INSIDE STATE WRESTLING FINALS WON’T BE HELD AT MEMORIAL COLISEUM THIS YEAR | SPORTS, B1 $1.50 TUESDAY EDITION January 4, 2022 Utility goes to court over B2H Idaho Power seeks access to Baker County properties for B2H surveys By JAYSON JACOBY Baker City Herald BAKER CITY — An Idaho-vbased utility is asking a judge to order the owners of fi ve Baker County properties to allow the company to survey their land as part of its plan to build a major electric trans- mission line through North- eastern Oregon starting as early as 2023. Attorneys representing Idaho Power fi led civil peti- tions regarding two of the properties on Dec. 17, 2021, in Baker County Circuit Court, two others on Dec. 21, and one on Dec. 28. The company is repre- sented in all fi ve cases by Timothy Helfrich and Zach Olson, of the Ontario law fi rm Yturri Rose. The company has been working since 2007 on the Boardman-to-Hem- ingway project, a 293-mile, 500-kilovolt line that would run from near Boardman to Hemingway, near Murphy in Owyhee County, Idaho. Although sections of the proposed route runs through public property — Idaho Power has received permission from the federal government to do so — the line, as proposed, would also cross several dozen parcels of private land in multiple counties, including Baker, Union, Wallowa and Morrow in Oregon. Idaho Power would have to pay private landowners for an easement to build the power line across their property. This would be a one-time payment, not an annual lease, according to the boardmantohemingway. com website. Sven Berg, a corporate communications specialist for Idaho Power, said the line would aff ect about 30 private landowners in Baker County, who combined own about 60 separate parcels. Court fi lings Alex Wittwer/The Observer Crews with the city of La Grande Public Works clear a snow berm along Adams Avenue on Monday, Jan. 3, 2022. Wind storms and severe weather closed schools, as well as several local roads. High winds batter valley Severe weather forces road closures, shuts down school districts in Union County By DICK MASON and ALEX WITTWER The Observer UNION COUNTY — Snowdrifts cre- ated by high winds plus icy conditions are making traveling in Union County treacherous. The weather forced all six of Union County’s school districts to be closed on Monday, Jan. 3, which was to be the fi rst day back after the holiday break. Imbler School District Superintendent Doug Hislop said on Jan. 3 the decision was not a hard one to make. “I spent three hours driving around yesterday and most of the time it was hard for me to fi nd anywhere where roads were clear,” Hislop said. He noted that the Imbler School Dis- trict’s parking lot was fi lled with snow and that workers there spent much of the day just trying to clear the lot. Alex Wittwer/The Observer See, Storm/Page A5 Oregon Department of Transportation vehicles block Interstate 84 on Monday, Jan. 3, 2022. Severe wind formed several snowdrifts along I-84, closing the roads in and out of the Grande Ronde Valley. Recalling a special visitor Bishop Desmond Tutu spoke during a 1983 visit to Cove By DICK MASON The Observer The properties listed See, B2H/Page A5 COVE — A leather fi sherman’s cap worn by Anglican Bishop Desmond Tutu saved the day for a party he was traveling with on Interstate 84 in Baker County four decades ago. The South African was riding in a car with Rustin Kimsey, then the bishop of the Eastern Oregon Diocese of the Episco- palian Church, and his wife, Gretchen, on a hot August day in 1983. The three had left the Ascen- sion School Camp in Cove a half hour earlier. They were bound for the airport in Boise, where they were supposed to pick up Tutu’s daughter, M’Pho, before returning to Cove where Tutu was making presen- tations during a week-long conference. The trip to Boise was going well until the car overheated because of a malfunctioning radiator. The vehicle was stranded on the side of Interstate 84 and the situation looked bleak before Tutu spotted a drainage ditch below the road. “Undaunted by the steepness and while wearing his leather fi sher- man’s cap, he scampered down the ravine, dipped his hat into the drain ditch and brought enough water to our overheated radiator to cool it. Soon we were on our way again,” Gretchen Kimsey said. The three, after a stop in Baker City for repair work, ‘He spoke to the heart’ The Kimseys were among about 70 people who attended the 1983 See, Tutu/Page A5 WEATHER INDEX Classified ......B2 Comics ...........B5 Crossword ....B3 Dear Abby ....B6 made it to Boise to pick up Tutu’s daughter and soon returned to Cove. Gretchen Kimsey has fond memories of that day and of Tutu. Kimsey’s hus- band, Rustin, had become a good friend of Tutu’s after getting to know him at international meetings of Episcopalian church leaders. Tutu, who had just attended a meeting of the World Council of Churches in Vancouver, B.C., had come to Cove to speak at the Ascension School Camp at Rustin Kimsey’s invitation. Home .............B1 Horoscope ....B2 Letters ...........A4 Lottery ...........A2 THURSDAY Obituaries .....A3 Opinion .........A4 Sports ............A7 Sudoku ..........B5 Ascension School Camp/Contributed Photo Churchill Pinder is ordained as a deacon in the Episcopal Church by The Most Rev. Desmond Tutu, left, and The Rt. Rev. Rustin Kimsey at the Ascension School Camp in Cove in 1983. Full forecast on the back of B section Tonight Wednesday 30 LOW 32/27 Snow, 2-4” A bit of snow EOU DUO STEP UP AFTER INJURIES HIT CONTACT US 541-963-3161 Issue 2 2 sections, 14 pages La Grande, Oregon Email story ideas to news@lagrande observer.com. More contact info on Page A4 Online at lagrandeobserver.com