COMMUNITY MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2019 BAKER CITY HERALD — 3A STORM Man dies in I-84 crash Continued from Page 1A By Chris Collins The weather station near- est the fi re, at Mule Peak Lookout about three air miles southwest of the fi re, recorded 0.19 of an inch of rain. Higher amounts were recorded elsewhere, including 0.83 of an inch at the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center and 0.23 of an inch at the Baker City Airport. Sunday was the wettest day at the airport since March 24, when 0.32 of an inch fell. Fire offi cials don’t consider Sunday’s storm a “season- ending event,” referring to the offi cial end of fi re season, said Larisa Bogardus, a pub- lic information offi cer for the BLM serving in that capacity for the Granite Gulch fi re. But with the ground still wet, and temperatures fore- cast to remain below average much of this week and a chance of additional rain, it’s “highly unlikely” that the fi re will generate much smoke, Bogardus said. A similar situation prevails at the region’s other large blaze, the 204 Cow fi re burn- ing in the extreme southwest corner of Baker County about 17 miles southwest of Unity. ccollins@bakercityherald.com U.S. Forest Service photo This photo, taken early Saturday from Granite Butte, shows low-lying smoke from the Granite Gulch fi re in the Minam River Canyon at the confl uence with Elk Creek. The 204 Cow fi re, started by lightning on Aug. 9, has burned 9,668 acres and is 73% contained. According to an update from fi re managers this morning, “cool wet weather continues over the fi re area today, making fi re spread very unlikely in the near future. Rainfall and high hu- midity are penetrating more deeply into burnable mate- rial. Isolated concentrations of heavy fuels will continue to smolder and produce smoke.” Managers expect to cancel the road closures near the fi re soon. The fi rst major rainstorm of the season also prompted the Umatilla National Forest to end restrictions on camp- fi res and other activities on that forest. As of press time this morn- School board to transfer Central Building to BTI The Baker School Board is expected to approve transfer of ownership of the historic Central Building Thursday night from the 5J School District to the Baker Techni- cal Institute The regular meeting will begin at 6 p.m. at City Hall, 1655 First St. The September meeting has been resched- uled to Sept. 12 instead of the usual third Thursday of the month because of scheduling confl icts. After ownership transfer of the Central Building is completed, BTI will be able to seek grant funding to clean up asbestos and lead paint contamination in the building through its brownfi eld/envi- ronmental science curriculum at Baker High School. Speaking at the August meeting, Superintendent Mark Witty told the Board that the class could possibly acquire more grant funding to complete the work needed to restore the historic building and transform it into a com- munity asset that could be used for purposes other than a school building. The regular meeting will be preceded by an executive (closed to the public) session beginning at 5:30 p.m., at Baker City Hall, 1615 First St. The closed meeting will be for the purpose of negotiat- ing property transactions as allowed by the Oregon Public Meeting law. In other business Thursday night, the Board will review personnel reports: • Assistant Superintendent Betty Palmer has announced that she has retired through the Public Employee Retire- ment System (PERS), effec- tive Sept. 1, but will continue to work on contract with the District through June 30. • Tim Taylor has retired from his position as a bus driver. • New classifi ed employees hired for the coming year are Taylor Baker, parapro- fessional, Keating Elemen- tary School; Veronica Baxter, BESST (Behavioral Educa- tion Social Skills Teaching) clinical paraprofessional at Brooklyn Primary School; Calli Gulick, South Baker In- termediate School secretary; and Jami Standish, South Baker paraprofessional. • Extra-duty new hires: Mike Long, Baker Middle School football coach; Wayne Dyke, BMS football coach; Alayna Carpenter, BMS cross-country coach; Ethan Wolston, Baker High School assistant cross-country coach; John Quintela, BHS JV boys soccer coach; and Adam Robb, BHS JV girls soccer coach. BLUEGRASS tenor and baritone. He taught country-swing band and sang banjo and guitar at EOC and in a gospel quartet. Continued from Page 1A played a major role in bring- Hal Spence of Dallas, Or- Ron Emmons, well-known ing national bluegrass acts to egon, played guitar and sang as the front man for the popu- this part of the state. tenor for 27 years with The lar Cabbage Hill bluegrass McClellan resides at Or- Sawtooth Mountain Boys, one band, will bring his college egon City and plays rhythm of the nation’s best-known classmates Hugh McClellan, guitar, harmonica and is bluegrass bands, whose Boyer and Hal Spence back to known for his low, lonesome travels included three tours of Eastern Oregon for Round- bass voice. He’s also fronted a Europe. Up week, Lavadour said. The group will be joined by Alan 땨/LIHVKRXOGQRWEHDMRXUQH\WRWKHJUDYHZLWKWKHLQWHQWLRQRI Feves on bass and National DUULYLQJVDIHO\LQDSUHWW\DQGZHOOSUHVHUYHGERG\ EXWUDWKHU Oldtime Fiddle Champion WRVNLGLQEURDGVLGHLQDFORXGRIVPRNH WKRURXJKO\XVHGXS Dan Emert on fi ddle. WRWDOO\ZRUQRXWDQGORXGO\SURFODLPLQJ Emmons and Boyer met :RZ:KDWDULGH᮱+XQWHU67KRPSVRQ during freshmen orienta- tion week at Eastern Oregon College (now Eastern Oregon University) in La Grande. They connected with Spence and McClellan through their involvement in the EOC Am- bassadors, a musical touring group that performed high school assemblies all over the Northwest. The name EOCenes is a play on the college’s mono- gram, EOC (which later became EOU) and the Eocene epoch, a period on the geologi- Weekly Specials September 9-15 cal time scale that occurred Monday Meatloaf............................................................$8.95 55 million to 34 million years Tuesday Lasagna.............................................................$8.95 ago. Wednesday Salisbury Steak..................................................$8.95 Emmons, who lives at Thursday Chicken Fried Steak............................................$9.95 Hermiston, has played Friday All You Can Eat Mini Shrimp................................$9.95 mandolin and sung lead Steak & Shrimp................................................$10.95 tenor and baritone with Pan Fried Oysters ......$10.50 Prime Rib ..........$14.95 the Blue Mountain Crested Saturday NY Steak....................$13.95 Prime Rib .........$14.95 Wheatgrass Boys, the Muddy Sunday Baked Chicken......................................$9.50/8.95 sr Bottom Boys, Blue Heat and BUFFETS The Thatchmasters, as well Monday - Friday 11 AM - 2 PM Lunch includes Salad Bar, Entree, as Cabbage Hill. Grilled Bread, Baked Bean & Vegetable Boyer, a longtime Haines 221 Bridge Street • 541-523-5844 Sunday 8 AM - 11 AM resident, plays banjo and Open Daily 6 AM - 8 PM Sunday Buffet includes Chocolate Fountain guitar, and sings lead, Baker Valley Travel 541-523-9353 • 877-550-9353 ing the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest had not changed its public use restric- tions. Sunday’s soggy and cool weather was preceded by thunderstorms that brought widespread lightning, but also rain showers, on Friday night. Lightning ignited about a dozen wildfi res across North- eastern Oregon, including several in Baker County, but crews from the Forest Service and Oregon Department of Forestry took advantage of the rain and quickly stopped the blazes. None burned more than 2 acres. A 19-year-old Beaverton man died Sunday after- noon when the vehicle in which he was traveling as a passenger was involved in a three-vehicle crash on Interstate 84 near Farewell Bend. Aislynn Hoang, 19, of Salt Lake City was the driver of the Subaru Crosstrek in which Garrett Carpenter was riding when he died, an Oregon State Police press release stated. The road was wet when the crash took place about 1:36 p.m. Sunday. Police said Hoang lost control of her vehicle as she attempted to pass an eastbound truck and semitrailer. The Subaru struck the semitrailer, crossed the median into the westbound lanes and col- lided with a Ford F150 pickup truck pulling a trailer. Hoang was fl own\ by air ambulance to a Boise hos- pital for treatment, police said. No information about her condition was available in time for this report. The pickup truck was driven by John Mcpherson, 67, of Port Orchard, Washington. He and his passenger, Lou Anne Heim, 64, also of Port Orchard, were trans- ported by Treasure Valley Medics to an area hospital, police said. Information about their conditions also were not available in time for this report. The truck driver, whose name was not released by OSP, was not hurt in the crash, the press release stated. FISHING spring. These fi sh are of legal Continued from Page 1A size to ensure anglers have The bag limits will be a fi shing opportunity dur- suspended from Sept. 11 to ing the spring and through Oct. 15. In addition, during midsummer when the that period anglers can reservoir generally is near keep fi sh of any size, and full. use any harvest method, This year ODFW including by hand or dip stocked 2,500 legal-size net. rainbow in the reservoir In previous years when the fi rst week of April, Thief Valley Reservoir 5,000 legal-size and 500 emptied, ODFW has re- trophy rainbow the second stocked the reservoir with week of April, and 5,000 rainbow trout the following legal-size trout in mid-May. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK WWW. 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