LOCAL & STATE TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 2021 BAKER CITY HERALD — 3A ELECTION has two positions. Koby Myer and Jessice Dough- Continued from Page 1A erty are vying for one The bond measure position, and Travis Cook would also all the district is running unopposed for to: the other. • Construct an approxi- • Five-year renewal for mately 5,000-square-foot the Baker County Library multipurpose building at District’s local option, Baker Middle School for general operations levy. use as a cafeteria/kitchen. The levy, which would • Replace the roof at not increase property South Baker Intermedi- taxes, amounts to about ate. 24.9 cents per $1,000 of If voters approve the assessed value. Voters measure, it would increase approved the last fi ve-year property taxes within extension, in 2016, by a the school district over margin of 83% to 17%. fi ve years by 66 cents per • Measure, for Half- $1,000 of assessed value. way voters only, to allow That equates to $66 more marijuana businesses, per year on a home as- including dispensaries, in sessed at $100,000. the town. In 2016 Halfway Also on the May 18 voters, by a margin of 10 ballot: votes, decided to ban mari- • Baker School Board juana dispensaries. Samantha O’Conner/Baker City Herald Kids enjoy a sunny but blustery Monday, April 19 at Geiser-Pollman Park. Continued from Page 1A CAMERAS Continued from Page 1A “There is an app for the law enforcement to use; they can monitor those cameras on their phones,” Waggoner said. “They will be able to go back and see where people were, who was doing what. Maybe we can not have so much destruction to the pavilions and carvings on the picnic tables, and play- ground equipment torn up.” Police Chief Ray Duman told councilors that police officers are installing the app on their phones. Waggoner said the cameras were set up to cover the entire parks. The city received a grant of $18,745 from the Leo Adler STUDENTS Samantha O’Conner/Baker City Herald One of the six security cameras at Geiser-Pollman Park. Foundation to help pay for the cameras, Bornstedt said. The city’s total cost, includ- ing installing electric lines and poles, was $36,319. Waggoner said the city could potentially install cam- eras in the future along the Leo Adler Memorial Parkway, the paved path that follows the Powder River through much of Baker City. In addition to installing the security cameras, Bornstedt said the parks department is also working to remove aging trees that pose a safety hazard. “Our trees are aging, espe- cially in Geiser-Pollman Park, and we just had a couple that were rotten from the center,” Bornstedt said. “One in par- ticular was in close proximity to the playground, so it had to come out. The other, the tree board hasn’t consented to removal yet. So, we’ll just keep evaluating until at some point in time it’ll have to come out as well.” Baker High School • Neah Thomas is state champion in social systems for her project studying the Smith effects on people’s stress level using equine therapy. She collected data such as blood pressure and heart rate of people after they interacted with horses. • Skye Smith is state champion in animal systems (division 3) for her experiment on Thomas whether horses have taste preferences, us- ing treats. • Weston Bryant and Dillon Multop are state champions in animal systems (division 4) for their study of the effects of different colored lights on the behavior of fish. • Kylie Siddoway is state champion for Siddoway her job interview performance. • Jocelynn Hellberg won the HH Gibson scholarship. These students earned their state FFA degree: Emma Baeth, Iriana Rosales, Katie Wilde, Majestic Grove, Thomas Lyon, Zack Morrison, Lacy Churchfield. Group hopes to have visitor services proposal by July contract to Anthony Lakes, commis- sioners decided to delay awarding The work group reviewing Baker the contract. County’s lodging tax system hopes Then, in the fall of 2020, commis- to have a draft request for proposals sioners decided to restart the process for the visitor services contract — and create a new request for propos- the issue that prompted the group’s als (RFP). formation in March — for public The city/county work group was review by early July. tasked with drafting that pro- The six-member group met on posal as well as considering other Wednesday, April 14. potential changes to the lodging tax Bill Harvey, chairman of the system that’s been in place since Baker County Board of Commis- 2006. sioners and one of the county’s three Guests at motels, bed and break- representatives on the work group, fasts, RV parks, vacation rental said early July is the tentative goal homes, campgrounds and other for fi nishing the request for propos- lodging establishments pay a 7% als. tax. The tax is collected in Baker County commissioners voted on City, some other incorporated cities, March 3 to propose the work group including Halfway and Sumpter, to the city. and in unincorporated parts of the Commissioners also voted to county. The tax generated about extend the current visitor services $440,000 in the most recent fi scal contract, with the Baker County year. Chamber of Commerce, through Baker City manager Jon Cannon, Aug. 31. one of the city’s three members on Commissioners had intended the work group, said the group has to award a new contract in Febru- been discussing visitor services, ary 2020. The county received two tourism marketing and event coor- proposals, from the Chamber of dination. Commerce and from Anthony Lakes. The current lodging tax ordinance Although the county’s Lodging requires that 70% of the tax rev- Tax Committee and Economic De- enue be spent for tourism promotion velopment Committee both recom- and 25% for economic development. mended commissioners award the The county, which oversees the tax By Samantha O’Conner soconner@bakercityherald.com program, can keep up to 5% for administrative costs. “We already have a contract in place for marketing,” Cannon said (with Timothy Bishop). “I think if we write up a good RFP for event coordination and visitors services, and then we kind of look at the mix of our TLT committee to make sure that everybody in the county and city is well represented, and then kind of put it back into play from there, I think that simplifi es the structure a lot and addresses the things that our TLT ordinance says it wants us to do as well as our strategic plan wants us to do.” Cannon’s reference to the TLT committee has to do with potential changes to its membership. Now, the seven-member commit- tee includes one lodging establish- ment operator, a city offi cial ap- pointed by the Baker City Council, a member appointed by the economic Development Committee, and four at-large members. “I think it’s important you have a cross section of the right folks within those industries and different types of folks that are affected by TLT,” said Martin Arritola, chairman of the Economic Development Com- mittee and one of the county’s three representatives on the work group. “We just want willing bodies, number one, hopefully in the same category that we’re trying to fi ll. And that doesn’t always happen,” Harvey said. A possible change the work group discussed would have the Baker City Council appoint three mem- bers: • A lodging business owner or representative • a tourism industry representa- tive • a city offi cial “If we got a downtown business that wants to join the committee and we don’t have a slot with one of these other businesses then we could do that,” said Joanna Dixon, a Baker City Council member and one of the city’s three members on the work group. The County Commissioners would appoint four members: • A lodging business owner or representative • a member of the Economic Development Committee • a restaurant owner or repre- sentative • an at-large member Jason Brandt, president of the Oregon Restaurant and Lodging Association, has been participating by phone with the work group dur- ing its meetings. Brandt said that ideally, a major- ity of the lodging tax committee members will be in positions where they see fi rsthand the results of the work that’s done with tax revenue, including tourism marketing and event coordination. In addition to the RFP for visitor services, the work group is discuss- ing a separate request for proposals for a person who would operate what Harvey described as an “event clearinghouse.” The contractor could help orga- nizers coordinate their events to avoid confl icts. Cannon said it would be helpful to have a person responsible for helping with events. “It also makes it easy for if someone calls City Hall and says, ‘hey, I have this great idea for a golf tournament,’ I can say ‘You know what, you need to call this person and they’ll tell when the weekends are available,’ that’s how I see it,” Cannon said. Harvey said the event coordi- nation contractor also would be asked to help volunteers get events started. The position would not be a year- round position the fi rst year but could develop into one. Advocates call Snake River prison court order a landmark ■ Multnomah County Circuit Judge Amy Baggio ruled that the Ontario prison failed to comply with face mask requirements has left vulnerable prisoners in unconstitutional condi- ONTARIO — Lawyers and tions during COVID. Sixteen advocates say that the sweep- lawsuits involved SRCI. ing court order requiring Less than 10 COVID- reforms in Snake River Cor- related habeas corpus cases rectional Institution’s COVID have made it to trial so far due protocols is a landmark. The to the backlog in the courts. case, they say, not only raised In cases where judges have questions about the quality ruled, most have ordered relief of medical care at the prison for a particular inmate, but but also exposes problems en- “most judges have not wanted demic to the Oregon Depart- to touch the COVID claims,” ment of Corrections’ handling Herivel said. of the pandemic. Multnomah Circuit Judge “It’s an extensive, expansive Amy Baggio ruled that the order on the issue of masking, Ontario prison’s masking com- and really hopeful,” said Tara pliance has been inadequate Herivel, coordinating attorney and “creates an unjustifi able of the Oregon Habeas Strike risk” throughout the prison. Force. She ordered prison offi cials Herivel’s organization has to document “how SRCI is handled over 400 civil law- enforcing the masking policy, suits alleging that the Oregon including proof of specifi c Department of Corrections enforcement; (and) consider- By Liliana Frankel Malheur Enterprise ation of a plan to engage in mass COVID-19 testing at SRCI, particularly rapid test- ing of staff prior to entry.” Jennifer Black, commu- nications manager for the Oregon Department of Cor- rections, declined to answer specifi c questions from the Enterprise. She said that to do so would run “the risk of preempting the court’s decision-making process” re- garding the “detailed report” that SRCI must submit to Baggio by the end of April. The fi ndings by Baggio con- fl ict with what prison offi cials have been telling the public for months. Last September, for example, prison offi cials sug- gested corrections workers and inmates – referred to by the agency as adults in custody — were following COVID orders. “We continue to require employees and (AICs) to wear masks when social distanc- ing is not possible, as well as requiring employees to be screened prior to entry into the facility,” Amber Camp- bell, public information of- fi cer for SRCI, said in a Sept. 22 email to the Enterprise. But the report of a Feb. 6 inspection at the prison, submitted to the judge, showed that only 80% of staff at SRCI was wearing their masks correctly. “Some staff remark to AICs that they already had COVID,” according to the inspection report. “Observed AICs and staff pull down masks to talk and/or do not wear them properly.” Zach Erdman, operations and policy manager at the Oregon Department of Cor- rections, wrote in a Sept. 17 email that “many staff have been verbally counseled, resulting in immediate and cooperative compliance. DOC does not track these minor corrections. To date, a few employees are in investi- gative processes which could lead to discipline. Non-com- pliance with face covering directives has not yet led to a dismissal, but it could.” But the accountability processes Erdman spoke of were not effective in pre- venting the 20% mask non- compliance rate documented in the February evaluation. And in the court ruling, SRCI’s assistant superin- tendent, Jason Bell, testifi ed under oath that there was widespread noncompliance, but “only one staff member had progressed in discipline to step six (of six possible disciplinary steps) for mask violations.” Kate Edwards, the Hills- boro attorney who tried the SRCI case, said that the cul- ture of mask noncompliance in Ontario wasn’t unique, but refl ected a problem across the Oregon Department of Corrections. “As an organization, they have kind of thrown up their hands and said, ‘What do you want us to do about it? We have all of these policies in place,’” she explained. “But on the ground, it’s not trickling down, it’s not being enforced.” See Landmark/Page 5A