BAKER CITY HERALD — 3A SATURDAY, MAY 8, 2021 Rachel Center’s baby bottle drive set The Rachel Pregnancy Center’s annual fundraiser, also known as its baby bottle drive, will begin on Mother’s Day, Sunday, May 9. The campaign will conclude on Father’s Day, Sunday, June 20. Last year, the fundraiser was shifted to a June start and a July fi nish because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The 2021 event returns to its original time frame this year, said Vera Grove, the nonprofi t organization’s director and only paid employee. As the fundraiser gets underway, baskets of baby bottles, in which donations of cash and change can be col- lected, will be available at local churches. Donations also may be made at the Rachel Center offi ce at 2192 Court Ave. dur- ing regular hours — Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The offi ce is closed from noon to 1 p.m. for lunch. Those who would prefer to write a check to the Center during the fundraiser can pick up an envelope instead of a baby bottle and mail the donation to Rachel Pregnancy Center, P.O. Box 1086, Baker City, OR 97814. The Rachel Center hopes to collect most of the bottles (and other monetary donations) by Father’s Day, but contribu- tions are accepted at any time, Grove said. The Rachel Pregnancy Cen- ter offers help to both men and women who are dealing with fi nancial or emotional prob- lems related to an unplanned pregnancy. The annual baby bottle drive is the Rachel Cen- ter’s main fundraiser for the year. The organization does not receive government funding and relies solely on community support. Among services provided at Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald, File Photo Patsy Hoelscher, left, a member of the board of directors for the Rachel Pregnancy Center in Baker City, looks over some of the baby and child clothing available at the nonprofi t with Matt Reidy, center, and Hal Huntington, right in March 2020. the Center are the voluntary Earn While You Learn classes, in which clients have the op- portunity to participate in ses- sions ranging from prenatal to parenting instruction about infants, toddlers and older children, along with relation- ship classes, money manage- ment and more. “Baby Bucks” earned through Earn While You Learn can be redeemed for baby furniture and items from the center’s Baby Bucks store, including gift cards for gas, groceries and to obtain car seats from the Baker City Police Department. Along with in-person classes at the Center, online classes have been added dur- ing the pandemic. The online sessions are available through livestreaming via the Zoom computer app or online by text message to cellphones and email, Grove said. A post-abortion recovery Bible study class titled “Sur- rendering the Secret” also has been added to the curriculum months to 3T, and maternity clothes, Grove said. Diapers and wipes, formula and baby food, and baby furniture also are a need. Grove shared this client comment from a young teen Pregnancy help who took prenatal and infant • Pregnancy tests/verifi ca- care classes: “I love how nice, tion understanding people are. • Referral for free ultra- They always offer help or sound advice. There is no judgment • Pregnancy options coun- and they all just want to help seling out. Being a fi rst time mom • Maternity clothes is scary enough but this place helps with pretty much all the Parenting Help preparing and makes things • Encouragement and less scary.” counseling The Rachel Pregnancy Cen- • Baby clothes up to size 3 ter is led by a board of direc- • Baby furniture and items tors, which includes Patricia • Diapers and formula Hoelscher, Cathy Blankinship, • Referrals to other help Jesse Whitford, Allyson How- Volunteer positions avail- arth and Grove. able at the Center include: of- More information is avail- fi ce assistant, client advocate/ able by visiting the offi ce or peer counselor, clothing as- calling 541-523-5357 during sistant, teacher, church liaison business hours. Grove also and fundraiser. In addition may be reached by email at to fi nancial gifts, the Rachel rpc.director1@gmail.com or Center is always in need of visit the center’s Facebook baby clothes, especially size 18 page. for clients seeking emo- tional and spiritual healing. A Rachel Center brochure lists these free, confi dential services that it provides in the community: Search planned for woman missing since early January The (La Grande) Observer MEACHAM — Umatilla County Search and Rescue and Oregon State Police are coordinating a multi- agency search Saturday, May 8, and Sunday, May 9, near Meacham for Deborah Hendrichs, the 56-year-old woman from Star, Idaho, who went missing in the area on Jan. 11. The search will concentrate on areas on the eastbound side of Interstate 84 near milepost 238, where her abandoned vehicle was found after she was reported missing, Contributed Photos according to a press Two photos of Deborah release from the Uma- Hendrichs, an Idaho tilla County Sheriff’s woman who went missing Offi ce. Search areas Jan. 11 near Meacham. include portions along I-84, Hancock Road, the railroad and bridge and area creeks, bodies of water and wooded land. “This will be a robust search response with multiple agencies involved,” the release stated. “Approximately 90 personnel have committed to assist in the search, includ- ing possibly 10 K-9 teams, four drones and about 35 ground searchers. The actual number will not be known until participants check in on (May 8).” The sheriff’s offi ce also is asking the general public to remain out of the area unless they are residents and re- questing that hunters with spring turkey or bear tags be aware there are searchers in the area and to choose an alternate hunt location during those days. And locals liv- ing in the area, especially near Meacham Lake, should be aware the search will use four drones. “The drones will not be concentrating on occupied ar- eas or invading privacy of homes,” according to the press release. “They will be concentrating on areas away from occupied buildings and bodies of water. Searchers on the ground will also be staying away from occupied homes, however if a home appears to have been vacant through- out the winter or looks broken into, they will notify the land owner in an attempt to eliminate any possibility that she entered an unoccupied residence.” Personnel with the Oregon Department of Transpor- tation and Union Pacifi c Railroad have provided a liai- son to ensure safety of the search personnel because the area includes the interstate and railroad lines. ODOT also provided the location for an incident command post. Union Pacifi c Railroad, Cunningham Sheep Company and Hancock Timber Resource Group have been con- tacted and are cooperating with searchers because these businesses own a large portion of the search area. Sheriff’s Lt. Sterrin Ward said the project includes the development of a website on this mission at sterrinward. wixsite.com/website. The website also is where the mis- sion will provide updates. Bentz joins criticism of Idaho legislator’s dam breach plan on lawsuits, ending costly litigation over the dams’ SPOKANE, Wash. — Some environmental impact. That Republican members of provision prompted more Congress from the North- than a dozen Northwest west are accusing a GOP environmental groups to Idaho lawmaker of conduct- oppose the plan. Democratic ing secret negotiations with lawmakers have also been the Democratic governor of lukewarm to the proposal. Oregon over a controversial On Wednesday, May 5, proposal to breach four dams Reps. Dan Newhouse, R- on the Snake River to save Washington, Cathy McMor- endangered salmon runs. ris Rodgers, But Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Washington, R-Idaho, replied that he has and Cliff Bentz, for several years been telling R-Oregon, is- “everyone who would listen” sued a strongly about his proposal for a com- worded state- Bentz prehensive solution to save ment upon salmon. learning of a “How is that secret?” Freedom of Information Act Simpson asked this week. release detailing coordina- “My staff has had discussions tion between the offi ces of with nearly every governor, Simpson and Oregon Gov. member of Congress, and Kate Brown regarding the U.S. senator in the Columbia proposal to breach the four Basin on this proposal.” dams. Simpson’s plan to remove “For months, Rep. Simpson the Ice Harbor, Little Goose, has been speaking with us Lower Granite, and Lower about his sweeping dam- Monumental dams also in- breaching proposal, touting cludes a 35-year moratorium transparency and an open By Nicholas K. Geranios Associated Press process while telling us it was simply a ‘legislative concept’ for the Northwest delegation to consider,” the lawmakers, who oppose breaching the dams, said. “What he didn’t tell us was that he has been coordinat- ing for months with Oregon Governor Kate Brown’s staff behind the scenes to shep- herd his proposal through Congress with little to no sup- port from Pacifi c Northwest representatives – Republican or Democrat,” the lawmakers said. “It’s clear this proposal is not just a starting point, but rather a radical and fully- baked plan he is actively seeking to put into law,” they said. The three Republicans also suggest Simpson’s discussions with Brown could hurt an agreement signed last year by the governors of Washington, Idaho, Oregon and Montana to work together on solving an issue that has bedeviled the Northwest for decades. The documents were re- leased in response to a public information request by the Center for Biological Diversi- ty, a conservation group that opposes Simpson’s plan. “We rarely agree with Rep. Newhouse, but when it comes to removing the Snake River dams, we too insist that there must be a transparent, open process that involves all stakeholders,” said Brett Hartl, government affairs director at the Center for Biological Diversity. “A deal made behind closed doors with just the good ol’ boys will be worse for salmon, worse for the river and worse for the region.” The center opposes Simpson’s proposal, which would suspend key federal environmental regulations and exempt 80 other dams in the Columbia River basin from accountability for clean water and harmful impacts on salmon and other species. In his statement, Simp- son called the Center for Biological Diversity “one of the extreme environmental groups that is opposed to my concept because it would end their business model of keep- ing the stakeholders in the region in perennial litigation over the four Lower Snake River dams.” Simpson’s “Columbia Basin Initiative,” proposes re- moving the earthen portions of the four dams, while mak- ing all the regional stake- holders whole. Most of the proposed $33.5 billion cost of the plan would replace the power the dams generate, the barging capacity they provide between the Tri-Cities region of Washington and Lewiston, Idaho, plus irrigation and other benefi ts. Brown’s offi ce did not respond to a request for com- ment. But Simpson on Wednes- day issued a statement de- fending the proposal he has worked on for three years, involving some 300 meetings. “I expected pushback when this all started,” he said. “What I did not expect was colleagues with whom I have worked for a number of years on a number of issues to question my integrity, to in- sinuate I have lied about my motivation and in fact have nefarious intentions — to — what? Sabotage the economy of my own state?” New At The Library Patrons can reserve materials in advance online or by calling 541-523-6419. Drive- in hours at 2400 Resort St. are Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday from noon to 4 p.m. See everything new this week to Baker County Library District at wowbrary.org, FICTION • “Hour of the Witch,” Chris Bohjalian • “Robert B. Parker’s Payback,” Mike Lupica • “The Forest of Stolen Girls,” June Hur • “The Most Beautiful Girl in Cuba,” Cha- nel Cleeton • “The Prison Healer,” Lynette Noni NONFICTION • “What Happened To You?,” Bruce D. Perry, Oprah Winfrey • “Cook This Book,” Molly Baz • “Mom Genes,” Abigail Tucker • “The Righteous Mind : Why Good People Are Divided By Politics and Religion,” Jonathan Haidt • “The Women of the Bible Speak,” Shan- non Bream DVDS • “All My Life” (drama) • “Another Round” (comedy) • “Shadow in the Cloud” (horror) • “Soul” (family) • “You Never Had It: An Evening with Bukowski” (documentary)