A12 ELECTION 2022 Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, November 16, 2022 John Day council sees turnover New mayor for Prairie City By JUSTIN DAVIS Blue Mountain Eagle JOHN DAY — The John Day City Council will have two new faces in the new year. Sitting City Councilor Katrina Randleas cruised easily to re-election, but fellow council members Shannon Adair and Chris Labhart are on their way after being outpolled by challengers Ron Phillips and Sherrie Rininger. Three of the council’s six seats were up for grabs in the election, with the positions going to the top three vote-getters. Here are the results of the election, based on unof- ficial returns as of Monday, Phillips Rininger Nov. 14: Katrina Randleas: 486 Ron Phillips: 446 Sherrie Rininger: 393 Shannon Adair: 376 Richie Colbeth: 252 Sitting Councilor Chris Labhart missed the dead- line to get his name on the ballot but ran as a write-in candidate. Three write-in candidates garnered votes in the balloting, with the top one getting 74 votes, but they were not identified by name by the Grant County Elections Office. Under a new state law, mail-in ballots post- m a r k e d Randleas by Elec- tion Day can still be counted up to a week later, so the final results could still change. Where that could still make a difference is in the 17-vote margin between Adair and Rininger. If Adair receives enough late mail-in votes to pull ahead by the final count, she will retain her seat on the coun- cil. As of Monday, how- ever, she had only nar- rowed the gap by a single vote. Scott Offi cer headed for victory in Prairie City mayor race By TONY CHIOTTI Bluer Mountain Eagle PRAIRIE CITY — Scott Offi cer will be the next mayor of Prairie City. Results are still unoffi cial, but Offi cer appears headed for victory with the results at press time reported as follows: Scott Offi cer: 279 Georgia Patterson: 147 Write-in: 35 Offi cer, a current city council member, was not immediately avail- able for comment. He will be sworn into offi ce in the new year and will succeed Jim Hamsher, who did not seek reelection. Offi cer, 56, has served Offi cer on the city council for four years. In a candidate statement submitted to the Eagle, he said he would continue to work on updating the city’s infrastructure, particularly te water and sewer systems. Offi cer also identifi ed an outdated plan- ning document and a housing shortage as issues that Prairie City needs to address. COUNTING THE VOTES Psilocybin bans pass By TONY CHIOTTI Blue Mountain Eagle PRAIRIE CITY — Two measures on the ballot that proposed prohibitions of psi- locybin-related businesses in portions of Grant County passed handily. While results are still unoffi cial, the tallies as of late Monday, Nov. 14, left little doubt as to the fi nal outcome. Measure 12-83, which bans psilocybin-related busi- nesses in unincorporated Grant County, was passing 2,457 to 1,554. Measure 12-84, which will keep psilocybin-related busi- nesses from opening in Prai- Showing Movies Since 1940! 1809 1st Street • Baker City  NOVEMBER 18-24  THE MENU Friday Sat & Sun Mon & Tues Wed & Thurs (R) 4:20, 7:20 1:00, 4:20, 7:20 7:20 4:20, 7:20 Andrii Zhezhera/123RF Psilocybe cubensis, magic mushrooms. rie City, was passing 322 to 151. Nothing keeps similar businesses from sprouting up in other incorporated areas of the county. The measures were fi led in response to Oregon Measure 109, which was approved by voters in 2020 and directs the Oregon Health Authority to license and regulate the man- ufacture, delivery, sale and purchase of products made BLACK PANTHER: WAKANDA FOREVER (PG-13) Friday Sat & Sun Mon & Tues Wed & Thurs 3:45, 7:00 12:30, 3:45, 7:00 7:00 3:45, 7:00 TICKET TO PARADISE Friday Sat & Sun Mon & Tues (PG-13) 4:10, 7:10 1:10, 4:10, 7:10 7:10 STRANGE WORLD Wed & Thurs (PG) 4:10, 7:10 **SHOWTIMES SUBJECT TO CHANGE. VISIT OUR WEBSITE OR CALL AHEAD TO VERIFY** www.eltrym.com (541) 523-2522 with psilocybin, also known as “magic mushrooms.” While products derived from psilocybin mushrooms remain a Schedule I substance under the Federal Controlled Substances Act, this mea- sure, now codifi ed in Ore- gon Revised Statutes as ORS 475A, allows the use of such products by adults under supervised conditions for ther- apeutic purposes. The framework requires that such products be cul- tivated and produced by licensed manufacturers, tested by a licensed testing cen- ter and administered through licensed facilitators. Oregon is the fi rst state to approve such a program. The legislation specifi cally carves out the right of cities and counties to prohibit the manu- facture of psilocybin products in their jurisdictions. On the midterm election ballots, a total of 27 of Ore- gon’s 36 counties proposed bans, along with more than 100 municipalities. The bans passed in all but two Oregon counties. Tony Chiotti/Blue Mountain Eagle Grant County Clerk Brenda Percy sends a batch of ballots through the counting machine at the clerk’s offi ce Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2022. Jewell leads mayor’s race in Granite By TONY CHIOTTI Blue Mountain Eagle GRANITE — A week after Election Day, the may- or’s race in the tiny Grant County community of Gran- ite remained too close to call. Unoffi cial results as of Monday, Nov. 14, stood as follows: David Mosteit: 8 Sandra Smith: 11 Dorothy Jewell: 12 A total of 31 ballots have been tabulated so far, and there are 35 registered vot- ers with addresses in Granite, according to Grant County Clerk Brenda Percy. Ballots postmarked on or before Election Day will be counted, provided they are received by election offi cials within a week. In a race this close, the offi cial results will have to wait until the very last bal- lots are tallied, Percy said. There are challenges on sig- natures yet to be resolved on county-wide totals. The fi nal counts will be performed on Oct. 29, with certifi ca- tion on the 30th and results Jewell Smith announced the morning of Dec. 1. The vote tallies for Gran- ite’s mayoral election were locked in a tie between Sandra Smith and Dorothy Jewell in unoffi cial returns on election night, Tues- day, Nov. 8. On Thursday, a potentially tie-breaking vote was added to the tally, put- ting Jewell in the lead by one vote. Two city council seats will also be decided, with both determined purely from write-in candidates as nobody fi led to have their names appear on the bal- lot. No returns are currently available for that race. When reached for com- ment on election night, Jew- ell said she planned to go down to city hall in the morn- ing and see if she could get in to fi nd the bylaws. “The current council and mayor are the only ones who have keys to the building,” she explained, noting the build- ing has been closed for “some time.” Mosteit, the incumbent mayor, is now trailing by four votes, which could be an insurmountable defi cit. He was reached by phone the day after Election Day while elk hunting. He was in his truck, warming up with coff ee after having “putzed around for a while,” unaware of the results. “It is what it is,” he said. “And so I’ll be glad to step aside and turn it over to those folks.” When he heard the vote was a tie, he suggested a tie-breaker could be to “put the two girls at the bottom of the hill and have a race to the mailbox at the top of Center Street and see who wins.” He said he might go to city hall to dig through the boxes of papers to fi nd the city charter, hoping it might spell out the next steps should the election remain tied. But if the unoffi cial result holds up, that won’t be necessary. Coffee Break! Puzzle solutions can be found in today’s classifieds CLUES ACROSS 1. Greek mountain 5. One dependent on something 11. Gratitude 14. Glazed ceramic ware 15. Paddling 18. Step 19. More greasy 21. Upper-class young woman 23. Light beige 24. Belief in a supreme being 28. Indigenous people of Scandinavia 29. A beloved princess 30. 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