC Swim Center political action com- mittee to place the $4 million pool bond back on the November gen- eral election. Some facts are appropriate to clarify the issue: An undated “Draft 7th Street Aquatics Cen- ter – Capital Construction Bud- get” by the city identifi es income of SB 5534 $2,000,000, city of JD $200,000 Gleason Pool sale pro- ceeds, city of JD $350,000 cash from interim fi nancing (i.e. line of credit), city of JD $450,000 in-kind site improvements (streets, utili- ties, broadband), Parks & Rec Dis- trict $3,000,000 general obligation bond net proceeds subtotal income $6,000,000. Expenses: $20,000 grant admin. & construction mgmt. Grant County’s Weekly Newspaper SUBSCRIPTION RATES (including online access) Editor ........................................................Bennett Hall, bhall@bmeagle.com One year ..................................................$51 Monthly autopay .............................. $4.25 Outside Continental U.S. ....................$60 Reporters .................................................... Steven Mitchell, steven@bmeagle.com Justin Davis, jdavis@bluemountaineagle.com Sports ........................................................sports@bmeagle.com Page Designer ...................................................... Randy Wrighthouse, rwrighthouse@eomediagroup.com Subscriptions must be paid prior to delivery Marketing Rep .......................................Kim Kell, ads@bmeagle.com Online: MyEagleNews.com Phone: 541-575-0710 Services, $550,000 architectural design and engineering, $25,000 community survey, $150,000 SDC connection fees, $50,000 city of John Day interim credit facility costs, $140,000 parking lot land acquisition/building demolition & site prep (city) in-kind $450,000, $4,570,000 aquatics center capital construction. Yes, this is a draft! However, the SB 5534/HB 5006 grant will not be available until 2023 and money has already been spent (i.e. community survey, con- ditional use permit, architectural design and engineering). Other concerns: The meeting prompting the city’s July 26 letter to JDCC Parks and Recreation Dis- trict voicing support for a second pool measure was hosted by the city and as such limited the public comment to one minute. It is ques- tionable if the appropriate notifi - cation was given to the tax-paying residents of Canyon City and rural areas of the district were provided an agenda and comment limitations. One participant identifi ed discrepan- cies for ORS 192.620 public meet- ing notifi cation. The OPM (Other People’s Money), i.e. Yes to JDCC Swim Center group did not voice a con- cern when the city voted to demol- ish Gleason Pool because that made repair a moot issue. The community survey that resulted in a 16.8% par- ticipation had 58% in favor of the levy and 57% of the eligible voters in the district (1,604 of 2,785) cast votes. This tends to indicate 1,181 voters either did not cast ballots for or against the measure or just did not choose to vote on this specifi c issue. John Morris John Day Periodicals Postage Paid at John Day and additional mailing offi ces. POSTMASTER send address changes to: Blue Mountain Eagle 195 N. Canyon Blvd. John Day, OR 97845-1187 USPS 226-340 Offi ce Assistant .....................................Alixandra Hand, offi ce@bmeagle.com MEMBER OREGON NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION attention to fl our products on trips on my VLB (very low budget) travel plan. In Finland, a family farm- house still stands. A Swedish-speak- ing great-grandmother baked her rye bread in a wood-burning brick oven. The fl at loaves, with a center hole about the size of a donut, were strung on wooden poles that nestled in ceil- ing-high wooden slots. In a rural village in Italy, a mother and adult daughter served up the fi n- est pizza from a wood-fi red brick oven. A Hungarian homemaker gave me a lesson on spaetzle, the noodle dough shaved through what looked like an over-sized carrot grater. This week, with the fl our mill fi re on my mind, I pulled out ingredients to concoct an original bread to honor the Pendleton fl our mill. Disclaimer: Should there be an unintentional error in the above, the author notes that the “original rec- ipe dough” she vigorously kneaded turned out to be the size of an over- infl ated basketball. By the time the author fi nished kneading, she may have developed low oxygen levels impacting cognition. Jean Ann Moultrie is a Grant County writer. Readers need not fear the author’s original bread rec- ipe turned loose on the public. The author didn’t write the recipe down. She looks forward to a successful rebuild of the fl our mill. Copyright © 2022 Blue Mountain Eagle All rights reserved. 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