SATURDAY SEARCHING HIGH AND LOW: GEOCACHING ADDS EXCITEMENT TO HIKES: 1B Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com May 23, 2020 IN THIS EDITION: Local Health & Fitness Outdoors TV • • • $1.50 Exploring a geocache QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Doris Hutton of Baker City. Jayson Jacoby / Baker City Herald BRIEFING F-15 Flyover Rotary Club putting up fl ags for Memorial Day The Baker City Ro- tary Club will be placing American fl ags in front of many businesses and residences for Memorial Day, Monday, May 25. You can sign up to be included for future holidays by calling 541-377-5795. Rotarians will be setting out fl ags along the route of the Baker High School graduation on June 7, as well as on Flag Day, June 14, Independence Day and other federal holidays later in the year. A pair of F-15 Eagle jets fl ew over Saint Alphonsus Medical Center-Baker City Friday morning to honor health care workers. The aircraft are from the Oregon Air National Guard’s 142nd Wing based in Portland. Wednesday Rain Too Little, Too Late To Have Major Benefi t For Phillips Reservoir Failing To Refill Baker County Fair Board to meet Wednesday By Jayson Jacoby The Baker County Fair Board will meet Wednes- day, May 27, at 6 p.m. at the Baker Community Events Center, 2600 East St., to discuss plans for the Fair in August. Social dis- tancing will be observed and seating will be limited. The meeting will also be streamed via Zoom. For a link, send an email to mkaseberg@gmail.com jjacoby@bakercityherald.com When Jimm Mooney heard there might not be a ceremony in the veterans section at Mount Hope Cemetery on Memorial Day due to the pandemic, his reaction was immediate. “Something has to hap- pen,” said Mooney, senior pastor and founder with Veterans Hope Ministries in Baker City. And something has. Or, rather, something will. Mooney, whose organiza- tion is dedicated to helping Baker County veterans and their families, has put together a brief program starting at 11 a.m. Monday at the cemetery. WEATHER Today 61 / 34 Mostly sunny Sunday Memorial Day event planned at the cemetery Lisa Britton / For the Baker City Herald Phillips Reservoir between Baker City and Sumpter is slightly less than half full. See Memorial/Page 6A 69 / 42 Cloudy Planners approve housing complex By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Monday 73 / 46 Afternoon showers Full forecast on the back of the B section. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Jeff Colton was sorry about the rain Wednesday. Sorry that it eventually stopped falling in Baker County. The rain that sluiced down most of the day — a daily record of 0.54 of an inch fell at the Baker City Airport — didn’t cause any fl ooding here as it did in neighboring counties. But the storm did give Colton some optimism about this summer’s water supply in the midst of a spring that’s mainly been disappointing. “It’s been a tough spring,” said Colton, who manages the Baker Val- ley Irrigation District. Tough, in Colton’s view, being a synonym of sorts for “dry.” Every month in 2020 has been drier than average at the airport. Phillips Reservoir, the Powder River impoundment between Baker City and Sumpter that stores water to irri- gate more than 30,000 acres in Baker Valley, refl ects the arid trend. The reservoir is holding about 45% of its capacity. The biggest problem, Colton said, isn’t that there hasn’t been enough rain to replenish the reservoir. Rather, he’s had to release more wa- ter through Mason Dam than usual to meet irrigation demand. During a more damp spring, by contrast, Colton can reduce the water fl ow through the dam to a mere trickle because rain keeps fi elds and pastures moist and there’s no need for supplemental irrigation. That TODAY Issue 6, 14 pages Jayson Jacoby / Baker City Herald After rising Wednesday during a prolonged rainstorm, the Powder River through Baker City had receded signifi cantly by Friday. means most of the snowmelt from the The more water Colton can store in Elkhorn Mountains and other ranges the reservoir, the more he can dole out stays in the reservoir — ideally rais- to farmers and ranchers through the ing its level to full, or nearly so, by late summer. See Irrigation/Page 3A spring. Calendar ....................2A Classified ............. 3B-6B Comics ....................... 7B Community News ....3A Crossword ........5B & 6B Dear Abby ................. 8B Horoscope ........5B & 6B Jayson Jacoby ..........4A News of Record ........3A Obituaries ..................2A Opinion ......................4A Outdoors ................... 1B The Baker City Planning Commission on Wednes- day approved a proposed 16-unit housing complex with one- and two-bedroom units that the developer plans to rent to people 55 and older. Planners OK’d The Carriage Homes complex, which would consist of three duplexes, two tri- plexes and one quadplex on 1.27 acres south of D Street and east of Clark street. The property is about 2 blocks north of D Street. David Hays, owner of Big Creek Rentals LLC and Big Creek Builders Inc., applied for approval for the development on behalf of property owner Russ Hune- miller of Meridian, Idaho. In the application, Hays wrote that the development is intended to “address the rental shortages in Baker City.” Senior Menus ...........2A Sports ........................5A Weather ..................... 8B INSIDE — POLICE SAY ATTEMPTED KIDNAPPING DIDN’T HAPPEN: PG. 3A