At 83, John Mayala is a man of few words and many seasons, who remembers being a 12-year-old boy on his parents’ farm when Wallace Jerome, the founder of Barron’s Jennie-O Turkey factory, rolled into town.

“The guy had turkey eggs and was driving a ’41 Pontiac,” he said, smiling.

Now Mayala is retired, the proud father of his son, David, and the proud owner of a home along Barron’s Highway 8.

Crimson, sage and amber vestiges of fall blanket the 40 acres of Mayala’s property in defiance of Northern Wisconsin’s impending winter.

He’s been watching the sunlight bounce off the house since he purchased and remodeled it in 1965; for the past 15 years, he has claimed the surrounding 40 acres as well.

This picturesque scene belies the tragedy which struck just yards down the road, at the Closs family home.

Jayme Closs, Closs family home, Barron
Yellow caution tape and a command center remained stationed outside the Closs family home along Highway 8. Photo: Talis Shelbourne

Soon after the Closs’ murder and Jayme’s disappearance, Highway 8 was full of sheriffs and FBI agents, who checked with neighbors, but never talked to him.

It’s just as well; Mayala says he didn’t hear anything about the murder.

But he’s been living in Barron for many years, long enough to notice the dirge of methamphetamine use which has disappeared an entire generation and transformed the community.

“I know it’s in the paper every week,” he says about the drug.

According to the Department of Justice, Barron County reported 137 cases of methamphetamine use in 2018, which is the highest number in the state by far — the second-closest county is Outagamie (67).

Captain Dale Hall of the neighboring Polk County says that even successful police apprehensions can’t handle the scale of the problem.

“You know, if you take a hundred pounds off the street, it’s back in a couple days,” Hall says, a tinge of frustration in his voice.

Mayala says he doesn’t know anything about where the meth is coming from, probably because it’s a part of the town he doesn’t experience; instead, he found solace through prayer and work.

Prayer runs especially strong throughout Mayala’s family: his grandparents started a Lutheran church south of Almeno and Mayala’s faith helped him through the loss of his wife of 55 years when she died from Alzheimer’s.

His grandparents’ church has since closed. Today, he attends First Lutheran with Lauretta, a new friend who brings a twinkle to his eye every time he mentions her.

Mayala is lucky.

In this area of Northwestern Wisconsin, support services are in short supply. In fact, the Barron News-Shield reported that after reviewing over 800 surveys, 100 Barron residents placed mental health and substance abuse as two of the top three most-important healthcare concerns for the county.

Captain Hall says the drug problem has worsened since the explosion of meth and specifically blames Governor Scott Walker’s passage of Act 10 as a reason for the reduced revenue and lack of adequate funding.

“We are dealing with third, fourth, fifth generation of meth users (and) there’s no real money to throw at the programs to try and [help] these people out,” he explains, that frustration in his voice more than just a tinge now. “So, you know, we find ourselves driving people literally 10 hours round-trip to get [them] mental health help.”

Mayala voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016. Why?

“Republicans never helped the working man any,” he says with a half-grin.

And working man he was.

Mayala was an operating engineer of heavy machinery for over four decades, earning the 40 acres he calls a backyard, the Jayco trailer parked nearby and the race cars in his garage.I

John Mayala, race car, Rice Lake car racing
Mayala loves to build and race cars on a track in Rice Lake with his son David; he keeps them in a large shed on his property. Photo: Talis Shelbourne.

As the years have stacked up, Mayala comments there have been fewer deer in his backyard.

And that’s not the only demographic change he’s witnessed.

Up until the Somalis arrived, there were only 20 African Americans living in the city in 2000. More recently, African-Americans represent at least 13 percent of the city’s population, many of whom work at the Jennie-O Turkey Factory Wallace Jerome started using the eggs in his 1941 Pontiac.

Mayala remarks that the Somalis seem to do well in school, wryly adding: “There are a few that are a problem, but there a few native [residents] that are a problem too.”

And he doesn’t have much else to say on the subject.

But a call and a few follow-up questions later, he does mention that he will receive a 60-year pin from his job on Friday, Nov. 30 — a celebration of his lifetime of work.

And he also takes a few seconds to summarize his feelings about the 2018 midterm election results in four words spoken with a classic Midwestern lilt and a satisfaction one can hear over the phone:

“’Tis okay with me.”