Volunteering a way of life for lone teens VOL. 116 NO. 39 8 Pages Wednesday, September 24,1997 Morrow County, Heppner, Oregon Lawsuit filed to wreck unified rec. district Boardman resident Ed Glenn is going to court to stop the Morrow County Recreation District from collecting taxes to fund sports and other extracurricular activities in the Morrow County School District. Glenn said the rec. district was set up two years ago only as a stop gap measure and that it was never intended as a permanent solution to funding sports in the school district. In the face of budget cuts the school district had threatened to cut sports and other extracurricular activities in all the schools in the district, and the rec. district was passed by voters to fund these activities. "I believe the rec. district was created by tax payers for temporary adjustment, not as a permanent thing," Glenn said this week. If Glenn's petition in Oregon Tax Court is successful the rec. district will lose most of its taxing power, dropping the amount it can collect and give to the school district, from about $450,000 per year, to around $30,000, Glenn says. Glenn said he filed the legal action challenging the district now because, after one more year the, rec. district can tax $450,000 per year with a three percent automatic increase each year. Glenn said he was pursing legal action against the rec. district mainly to, "reduce the tax burden on Morrow County tax payers." Glenn also said he thought the school district could, if it chose to, "tighten its budgeting process", and find the money to fund sports without the rec. district. He also said the district's per pupil costs are too high compared to statewide averages. When asked what would happen to sports in the schools if the rec. district money was no longer available Glenn said the school district could come up with the money if it wanted to. He said the school district routinely overestimates expenses, and underestimates revenues, leaving it with a surplus of between $250,000 and $400,000 per year. Glenn, a former lawyer, said he would be handling all the legal work on the petition himself. "I'm sure the recreation district will go out and hire itself a high powered attorney, but I don't have the money to do that. I will be doing this myself." Recreation district board chair Cyde Estes said she wouldn’t comment on the lawsuit, saying the board had not received official notice of the legal action. Glenn's basis for the suit is that the recreation district is a school tax and therefore should be included in the $5 per $1,000 of property valuation for schools, required under Oregon law. The recreation district spends money on other activities outside the school, therefore claiming it is not a school tax and as such is subject to the higher $10 per $1,000 valuation which would preserve its taxing ability. Glenn says that the rec. district spends only a small token amount on non-school activities (mainly Morrow County Arts Council activities), and the school district spends the money how it wants, without direction from the rec. district, which, he says, proves that the money raised by the rec. district is really a school tax. If Glenn's suit is successful it would force the rec. district levy into the $5 limit and essentially eliminate its ability to levy much over $30,000 per year. Glenn said he chose now to file suit because determinations on all taxing classifications must be completed before tax statements go out this year. Tax statements normally go out near the end of October, but Glenn said because of the passage of measure 50 and the confusion that has caused, the statements will not be going out on time. "The rec. district moves to the top of the calendar," Glenn said oti when the court would resolve the issue. He said it is possible the trial could be held in Heppner. Rec. District to discuss suit The Morrow County Unified Recreation District will discuss potential litigation concerning the district's taxing authority and Ballot Measure 50 at their meeting on Thursday, Sept. 25, at Columbia Junior High School in Irrigon. Other business includes: the ski program; the Morrow County Arts Council year end report; contracts; English as a second language; and the chairman's report. The board will also meet in executive session. Topics pending include "pay to play" and, in December, the Morrow County Ski Program agreement. The next meeting will be held October 30 at the Morrow County Courthouse in Heppner. MCGG's Larry Mills announces retirement Morrow County Growers general manager Larry Mills has announced his upcoming retirement, effective in May of next year. The cooperative is in the process of advertising for a new manager through a recruiting firm. Advertisements have appeared in national trade publications and newspapers such as the Wall Street Journal. Mills, who has been with the company for 29 years, says that MCGG plans to name his successor after the first of the year. MCGG, which handles gram and provides marketing services for around 430 cooperative members and other area farmers, has a sales volume of $50 million yearly and employs 60 full-time and part-time workers. MCGG is overseen by a 12-member board of directors. MCGG has outlets in Lexington, lone and Arlington, offering farm equipment, fertilizer and chemical applications, gasoline and diesel, clothing and farm supplies and also operates grain elevators and shipping centers. MCGG recently opened a gas station and convenience store in Lexington. Mills, 61, says that he will remain in the area. Wilkinsons to be honored at dinner Dick and Virginia Wilkinson, Morrow County Wheat League 1997 Conservation winners, will be honored Wednesday, Sept. 24, at the Morrow County Fairgrounds in Heppner. A barbecue dinner will be served at 5 p.m., followed by a video tour of the Wilkinson ranch. Meat and beverages will be provided. Those with last names starting with A to M are asked to bring a salad; N to Z, a dessert. "Just as the twig is bent, the tree's inclined." This quote by Alexander Pope seems very true for two young people from lone who seem "bent" to help others. Taught to volunteer from the time they were young children, in a community where volunteering is away o f life, Steve and Liz Allen, now teenagers, have gone from helping out their neighborhood, community and state—to volunteering on a global scale. Members of the lone United Church of Christ (IUCC) and the lone Youth Group, Steve, 18, and Liz, 14, have raked leaves and shoveled snow for the elderly, aided the homeless and worked in soup kitchens on Portland's Burnside Street. Liz even started a project several years ago collecting coats for the homeless. The brother and sister completed countless other school, church and community projects over the years. But this summer, the two upped the ante. They spent some o f their summer vacation in Ecuador, building a church for some of the poorest of the poor there. The two first heard about the project in Ecuador from their pastor at IUCC, the Rev. Lea Mathieu Peterson. * "We were excited from the beginning," said Liz. "It never really sunk in though, until the day we left," added Steve. After a lengthy series of shots, the two packed their bags, including a set of tools from Morrow County Grain Growers and a bag of clothing, and set off for Ecuador on August 3. They spent around 10 hours in the air, flying from Portland to Chicago and then to Miami before arriving in Quito, Ecuador, a city of around two million people and the only industrialized area they saw in Ecuador. They spent about four days in Quito, which has an elevation of around nine thousand feet. The Allens and their group, consisting mostly of Oregonians, with the exception of one teen from Idaho and one from New York, then traveled by bus to the town of Pasco Calle. Steve said that the bus was quite nice, not at all the stereotyped movie image of a crowded bus, complete with livestock. Their reception in Pasco Calle was extremely warm, they said. Fifteen to 20 people were waiting to greet them. "They didn't shake our hands," said Steve. "They started out hugging us. We were totally spoiled there." In Pasco Calle the group built a church. Steve worked mainly with concrete and Liz painted. "It took a lot of coats of paint," said Liz. "They watered the paint so much, when we turned our backs, they would be dumping more water in." Everyone in the town helped out—kids, 60-year old men-everyone. The people in Pasco Calle improvised with branches hammered into boards for scaffolding and branches tied with string for ladders. Steve and Liz were shocked by the poverty there, but added that the people seemed really happy. "The kids waited around for our leftovers," said Liz. " While we were there, the kids ate better, the animals ate better." When the teens went to the store, they brought back candy, stickers and even a bottle of bubbles. The Ecuadorian children were fascinated with Liz' compact CD player, she said. The Allens were impressed by the closeness of the Pasco Calle people. "You couldn't tell who were brothers and sisters and whose kids were whose," they said. And they were also amazed by the peoples' faith. "Going down there," said Steve. "Religion was to me something I didn't really need. But seeing people there-their faith was so strong and they were so happy. They asked us all the time when we found Jesus and when Jesus came into our lives." The living conditions in Pasco Calle were "the worst" said the Allens. "It makes you realize how many details you have here Steve and Liz Allen Ecuadorian rain forest in the Steve and Liz Allen (in the U.S.) that you don't need," added Liz. "They didn't have anything, but they keep going through faith. Every night they would get together and sing." Liz said she sang Beatles songs with some of the people and they enjoyed having Steve play his harmonica. Liz visited an orphanage where the workers earned $50 in American money for two months' work. The children couldn't afford medical care, so the group paid for a child, ill for several months, to go to a doctor. The doctor's visit cost only $3 but it was beyond the means of the people there. People were so poor, it wasn't unusual to see children without clothes and animals going to the bathroom on the floor in the houses, they said. During their visit to Pasco Calle, the teenagers "gave away a lot of money", bought paint and supplies and left their tools and a lot of clothes. "No matter how much we did, it just wasn't enough," said Steve. "We took more out of that trip than we gave." "It made you grow up a lot," replied Liz. When they left Pasco Calle practically the whole town turned out to tell them how much they appreciated the Americans' visit. "They told us that for three years they had been waiting for another group of God to come," said Liz. "When they spoke, it was so powerful." After a week in Pasco Calle, the group traveled to another town, Otovalo, to build a church there. Their reception in Otovalo was as cool as the reception was warm in Pasco Calle. Only two people showed up to greet them and in church, the people from Otovalo sat on one side and the American group on the other. "The church was nice," said Steve, "but it seemed that we did things that weren’t really needed. It seemed that they just wanted us to give them money." After a week in Otovalo, the Allens and their group were ready for some R and R Tliey took a seven-hour bus ride and a 1-1/2 hour canoe ride to spend a week "on vacation" in the Ecuadorian jungle. On the way, they encountered random stops "by guys with guns" and were told by their interpreter to keep quiet—advice they took to heart. In the jungle they visited a reserve for endangered animals and animals confiscated from smugglers. They saw poisonous snakes, boa constrictors, parrots, monkeys and incredible plants and flowers and even met a Peace Corps worker from Corvallis there. The monkeys jumped down and sat on the visitors' heads and shoulders. "You had to watch your backpacks," said Steve, "because they'd unzip them and steal stuff out." A monkey even stole a bottle of pop from Liz— and drank it. They had rainwater showers, but the first night Liz encountered a tarantula in the shower. So from then on, they bathed mostly in the river, despite warnings about snakes. "I prayed every day that they would be safe," said Liz and Steve's mother, Jannie. "But Dick (their father, who is principal at lone Schools) and I never really worried about them. When they're doing something they should be doing, you feel as someone's watching over them." She said that she had learned a lot about the country through a friend and fellow teacher from Ecuador, Vicky Broden, who taught at Heppner Middle School, Junior High and High Continued next page CENEX OIL SALE on selected 55 drums, 2% gallon, and quarts Prices posted in store... Sale good through Sept. 30th MORROW COUNTY GRAIN GROWERS Lexington 989-8221 1-800-452-7396______________