Ruralite
OREGON TRAIL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE
FEBRUARY 2025

INSIDE >> Scholarships Close Soon—Apply Today
Surging Demand, Shrinking Supply
What’s in My Electric Bill?
OREGON TRAIL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE
FEBRUARY 2025
INSIDE >> Scholarships Close Soon—Apply Today
Surging Demand, Shrinking Supply
What’s in My Electric Bill?
February 2025 • Volume 72, No. 2
CEO Michael Shepard
SENIOR VP OF CONTENT Leon Espinoza
EDITORIAL DIRECTOR Chasity Anderson, CCC
DEPUTY EDITORIAL DIRECTOR
Noble Sprayberry
SENIOR EDITOR Jennifer Paton, CCC
ASSISTANT EDITORS Victoria Hampton, CCC; David Herder, CCC; Sable Riley, CCC
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
Valeri Saldanha Rosa, Nina Todea
PUBLICATIONS PRODUCTION SR. MANAGER
Elizabeth Beatty
SENIOR PUBLICATIONS COORDINATOR
Alyssa McDougle
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February always has a chill to the air, but it’s also a month brimming with warmth and connection.
As we lean into the spirit of Valentine’s Day, our stories reflect the love and care that bind our communities together— from the joy of making music to the dedication of those nurturing the land and each other.
In a small, historic schoolhouse near Junction City, Oregon, the lively strains of fiddle music fill the air. Thanks to music teacher Amy Burrow, young musicians are discovering the joy of traditional jam sessions.
Amy’s quarterly gatherings, supported by grants, are more than just lessons. They are opportunities to build confidence, creativity and camaraderie. For 14-year-old Sapphire Rain, fiddle music is all about freedom and expression.
“You can do what you want with it,” she says.
What better way to share the love of music than by passing it on to the next generation? You can read more on Page 10.
The idea of sharing knowledge and building connections extends to our feature on University Extension programs. Across the country, these programs empower individuals and strengthen communities.
From helping women in farming gain confidence through Annie’s Project in Idaho to saving lives through the Diabetes Prevention Program in Arizona, Extension offices focus on uplifting people in practical, meaningful ways. Read more on Page 12.
February is a time to embrace moments of connection. Whether it’s a warm meal shared with loved ones, planning a spring garden with a friend or learning something new and sharing that new skill, this month invites us to celebrate the ties that bind us.
Have an idea for a story we should share about your community? Reach me at editor@pioneer.coop.
Chasity Anderson Editorial Director
For supplemental and interactive content, search @Ruralite on your favorite social media sites.
Up Close, Page 10
From hands-on farming skills to diabetes prevention, initiatives help America innovate Spotlight, Page 12
In The Kitchen, Page 16
Power outages disrupt our lives. Disruptions may be brief, causing only minor inconvenience, or they may be prolonged, creating unique challenges for you and your electric cooperative.
Power outages happen for many reasons, and understanding these causes can help mitigate their effects.
Here are some common causes:
Planned maintenance or upgrades. Utility companies, such as Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative, occasionally schedule outages to upgrade equipment or perform maintenance. While inconvenient, these outages are necessary to prevent larger, unplanned disruptions.
When OTEC plans an outage, it first contacts member-owners who have a power meter that will be affected. The member-owners are informed when the outage will occur and how long it’s anticipated to last. This is one reason why it’s so important to ensure your contact information is up to date.
OTEC invests heavily in strengthening its infrastructure all year to improve system resiliency and maintain the mission of providing safe, reliable power to its member-owners.
Severe weather events. Weather is the leading cause of power outages. High winds, heavy rain, snow, ice and lightning can damage power lines, poles and substations. During storms, for example, falling trees often sever power lines, leaving entire neighborhoods in the dark.
In Eastern Oregon, winter storms are a significant cause of power outages. Strong winds can topple trees and limbs into poles and lines, and heavy snow can weigh down lines, causing outages.
Equipment failure. Electrical infrastructure is susceptible to wear and tear. As equipment ages, it can wear out and fail. OTEC patrols its lines and inspects equipment for damage to minimize failures, but they do still occur, necessitating crews to locate and repair the failures when they happen.
Animal interference. Occasionally, small animals—such as squirrels or birds—find their way into a substation or transformer, inadvertently causing power disruptions. This is a common occurrence and can be challenging to prevent.
Human error or accidents. Construction work, vehicles colliding with utility poles and digging into underground power lines are common human-related causes of power outages.
Cyberattacks and Vandalism. In rare cases, intentional sabotage or cyberattacks on the power grid can lead to
widespread outages, highlighting the importance of cybersecurity measures within the utility industry.
Public Safety Power Shutoffs. When an area we serve is at high risk for wildfire, it may be necessary to preemptively shut off power to protect that community. This action is called a Public Safety Power Shutoff (PSPS) and is only initiated as a last-resort safety measure under certain extreme weather conditions.
OTEC takes the decision to turn off power seriously, and we use the best, most accurate data to inform our decisionmaking process. We send an annual notification letter to member-owners with meters in high-risk wildfire areas susceptible to PSPS.
Restoring power after an outage is a coordinated effort involving specialized personnel, advanced technology and clear prioritization.
When OTEC dispatchers receive notice of outage locations, they alert line crews, engineers and others involved in the restoration process. This typically includes:
1. Assessing the damage. The process begins with identifying the cause of the outage. Utility companies use outage management systems and smart-grid technology, such as Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition, to pinpoint the affected areas. Field crews assess physical damage.
2. Prioritizing repairs. Restoration efforts prioritize critical infrastructure, such as hospitals, emergency services and water treatment plants. Next, they focus on areas with the largest number of affected member-owners.
3. Repairing or replacing equipment. Crews repair downed power lines, replace damaged transformers and secure poles. Following severe damage, rebuilding parts of the grid may be required, which can extend restoration times.
4. Testing and reenergizing. Before restoring power, utility workers test the repaired equipment to ensure safety and stability. Once the system is verified, they restore power incrementally to avoid overloading the grid. Line crews inspect each section of the line affected to make sure it’s safe for members and themselves before turning the power back on.
5. Communicating with memberowners. Throughout the process, OTEC’s communications team provides updates to local media and member-owners via social media. For prolonged outages and PSPS, additional communication is issued.
Restoring power is not without its challenges. Adverse weather may make it impossible to begin repairs right away. The damage may be in a remote area, requiring crews to cut their way through downed trees to get to the location of the outage.
OTEC’s line crews often face severe conditions, including heavy snow, high winds and extreme temperatures, while repairing damage and restoring power.
How can you help?
When a power outage occurs, OTEC prioritizes restoring your power as quickly as it is safe to do so. You can help by calling to report outages, report birds building a nest on a power pole or tree limbs growing into power lines, and staying alert when working or playing near electrical equipment. Most importantly, if you see downed power lines, stay back and call 911 or OTEC right away.
Power outages are a part of life, but understanding their causes and the effort required to restore power helps everyone appreciate the work of OTEC. By investing in modern infrastructure and adopting preventive measures, the co-op can reduce the frequency and duration of outages, ensuring more reliable power supply for all.
OTEC’s commitment to strengthening its infrastructure is a testament to the dedication and hard work of its employees, who brave dangerous conditions to keep the community’s lights on while delivering on their mission to provide safe and reliable electricity at a competitive price. n
After decades of flat or declining electricity demand, the United States is in the midst of a boom in power use. Recent government data shows power consumption nationwide is set to increase by at least 38 gigawatts between now and 2029. This trend would ordinarily be great news for the power industry. But government policies aimed at shutting down fossil fuel-based generation and yearslong delays in permitting and siting for new transmission lines are turning this power boon into a capacity crisis. Here are the primary demand drivers:
Electrification
Electric vehicle adoption, electrification of home heating and industrial electrification are expected to increase overall U.S. energy consumption by 1% per year through 2026.
Economic Growth
Driven by explosions in artificial intelligence, cryptocurrency and cloud computing, total U.S. data center load is projected to increase by 65% by 2050.
Residential power consumption is expected to increase by 14% to 22% through 2050 due to increases in population and steady economic growth.
New, expanding and “onshored/reshored” manufacturing capacity driven by federal incentives is expected to increase industrial demand by 13,000 GWh per year. Key products: EVs, batteries, semiconductors, solar power components
Analysts predicted in 2023 that U.S. peak demand will increase by at least 38 GW over the next five years, nearly double the growth rate predicted in 2022.
Academic Scholarships
Attention, high school students and those looking to go to college. Do you need help paying for your education? Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative has academic scholarships to help power your future.
There are $5,000 academic scholarships available, as well as a scholarship that covers four years of tuition and fees at Eastern Oregon University.
Applications are due by March 16. Visit otec.coop/scholarships to learn more and apply.
Looking for a rewarding career in a trade or technical field? The world needs welders, truck drivers, construction workers and cosmetologists.
OTEC has a scholarship that’s right for you. An OTEC Trade School Scholarship can provide you with up to $5,000 to help power your future in the trades. Applications are open, with the first review of applicants in March.
Visit otec.coop/scholarships for more information. n
OTEC offices are closed for Presidents Day on Monday, Feb. 17. If you need to conduct business with OTEC, you can view your account, make payments, set up paperless billing and more on the free MyOTEC app.
You may also pay your bill at the kiosks at any OTEC office or by visiting otec.coop.
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Minimum order of 5 coins
GENERATIONAL WEALTH is of paramount significance as it represents a beacon of financial stability. It serves as a tangibletestament to the hard work, diligence, and financial acumen of previous generations, offering a solid foundation upon which future generations can build their dreams and aspirations.
American Gold Reserve is releasing Government issued $5 Gold American Eagles completely free of dealer mark-up for only $299 each. These beautiful $5 Gold American Eagles are a perfect way to enter the gold market. They are set for immediate public release and will sell out fast
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FROM ABOVE: Sapphire Rain keeps a close eye on her instructor as she learns a new fiddle tune. Musicians take a break from playing to dance. From left, Nina Kuhl, Leo Kuhl and Tristan
play along with the group. Anna Vane concentrates during class. Amy brings a lot of energy to the class as she teaches the students how to play in a jam session. The 1888 schoolhouse is a fitting setting for old-time fiddle music.
By Ginger Meurer
When Emily Black and her husband, Luke, started farming, they needed help.
“I went to the library and got every single farming book I could find, but that only takes you so far,” Emily says. “Then, there’s YouTube channels that you’re following, but they’re so generic. What about my area? What about my soil?”
To find those close-to-home answers, Emily turned to Annie’s Project at the University of Idaho Cooperative Extension.
Extensions services spread the mission of land-grant universities beyond campuses, reaching out to residents of all ages across America. Educational opportunities provided by extension services cover a wide range of topics, such as helping farmers grow crops and livestock, educating adults about gardening and health, and teaching youth hands-on skills.
University of Idaho Extension educator Colette DePhelps says Annie’s Project courses help women farm operators gain skills, manage risks and build professional networks. While participants have met in person in the past, recent sessions have been virtual—three hours weekly over 12 weeks.
Classes are structured to accommodate the realities of life.
“We know you are multitasking, and it’s fine,” Colette says. “It’s fine if your kids are on Zoom. It’s fine if you have to step away and come back. We totally understand. We’re a very welcoming class.”
Participants come from all scales of operations.
“Newer farmers are learning from farmers who have been farming for a long time,” Colette says. “But also, newer farmers have a different perspective, and they may be more comfortable with technology or direct marketing, so they have fresh ideas to share with more experienced farmers about reaching modern clientele.”
That was the case for Emily, who now teaches marketing strategy through the extension and offers one-on-one coaching through cultivatingyourmarket.com.
Annie’s Project is only one of a wide variety of courses offered through extensions. While 4-H youth development programs and
Master Gardeners community gardening experts are well known, extensions across the country lead a host of other projects they’re excited about.
In Twin Falls County, Idaho, extension educator Siew Guan Lee leads Kids in the Kitchen, a live online cooking program co-launched with the University of Georgia Cooperative Extension in 2020.
“One of the goals is that kids are the chef, and they’re making the meal for the family that night,” Siew says. She started out offering kid-trusted basics with healthy twists, such as baked chicken nuggets and mac and cheese with broccoli. Participants encouraged Siew to embrace diverse dishes, including offerings from Mexico, Japan, Hawaii, Thailand, Ireland and more. Inspired by a colleague in Georgia, Siew also offers Southern dishes.
“And, of course, we’re Idahoans,” she says. “So, potatoes. We have to have that featured.”
Though the program is intended for Idaho residents, Siew says children log in from Wyoming, Washington, Utah, Oregon, Colorado, California and even Canada. And they aren’t just learning nutrition and food prep skills. They’re bonding with their sous-chef parent assistants.
“Parents said in their feedback that it actually improved their family dynamics,” she says.
Getting families involved in nutrition education was also one of the goals behind Washington State University-Chelan and Douglas Counties Extension’s Story Walk.
Extension director Margaret Viebrock says they teamed with Friends of the Library to select and dissect oversized nutritional picture books. They mounted pages on foamcore with English on one side and Spanish on the other, then took them on the road.
The first book was, “I Will Never Not Ever Eat a Tomato,” which was set up at the Master Gardeners’ Tomato Gala, an annual sample fest where the community votes on which tomato varieties the Master Gardeners grow for the spring plant sale.
The story walk was a hit with families strolling through, reading and collecting prizes after a quiz at the end. The project won a regional award and has been duplicated in half a dozen other extension offices in the state.
The extension also teaches nutrition basics in schools so children “understand that food doesn’t come from the back of a grocery store,” Margaret says. “There’s actually a farmer out there who grows it.”
The mission continues in community gardens, where aspiring green thumbs of all ages can rent small plots for the summer with water, seeds and a few starter plants included.
Lessons get serious when it comes to food preservation. It’s not like baking cookies, Margaret explains. If you’re out of chocolate chips and you substitute raisins, it’s still a cookie.
“With canning and preserving food, you just can’t make a substitution and put it in a sealed jar and expect it to be safe,” she says. “Just because it’s on the internet doesn’t mean it’s right. It’s important to know the source of a recipe to make sure it’s safe to use.”
Life on the Tundra
Hands-on education is so important to the Bering Strait Region Cooperative Extension that students are flown in three to four times a year for the High Latitude Range Management Program—an offering assistant professor Jackie Hrabok says is among the extension’s coolest.
The Western Alaska extension serves residents of Nome and 15 Alaska Native villages in the surrounding 36,000 square miles. Most of the area’s population is Inuit, living in villages off the road system across the Seward Peninsula.
Students learn to manage free-range reindeer that live alongside musk ox, caribou, arctic and red foxes and grizzly bears. They learn how many animals can survive on the rangeland, their preferred diets and how to prevent illness in the animals.
“Interactions between people and animals and the land is all part of the hands-on experience in the classroom and in the field doing field work and learning what type of techniques are used currently to monitor animals and the health of the land,” Jackie says.
The extension also taps the talents of community elders who take students out in the summer and prepare them to learn about plants by having them close their eyes.
“We will taste all the leaves of a variety of species of plants on the tundra,” Jackie says.
Food preservation lessons are also vital as communities deal with seasonal shortages. Jackie explains what changes in weather or delays in supply flights can mean.
“Your little village grocery store, quite often, might not be stocked with the nutrition that you seek,” she says. “So, you go on the land and in the waters, and you bring it home.”
Unlike other extensions tied to a single land-grant college, the University of California’s system taps talent and resources across all 10 University of California campuses while operating as its own entity. Brent Hales, associate vice president for research and cooperative extension, says extension advisers are on the ground throughout the state engaging with local governments, businesses, nonprofits and communities.
The extension operates nine research farms stretching from its borders with Oregon to Mexico. Newer agriculture projects step into the future with drones and robotics.
“We’re investing a lot of time, effort and resources into technology transfer and working with growers and companies to develop cutting-edge technologies,” Brent says. “We’re working with different community colleges and universities to engage both college and high school students in robotics competitions specifically designed to do workforce development to help kids see that they have a great future in agriculture, and they may not touch the dirt at all other than walking on it.”
The extension is also part of a disaster preparedness and resilience team launched in October to face “fire, flood, drought, you name it, climate, heat, human pandemic, animal pandemic, a whole litany,” Brent says.
Cooperative extensions provide practical resources and education, helping communities solve real-world challenges. Whether teaching kids to cook, supporting farmers or preserving local traditions, these programs build stronger, more resilient communities for the future. n
Visit extension.org/find-cooperative-extension-in-your-state to find the cooperative extension in your state.
Latin, Greek, rhetoric, history and mountains of memorization were all elements of the classical university education available to only an elite few Americans before the Civil War. Then, the nation’s education mission expanded on a path that resulted in the cooperative extension network.
X The Land-Grant College Act of 1862, called the Morrill Act for its sponsor, U.S. Rep. Justin Smith Morrill of Vermont, granted each state 30,000 acres of western land for each of its congressional seats to expand access to college education.
X In 1890, the second Morrill Act expanded the land-grant university funding system to the southern states. Native American tribal colleges were added with the Equity in Educational Land-Grant Status Act of 1994.
X In 1914, Congress passed the Smith-Lever Act, which established the Cooperative Extension Service. At the time the act was signed, more than 50% of the U.S. population lived in rural areas, and 30% of the workforce was engaged in farming, according to the United States Department of Agriculture.
X Today, roughly 17% of Americans live in rural areas. University extensions have offices in or near most of the country’s approximately 3,000 counties.
BY NATALIA
Collard Greens With Bacon
2 pounds collard greens
4 thick-sliced bacon strips, chopped
1 cup chopped onion
4 cups chicken stock
1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
Trim thick stems from collard greens, and coarsely chop leaves. In a Dutch oven, saute bacon for 3 minutes. Add onion. Cook until onion is tender and bacon is crisp, about 8 to 9 minutes. Add greens. Cook just until wilted. Stir in remaining ingredients. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat, and cover. Simmer until greens are tender, about 45 to 50 minutes.
Free to an appreciative home. Almostcomplete sets of “Idaho Magazine” years 2018-24. Pick up at my address in Idaho or by arrangement in Netarts, Oregon. Will ship by UPS if prepaid.
Jim Fazio 1049 Colt Road Moscow, ID 83843
Looking for used postcards featuring the greater Bend/Central Oregon area with writing on the back. These likely would have been from people visiting the area and mailing postcards to friends or family in other parts of Oregon or other states. Thank you.
J. Stephens 19110 Buck Drive Bend, OR 97703
Please help with a legacy artwork of black and white photography portraits for my art project. I will email you a photo of the final. I don’t have any photos of family, so anything will be appreciated. I’m a hobbyist, not a professional photographer.
NJ Bittick 1009 Orchard St. Susanville, CA 96130
I have many used greeting and Christmas cards and a surplus of wrapping paper. If anyone would like to have some of these for a project, I will help with shipping.
Tam Judy 456714 Highway 95 Careywood, ID 83809 jslashbrand@gmail.com
Our father, Marvin, will celebrate his 89th birthday in February. When he was in his 20s, he was stationed with the Air Force in Alaska and never left. He has been in Alaska for over 65 years, worked for the FAA, owned a construction company and enjoyed years of wilderness adventures. Please send to, Marvin Hassebroek, 518 Slater Drive, Fairbanks, AK 99701
Melanie Hinzman Fairbanks, Alaska
Our wonderful grandmother Marian celebrates 100 years in February. Longtime residents of Brookings-Harbor will remember her beautiful smile and gracious presence working at her in-laws mercantile, Hanscam's Store, following her move to Oregon from Kentucky with her Fort Knox soldier after the war. She still attends mass and bakes a terrific cookie. If you care to send a card, poem, cookie or bar recipe, recollection, postcard, etc., to her c/o of me, I'll be sure to deliver them on her birthday. Thank you in advance for sending cheer.
Marian, c/o Cora Rose P.O. Box 490 Brookings, OR 97415
My father-in-law, Elisardo “Alex” Camarillo, will turn 100 in February. Alex was raised in Southern California and served in World War II as a Private First Class from 1942-1945. After the war, he returned to Southern California working on some of the large ranches, such as the Rancho Santa Margarita. He learned to train horses and also worked as a farrier. He moved to Oregon in 1948 and raised his family near Carlton. He continued to work as a farrier until he was 80 years old. It would be wonderful if he could receive cards from you for this special event. Please send cards to Elisardo “Alex” Camarillo, 400 Frank Gilliam Drive, Apt. #15, Heppner, OR 97836.
Sharon Camarillo
Heppner, Oregon
I'm looking for new dinner recipes to add to my family's collection. I would love meals that can be prepared in advance and frozen for later use. If you have a favorite family recipe, please share it with me by email or mail. Thank you.
Stefanie Steward P.O. Box 566 Susanville, CA 96130 stefsteward@gmail.com
Send your request—with no attachments—to readerexchange@ruralite.org or mail to Reader Exchange, 5625 NE Elam Young Parkway, Suite 100, Hillsboro, OR 97124. Fill in the subject line with Reader Exchange. Acceptance, scheduling and editing are at the editor’s discretion. Single requests only, please. No duplicates. Submissions are handled on a first-come, first-served basis and as space allows. We cannot honor every request.
Please affirm you have authorization from all appropriate parties before submitting. By submitting, you indemnify Reader Exchange, Pioneer Utility Resources Inc., its officers, directors, employees, utility clients and insurers from all legal liability incurred by the publication of information.
We no longer accept pen pal requests. You may submit a pen pal request as a Marketplace ad. Marketplace pricing applies.
When submitting a milestone request, please send it at least two months before the milestone.
Phone numbers will not be published. Email addresses will be published if part of the ad, but the request must include a postal address.
Request must include the name and address of the electric utility that provides your magazine.
See bluffs, beaches and history in
Walk into history at Ebey’s Landing National Historic Reserve in the far reaches of Northwest Washington. The reserve, on Whidbey Island near the Canadian border, features unique plants and habitats, tall bluffs that lower into the sea and centuries of historic structures.
First National Historic Reserve
Whidbey Island has been home to many over thousands of years, and, for a long time, was part of the territory of the Lower Skagit tribe. In the mid-1800s, settlers came to the area for the great soil and maritime benefits. In 1978, the area became the United States’ first National Historic Reserve to preserve the natural landmarks and farms that tell the story of rural life.
Ebey’s Landing has more than 30 miles of hiking and biking trails through forests and prairies and along coastline. The Bluff Loop trail and Ebey’s Prairie Ridge trail are popular. Ebey’s Landing is also home to a beach with miles of shoreline, and nearby Crockett Lake is a popular spot for birders during migration seasons.
Inside the reserve are three state parks. Fort Casey State Park is home to a fort built in the late 1800s that was used during World War II and Admiralty Head Lighthouse. Fort Ebey State Park is home to another fort used during WWII and many popular trails.
Ebey’s Landing State Park includes the Bluff Loop Trail and many other sweeping viewpoints.
Weather on the reserve is known to change quickly, and quick rainstorms can cause trails to become slick or even cause landslides. The reserve is not all public land—85% of the reserve’s area is privately owned. Please avoid private property. Entering the reserve is free, but entering any of the state parks requires a discovery pass—$10 for a day or $30 for an annual pass. To start planning your trip, visit nps.gov/ebla or call 360-678-6084.
People don’t always do what their doctor says, but when seasoned veteran emergency room physician, Dr. Philip B. Howren, says every senior should have a medical alert device, you better listen up.
“Seniors are just one fall away from being put in a nursing home,” Dr. Howren said. “With a medical alert device, seniors are never alone. So it keeps them living independently in their own home. That’s why seniors and their family members are snapping up a sleek new medical alert device that comes with no monthly bills ever,” he said.
Many seniors refuse to wear old style help buttons because they make them look old. But even worse, those medical alert systems come with
monthly bills.
To solve these problems Universal Physicians, a U.S. company went to work to develop a new, modern, state-of-the-art medical alert device. It’s called “FastHelp™” and it instantly connects you to free unlimited nationwide help everywhere cell service is available with no contracts, no deposits and no monthly bills ever.
“This slick new little device is designed to look like the pagers doctors wear every day. Seniors love them because it actually makes them look important, not old,” Dr. Howren said.
FastHelp is expected to hit store shelves later this year. But special newspaper promotional giveaways are slated for seniors in select areas. ■
■ NO MONTHLY BILLS: “My wife had an old style help button that came with hefty bills every month and she was embarrassed to wear it because it made her look old,” said Frank McDonald, Canton, Ohio. “Now, we both have FastHelp™, the sleek new medical alert device that our grandkids say makes us look ‘cool’ not old,” he said. With FastHelp, seniors never have to worry about being alone and the best part is there are no monthly bills ever.
It’s just what seniors have been waiting for; a sleek new medical alert device with no contracts, no deposits and no monthly bills that instantly connects you to free unlimited nationwide help with just the push of a button for a one-time $149 price tag that’s a real steal after today’s instant rebate
The phone lines are ringing off the hook.
That’s because for seniors born before 1961, it’s a deal too good to pass up.
Starting at precisely 8:30am this morning the Pre-Store Release begins for the sleek new medical alert device that comes with the exclusive FastHelp™ One-Touch E 911 Button that instantly connects you to unlimited nationwide help everywhere cell service is available with no contracts, no deposits and no monthly bills ever.
“It’s not like old style monitored help buttons that make you talk to a call center and only work when you’re at home and come with hefty bills every month. FastHelp comes with state-of-theart cellular embedded technology. That means it works at home or anywhere, anytime cell ser
(Continued on next page)
By Dave LaBelle
Without darkness, I would never know light. I have heard variations of this truth since my youth.
Though we often speak about contrast—the degree of difference between the darkest and lightest parts of an image—there is another form of contrast that emphasizes the variances between subjects in a composition. And while, generally, we want a photograph to have good tonal range, compositionally, contrasting subjects can also be important for storytelling impact.
For instance, positioning someone tall next to someone short in the same frame helps show the height differential. The same goes for the contrast of a man dressed in an expensive, tailored suit passing by a man partially clothed in soiled rags, communicating the different place in life each occupies.
Henry Cartier-Bresson’s photographs of children playing in war-torn ruins or children pushing a steel hoop down the street as a hearse passes behind them and Margaret BourkeWhite’s 1937 Great Depression image of hungry people in a breadline as a billboard behind
them shows a smiling family in a nice car are examples of iconic photographs employing the concept of contrast.
Of the tools in a writer’s and photographer’s toolbox, the use of contrast can be a powerful and effective device to quickly communicate ideas and concepts. n
Renowned author, photographer and lecturer Dave LaBelle has captured special moments for more than half a century. For more of his writings, visit davidlabelle.com and bridgesandangels.wordpress.com.
See if you can capture or make a photograph that tells a story by using a contrast of subjects. Consider a still-life composition of objects, such as your child’s baby shoes arranged next to their grown-up shoes. It’s a way of revealing time passed. Or illustrate aging with a photograph of a frisky new puppy crawling over a tired, old dog.
Email your best image (just one, please) with caption information, including an explanation of how it affects you, to gph@pioneer.coop. We may share submissions on our website and social media channels.
OnMay 18, 1980, the once-slumbering Mount St. Helens erupted in the Paci c Northwest. It was the most impressive display of nature’s power in North America’s recorded history. But even more impressive is what emerged from the chaos... a spectacular new creation born of ancient minerals named Helenite. Its lush, vivid color and amazing story instantly captured the attention of jewelry connoisseurs worldwide. You can now have four carats of the world’s newest stone for an absolutely unbelievable price.
Known as America’s emerald, Helenite makes it possible to give her a stone that’s brighter and has more re than any emerald without paying the exorbitant price. In fact, this many carats of an emerald that looks this perfect and glows this green would cost you upwards of $80,000. Your more beautiful and much more a ordable option features a perfect teardrop of Helenite set in gold-covered sterling silver suspended from a chain accented with even more verdant Helenite.
Helenite Earrings -a $129 valuewith purchase of Helenite Necklace
Limited Reserves. As one of the largest gemstone dealers in the world, we buy more carats of Helenite than anyone, which lets us give you a great price. However, this much gorgeous green for this price won’t last long. Don’t miss out. Helenite is only found in one section of Washington State, so call today! Romance guaranteed or your money back. Experience the scintillating beauty of the Helenite Teardrop Necklace for 30 days and if she isn’t completely in love with it send it back for a full refund of the item price. You can even keep the stud earrings as our thank you for giving us a try.
Earrings (1 ctw)
¼ ctw)
Substations are fenced off from the public because they contain high voltages, posing a danger to untrained individuals.
Only authorized utility workers should approach a substation, touch the fence or enter the gate.
Authorized workers should:
Wear proper personal protective gear.
Use vehicles and gear that have utility branded logos/information.
Suspicious activity includes individuals in street clothes who are:
Near or inside a substation fence. Tampering with equipment, such as power poles, meters and padmount transformers.
If you notice anything unusual at a substation, please report it to OTEC. Examples include: Call 9-1-1 and then OTEC if you see:
An open or unlocked gate. A damaged fence. Obvious damage inside the fence.
Smoke or fire.
Non-Utility workers inside the substation fence.
Non-Utility workers on a pole or tampering with a meter.
Let me help you buy or sell ranch, farm and recreation property in OR. Fourthgeneration Oregonian, prior ranch owner. For sale: Klamath Marsh, OR. 173.65 acres. $2.5M. Guest Ranch Overlay. John Gill, 541-480-9161; johngill@landandwildlife.com. Land And Wildlife brokerage. 0225
Dale store. Live/work in a recreational enthusiast’s location, store, fuel, post office, home, game cooler. $325K. Duke Warner Realty, 541-987-2363, ddwr@ortelco.net. 0225
3 beautiful 1.01-acre lots in Pahrump, NV. Awesome mountain view in nice area. No HOA. $30K each or two for $55K. Easy access to off-roading. Horses OK. Also 10-acre lot with water rights and underground utilities. pkcfitness@hotmail.com. 775-209-2830. 0225
320 acres east of Adel, OR. Borders Hart Mountain views, Steens Mountain and Beaty Butte. Landowner tags, very rural. $263K. For maps, contact: 541-659-1573; thejugglingman3@gmail.com. 0225
Recreational Rentals
Bed and Birds; a guesthouse. Wet meadows, range, forest, dark sky. Beds for 9. Lakeview, OR. Explore or ride? Near ski hill. Reasonable. 541-219-2044. 0425
Bend country cabin. Very clean and fully furnished cabin on private ranch. Close to recreation areas. Very nice. $95/night. 541-382-3050; bendcountrycabins@gmail.com. 0325
Wavecatcher: oceanfront cottage. Central Oregon Coast. $175/night (plus cleaning/tax). Open April through Oct. Holds up to 6-plus kids and pets. Wavecatcherbeachrentals.com. Reservations: 541-740-2846. 0325
Dry cabin and bunkhouse rental near Freeman Creek on Dworshak. Fully furnished. Outhouse and outdoor shower. Sleeps 6. No animals. April through Oct. Reservations: DebbieL1213@gmail.com. 0225
Cabin rental in Eagle Lake, CA. 3 bd, $175; summer rate. Memorial weekend-Oct. Winter months: Nov.-Feb.; $225. 3 miles to marina. Reservations, 530-310-5320. 0225
Recreational Vehicles
Thor A.C.E model 27.2, 2017 motor home. Excellent condition. 14K miles, 2 slides. Sleeps 6, 2 TVs, always covered. $60K. debutler1947@icloud.com; 541-953-0295. 0225
24-ft. Sunseeker RV Mercedes. Diesel, 8-ft. slide out with 4-person dinette, sleeps 6. 60K miles, 2016. $48.5K. Ted, 458-910-3727. 0225
2008 Lance truck camper with slide, model number 1181. Fully loaded; excellent condition. Onan generator, solar panel, wooden interior. $15K. Pahrump, NV. 775-990-0028. 0225
Dawn Till Dusk Masonry. Brick, block, stone and pavers. Small jobs and repairs welcome. dawntillduskconstructionmasonry.com. 541-388-7605; 541-410-6945. License #245760 bonded and insured. La Pine, OR. 0225
Writing and grammar coach with 35 years experience teaches students 12 and older. Local hybrid in Manzanita, OR, or all online. $100/class. writingtutor22@gmail.com; Louisapeck.com. 0225
All types of roofing and repairs, family business since 1956 where integrity prevails. Dave, 541-852-2816. Josh, 541-255-6031. 0425
Grandsons want Damon Howatt bow’s and arrows for target and or hunting. Bill Howat, text pictures of equipment: 509-837-8695. Swaps and Trades
Private horse ranch in Sisters, OR, offers an RV spot for your RV living in trade for light horse feeding and cleaning. TK, 541-504-1234. 0225
Old carpenter tools, planes (wood/metal), levels, chisels, slicks, adzes, axes, hatchets, handsaws, old rulers, spoke shaves, wrenches, shipwright tools, old tool chests. 503-659-0009; 971-666-0659. 0225
Gold, silver, coins/currency, buy, sell. Collections wanted. Fair prices paid. 44 years in retail store. Baker City, OR. 800-556-2133; garrymclin@aol.com. 1025
Buying American Indian collectibles, Navajo blankets and rugs, baskets, beadwork, etc. Also, quality paintings of the early Southwest and Americas. Call 760-409-3117 or send photos to amer.ind.baskets@gmail.com. 0225
Nothing brings family together like food, but what are our readers’ favorite dishes? Check out nearly 300 recipes for appetizers, drinks, main dishes and desserts from our 2013 contest. The book is $10 (includes postage).
TO ORDER BY MAIL: Submit payment with cookbook title, your name, address and number of cookbooks wanted to: Ruralite Cookbooks P.O. Box 1306 North Plains, OR 97133
TO PAY BY PHONE: Call 503-357-2105 for credit card payments with Visa, MasterCard, Discover or American Express.
TO ORDER ONLINE: Visit www.ruralite.com.
Please allow two to three weeks for delivery.
Cash paid for old gas station and oil company signs, pumps, globes, metal oil cans. Good condition. Discreet cash settlement. Clifton Jones, collector. 512-413-4459. 0225 Eatonville United Methodist Church A Spiritual Base Camp On The Way To Paradise. Mashell Avenue North P.O. Box 205 Eatonville, WA 98328 360-832-4021 Home: 360-832-4562 Pastor Bernard Preston Ritchea Cell: 361-330-9666
Facebook: Eatonville United Methodist Church of Washington OPEN HEARTS OPEN MINDS OPEN DOORS OPEN TABLE WORSHIP SERVICE BEGINS AT 10:30 a.m.
By Shane Stenquist
Each month, most of us receive a stack of bills. There are bills for our rent or mortgage, car insurance, subscriptions to our favorite streaming services and, of course, there is one for electricity. Some bills, like rent, are fixed, meaning the bill is the same every month. Others, like gas or electricity, vary based on use.
Many things you do affect your electric bill: lowering your thermostat on cold days, upgrading to more energy-efficient appliances, weatherproofing your doors and windows, and simply limiting overall use.
Another simple thing you can do to help lower your bill is to sign up for paperless e-billing and auto-pay through the bank draft program. By enrolling in Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative’s bank draft and e-bill programs, you receive your statement electronically each month, and OTEC automatically deducts the payment from your checking account. You don’t need to worry about writing a check or missing due dates. Plus, simply for enrolling in these programs, OTEC credits your account $1 each month—50 cents each for e-billing and bank draft enrollment.
Our electricity use varies based on a number of factors, but the No. 1 influencer for most of us is weather.
Temperature fluctuations affect not only the thermostat, but our activities. For some, high temperatures mean running an air conditioner or fans. For others, low temperatures mean getting out the electric blankets and space heaters.
OTEC’s electricity use tracker is a helpful tool to understand your electricity use. Find it by logging into your OTEC
account through our online portal. You can view your actual use over time, which can help you determine what factors influence how much electricity you use. Perhaps there was a spike when you hosted a watch party for your favorite football team’s playoff game or when you baked holiday treats for the office.
Not every electricity bill is the same. Some companies charge different rates on different days or during different times of the day.
OTEC does not distinguish between peak or off-peak hours, so your rate per kilowatt-hour does not fluctuate throughout the day. This means that whether your TV
is on from 7-9 a.m. or 7-9 p.m., it costs the same amount to power it.
Another thing you may notice on your OTEC bill is the monthly delivery charge. This is a recurring charge for your class of service, such as residential, irrigation or commercial. The fee is set to recover a large portion of fixed costs, such as poles, wires and other equipment and services required to provide electricity to your meter regardless of the use.
Your bill includes the monthly delivery fee plus your kilowatt-hours used multiplied by the applicable rate. For example, if your household used 200 kWh of electricity, you would multiply 200 x 0.067970 (the current residential rate per kWh), which totals $13.59 for the month.
After seeing the photo we published in September of a fawn and cat, Ron Kopp decided to photograph similar events in his own backyard between a cat and a young buck.
“On our family ranch, south of Pilot Rock, Oregon, it is not unusual for deer to be in the yard—or cats, for that matter,” Ron says. “It is unusual for them to interact, however, especially on the sidewalk that leads to the ranch house’s front door.”
To submit your photo, email a JPEG file to photos@pioneer.coop. Include “Before You Go” in the subject line. Please share a bit about what inspired you to make your photo. n
A cat named Cat lies on a sidewalk as a curious buck leans down to lick it. As Cat placed his paw on the buck’s nose, neither seemed to mind the interaction. PHOTO COURTESY OF RON KOPP
Get more than 220 recipes in a perfect-bound 8½-by-11-inch indexed book for $10, postage included. of cookbooks wanted, along with your name and address, to Ruralite Cookbooks, P.O. Box 1306, North Plains, OR 97133. BY PHONE: with Visa, MasterCard, Discover card or American Express. The 2008 contains recipes—most and dessert, the heartfelt stories recipes. indexed postage).
The 2008 contest cookbook contains more than 180 recipes—most with a side dish and dessert, too. Included are the heartfelt and entertaining stories that accompany the recipes. The 8½-by-11-inch indexed book is $8 (includes postage).
TO ORDER BY MAIL:
Submit payment with cookbook title, your name, address and number of cookbooks wanted to:
Ruralite Cookbooks P.O. Box 1306 North Plains, OR 97133
TO PAY BY PHONE: Call 503-357-2105 for credit card payments with Visa, MasterCard, Discover or American Express.
TO ORDER ONLINE: Visit www.ruralite.com.
Please allow two to three weeks for delivery.
Submit
District Offices
4005 23rd St. P.O. Box 226
Baker City, OR 97814 541-523-3616
567 W. Pierce St. Burns, OR 97720 541-573-2666
400 Patterson Bridge Road P.O. Box 575
John Day, OR 97845 541-575-0161
2408 Cove Ave. La Grande, OR 97850 541-963-3155
www.otec.coop communications@otec.coop Report Outages at 866-430-4265
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Board Members
President Aletha Bonebrake, Baker County
Vice President Gary Miller, Grant County
Secretary-Treasurer
Cory Miller, Union County
George “Austin” Bingaman, Union County
David Baum, Union County
Robert Cargill, Harney County
Charlene Chase, Baker County
Jeff D. Clark, Union County
Wayne Overton, Baker County
Les Penning, CEO
Ron Williams, Attorney
article, we focused on how drastically the prices of materials used in virtually every industry have risen.
While the cost of materials helps determine the cost of your electricity, you are probably aware several other factors also affect your electric rates. Transportation costs for goods and materials have dramatically increased in recent years as well—everything from fuel costs to tires, vehicle maintenance, freight charges, insurance and driver wages. Fire mitigation, interest rates, depreciation and labor costs also contribute to the total cost of electricity.
However, one of the greatest factors affecting OTEC is the cost of buying wholesale electricity. Purchased power generally makes up about half of our costs. OTEC buys electricity directly from Bonneville Power Administration through an all-requirements contract. BPA operates the majority of the federal dams in the Pacific Northwest.
As we have discussed, we are blessed to have access to the renewable hydropower provided by the dams in the Pacific Northwest. Of course, as the cost to buy power and transport that electricity from the dams to our service territory increases, it directly affects OTEC member-owners.
In the coming months, we will continue to evaluate the effects of some of the extreme changes in the market and cost increases and work to manage these as much as possible. This allows us to continue to operate and maintain our system while continuing to focus on providing you with reliable energy.
CEO Les Penning