2A — Baker City Herald Tuesday, March 10, 2020 Local BAKER COUNTY CALENDAR TUESDAY, MARCH 10  Baker City Council: 7 p.m., City Hall, 1655 First St. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11  Lower Powder River Irrigation District Board: 6 p.m. at Barley Brown’s, 2190 Main St. Governor seeks executive order to cut the state’s climate impacts Brown says she wants to act as aggressively as she can By Claire Withycombe Oregon Capital Bureau THURSDAY, MARCH 12  Baker School Board: 6 p.m., Council chambers at Baker City Hall, 1655 First St.; meeting date rescheduled from third Thursday of the month. FRIDAY, MARCH 13  Live Music by Keith Taylor: Ragtime piano, 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m., Crossroads, 2020 Auburn Ave.; no charge. MONDAY, MARCH 16  Baker School Board: Work session, 5 p.m. to 7 p.m., at South Baker Intermediate School, 1285 Third St. TUESDAY, MARCH 17  Elkhorn Community Preparedness: 5:30 p.m. supper; 6:30 p.m. meeting; at the Sunridge Inn Restaurant, 1 Sunridge Lane. TURNING BACK THE PAGES 50 YEARS AGO from the Democrat-Herald March 10, 1970 More than one hundred persons attended the fourth bull sale Monday at the Chandler Ranch, which is be- tween Haines and Baker, and bought 76 bulls. 25 YEARS AGO from the Baker City Herald March10, 1995 About 20 people attended a public meeting Thursday night but one, Art Payne, asked most of the questions about the $600,000 bond measure city voters will decide in a mail-in election March 28. SALEM — Gov. Kate Brown is preparing an executive order to cut the state’s climate impacts on her own authority, after a second failure to get legisla- tors to approve such a plan. The governor’s offi ce “is having conversations with the Department of Jus- tice to ensure the governor acts as aggressively as she can within Oregon statutes, and the executive order will refl ect that,” a spokes- woman for Brown said in an email Friday. Brown said she would act in a statement issued after Democrats in the Leg- islature decided to close down the 35-day session. They did so because Republicans in the House and Senate had walked out to avoid voting on an envi- ronmental proposal known as cap and trade, insisting the complicated program be sent to Oregon voters instead. The most recent legisla- tive version of the climate plan would have capped business emis- sions of green- house gases, shrunk the cap Kate over 30 years’ Brown time and cre- ated a market for those businesses to buy and sell certifi cates for emissions, using the pricing scheme to encourage businesses to emit less. Brown said Thursday that, while she preferred the legislation, she would not abandon the climate change plan. “In the coming days, I will be taking executive action to lower our green- house gas emissions,” Brown said in a written statement. What exactly the order would do wasn’t clear. But any program Brown sets up would be less fl ex- ible than the cap -and -trade program that legis- lators had proposed, said Sen. Michael Dembrow, a Portland Democrat who was a leading architect of the climateplan. “My sense, based on what we saw last year, is there’s fair amount she can do on the cap side, and not much that she can do on the invest side,” Dembrow said. “She can’t actually create a market. And so it’s more of ONE YEAR AGO from the Baker City Herald March 11, 2019 The Baker girls basketball team completed the greatest season in school history Saturday by beating Marist 51-48 to claim the Class 4A state championship, the fi rst girls hoops title for the school. The Bulldogs fi nished the season with a 25-1 record. Baker won all three of its games at the state tourna- ment at Forest Grove High School in thrilling fashion, in- cluding rallying from a fourth-quarter defi cit in Saturday’s title game. Fans turned out Sunday evening to greet the Bulldogs when they returned to Baker City. 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CONTACT THE HERALD 1668 Resort St. Open Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Telephone: 541-523-3673 Fax: 541-833-6414 Regional publisher Christopher Rush crush@eomediagroup.com Publisher Karrine Brogoitti kbrogoitti@lagrandeobserver. com Jayson Jacoby, editor jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Advertising email ads@bakercityherald.com Classifi ed email classified@bakercityherald.com Circulation email circ@bakercityherald.com Darlene Ewing Baker City, 1957-2020 Darlene Ewing, 62, of Baker City, died March 1, 2020, at her home, sur- rounded by her family. A celebration of her life will take place on her birthday, April 23, 2020, time and place to be announced. Darlene was Darlene born on April Ewing 23, 1957, at Waterville, Maine, to James and Ester Collins. She was raised in Maine and grad- uated high school there in DEATHS Tara Lee Warren: 56, of Bak- er City, died March 5, 2020, at St. Alphonsus Medical Center in Boise. Her memorial service will take place at 2 p.m. Saturday, March 21, at Gray’s West & Co. Pioneer Chapel, 1500 Dewey Ave. There will be a reception afterward at 2525 College St. in Baker City. In lieu of fl owers, memorial contributions may be made to the Ronald McDonald House or to a charity of one’s choice through Gray’s West & Co. Pioneer Chapel, 1500 Dew- ey Ave., Baker City, OR 97814. To light a candle in memory of Tara, or to leave a condolence for the family, go to www.gray- swestco.com Ray Zaccone: 71, of Halfway, died March 5, 2020, at Saint Alphonsus Regional Medical Center in Boise with his family at his side. A memorial service and celebration of Ray’s life, with military honors and a potluck, will be Friday, March 27, at 2 p.m. at the Halfway Lions Hall. The family suggests memorial contributions in Ray’s name to the 173rd Airborne Brigade, or VFW Post No. 7847, through Tami’s Pine Valley Funeral Home & Cremation Ser- vices.Online condolences may be made at www.tamispineval- leyfuneralhome.com POLICE LOG Baker City Police Arrests, citations FAILURE TO APPEAR (Two Baker County Circuit Court war- WE ARE NOW IN BAKER CITY! Accepting most Dental Insurances including OHP ODS Plus Call 541-742-6012 for an appointment Drs. Hillary Berry & LaVonne Hammelman MAR 6 - 12 ELTRYM HISTORIC THEATER 1809 1st Street, Baker City www.eltrym.com ONWARD PG FRI: (4:00) 7:00 SAT & SUN: (1:00) (4:00) 7:00 MON-THURS: 7:00 ISSN-8756-6419 Serving Baker County since 1870 THE CALL OF THE WILD Periodicals Postage Paid at Pendleton, Oregon 97801 1975. She moved to Oregon in 1978. Darlene either lived on or very near the 45th parallel in both Maine and Oregon. Darlene was a loyal fan of the New England Patriots. Her favorite color was blue and she enjoyed yellow roses, as did her own mother. She also loved the outdoors, horses and cooking, but nothing com- pared to spending time with family. Her children and grandchildren were always the love and light of her life, each moment spent with them was cherished by her. Darlene lived her life by this quote that she also used in her high school year- book, by Booker T. Wash- ington: “Success is to be measured not so much by the position that one has reached in life as by the obstacles which he has overcome while trying to succeed.” Darlene is survived by her daughters, Laura (Nick) Bowling, Angela Dorman, Heather (Guy) Zickefoose, and Kimberly Ham; her son, Domanic (Katia) Col- lins; her brothers, David and James Collins; 16 grandchildren; and many who loved her as mom and grandma over the years. Darlene was preceded in death by her parents, James and Ester Collins; her brothers, Norman, Carlton and Brian Collins; and her sisters, Helen Falloon and Debbie Daskam. For those who would like to make a memorial dona- tion in honor of Darlene the family suggests May Day Inc. through Tami’s Pine Valley Funeral Home & Cremation Services, P.O. Box 543, Halfway, OR 97834. Online condo- lences can be made at www. tamispinevalleyfuneral- home.com NEWS OF RECORD Copyright © 2020 Published Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays except Christmas Day by the Baker Publishing Co., a part of EO Media Group, at 1668 Resort St. (P.O. Box 807), Baker City, OR 97814. Subscription rates per month are: Bak- er City (97814), $10.80; all others, $12.50. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Baker City Herald, P.O. Box 807, Baker City, OR 97814. not enough Democrats sup- ported it. At that time, Brown could have enacted a number of climate poli- cies intended to reduce emissions, according to an assessment done last year by the Oregon Depart- ment of Environmental Quality and obtained by the Oregon Capital Bureau. A spokesman for the agency said in an email the docu- ment is now “outdated.” According to that 2019 document, Brown could have imposed a new limit on emissions from indus- trial sources and on fossil fuels, like auto fuel and nat- ural gas, imported to the state. Those limits could have been reduced over time and the state could have required businesses to buy credits or offsets for excessive emissions. The 2019 document also said that Brown could have taken steps to “strengthen and extend” the state’s low- carbon fuel standard, tight- ened regulations on landfi ll methane emissions, boosted energy effi ciency stan- dards for electric appliances and required new build- ings to have electric vehicle charging stations. The governor could face a legal challenge from opponents of a climate program. OBITUARIES 10 YEARS AGO from the Baker City Herald March 10, 2010 Jennifer Lint was perusing health statistics for Baker County when she found the ideal subject for her research proejct. “One of the most staggering statistics I found was women who smoked during pregnancy,” she said. Lint is a third-year medical student at Oregon Health and Sciences University in Portlanad, and this week she fi nished her four-week rural rotation at Eastern Oregon Medical Associates in Baker City. a regulatory approach.” The legislation would have used money from the program for projects to make transportation more effi cient, for example, and help Oregonians adapt to climate change. Brown’s order likely wouldn’t raise money for those kinds of projects, said Brad Reed, a spokesman for Renew Oregon, a coali- tion of environmental and renewable energy organi- zations. The group wants a climate change program for Oregon. “She has a lot of ability to set targets … that will lower pollution, which has its benefi ts for health,” said Reed. “And certainly, clean energy transition of any kind is going to create eco- nomic activity and all the good stuff that comes along with the clean energy, like cheaper electricity. … But without the signifi - cant investments that were envisioned in the legisla- tion, we have to wait a little bit longer for that kind of activity. She can’t do that through executive order.” Brown considered an executive order on climate last year, when Republi- cans had walked out over the 2019 version of cap -and -trade legislation. That bill’s demise came in late June after it became clear PG FRI: (4:10) 7:10 SAT & SUN: (1:10) (4:10) 7:10 MON-THURS: 7:10 SONIC THE HEDGEHOG PG FRI: (4:20) 7:20 SAT & SUN: (1:20) (4:20) 7:20 MON-THURS: 7:20 ( )Bargain Matinee Show Times: 541-523-2522 Office: 541-523-5439 rants): Shaile Oren Moore, 21, of Baker City, 1:16 a.m. Sunday, in the 500 block of Campbell Street; jailed. OREGON STATE PAROLE BOARD WARRANT: Jake Keith Denning, 41, of La Grande, 4:51 p.m. Sunday, in the 2700 block of Ninth Street; jailed. STRANGULATION: Zackary Ryan Smith, 24, of Baker City, 12:58 a.m. Saturday, in the 3000 block of 10th Street; jailed. UNLAWFUL POSSESSION OF METHAMPHETAMINE and SECOND-DEGREE CRIMINAL TRESPASSING (Umatilla Coun- ty warrant) and FOURTH-DE- GREE ASSAULT (Baker County Circuit Court warrant): Kevin Shawn Chamberlain, 29, of Baker City, 11:05 p.m. Saturday, at Pendleton; in custody at the Umatilla County Jail. Baker County Sheriff’s Offi ce Arrests, citations CONTEMPT OF COURT (Bak- er County Justice Court war- rant): Ronald Wayne Skipper, 51, of Haines, 10:55 a.m. Friday, at Haines; cited and released. PROBATION VIOLATION (two Baker County Circuit Court war- rants): Jacob Michael Snider, 35, of 2600 Resort St., 11:50 a.m. Friday, at the Courthouse; jailed. FAILURE TO REPORT AS A SEX OFFENDER, two counts (Baker County Circuit Court war- rant): Robert Edward Nichols, 32, of 2455 Plum St., 4:35 p.m. Friday, in the 2300 block of Re- sort Street; cited and released. What were you made for? YOU’RE INVITED! Baker City Young Life & WyldLife Annual Banquet & Auction Friday, March 13, 2020 Baker High School Commons Doors Open 6 pm for Silent Auction Program begins at 7 pm Come & join us as we celebrate 20 years in Baker! Baker City Young Life 541-523-0661 | 541-519-5524 eksandefur@hotmail.com