NEWS MyEagleNews.com A3 Grant logs 26th Planning board seeks members COVID death Vaccine clinics come to county By TONY CHIOTTI Blue Mountain Eagle By TONY CHIOTTI Blue Mountain Eagle By TONY CHIOTTI Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY — There will be a series of vaccination clinics off ered in Grant County by the Oregon Health Authority and the Grant County Health Depart- ment starting Monday, Oct. 3, at various locations around the county. The OHA will be pro- viding a team to assist in admin- istering both COVID-19 and fl u vaccines. Primary COVID-19 vaccines as well as bivalent boosters, which are specifi cally designed to target the dominant omicron subvariants of the virus, will be available. There will be both regu- lar and high-dose fl u vaccines; high-dose versions are intended for patients over the age of 65 or with underlying conditions. It is recommended that resi- dents check with their primary care providers prior to attend- ing to help them choose the right options, although nurses will be able to answer questions at the clinics. Attendees should bring insur- ance information and any doc- umentation of prior COVID-19 vaccination with them. Here is the schedule for the vaccination clinics: • Monday, Oct. 3, 1-3 p.m. at Wednesday, October 5, 2022 Blue Mountain Eagle, File A health care worker prepares a COVID-19 shot. the Dayville Community Hall. • Tuesday, Oct. 4, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. at the Monument Senior Center, 269 Main St. • Wednesday, Oct. 5, 8:30 to 10:30 a.m. at the Long Creek School. • Wednesday, Oct. 5, noon- 1:30 p.m. at the Prairie City Senior Center, 204 N. McHaley St. • Thursday, Oct. 6, 11 a.m.-1 p.m. at the Seneca Community Center. • Friday and Saturday, Oct. 7 and 8, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. at the Grant County Health Depart- ment, 528 E. Main St., Suite E, John Day. JOHN DAY — The Grant County Health Department reported the 26th death of a local resident related to COVID-19 on Monday, Oct. 3. The 97-year-old male died at his res- idence on Sept. 25 and had underlying health conditions, the department said in a news release. Grant County reported 22 new COVID-19 cases in the previous week. There is currently one person hospital- ized in Grant County with COVID-19. The state of Oregon reported 4,553 cases in the week ending on Sept. 28, as well as 41 new deaths and 268 hos- pitalizations. Nationally there have been a total of 96,418,825 COVID cases and 1,059,711 deaths since the start of the pandemic. Reported case numbers only reflect cases known to county and state author- ities and do not include positive home tests that were not reported. The Grant County Health Depart- ment asks that people report any pos- itive at-home tests by calling the Ore- gon Heath Authority at 1-866-917-8881 as well as notifying all close con- tacts so they can watch for symp- toms and reduce the spread of the disease. Vaccination is still the single most effective way to protect yourself and reduce the impact of COVID-19 in the community, according to public health officials. The Centers for Disease Con- trol and Prevention strongly encourages COVID-19 vaccination for everyone aged six months and over. CANYON CITY — The Grant County Planning Commission is seeking new volunteer members to ensure its ability to oversee land use, zoning applications and the siting of new facilities. The commission is made up of nine regular members and two alternates, brought in to make a quorum when required. Currently, the commission has no alternates and only eight members. Grant County Planning Direc- tor Shannon Springer explained that such a lean roster risks situa- tions where the commission can’t fulfi ll its vital role. “We have 150 days to get through any local appeals,” said Springer. She explained that if the appeals process is not completed within the statutory time frames, an application could be approved by default, regardless of its merits. “So somebody wants to put a dog food factory on the corner next to, say, the grade school, and we don’t make all of our timelines, even though it’s not an allowable use and they don’t meet the cri- teria, then it would be authorized by default because they weren’t aff orded the appropriate process in the appropriate time frame.” She explained that the com- missioners are careful to plan things out to avoid such outcomes, but they would like to fi ll out their ranks to make sure they are never put in that position. Applications for new members are reviewed by the current mem- bers of the planning commission, who make a recommendation to the Grant County Court. The court makes the appointments as part of its regular meetings. Positions are approved for a four-year term, at the end of which members are free to reapply. Springer said there is an eff ort to ensure that a wide geograph- ical area of Grant County is rep- resented, and there are statutory requirements that state no more than two members should be from the same industry background, in order to ensure fairness in the decisions. “It’s not an enormous time commitment,” said Springer, add- ing that when a complex case does come up, there is support for commission members. While not allowed to talk to each other or to applicants or complainants, com- missioners are able to receive sup- port from the planning offi ce staff in order to understand the codes and processes before them. “It’s a key and integral part of Oregon’s land use process,” said Springer. “Citizen involvement is a foundational block.” The commission meets at 5:30 p.m. on the fourth Thurs- day of the month at the John Day Fire Hall, 316 S. Canyon Blvd. Agendas and minutes from past meetings are published online at https://grantcountyoregon. net/248/Planning. Anyone interested in applying should pick up a volunteer appli- cation form from the county court or by contacting the planning offi ce directly. Fourth Avenue to reopen next month By JUSTIN DAVIS Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY — Work to repair a fl ood-damaged stretch of Southwest Fourth Ave- nue should be completed next month. A portion of Fourth Avenue, which serves as the primary connector between John Day and the Grant County Regional Justin Davis/Blue Mountain Eagle Airport, was damaged in 2019 after fl ooding in Canyon Creek Lee Duckett of Tidewater Contractors operates a front loader on eroded the bank beneath the Wednesday, Sept. 29, 2022. The company is shoring up a fl ood-dam- aged portion of Southwest Fourth Avenue in John Day. roadbed. Eff orts by Tidewater Con- tractors to repair the road are ging out the road base in the ate the road base that had fallen about halfway done, according damaged area. Sandbags were into Canyon Creek during the to Tidewater’s Lee Duckett. then placed along the creek fl ooding. An update on the status of to keep water out of the work A riprap wall made of large the project was provided at the site before a survey of the line boulders will then be con- Sept. 27 John Day City Coun- where a mechanically stabi- structed to anchor the MSE cil meeting by Nick Green, the lized earth retaining wall would retaining wall to the bank. The city’s chief planning offi cial. be placed. The MSE retain- result, Green said, will be a Excavation of the site began ing wall consists of compacted native-looking slope with the on Sept. 1, with workers dig- soil and gravel and will re-cre- riprap anchoring the MSE wall WHAT’S HAPPENING THURSDAY, OCT. 13 Triple P Positive Parenting Program • 5:30-8 p.m., Painted Sky Cen- ter for the Arts, 118 Washington St., Canyon City Free parenting program that combines four evening sessions with personal phone calls to help with individual implementation. Sponsored by Families First, Com- munity Counseling Solutions and Frontier Early Learning Hub. Free dinner and free child care available. Register online at https://tinyurl. com/bdevzm6s. For more informa- tion, call 541-575-1006. FRIDAY, OCT. 14 Dayville Fall Festival • 6 p.m., Dayville Community Hall, Highway 26, Dayville The town will hold its annual Fall Festival in the newly renovated Dayville Community Hall. Corn- bread, rolls and apple cider will be provided, and attendees are asked to bring a soup, stew, chili or dessert to share. There will also be a cake- W HAT’S HAPPENING walk and an Anything Pumpkin Contest (bring food, artwork or any- thing else pumpkin-related to enter). Winners of the Scarecrow Contest will be announced, the community hall’s new tile wall will be unveiled, and Dayville student work will be displayed. THURSDAY, OCT. 20 Triple P Positive Parenting Program • 5:30-8 p.m., Painted Sky Cen- ter for the Arts, 118 Washington St., Canyon City Free parenting program that combines four evening sessions with personal phone calls to help with individual implementation. Sponsored by Families First, Com- munity Counseling Solutions and Frontier Early Learning Hub. Free dinner and free child care available. Register online at https://tinyurl. com/bdevzm6s. For more informa- tion, call 541-575-1006. THURSDAY, NOV. 10 Triple P Positive Parenting Program • 5:30-8 p.m., Painted Sky Cen- ter for the Arts, 118 Washington St., Canyon City Free parenting program that combines four evening ses- sions with personal phone calls to help with individual imple- mentation. Sponsored by Fami- lies First, Community Counsel- ing Solutions and Frontier Early Learning Hub. Free dinner and free child care available. Regis- ter online at https://tinyurl.com/ bdevzm6s. For more information, call 541-575-1006. Do you have a community event you’d like to publicize? Email information to editor@bmeagle. com. The deadline is noon Fri- day for publication the following Wednesday. A MAN WAKES UP in the morning after sleeping on... an advertised bed, in advertised pajamas. 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! Blue Mountain Eagle MyEagleNews.com mentioned that the repaired sec- tion of road may not be paved when it fi rst reopens to the pub- lic but it will be in good enough condition to drive on and will be repaved eventually. Duckett confi rmed Green’s timeline in an interview, stat- ing that the road will be opened to the public sometime in November. “(We have to) fi nish build- ing the rock wall (and) get it brought up to the surface, and then put in a storm drain and some paving. That’s about it,” he said. “We’re probably at the half- way mark (or) a little further than that. We dug out pretty fast. … It’ll get faster and faster the higher we get,” Duckett added. Tidewater’s bid for the project was $917,575. The work was originally going to be 75% funded by the fed- eral Emergency Management Agency with a 25% match by the city. The project is now completely grant-funded. Harvest Festival Oct 14th 3pm-8pm, Oct 15th 9 am - 2 pm. Heritage Barn at the Grant County Fairgrounds. Multiple Food Vendors, Curbside Cravings on Saturday, Hot Dig-Ga-Dy Dogs, hot dogs and sausage dogs with all the fixings on both days. Fire and Ice Ice Cream, multiple dietary options available. Live Music Kids activities- face paintings too! Drawing for a 8 burner grill Cider Press available, bring your own apples/containers, or both available for purchase. Autumn mini photo sessions Pumpkins and winter squash, home canned goods, baked treats & honey for sale 20+ vendors Sign up to be a vendor: grantcofarmersmarket@gmail.com or call 541-620-3152 S286526-1 THURSDAY, OCT. 6 Triple P Positive Parenting Program • 5:30-8 p.m., Painted Sky Cen- ter for the Arts, 118 Washington St., Canyon City Free parenting program that combines four evening sessions with personal phone calls to help with individual implementation. Sponsored by Families First, Com- munity Counseling Solutions and Frontier Early Learning Hub. Free dinner and free child care available. Register online at https://tinyurl. com/bdevzm6s. For more informa- tion, call 541-575-1006. Emergency communications council meeting • 6 p.m., John Day Fire Hall, 316 S. Canyon Blvd. The Grant County Emergency Communications Agency Intergov- ernmental Council will meet to dis- cuss the appointment of a budgeting offi cer, a hiring bonus program and other matters. The meeting is open to the public. To join via telecon- ference, dial 605-313-5406 and use access code 889135. to the bank while the MSE retaining grid stabilizes the wall. Native soil will then be put back in place and eff orts to re-vegetate the site will begin. Green said the goal of the proj- ect is to bring the site back to pre-disaster conditions. Tidewater was expected to be fi nished with restoration eff orts around Canyon Creek by Sept. 30, with the road opened for use by the general public again by the end of October or early November. Green also Don’t get left behind, call today! Kim Kell 541-575-0710