‘Yart’ Sale and more at First Friday in Baker City NORTHEAST OREGON THURSDAY MAY 6, 2021 BAKER SOFTBALL, TENNIS AND BASEBALL ALL IN ACTION: SPORTS, PG. 6A www.gonortheastoregon.com Painting by Sherri Linnemeyer GO! Magazine Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com May 6, 2021 IN THIS EDITION: QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber Local • Business & AgLife • Go! magazine $1.50 Risk level drops Friday A special good day to Herald subscriber Roger Holden of Baker City. By Jayson Jacoby Oregon, 5A Restaurants and bars in Baker County can resume limited indoor dining on Friday, May 7, as the county drops from extreme to high risk level. PORTLAND — Oregon adopted a controversial rule on Tuesday, May 4 that indefi nitely extends coronavirus mask and social distancing require- ments for all businesses in the state. State offi cials say the rule, which gar- nered thousands of public comments, will be in place until it is “no longer neces- sary to address the effects of the pandemic in the workplace.” jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Gov. Kate Brown announced on Tuesday that the 15 counties which have been in extreme risk since April 30, including Baker, will move out of that level, which has the most stringent restrictions on businesses and activities. The trigger for the change is a 0.1% difference in one key statewide metric — the percentage growth in COVID-19 patients being treated in hospitals statewide. Last month Brown announced that no county would be at extreme Improving Pedestrian, Bicycle Travel Beneath Interstate 84 See Harvey/Page 2A County gets $300,000 for business aid Mckenzie Hall receives John Leonard Memorial Scholarship 80 / 44 Sunny Friday 57 / 31 Cloudy, cooler The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Harvey defends his actions Baker County Commission Chairman Bill Harvey spent several minutes at the end of the Commission’s Wednesday, May 5 meeting addressing a series of rumors involving his Harvey actions. “Thanks the papers in our local community, I have been the topic of discussion,” Harvey said. He didn’t elaborate. BRIEFING Today See Risk Level/Page 2A soconner@bakercityherald.com ATLANTA — Danilo Gal- linari made seven 3-point- ers and fi nished with 28 points, leading the Atlanta Hawks to a 123-114 victory over the Portland Trail Blaz- ers in a matchup Monday night of teams battling for playoff positioning in their respective conferences. WEATHER risk unless there were at least 300 COVID-19 patients in hospitals, and the weekly percentage increase in hospitalizations was 15% or higher. By Samantha O’Conner Sports, 6A The Baker City Lions Club recently announced that Mckenzie Hall is the recipient of the 2021 Lion John Leonard Memorial Scholarship. The $1,000 scholarship emphasizes the impor- tance of community ser- vice involvement, and the award is granted to a high school graduating senior. Your guide to arts, entertainment and other events happening around Northeast Oregon By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Samantha O’Conner/Baker City Herald Workers are preparing to build sidewalks on the south side of Campbell Street at I-84. Sidewalk Work Is Underway The $690,000 project also will include restriping of Campbell Pedestrians and bicyclists Street to a three-lane confi gura- will soon have a safer way to tion that includes a center turn get from one side of Interstate lane and bicycle lanes, accord- 84 to the other at Baker City’s ing to the Oregon Department busiest freeway interchange. of Transportation (ODOT). Crews from Mike Becker The federal dollars are part General Contracting Inc. in La of ODOT’s Eastern Region Grande are preparing to build Americans with Disabilities Act a 6-foot-wide sidewalk on the (ADA) program budget. south side of Campbell Street The project includes work to through the freeway underpass. upgrade curb ramps to ADA- By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com compliant standards. The work was prompted in part by business development on the east side of the freeway, including the 2018 opening of the Grocery Outlet store, said Tom Strandberg, an ODOT spokesman in La Grande. That has increased traffi c, both vehicle, pedestrian and bicycle, beneath the freeway. Baker County will receive $300,000 from the state to help restaurants and other busi- nesses harmed by recent COVID-19 restric- tions. County Commissioner Mark Bennett said the money is part of the $20 million in federal aid that Gov. Kate Brown and the state Legis- lature negotiated to help businesses affected when 15 counties, including Baker, moved to the extreme risk level on April 30. See Aid/Page 3A Most virus cases people under 40 By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com A large majority of COVID-19 cases in Baker County over the past two weeks or so were people younger than 40, a signifi cant increase from the rate of cases in that age range earlier this spring. For the period April 15-30, almost 71% of the county’s 78 new cases were people 39 or younger, according to the Baker County Health Department. See Sidewalks/Page 3A See COVID/Page 3A IT’S WILDFIRE AWARENESS WEEK IN BAKER COUNTY Wary of wildfires By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Wildfi re Awareness Week is designed to remind people about the threat of wildfi res yet to come, but this year it seemed that the event might be a trifl e late in bringing its message in Baker County. With most of the county in either moder- ate, severe or extreme drought, and follow- ing the second-driest March on record at the Baker City Airport, the fi re risk is higher than usual as the annual awareness week began Monday, May 3. “This spring, fi re agencies have already TODAY Issue 153, 22 pages Business .............. 1B-3B Classified ............. 3B-6B Comics ....................... 7B responded to a variety of preventable fi res in Baker County resulting from escaped fi res,” said Sean Lee, chief of the Baker County Fire Defense Board as well as the Baker City Fire Department. “It’s critical that home and property owners monitor their fi res and consider the right time and day to burn.” See Wildfi re/Page 3A Al Crouch/Submitted Photo, File The Indian Creek fi re burns in Malheur County in August 2020. Community News ....3A Crossword ........3B & 6B Dear Abby ................. 8B Horoscope ........4B & 6B Letters ........................4A Lottery Results ..........2A News of Record ........2A Obituaries ..................2A Opinion ......................4A Senior Menus ...........2A Sports ........................6A Weather ..................... 8B SATURDAY — YMCA TO OPEN CHILD CARE CENTER IN SEPTEMBER