A6 NEWS Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, September 28, 2022 Candidates pass on E. Oregon event By ANDREW CUTLER, DAKOTA CASTETS-DIDIER and PHIL WRIGHT EO Media Group LA GRANDE — An eff ort to host a gubernatorial candidate forum at Eastern Oregon University for rural residents appears to have fi zzled out, according to the organization behind the eff ort. Jennifer Groth, director of policy and partnerships for Rural Develop- ment Initiatives, said in an email that the lack of a television sponsor for an event on the La Grande campus was ultimately what torpedoed the eff ort. “Our initial hope with this pro- posal was to ensure that the gubernato- rial candidates could hear directly from rural voters and that rural voters could hear directly from the candidates,” she said. “And so we thought this would be an opportunity to do that. I’m assuming there are other ways to connect those folks to one another, but that was our hope. And so, of course, we’re disap- pointed that it didn’t come to pass.” The eff ort, Groth said, began fol- lowing the primary when the fi eld was set with Republican candidate Chris- tine Drazan, Democratic candidate Tina Kotek and unaffi liated candi- date Betsy Johnson. Groth said Rural Development Initiatives proposed to all three campaigns a series of virtual town hall meetings to represent diff er- ent regions around the state, culminat- ing in an in-person event on the campus of Eastern Oregon University. “We talked to the diff erent cam- paigns, and Tina Kotek’s campaign came back and said we could propose to do three virtual town halls, one for each candidate, and then participate in the culminating event at Eastern Ore- gon University,” she said. There was initial interest from Dra- zan’s campaign, Groth said. “They basically told me, ‘Just let us know what’s happening, keep us in the loop, and we’ll let you know if we decide to participate.’ So I’ve been keeping them in the loop but I haven’t heard much from that campaign.” Groth said Johnson’s campaign staff indicated pretty much throughout early conversations that their interest was focused on televised opportunities to hear from the candidates as opposed to other types of formats because they thought that would reach the broadest number of Oregonians. “So we fi rst tried to arrange for livestreaming, which we could do with the resources that we had,” she said. “We went back to the campaigns and said that this is the option we can pro- Yasser Marte/East Oregonian Democrat Tina Kotek, left, Republican Christine Drazan, center, and unaffi liat- ed Betsy Johnson, the leading candidates for Oregon governor, are not coming to Eastern Oregon for a public debate in front of local voters. vide as a livestreaming option for the event. But Betsy Johnson’s campaign was actually interested in the television sponsor.” Groth said if candidates are truly interested in representing the entire state, then appearances in Eastern Ore- gon should be included. “I’m concerned that hosting these events along the I-5 corridor or in more major metropolitan areas doesn’t get (rural) voices into the conversation, and so the issues that are of concern to those particular regions of the state don’t nec- essarily get addressed as part of the media coverage of the race,” she said. Campaigns give their reasons Jennifer Sitton, communications director for the Betsy Johnson for Gov- ernor campaign, said Johnson “wel- comes every opportunity to debate her fellow candidates and wants to ensure that as many Oregonians as possible are able to hear directly from the candi- dates, which is why we are prioritizing televised debates.” Sitton said the Johnson campaign had assumed broadcasting facilities in the Tri-Cities would be willing to host a gubernatorial debate, despite being north of Oregon’s border in Washing- ton. Sitton explained the Johnson cam- paign was unclear on why that opportu- nity hasn’t arisen. In July, all three candidates partic- ipated in an Oregon Newspaper Pub- lishers Association debate that was livestreamed online rather than tele- vised. Sitton explained that debate was a special circumstance as the ONPA is a “statewide newspaper association and the traditional fi rst debate for guberna- torial candidates.” Katie Wertheimer, communications director for Tina Kotek’s gubernatorial campaign, said Kotek hadn’t rejected the idea of an Eastern Oregon debate and had attended the Eastern Oregon Economic Summit in June, which fea- tured all three candidates. “We’re not aware of any debate invitations from other Eastern Oregon media outlets,” Wertheimer explained. “Back in June, Tina agreed to eight joint forums and debates across the state, and ultimately all three can- didates agreed to fi ve,” Wertheimer said, listing the Economic Summit in Hermiston, as well as other debates or forums in Welches, Bend, Medford and Portland. John Burke, communications direc- tor for the Drazan campaign, said there was only one debate proposed in East- ern Oregon and the campaign “had some concerns with the format.” Burke did not comment on the nature of their concerns. “Christine has spent more time in Eastern Oregon than any of the candi- dates running for governor,” he said, “and will continue to campaign hard to earn the votes of rural residents from now until Nov. 8.” Northeastern Oregon party chairs react Annette Lathrop, speaking as chair of the Wallowa County Republican Party, said she does not see much value to a debate in Eastern Oregon because her county is isolated and few would have access to it. A debate at EOU, she said, likely would profi t La Grande and Pendleton more. “There are debates, and for people tuned into that, they are available,” she said. “We can access those debates.” She also said candidates are busy and only human, and there is only so much they can squeeze into a day of campaigning. She said the candidates don’t need to physically come to East- ern Oregon for voters to learn about them. Union County Republican Party Chair Allen Duff y, however, said it’s a shame the gubernatorial candidates don’t hold a debate open to the public in Eastern Oregon. “I understand that three counties in Oregon can decide who’s governor,” he said, “but that leaves the rest of us won- dering who our candidates are.” He said Drazan has visited Eastern Oregon several times, Kotek is fi rmly a leftest Democrat but Johnson presents some questions as a former Democrat now running without a party, and a pub- lic debate “would give people here an opportunity to see who she is.” Rural voters get campaign ads, liter- ature and propaganda, he said, but com- ing out to Eastern Oregon in person means voters here can see just where the candidates stand. “If you really want to be true and honest to the voters, come out and have a debate,” Duff y said. And a debate could fi re up grass- roots campaigning — knocking on doors, making phone calls, talking to people about candidates and issues. “That’s what we do out here in Eastern Oregon,” he said. “Grassroots campaigning.” Mark Peterson, co-chair of Umatilla County Democrats, said he has seen statewide candidates operate this way for years. “People really feel like they are being ignored out here,” he said. Statewide candidates tend to pay lip service to rural Oregon, Peterson said, and focus their campaigns on Oregon’s population centers from Portland south to Eugene. He said that could be why Johnson has some traction in Eastern Oregon. She seems to be popular here and could be working on getting rural Ore- gonians to back her to make up for what she may not get in the metro areas. But he said she has a lot of ground to cover there. Recent polling shows Kotek and Drazan each winning about 30% of the vote while Johnson trails at about 20%. ‘A long shot’ Tim Seydel, EOU’s vice president for university advancement, said the school explored a couple of options, including Oregon Public Broadcasting or using the school’s resources to lives- tream an event on the internet. “That was kind of a long shot to see if OPB might be able to do it,” he said. “But based on the capacity to be able to do it again, it’s one of the challenges of being in a rural area.” Seydel said the school continues to explore options, in case an 11th hour reprieve presents itself. “It’s too bad we couldn’t come, we couldn’t get them to come to Eastern, to be here,” he said. “We were hoping to engage with students and area com- munities and other schools, but unfor- tunately it doesn’t look like we’ll get that shot this time around.” Granite Hill Road gets an upgrade By JAYSON JACOBY Baker City Herald GRANITE — The drive from Sumpter to Granite looks diff erent than it did a few months ago. Feels diff erent, too. Smoother. Two separate projects, one involving the highway and one in the forest that borders it, have transformed the trip. The work is confi ned to the 9-mile stretch from Blue Springs Summit, west of Sumpter, to Granite. Crews are repaving the two- lane highway, which is part of the Elkhorn Drive Scenic Byway and also known as the Granite Hill Road. Work started earlier this summer and is scheduled to be fi nished in November of this year, according to the Federal Highway Administration. The cost is $6,328,000. The Grant County Road Department did some of the work, and the FHA awarded a con- tract to Marcum and Son LLC of Redmond. Meanwhile, workers on both sides of the highway have been cutting trees and stacking the limbs into piles that will be burned, possibly starting in late 2023. The thinning work is part of the Ten Cent project, which includes sections of the Wallowa-Whitman and Umatilla national forests, said Kendall Cikanek, ranger for the Wallowa-Whitman’s Whitman District. The Ten Cent project dates to 2017. It includes 23,990 acres on the Umatilla National For- est, and 13,810 acres on the Wallowa-Whitman. Its chief goal is to reduce the risk of wildfi res spreading rapidly by creating fuel breaks, particu- larly along roads. These “defen- sible spaces” are areas where fl ames are less likely to climb into the crowns of trees, and where fi re crews can concentrate their eff orts to stop a blaze. Cikanek said the strategy is similar to what the Forest Ser- vice has employed in the East Face project along the Elkhorn Mountains from near the Anthony Lakes Highway north to the La Grande area. MT. 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