SATURDAY BENTZ: INVESTIGATING CAPITOL RIOT A CONSTITUTIONAL DUTY: PAGE 2A In OUTDOORS, 1B Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com June 12, 2021 Local • Outdoors • Sports • TV IN THIS EDITION: QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Patti Hall of Baker City. BRIEFING Keegan Masterson wins scholarship Keegan Masterson, a 2020 Baker High School graduate, received a $7,000 Oregon State chapter P.E.O Sisterhood Cottey College scholarship. Keegan was nominated by the Baker City P.E.O. Chapter CJ. She is a freshman at Cottey College in Missouri, where she is pursuing a career in diplomacy and consider- ing attending law school. $1.50 State board hears Harvey’s case Baker City’s First Lutheran Church Founded 100 Years Ago Church Celebrates Its First Century By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com WEATHER Today 78 / 52 Mostly sunny Sunday 89 / 53 Mostly sunny Monday 88 / 52 Mostly sunny Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Corrections: A story in the Thursday, June 10 issue identifi ed Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative employees Mark Dyer and Myles Schwebke as linemen. Both are metermen. A caption for a photo on Page 6A showing BHS basketball player Gabe Gambleton listed his fi rst name as Grant, who is Gabe’s younger brother. Clarifi cation: A story in Thursday’s issue about the Baker City Council didn’t make clear that councilors have not decided whether to ask voters if they support the city pursuing a “quiet zone” for freight trains in the city. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Fly-fishing advice A total of 1,200 white paper doves decorate the interior of First Lutheran Church in Baker City. Each dove represents a person who was baptized at the church since it opened in 1921. The Oregon Government Ethics Com- mission voted unanimously Friday, June Harvey 11 to make a preliminary fi nding that Bill Harvey, chairman of the Baker County Board of Commis- sioners, violated state ethics laws last year. A member of the Ethics Commission, Sean O’Day, told Harvey, who participat- ed in the meeting by phone, as did Ethics Commission members, that he hopes the Commission will “emphasize education” rather than tak- ing punitive action against Harvey. “I have a great apprecia- tion for rural Oregon, and the job of a county commis- sioner is a diffi cult one,” O’Day said. “You’re out there hauling equipment and taking care of the county’s business as well.” See Harvey/Page 2A Lisa Britton, Baker City Herald Woman accused of assault J udy Chinn smiles as she looks at the white paper doves — 1,200 in all — streaming down the walls of the sanctuary. “I thought it was just so beautiful,” Chinn, 83, says of when she fi rst saw the decorations in place. “Each one of these doves represents a soul.” By Jayson Jacoby The doves, each labeled with a name and date, signify every person baptized at First Lutheran Church in Baker City since 1921. The church, 1734 Third St., celebrates its 100th year with an anniversary divine liturgy on Sunday, June 13, at 10 a.m. A reception will follow in the fellowship hall, where visitors can see historical documents and photos on display. More summer events include: • Ice Cream Social, 5 p.m. July 10, at First Lutheran Church • Service at Crossroads Carnegie Art Center, 11 a.m. July 11 • Annual worship and picnic in Geiser-Pollman Park, 10 a.m. Aug. 22 in the building. When he left seven years later, there were 250 people.” Sig well remembers the growing irst Lutheran Church in church. Baker City was organized “Dad had confi rmation classes and incorporated in 1921. that were huge, and we had Sunday It was built on the corner of Third school classes all over the place, there Street and Valley Avenue. were so many kids,” he said. “He had Prior to the building construction, an amazing ministry here.” the congregation met in the base- Soon after arriving, Pastor Siefkes ment of the Carnegie Library. orchestrated the purchase of a Kim- Sig Siefkes, 92, remembers the ball pipe organ. original church. His father, Siegfried A shipping delay caused a bit of Siefkes, was pastor at First Lutheran panic in the congregation. from 1936 to 1943. “It came the Saturday before it was “We drove out here from Rocky to be dedicated,” Sig said. Ridge, Ohio,” Sig said. “When Dad See Church/Page 5A was installed, there were 19 people Updates will be posted on the church’s Facebook page. F jjacoby@bakercityherald.com A Baker City woman is accused of throwing broken glass at Baker City Police offi cers, kicking two of them, and assaulting a corrections deputy during her arrest on Brinton domestic as- sault charges Wednesday afternoon, June 9. Valerie Jean Brinton, 53, was arrested and taken to the Baker County Jail. See Arrest/Page 3A High-level position ■ Forest Service officials have had to scramble to find a fire lookout to work this summer on Mount Ireland the Elkhorn Mountains and forms the divide between the Powder River and Joel McCraw needed to fi nd someone North Fork John Day River basins as willing to spend the summer atop a well as the boundary between Baker mountain that has a three-state view and Grant counties. but is far out of sight of any coffee shop Mount Ireland is one of more than or grocery store. a dozen prominences in Northeastern His task wasn’t as daunting as it Oregon where the traditional method might sound, thanks in part to Face- of fi nding wildfi res — a person work- book. ing inside a tiny building on a high The job is fi re lookout on Mount point, looking for the telltale tendril of Ireland. The 8,346-foot peak is the apex smoke — persists. of a granitic shoulder that extends See Lookout/Page 3A several miles west from the spine of By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com TODAY Issue 14, 12 pages Classified ............. 2B-4B Comics ....................... 5B Community News ....3A Crossword ........2B & 4B Dear Abby ................. 6B Horoscope ........2B & 4B Wallowa-Whitman National Forest/Contributed Photo The fi re lookout on the summit of Mount Ireland, 8,346 feet, is staffed each summer. The lookout has a view that extends over parts of three national forests — Wallowa-Whitman, Umatilla and Malheur. The metal building replaced a wooden structure in 1957. Jayson Jacoby ..........4A Letters ........................4A News of Record ........2A Obituaries ..................2A Opinion ......................4A Outdoors ..........1B & 6B Sports ........................6A Senior Menus ...........2A Weather ..................... 6B TUESDAY — BAKER SENIOR CENTER OFFICIALS EAGER TO REOPEN