INSIDE SANDWICHES: RECIPES FOR SIX MEALS YOU CAN HOLD IN YOUR HAND | HOME & LIVING, B1 $1.50 TUESDAY EDITION July 27, 2021 ‘It is important to reach out’ NORTHEAST OREGON WILDFIRES Leading the fi ght against Bootleg School district encouraging those impacted by movie to seek assistance Northeastern Oregon native Joe Hessel heads effort to stop nation’s largest wildfire By DICK MASON The Observer LA GRANDE — La Grande School District Superintendent George Mendoza is worried that the release of the movie “Joe Bell,” which opened in theaters across the United States on Friday, July 23, will set back what for some has been an eight- year healing process. This con- cern is why Mendoza is encouraging students, par- ents and staff Mendoza impacted by the tragic story the movie tells to contact the La Grande School District for help if they need it. “I feel that it is important to reach out,” Mendoza said. The fi lm depicts the story of Jadin Bell, a La Grande High School soph- omore who committed sui- cide in early 2013 after being bullied because he was gay. The movie also tells of how Jadin’s father, Joe Bell, responded by starting a walk across the United States as a tribute to his son. Bell’s walk ended tragically on Oct. 9, 2013, when he died after being struck by a semi- trailer while walking along a road in Colorado. Mendoza said the movie is a reminder to many in the community of a great loss and he expects a number of people will fi nd themselves needing love and support to help them cope. The school district superintendent also said this is an important time to refl ect on the full range of ways “we can sup- port young people in our communities.” Lola Lathrop, the mother of Jadin Bell and the wife of Joe Bell, shares this sentiment. See, Movie/Page A5 By JAYSON JACOBY Baker City Herald Umatilla National Forest/Contributed Photo The Elbow Creek Fire burns on Friday, July 16, 2021, along the Grande Ronde River in northern Wallowa County. The blaze, which has burned about 23,000 acres, is the largest in Northeastern Oregon this summer. ‘90-day August’ Officials concerned that fire season, which started much earlier than usual, will persist throughout summer and even beyond By JAYSON JACOBY Baker City Herald BAKER CITY — Noel Living- ston slides the cursor across the charts on his computer screen, and what he sees, lurking behind the zigzagging lines and the multiple colors, is trouble. Wildfi re trouble, to be specifi c. Livingston, who is the fi re management offi cer for the Wal- lowa-Whitman National Forest, focuses on two lines in particular — a pair of lines for each of six regions on the forest, ranging from diff erent types of forests to the grasslands of Hells Canyon. One line, rendered appropriately in bright fl ame red, depicts the highest daily measurements, from 2010-19 on the Wallowa-Whitman, of a statistic known as the “energy release component.” A computer model considers the moisture level in wildfi re fuels, as well as temperature and humidity, to project how much energy a fi re would release — in eff ect, how rapidly fl ames would spread on a given day. But it’s the second line, a series of brown dots, that worries Living- ston. Because that line represents current conditions, not those of past summers. It tracks the daily energy release component readings for 2021. And for most of July, in each of those six regions, the brown dot line has been higher on the chart than the bright red line. In some cases the brown dot was higher than the red line has ever been. Which is to say, the energy release component has been breaking daily records with a regu- larity that’s frightening for Living- ston and other fi re managers. “That’s what’s got us on the edge of our chairs,” Livingston said. “We’ve got a long summer ahead of us.” With the energy release compo- nent at record-setting levels, every fi re has a higher-than-average Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian A bulldozer navigates Sloan Point Road on Thursday, July 22, 2021, while working the Elbow Creek Fire near Promise. potential to turn into confl agration before fi refi ghters arrive, Living- ston said. Crews have doused most blazes on the Wallowa-Whitman relatively rapidly, with a majority of the 36 blazes this season burning less than one acre. But the statistics don’t tell the entire tale, Livingston said. “The fi res that we are dealing with are showing a high resistance to control,” he said. “We’ve been successful for the most part, but it’s taking a lot more resources on ini- tial attack to do so.” For instance, Livingston said some lightning-sparked blazes — the ignition source for about 80% of fi res historically on the Wal- lowa-Whitman — that in a typical summer would pose no great chal- lenge for one fi re engine crew are this year requiring two or three crews. Fortunately, Livingston said, almost all of the Wallowa-Whit- man’s fi refi ghters are here and ready to fi ght local fi res, rather INDEX Classified ...............B2 Comics ....................B5 Crossword .............B4 Home ......................B1 WEATHER Horoscope .............B3 Letters ....................A4 Lottery ....................A2 Obituaries ..............A3 THURSDAY Opinion ..................A4 Records ..................A3 Sports .....................A7 State ........................A6 than assigned to fi res elsewhere in the state or region. “We’re where we want to be in terms of resources on hand,” he said. Livingston said the Wal- lowa-Whitman has also bolstered its fi refi ghting capability by having three bulldozers on contract as well as additional aircraft. Conditions create what looks like a ‘90-day August’ The recent record-high energy release components are disturbing not only based on the sheer num- bers, Livingston said, but also the timing. Starting in late June, when an historic heat wave descended on the Northwest, energy release components on parts of the Wal- lowa-Whitman didn’t merely set daily records — they exceeded many previous daily highs for August. See, Fires/Page A5 Full forecast on the back of B section Tonight Wednesday 65 LOW 93/63 Clearing Mostly sunny LES SCHWAB EXPANSION UNDERWAY BAKER CITY — Joe Hessel remembers when the Dooley Mountain Fire, which burned 20,000 acres south of Baker City over several days, was a “giant” blaze. Nowadays he’s coordinating the eff ort to stem a fi re that burned more land than that every day. For almost two weeks straight. This yawning diff erence between what was typical early in Hessel’s career, and what is commonplace today, illustrates his longevity in a way perhaps more compelling than Hessel a couple of num- bers can. Certainly Hessel, who lives in Baker City and is in his 38th summer amidst the smoke and the fl ames, can attest to the changes time has wrought when it comes to fi ghting wild- land fi res in Oregon and across the West. The Dooley Mountain Fire, sparked by lightning in late July 1989, was at the time the biggest blaze in Baker County in several decades. It was also an abnormally large fi re by Oregon standards. But today, the acreage charred that distant summer would occupy a scarcely noticeable corner of the fi re that has kept Hessel away from his Baker City home, and his La Grande offi ce, for almost two weeks. Hessel, 54, who is the Northeast District forester for the Oregon Department of For- estry, is one of three incident commanders for the Bootleg Fire, a lightning fi re burning in Klamath and Lake counties in south-central Oregon. At 409,611 acres as of Monday, July 26, it’s the nation’s biggest blaze, the one responsible for much of the smoke that has clogged Baker Valley at times this month. The one that has spawned smoke plumes that look, from the vantage point of space sat- ellites, similar to a cataclysmic volcanic eruption. Hessel said his experi- ence on the Bootleg Fire has led him to ponder, as he sometimes has over the past 32 years, the days when he worked on the Dooley Moun- tain Fire as a fi refi ghter with the ODF. “That was one of the fi rst big fi res I was involved in, and See, Hessel/Page A5 CONTACT US 541-963-3161 Issue 87 2 sections, 14 pages La Grande, Oregon Email story ideas to news@lagrande observer.com. More contact info on Page 4A. Online at lagrandeobserver.com