LOCAL & STATE TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2020 FREEWAY Continued from Page 1A The westbound lanes were closed between Milepost 226, near the top of Cabbage Hill, and La Grande around noon on Sunday, said Tom Strand- berg, a spokesman for ODOT in La Grande. The westbound closure was extended to Baker City around 2 p.m. as truck park- ing areas neared capacity in La Grande, Strandberg said. Around the same time ODOT put a message on its video sign near Ontario tell- ing westbound commercial truck drivers — who make up between 40% and 50% of the traffi c on the freeway, Strandberg said — to exit at Ontario. The westbound lanes remained open to other traffi c from Ontario to Baker City. The freeway reopened to all traffi c around 4 p.m. Sunday, Strandberg said. The closure was a “proac- tive” step intended to prevent a major, multivehicle crash Ben Lonergan/EO Media Group Interstate 84 was beginning to thaw on Monday morn- ing, Nov. 9, near Meacham. that could block one side of the freeway for many hours, Strandberg said. “What we’re trying to do is shut things down when people are having trouble controlling their vehicles,” he said. “We’re pretty lucky we didn’t have any major incidents.” Although it’s hardly uncom- mon for vehicles to slide off the freeway during snow- storms, Strandberg said he PAUSE suspects Sunday’s weather, as the fi rst major wintry episode along the freeway this fall, “caught some people off guard.” In particular the storm might have caught some driv- ers who haven’t installed their winter traction tires. The legal season to use studded tires started Nov. 1. Strandberg said he’s not sure why the bulk of the prob- lems were in the westbound continues to encourage outdoor dining and take out. Continued from Page 1A • Reducing the maximum capacity On Monday afternoon Brown an- of other indoor activities to 50 people nounced that Baker, Union, Clackamas (includes gyms, fi tness organizations/ and Washington counties, but not Linn studios, bowling alleys, ice rinks, indoor County, would begin the 2-week pause sports, pools, and museums). on Nov. 11. • Limiting social gatherings to people The governor said during a Friday in your household, or no more than six press conference that counties with people if the gathering includes those populations below 30,000 — Baker from outside your household, reducing County has about 16,800 residents — the frequency of those social gatherings could be placed on the 2-week pause if (signifi cantly in a 2-week period), and they had 60 or more new cases over the keeping the same six people in your preceding 14 days. social gathering circle. From Oct. 27 through Nov. 9, a span of Baker County Commissioner Mark 14 days, Baker County reported 64 new Bennett said Monday afternoon that he cases, according to the Baker County urges county residents to take precau- Health Department. tions including wearing face masks and There were no new cases on Saturday, observing social distancing to curb the Nov. 7, one new case on Sunday, Nov. 8, recent rise in new cases. and four cases on Monday. He also echoed the comments from Measures during the 2-week pause: Nancy Staten, director of the Baker • Urging all businesses to mandate County Health Department, in recom- employees work from home to the extent mending residents reconsider attend- possible. ing parties and other social gatherings • Pausing indoor visits at long-term that, according to Staten, have been a care facilities. primary source of the county’s recent • Reducing maximum restaurant rash of cases. capacity to 50 people (including custom- Less than a month ago, from Oct. ers and staff) for indoor dining, with a 10-23, the county reported just three maximum party size of six. The state new cases. lanes. The eastbound lanes weren’t closed Sunday. There was much less snow in Ladd Canyon, so the storm didn’t pose a test for the new- est arrow in ODOT’s quiver — the third lane on the steep uphill grade on the eastbound freeway. Strandberg said ODOT offi cials are confi dent that the new lane will prevent some of the truck crashes that can block the eastbound lanes. “We feel that is going to be a big help in keeping the road open,” he said. The challenge in Ladd Can- yon is that traffi c has to negoti- ate a relatively sharp curve just before starting up the hill. The curve, combined with the tendency for ice to form on the former bridge over Ladd Creek, made that spot a notori- ous site of winter pileups. ODOT, in addition to adding the third lane, replaced the bridge with a culvert, so the freeway no longer has open air beneath it and thus is less prone to freezing. Reversing the recent trend — 68 new cases in the county since Oct. 26 — will not only protect residents, Bennett said, but it will reduce effects on businesses and, potentially, allow some Baker stu- dents to continue attending in-person classes. “Our goal is to try to avoid any fur- ther impacts on people, the schools and businesses,” Bennett said. He emphasized the potential severity of the virus. Although three Baker County residents have died as a result of COVID-19, Bennett said “a number of people” — he didn’t know the precise total — have been hospitalized outside the county due to severe symptoms. He didn’t know the current num- ber of county residents who are being treated. According to the Oregon Health Authority, as of Sunday — not counting the four new cases Monday — of the county’s 182 COVID-19 cases, 138 were residents who had tested positive, and 44 were “presumptive” cases. Those are residents who had symp- toms consistent with the virus and who were in close contact with someone who tested positive, but who have not tested positive themselves. Reward offered for second wolf killing ently poached in Baker County this fall. Conservation groups are In September the breeding increasing the reward for in- male from the Cornucopia formation leading to the arrest Pack was shot and killed about and conviction of whoever shot 15 miles west of where the a female gray wolf in Baker female wolf was found. The County. reward in that case stands at The wolf, killed about Oct. $6,150. 29, was found by a hunter “The killing of a second Ore- in the Wallowa-Whitman gon wolf within the last several National Forest about 8 miles weeks is an absolute outrage,” northeast of Halfway, within said Brooks Fahy, executive the territory of the Pine Creek director of Predator Defense, a Pack. national nonprofit organization. A coalition of groups — “It is critical that this criminal including the Center for be brought to justice.” Biological Diversity, Northwest OSP Capt. Tim Fox has said Animal Rights Network, “there’s no reason, at this point” Oregon Wild and Predator to believe the shootings are Defense — are offering $7,300 connected. on top of the $300 provided by Oregon is home to at least Oregon State Police for infor- 158 wolves, according to the mation about the case. latest population estimate from It is the second wolf appar- the Oregon Department of Fish By George Plaven The Capital Press Blazing Fast Internet! ADD TO YOUR PACKAGE FOR ONLY and Wildlife. Most are concen- trated in the northeast corner of the state. While the Trump administra- tion recently announced its final rule to lift endangered species protections for gray wolves across the Lower 48 states, it remains illegal to kill wolves under the Oregon Wolf Plan, except to protect human life and livestock. Honoring our current and former employees who served: Pleas Brown US Air Corps; Phil O’Connell US Army; Nate Petrucci USMC; Jamie Emery US Navy. Lew Brothers Tires 210 Bridge, Baker City 541-523-3679 Jay & Kristin Wilson, Owners 2036 Main Street, Baker City tDDC 19 . 99 $ /mo. where available 2-YEAR TV PRICE GUARANTEE VETERANS Continued from Page 1A Three-quarters of a cen- tury later, Anderson, who has lived in Baker City since 1989, still ponders, with gratitude, all the decades of experiences he might not have had. “I was lucky,” Anderson, 93, said. “We had subma- rine scares a few times but nobody every shot a torpedo at us.” Anderson, who grew up in Duluth, Minnesota, wanted to become a sailor even earlier than he did. He graduated from high school in June 1944, almost 6 months before his 18th birthday. But his mother wouldn’t allow him to enlist immediately. Anderson ended up on the water anyway. He started working on a ship that hauled iron ore across the Great Lakes. Anderson chuckles when he imagines how the ship’s offi cers must have reacted when they saw the slender boy who wanted to toil aboard one of the coal-fi red ore carriers. “I’m surprised they didn’t tell me to go home, eat some Wheaties and grow up a little bit,” An- derson said. “I was small but I was pretty strong.” After his fi rst voyage, during which he cleaned up ashes and did other labor, one of the ship’s fi remen — who shoveled coal to feed the voracious boilers — failed to turn up for the next trip. The chief engineer asked Anderson if he thought he could move enough coal to keep the boiler burning. Anderson, who was looking at a raise in pay from $130 a month to $189, allowed he thought he could. That fall of 1944, as the Great Lakes harbor began to ice up, Ander- son convinced his mother that he was a seasoned sailor ready to wear his country’s uniform. She agreed, and Anderson enlisted in the Navy on Nov. 7, 1944. He turned 18 a bit less than a month later, on Dec. 5. After attending engi- neering school, Anderson was assigned fi rst to a ship that was being repaired at Kirkland, Washington, before ship- ping off to the Aleutian Islands off Alaska. Although Anderson grew up in Duluth, a city known for its arctic tem- peratures, he said he’s never been so cold as he was one day in Decem- ber 1944 while sailing near Dutch Harbor, Alaska. Although the air temperature was only in the mid-20s — a balmy January day in Duluth — Anderson said the icy spray from seawater that was right at its freezing point of 28 was more frigid than anything he’d experienced. After his military service ended in July 1946, Anderson attended the Michigan College of Mining and Technology and earned a degree in mining engineering and geology in 1950. Since then he has worked at mines around the country, both as a mine manager, consultant and at times as a mine owner. ASSAULT Continued from Page 1A The suspect has been turned over to juvenile au- thorities and was transported to the juvenile detention center at the Northern Oregon Regional Corrections Facility (NORCOR) in The Dalles on Sunday. He was scheduled for arraignment Monday afternoon. Duman said the victim’s mother reported the crime. The girl was taken to the emergency room at Saint Alphonsus Medical Center where a sexual assault examination was completed, he said. Thank You Past, Present & Future Veterans. Baker County Custom Meats 2390 11th Street Baker City Today, we honor our veterans for the sacrifices they’ve made in serving the country we are so proud to live in! THANK YOU! America’s Top 120 Package MO. BAKER CITY HERALD — 3A 190 CHANNELS Including Local Channels! CALL TODAY - For $100 Gift Card Promo Code: DISH100 for 12 Mos. 1-866-373-9175 Offer ends 7/15/20. All offers require credit qualification, 24-month commitment with early termination fee and eAutoPay. Prices include Hopper Duo for qualifying customers. Hopper, Hopper w/Sling or Hopper 3 $5/mo. more. Upfront fees may apply based on credit qualification. You Were There For Us, Now We’re Here For You. Baker County Veteran Services 1995 3rd Street, Baker County Courthouse 541-523-8223 Veteran Services Coordinator, Rick Gloria 7KH%DNHU&RXQW\9HWHUDQ6HUYLFHV2IÀFH continues to provide access to the wide range of EHQHÀWVDQGVHUYLFHVRIIHUHGWR local veterans and their dependents. Health Care, Education, Compensation & Pension, %XULDO%HQHÀWV PXFKPRUH Serving local veterans since 1971 Mary Jo Grove, Tamara Claflin, Jaclyn Foss, Kristen McAdams, Mitch Grove, Jeff Anderson, Shannon Downing, Karla Smith 845 Campbell Street, Baker City 541-523-6485