TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2020 BAKER CITY HERALD — 3A Fire damages Baker City home A fi re damaged on Baker City home Friday morn- ing, and on Friday evening at another property fi refi ghters stopped fl ames fromspreading to a trailer to a home. The fi rst fi re was reported at 9:27 a.m. at 2231 Third St. Eleven fi refi ghters from the Baker City Fire The fi re caused an estimated $30,000 in damage, and $10,000 in lost possessions, according to the Fire Department. One resident was taken to the hospital for evaluation, according to the department. The likely cause of the fi re was an electrical short in a bathroom fi xture. The American Red Cross and Best Friends of Baker helped the residents and their pets, according to the fi re department. The home is owned by Jamie and Janet Conant. The second fi re was reported at 10:42 p.m. at 1345 Elm St. A trailer behind the home, which is owned by Melody and Earl Haney, caught fi re. Firefi ghters pre- vented the fi re from spreading to the home. The fi re, which caused an estimated $2,000 in damage, was caused by an overloaded extension cord connected to a space heater, according to the fi re department. BEDS Continued from Page 1A She said the organization, which started with seven chapters, received a major publicity boost in February when TV host Mike Rowe, responding to a request from a Sleep in Heavenly Peace chapter, featured the project on his “Returning the Favor” program. “After it started airing in the middle of February, they were getting applications to some chapters from across the country,” Brown said. At one point, the nonprofi t had about 1,000 applications from people wanting to volun- teer to help build beds. Today, Sleep in Heavenly Peace has more than 200 chapters nationwide. “We’re more than happy to support a great project like this,” said Brown, who started the John Day chapter with her husband. For Saturday’s bed-building event at OTEC, the coop- erative donated the use of its equipment, and seven OTEC employees (including two children of employee Ron Rasmussen) were among the volunteers who assembled 14 beds. Those will be combined into seven bunk beds, said Joseph Hathaway, communi- cations manager for OTEC. “We love to give back to the community,” Hathaway said. “OTEC is part of the community, we’re owned by the community, and it’s part of our mission to give back to the community.” Chris Kommer, treasurer of the Baker City Rotary Club, was one of several Rotarians who also helped build beds Saturday. Kommer said she has also helped deliver a bunk bed to a Joseph Hathaway/Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative Molly Rasmussen, left, daughter of Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative employee Ron Rasmussen, helps Mike Pommarane, OTEC’s director of operations, sand a board that will become part of a bunk bed donated to local children. Continued from Page 1A Sleep in Heavenly Peace Joseph Hathaway/Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative Susie Brown, left, president of the John Day chapter of Sleep in Heavenly Peace, works with Chris Kommer, treasurer of the Baker City Rotary Club. family in Baker County. “It was emotional, very emotional,” Kommer said. Besides the wooden bunk bed frame, Sleep in Heavenly Peace includes mattresses, comforters, sheets, pillows and pillow cases, Kommer said. Rotary member Jerry Shaw volunteered as a member of both the club and the Liberty Brothers Motor- cycle Club, which had about a dozen members on hand Saturday. “It’s a great thing that’s going on and so we automati- cally just jumped in to help,” Shaw said. The organization’s mission statement reads, in part: “We fully believe that a bed is a basic need for the proper physical, emotional, and mental support that a child needs. When it was brought to our attention that the need for beds went far beyond our own neighborhoods, we stepped up and took initiative. We’re a national organization answering the call to a national problem.” More information is available at www. shpbeds.org COFFEE Continued from Page 1A “We brought her down here with our whole family and they were able to all see it and it was a blessing, it was really neat for her to be able to see it before she passed,” Christa Barr, 37, said. “It was heartbreaking, but it was a blessing that she got to see her legacy and what she created.” Kris Barr opened her origi- nal Coffee Corral location at Campbell and Grove streets, across from Geiser-Pollman Park. Five years ago she bought the property at the southeast corner of Oak and Campbell, 4 blocks to the east, with a goal of having a second shop there. Construction started in March. Christa Barr said an of- fi cial grand opening for the new location is still in the works. She said the shop, which is considerably larger than the original location, has drawn positive comments. “Customers love it and we feel proud to have it for sure, so it’s been good,” she said. Christa Barr said she plans to continue operating both coffee shops for the time being. “If it can maintain itself there, I’ll keep it,” she said of the original shop. The new location offers indoor and outdoor seating, allowing people to sit and SCHOOLS Samantha O’Conner/Baker City Herald The Coffee Corral’s new location, at the southeast corner of Oak and Campbell streets, opened on Aug. 24. The original location, near Geiser-Pollman Park, remains open. “We brought her down here with our family and they were able to all see it and it was a blessing, it was really neat for her to be able to see it before she passed.” — Christa Barr, talking about her mother-in-law, Kris Barr, who started Coffee Corral, and saw the second location just before she died on Aug. 26 That proposal, Witty emphasized, depends on Baker County continuing its recent trend of hav- ing few new COVID-19 cases. The county has had seven new cases in the past 3 weeks. The state threshold for in-person classes is 30 or fewer new cases over the most recent 3-week period. Witty said Monday that he believes the major- ity — “but not all” — of the district’s teachers and staff “would like to get back to in-person if we can.” “But of course we want to do it in a safe manner,” Witty said. He will be joined in Wednesday’s Zoom meet- ing by Nancy Staten, director of the Baker County Health Depart- ment, and Dr. Eric Lamb, the county’s public health offi cer. In addition to ensur- ing the county meets the state limit for the number of new cases, the school district would have to have the approval from Lamb that there is no community spread of the virus before any in-person classes could resume. Witty said the current proposal to bring younger students back to schools, but not seventh- through 12th-graders, is based on the state requirements for how many people stu- dents can interact with per week while attending classes. The current limit is 50 people, Witty said. Baker schools can com- ply with that requirement for students in elemen- tary and primary schools because they spend most of their day in the same room, being taught by the same teacher, Witty said. But middle school and high school students move from classroom to classroom for their various subjects, so they would be exposed to more than 50 people per week, he said. It’s not feasible to deal with the issue by having middle school and high school students, like their younger counterparts, stay in a single room and have their various teach- ers move from room to room, Witty said. For one thing, he said, certain science classes that include lab experi- ments can only happen in a specially equipped room, so students taking those classes would have to cycle in and out. For another, that system would require that students be broken into groups based on all of them having the exact slate of courses. The hybrid model that district offi cials proposed this summer — with seventh- through 12th- graders taking in-person classes 2 days per week, and taking online classes the other 2 days — would be feasible if the state raised the weekly limit from the current 50 students to 100 students, Witty said. He pointed out that state education and health offi cials this sum- mer enacted less-strin- gent guidelines for schools in sparsely populated counties, including Baker. He said he has been talk- ing weekly with state of- fi cials about the prospect of further liberalizing the guidelines to potentially make it possible to have Baker middle school and high school students at- tend in-person classes at least part of the time. “The state did listen to us previously,” Witty said. Samantha O’Conner/Baker City Herald Coffee Corral’s second shop is larger than its original location at Campbell and Grove streets. enjoy their coffee and food while maintaining social available at the original shop. ral’s roasters supply the two distancing. There’s also a second coffee shops, and the business sells The new Coffee Corral also has additional food items not bean roaster. Coffee Cor- wholesale to other outlets. VIRUS Continued from Page 1A According to the statement, the series of negative tests allowed Meadowbrook to resume outdoor visits with residents, and to allow physical and other therapists to again treat residents. The Oregon Health Authority (OHA) re- ported that there were 27 cases of COVID-19 in the Meadowbrook outbreak. The state agency hasn’t said how many of the people who tested were positive are residents, and how many are employees. The two Baker County residents who have died due to COVID-19 were Meadowbrook residents, according to the OHA. As of Monday afternoon, the county’s total number of cases was 95. That includes 86 county residents who have tested positive, and nine “presumptive” cases — residents who haven’t tested positive but have had close contact with someone who did. A total of 1,851 of the county’s 16,800 resi- dents have been tested, with 1,766 of those tests — 95% — negative, according to OHA. Serving Baker and Surrounding Counties We offer landscape curbing and full service specialty and decorative concrete installation. 541-519-5268 stone.elitesprinklernland@gmail.com CCB#231936 LCB# 9809