SATURDAY Baker’s Sarah Plummer qualifi es for state tennis tournament ANDREW ZELLARS THROWS SHUTOUT FOR BULLDOGS: PAGE 8A A PG. 7A May 15, 2021 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com Outdoors • Sports • TV IN THIS EDITION: QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Aletha Bonebrake of Baker City. Oregon, 3A $1.50 County Clerk Certifi es New System For Tallying Ballots Counting Ballots PORTLAND (AP) — A judge has ruled that one of two Oregon brothers accused in the insurrec- tion at the U.S. Capitol will be released from custody Friday to a third-party guardian, where he will be on home detention and GPS monitoring pending his trial. U.S. District Judge Randolph D. Moss, of the District of Columbia, on Thursday granted Matthew Klein’s pretrial release to a Baker County couple after refusing to allow him to stay with his parents. ■ County commissioners might extend current contract beyond August By Samantha O’Conner soconner@bakercityherald.com Baker County’s often-delayed plan to award a new contract for operating a visi- tors center in Baker City could be extended again, this time to March 2022. That would be more than two years after county commissioners were originally slated to award the contract. The current contract, for about $77,000 per year, is with the Baker County Cham- ber of Commerce, which operates the visitor center at 490 Campbell St., near Interstate 84. The money comes from the local tax that guests pay at motels, bed and breakfasts, vacation rental homes and other types of lodging. In December 2019, the county received two proposals for visitor services, from the Chamber and from the nonprofi t that owns Anthony Lakes Mountain Resort. In February 2020 commissioners post- poned awarding the contract. In November 2020 commissioners decided to restart the process, after the county’s attorney deter- mined there were potential confl icts of interest. BRIEFING Baker County Garden Club to meet May 19 The Baker County Garden Club will meet on Wednesday, May 19 at 10:30 a.m. at Eagle Cap Nursery near Keating. Please bring a sack lunch and a chair. Friends of Baker Heritage Museum meeting May 21 Friends of Baker Heritage Museum will meet Friday, May 21 at 4 p.m. at the Museum, 2480 Grove St. WEATHER By Samantha O’Conner 77 / 39 The Baker County Clerk’s offi ce has conducted the public certifi cation on its new ballot tallying system in time for the May 18 election. County Clerk Stefanie Kirby explained how the machine works, and how she and the county’s election board count votes, on Tuesday afternoon, May 12. During Tuesday’s demonstra- tion at the Courthouse, Kirby used test ballots for each of Bak- er County’s 17 precincts to show how the machine separates the ballots onto three shelves: • ballots that have no write-in votes. Sunday 82 / 42 Mostly sunny Monday 83 / 44 Mostly sunny The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. See Contract/Page 5A Samantha O’Conner/Baker City Herald Baker County Clerk Stefanie Kirby conducted a public certifi cation of the county’s new ballot tallying system on Tuesday, May 12 at the Courthouse. Today Mostly sunny Visitor center debate resumes soconner@bakercityherald.com • ballots that include write-in votes. • ballots that the machine didn’t process and that need to be examined for possible mistakes, if any, before they’re tallied. Once all the ballots were pro- cessed, Kirby printed a report that showed the total number of votes for each candidate and measure in the test. The participants in the certi- fi cation election board checked for ballots that had been overvoted — the voter picked more than one candidate, and for undervotes, when the voter doesn’t choose any candidate in a race. Election board members separate tallied ballots by precinct, and use the precinct results report to double-check the machine’s tallies. The new machine — Elections Systems and Software’s DS450 — tallies ballots faster than the county’s previous machine, also made by that company. “Part of the reason why I chose the DS450 is because it’s the same company that provided the ES&S 650,” Kirby said. “So it’s continuity, it’s the same company, it’s pretty much the same tallying concept. It’s updated technology and software, basically, from what we had.” Baker schools will require masks rest of school year By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Although both federal and state offi cials have said fully vaccinated people needn’t wear masks or socially distance in most situations, Oregon schools will continue to require students, staff and visitors to follow those guidelines for the few remaining weeks in the school year. See Ballots/Page 2A See Schools/Page 8A Tackling the trail troubles ■ The Trailhead in Baker City hires seasonal employee to work on trails in the Elkhorns, southern Wallowas By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Peter Johnson had something of an epiphany about hiking trails when the trail his boots had recently been treading on seemed to up and disappear. He certainly couldn’t fi nd it, in any case. That frustrating day a few years ago on the Cunning- ham Cove trail — and off it — helped to inspire what today is the Trailhead Stewardship Project. See Trails/Page 3A TODAY Issue 2, 14 pages Classified ............. 2B-4B Comics ....................... 5B Community News ....3A Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald, File, 2020 Dead trees, killed in the 1996 Sloans Ridge fi re, litter the Peavy trail in the Elkhorn Mountains. A new partnership is designed to improve trail conditions in the range. Crossword ........2B & 4B Dear Abby ................. 6B Horoscope ........2B & 4B Jayson Jacoby ..........4A News of Record ........2A Obituaries ..................2A Opinion ......................4A Outdoors ..........1B & 6B Sports .............. 7A & 8A Senior Menus ...........2A Turning Backs ...........2A Weather ..................... 6B TUESDAY — BIOLOGY STUDENTS PLANT TREES, HUNT FOR MORELS