MONDAY MALHEUR SHERIFF: VALE JOURNALISTS DIDN’T HARASS OFFICIALS: PAGE 5A In HOME, 1B Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com August 26, 2019 IN THIS EDITION: Local • Home & Living • Sports Monday $1.50 QUICK HITS Baker City Memory Cruise Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Scott Sherman of Baker City. Local, 2A Oregon’s newly formed Governor’s Task Force on the Outdoors will meet for its third session of the year Tuesday in Baker City. The public meeting will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Sunridge Inn and Con- ference Center, 1 Sunridge Lane. A Classic Lives On BRIEFING Garden Club to meet Sept. 4 The Baker County Gar- den Club’s next meeting is set for Wednesday, Sept. 4. It will begin at 10:30 a.m. at Oregon Trail Landscape & Nursery, 600 Elm St. Members are asked to bring a sack lunch and a chair. New members are welcome. WEATHER Today 82 / 40 Mostly sunny Tuesday 88 / 45 Mostly sunny The space below will be blank on issues delivered or sold from boxes. The space is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Fire growth slows By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Oregon, 5A PENDLETON — The massive Boardman to Hemingway Transmission Line has cost around $100 million without the instal- lation of a single utility pole. The 300-plus-mile, 500-kilovolt line could be ready to carry juice as early as 2026 at a cost of $1 billion or more. Idaho Power, Pacifi cCorp and Bonneville Power Admin- istration teamed up on the project, and Idaho Power is spearheading the local, state and federal permit- ting work. Summer veggies + pasta Brandon Taylor / Baker City Herald Ron Robbel’s 1936 DeSoto Airfl ow won Best in Show in the Memory Cruise car judging at Geiser-Pollman Park on Saturday afternoon. The Granite Gulch fi re was relatively tranquil over the weekend, but with hot, dry and potentially windy weather predicted over the next several days, the blaze in the Eagle Cap Wilder- ness could begin to spread again as it did at times last week. The fi re, started by light- ning July 14 in Granite Gulch north of the Minam River, moved “very slowly” Saturday and Sunday, said Larisa Bogardus, public af- fairs offi cer for the Granite Gulch fi re. “It was mainly smolder- ing, burning the surface debris, which is ideal,” Bog- ardus said this morning. Fire offi cials anticipated the fi re, fanned by strong winds, could produce a column of smoke during the weekend. By Brandon Taylor btaylor@bakercityherald.com See Fire/Page 3A Hot rods and classic cars fi lled Geiser-Pollman Park Saturday for the 29th-annual Memory Cruise. Ron Robbel, 78, from Bend, won Best in Show for his aubergine- hued 1936 DeSoto Airfl ow. It was his fi rst time in Baker City and his fi rst time building a street rod. He originally bought the car in 2002 as a parts car — to be stripped and used to rebuild a different DeSoto. When that car was built, he had the leftover skeleton and he decided to build another car around that. Ghostly fl ames wrap around the front end of the vehicle. A chrome angel ornament was mounted on the hood. Copper rings encircled the headlights and copper hubcaps decorate the tires. Robbel said he doesn’t know how much money he has put into the car — he hasn’t added up all the receipts. “It wouldn’t make a difference,” he said, but he estimates he has spent about $100,000 over the past 11 years building the prize-win- ning DeSoto. See Classic/Page 3A Bicyclist nabbed trying to steal a chain saw Brandon Taylor / Baker City Herald Best in Show winner Ron Robbel, 78, from Bend, left, talks about his prize-winning 1936 DeSoto with Baker City resident Ray Koontz, 56, dur- ing Saturday’s Memory Cruise at Geiser-Pollman Park. Store employees and a bystander thwarted the efforts of a La Grande man Thursday as he tried to get away on his bicycle with a chain saw he is accused of taking from Cliff’s Saws and Cycles. Baker City Police arrested Chad La Vern Profi tt, 46, on charges of second-degree burglary and fi rst-degree theft, Chief Ray Duman stated in a press release. See Theft/Page 3A Project at Campbell Street Interchange Planned For Late Summer 2020 ODOT to build sidewalks under Interstate 84 The Oregon Department of Transportation plans to build sidewalks and wheelchair-accessible ramps beneath the Interstate 84 overpass at the Campbell Street interchange during the late summer of 2020. The $538,000 project, using federal money, will connect to the existing sidewalks near the Baker Truck Corral on the south side of Campbell Street, and near the Sunridge Inn on the north side of the street. ODOT also plans to restripe Campbell Street in that area to a three-lane confi guration, with one trav- el lane in each direction and a center turn lane, said Michelle Owen, Baker City public works director. The Baker City Council during its meeting Tues- day evening will consider approving an agreement with the state for the project. The meeting starts at 7 p.m. at City Hall, 1655 First St. Although ODOT would build the sidewalks and ramps, the city would be responsibile for maintain- ance. See Council/Page 2A TODAY Issue 46, 14 pages Calendar ....................2A Classified ............. 4B-7B Comics ....................... 3B Jayson Jacoby / Baker City Herald The Oregon Department of Transportation plans to build sidewalks under Interstate 84 at the Campbell Street interchange late next summer. ODOT will also restripe the area to a three-lane confi guration to match the rest of Campbell Street to the west. Community News ....3A Crossword ........5B & 7B Dear Abby ................. 8B Home ................1B & 2B Horoscope ........5B & 6B Lottery Results...........2A News of Record ........3A Obituaries ..................2A Opinion ......................4A Senior Menus............2A Sports .................. 6A-8A Weather ..................... 8B WEDNESDAY — GO! MAGAZINE ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE