SATURDAY FORMER OREGON DUCKS QUARTERBACKS DUEL IN THE NFL: SPORTS, 6A In OUTDOORS, 1B Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com December 19, 2020 Local • Sports • Outdoors • TV IN THIS EDITION: $1.50 Tracking animals at the dredge Case rate drops a bit Harvest Church Serves Free Meals Every Thursday Evening The Dinner Rush INSIDE TODAY New issue of Pulse magazine includes a story about two Baker High School athletes coping with the cancellation of sports due to the pandemic. By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com QUICK HITS Baker County’s number of new COVID-19 cases has dropped slightly over the past two weeks. But the rate of new infec- tions remains above what it was until the last week of October. For the seven-day period Dec. 11-17, the county re- ported 32 new cases. That compares with 34 cases for the previous seven- day period (Dec. 4-10) and 49 cases for the week before that (Nov. 27-Dec. 3). Case investigations conducted by the Baker County Health Department show that parties and other private gatherings continue to be a source of some of the infections, said Nancy Staten, the department’s director. The surge in cases over the past eight weeks — 265 of the county’s 384 cases, as of Thursday, or 69%, have been reported since Oct. 26 — has put Baker County in the extreme risk category under state standards. That subjects the county to the tightest restrictions, including on restaurants, through at least Dec. 31. Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Francis Mohr of Baker City. BRIEFING Herald won’t publish Dec. 26 In observance of the Christmas holiday, the Baker City Herald will not publish an edition on Saturday, Dec. 26. “It’s a chance to give our employees an opportunity to spend an uninterrupted holiday with their fami- lies,” said Andrew Cutler, regional editor for the EO Media Group, which owns the Baker City Herald. “But we will beef up our Dec. 24 edition.” That expanded issue will include addi- tional comics and puzzle features. WEATHER Today 39 / 36 Partly sunny Sunday 42 / 35 Rain showers Monday 44 / 31 Rain showers The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Chris Collins/Baker City Herald Pastor Matt Diaz, who coordinates children’s programs at Harvest Church in Baker City, pours salsa that will be part of the free meal the church served on Thursday, Dec. 17. years ago. He coordinates the church’s children’s programs. Each Thursday just as the workday Pastor Brad Phillips, 52, the church’s is winding down for most Baker City lead pastor for the past eight years, residents, the kitchen at Harvest rotates with Diaz to supervise the meal Church is warming up. delivery program. Phillips’ son, Braden, Volunteers and staff gather about 4 and his wife, Jenna, also have joined p.m., as they’ve been doing throughout the church staff after moving to Baker the coronavirus pandemic, to prepare City from Alaska about six months ago. free meals for community members. Braden is the church’s youth pastor. In the beginning, from March until This week, Diaz and his reliable about September, the church served troop of volunteers prepared tacos for 250 meals each Thursday, said Pastor 170 people, most of whom drove by Matt Diaz. the church for curbside pickup of the The 39-year-old moved to Baker meal. Of that total, 50 were delivered City with his wife, Mandy, and their to homes throughout the community, four sons (ages 9, 7, 4 and 2) about two including 17 to 20 that go to residents of By Chris Collins ccollins@bakercityherald.com Elkhorn Village each week, Diaz said. Diners were provided a clamshell carryout container filled with two tacos and all the trimmings, and a side serv- ing of chips and salsa. Three gallons of salsa and multiple bags of chips were needed to fill that portion of the order, Diaz said. Kenny Bain, 62, a church deacon, is on hand each week to help with the cooking. He was the man behind the staple of Thursday’s taco meal — 38 pounds of hamburger cooked to a turn with just the right amount of taco seasoning. See Meals/Page 3A See COVID-19/Page 5A ‘A beautiful life’: Remembering Virginia Kostol Their bond stayed strong until the very When Jessie Ritch became ac- end. quainted with Virginia Kostol she Ritch said she played knew straight off that theirs would cards with Virginia on not be an ordinary friendship. Sunday, Dec. 13, and This, Ritch sensed, was a relation- spoke with her on the Kostol ship she would always treasure. phone about 4:30 that “Virginia was one of those people afternoon. who, when you fi rst form a friend- Virginia, who has lived in Baker ship, you just know how special that City since 1953 and over the decades person is going to be in your life,” amassed a long record of community Ritch said on Thursday, Dec. 17. “She service, died that night in the North was just such a joy to be around. We Baker City home where she lived for hit it off right away.” all those years. By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com She was 94. Ritch, 80, said her sadness at los- ing her friend was tempered by the knowledge that Virginia’s daughter, Cris, had arrived two days earlier for a visit. “I just feel so thankful that Cris was there,” Ritch said. Virginia moved to Baker City with her husband, Carl Kostol, a physician. The couple had married in 1949. Carl died in March 2018 at age 95. Ritch, who attended school in Baker City, lived in Richland for 17 years and in Central Oregon for many years before returning to Baker City in 2006. She said she knew of Virginia long before they actually met. Virginia was involved in a variety of activities in Baker City, includ- ing organizing American Red Cross blood drives, and serving on the Baker School Board, the Education Service District board and with the Baker County Historical Society and The Salvation Army auxiliary. See Virginia/Page 5A ELKHORN WILDLIFE AREA The elk arrive, with appetites By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Dan Marvin chuckles as he lampoons the way Rocky Mountain elk sometimes act. Marvin knows how tough these animals are. During winters when sub-zero temperatures and snowdrifts deep enough to bury cars conspire to kill hundreds of mule deer in TODAY Issue 95, 12 pages Northeast Oregon, most of the elk make it through, a bit undernourished, maybe, but otherwise hale. Yet Marvin fi nds it amus- ing that when a couple of snowstorms arrive earlier than usual, while jack-o- lanterns still sit on some porches, the elk turn up, looking for a free meal. S. John Collins/Baker City Herald File Photo See Elk/Page 5A Rocky Mountain elk munch alfalfa at the Elkhorn Wildlife Area during a past winter. Classified ............. 2B-4B Comics ....................... 5B Community News ....3A Crossword ........2B & 4B Dear Abby ................. 6B Horoscope ................. 3B Jayson Jacoby ..........4A News of Record ........2A Obituaries ..................2A Opinion ......................4A Outdoors ................... 1B Senior Menus ...........2A Sports ........................6A Turning Backs ........... 2B Weather ..................... 6B TUESDAY — DRIVING GUIDE TO LOCAL CHRISTMAS LIGHT DISPLAYS