THURSDAY IDAHO VENDOR SELLING TRUMP MERCHANDISE IN BAKER CITY: PAGE 3A Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com June 4, 2020 IN THIS EDITION: QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscribers Kerry and Ginger Savage of Baker City. Local • Business & AgLife • Go! magazine $1.50 Plaintiffs respond in suit ■ In briefs to Oregon Supreme Court, attorneys say governor’s COVID-19 restrictions have expired By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com BRIEFING Rotary Club will place American fl ags on Main Street to honor BHS graduates Members of the Baker City Rotary Club will place American fl ags along Main Street to honor Baker High School graduates as they parade in vehicles after receiving their diplomas at the high school on Sunday afternoon, June 7. Graduates will gather at the Baker Sports Complex at 2 p.m. Each gradu- ate will ride in a vehicle with immediate family members. They will drive through the bus lane in front of the school, 2500 E St., to receive their diplo- mas. Graduates will then proceed in vehicles, start- ing around 3 p.m. Their route will be west on E Street to 10th Street, south on 10th Street to Broad- way, east on Broadway to Main, then south on Main Street to Auburn Avenue. Residents are asked to avoid parking on Main and Broadway streets during the event. Streets will remain open to regular traffi c. “This has been a challenging year for the seniors and we want to celebrate them,” Baker School District Superinten- dent Mark Witty said. WEATHER Today 74 / 47 Sunny Friday 84 / 50 Storms possible The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Attorneys for the plaintiffs in a lawsuit fi led May 6 in Baker County challenging Gov. Kate Brown’s executive orders during the coronavirus pandemic reiterated their claims, in separate briefs fi led Tuesday with the Oregon Supreme Court, that the governor’s orders have legally expired. Ray Hacke, an attorney with the Pacifi c Justice Institute in Salem who represents the plaintiffs, including Elkhorn Baptist Church in Baker City, argues that because Brown invoked the state’s public health emergency law, she is bound by its 28-day limit on such emergen- cies. Hacke fi led a 29-page brief in response to the brief Oregon Solici- tor General Benjamin Gutman fi led May 28 on behalf of the governor. The Supreme Court had set a Tuesday deadline for Hacke and another Salem attorney, Kevin Mannix, who represents a group of intervenor-plaintiffs in the lawsuit, to fi le briefs in response. See Lawsuit/Page 3A County expects to start Phase 2 Families Adjust To Visitor Restrictions At Care Facilities By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Kitch said. Mary Lou Lake has lived at Memory Lane since 2019, having moving here from Seattle. Kitch said she wasn’t satisfi ed with the level of care at a facility in Seattle where her mom had been living. “We needed to fi nd a place that had a different attitude and so we came here and I found this place and we are just so thrilled,” Kitch said. “They have done such a good job with her. They feed them well, they take care of them, they sit and they talk to them, they are really good here. I just can’t say enough about them.” Baker County Commis- sioner Mark Bennett is confi dent that state offi cials will allow the county to move into the second phase of the state’s reopening Bennett plan Friday. That would allow theaters and bowl- ing alleys to reopen, and it would also increase the number of people allowed to attend church services to 250 so long as the venue can comply with social distancing. The current limit is 25 people. “I don’t see any reason we wouldn’t be approved,” Bennett said Wednesday. Gov. Kate Brown was scheduled to announce today which counties can move into phase 2. During a press confer- ence Wednesday morning, Brown specifi cally men- tioned the increase in the number of people allowed to attend church services during phase 2. Brown said that would “allow more Oregonians in the appropriate counties to participate in a showing of faith with their fellow Oregonians.” Brown said she under- stands that attending church is “a source of com- fort” for many people. See Missing/Page 6A See Phase 2/Page 5A Samantha O’Conner / Baker City Herald Carol Kitch stands outside her mother’s window at Memory Lane Homes residential care facility in Baker City. Her mother, Mary Lou Lake, is 92. Missing The Touch care facilities during the coronavirus pandemic. Carol Kitch stands outside The mandate is intended to protect Memory Lane Homes, peering into residents in those facilities, several the window of the residential care of which have been the location of facility to speak with her mother, outbreaks. Mary Lou Lake. Kitch said it is diffi cult not being Kitch, 64, visits Memory Lane in able to hug or touch her mom. Touch- Baker City almost every day to see ing, she said, is an integral part of her 92-year-old mother, who has family and love. Alzheimer’s disease. “And so to not be able to touch or “I just fi gure even if it’s outside the hug is hard. Really hard,” Kitch said. window, if she can see me every day Despite the diffi culties, Kitch or almost every day, it just keeps the said she rests easy knowing Nicole connection,” Kitch said. Howerton, administrator at Memory In common with people across Lane Homes, and her staff are caring the state and nation, Kitch has had for her mother. to adjust to restrictions on visits to “They really do an excellent job,” By Samantha O’Conner soconner@bakercityherald.com Vigil honors George Floyd By Sam Anthony santhony@bakercityherald.com About 115 people attended a Monday night vigil in Baker City for George Floyd, the man killed by a Minneapolis police offi cer during a May 25 arrest. Many of those who attended the peaceful event brought fl owers and candles to place on a memorial at Central Park, beside the Powder River between Washington and Valley avenues. The event was intended to be a peaceful memorial, not a protest, said Boston Colton of Baker City, who organized the vigil. See Vigil/Page 2A TODAY Issue 11, 24 pages Business ...........1B & 2B Calendar ....................2A Classified ............. 3B-8B Sam Anthony / Baker City Herald Residents gathered at Baker City’s Central Park Monday evening for a vigil honoring George Floyd, who was killed May 25 during an arrest by a Minneapolis police offi cer. About 115 at- tended the event. Comics ....................... 9B Community News ....3A Crossword ........6B & 7B Dear Abby ............... 10B Horoscope ........6B & 7B Lottery Results ..........2A News of Record ........2A Obituaries ..................2A Opinion ......................4A Senior Menus ...........2A Sports ........................6A Weather ................... 10B SATURDAY — LATE SNOWSTORM FOILS A PLANNED HIKING TRIP