Fireworks! celebrating the THURSDAY STADLER, BLOOMER TALK ABOUT WINNING STATE TITLES: SPORTS, PG. A6 NORTHEAST OREGON FOURTH OF JULY JULY 1, 2021 www.gonortheastoregon.com in northeast oregon also inside: First Friday art shows Great Bear Folk Theatre Brady Goss in concert Wallowa County Fly-In Wallowa County Chamber of Commerce/Contributed photo “Shake the Lake” lights up the sky over Wallowa Lake on the Fourth of July. Picturing Paradise Cuadros are embroidered and appliquéd fabric pictures created by women of Compacto Humano and Manos Ancashinas, two art cooperatives located in Pamplona Alta, a shantytown situated on the outskirts of Lima, Peru. This project, which in part, evolved into an exhibition, features the work of these women, SODFLQJHPSKDVLVRQWKHPDVDUWLVWVDQGWKHZD\WKHLUDUWUHŴHFWVFUHDWLYLW\ resilience, and hope despite the harsh conditions of their lives. 2020 Auburn Avenue, Baker City, Oregon Ř 541.523.5369 Ř www.crossroads-arts.org Exhibition on display Friday, July 2 through Saturday, July 31 GO! Magazine Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com July 1, 2021 IN THIS EDITION: QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscribers David and Julie Mespelt of Baker City. BRIEFING Alexandra Colton receives $2,500 scholarship from P.E.O. Sisterhood Local • Business & AgLife • Go! magazine $1.50 From mayor to governor? ■ Baker City Mayor Kerry McQuisten announces bid for Republican nomination in the 2022 primary Chapter AX of the P.E.O. Sisterhood has awarded Alexandra Colton of North Powder a $2,500 Oregon Scholar Award from the Oregon State Chapter of P.E.O. This award grants monies for tuition and fees to women pursuing a degree at an accredited Or- egon college or university. The applicant must have junior, senior, or graduate level status. Colton is in her fi nal year at Oregon State Uni- versity, pursuing a degree in Veterinary Medicine and specializing in large animal veterinary studies. Her emphasis is on Food Pro- duction Medicine. Colton has received P.E.O. grants every year since graduat- ing from high school. By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Less than six months after she became Baker City’s mayor, Kerry McQuisten is vying for a higher politi- cal offi ce, one in which her constituents would number nearly 4.3 million rather than 10,000. McQuisten announced her candi- dacy for Oregon governor on Tuesday, June 29. McQuisten, 49, will seek the Republican nomination in the May 2022 primary. “I’m excited to get started,” McQuisten McQuisten said on Tuesday. “It’s an adventure.” Although McQuisten said her disdain for current Gov. Kate Brown’s policies — McQuisten on her website describes the Democrat governor’s pandemic policies as “draconian lock- downs” — McQuisten, should she win the Republican primary, won’t have a chance to unseat Brown. Brown is precluded from serving another four-year term due to Oregon’s term limits law, so Oregonians will elect a new governor in November 2022. WEATHER Today 95 / 56 Mostly sunny Friday 97 / 54 Sunny By Samanatha O’Conner soconner@bakercityherald.com Baker County Sheriff’s Offi ce/Contributed Photo A single-engine air tanker drops fi re retardant ahead of a blaze in Keating Valley on Tuesday, June 29. Fire Threatened Several Homes ■ No structures damaged in blaze about 18 miles northeast of Baker City Full forecast on the back of the B section. By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. See Governor/Page A2 Owners pleased by end of COVID limits 100-Acre Blaze Burned Tuesday Afternoon In Keating Valley Haines Fire District board meets July 12 HAINES — The Haines Fire Protection District will have its monthly board of directors meeting July 12 at 6 p.m. at the main sta- tion in Haines. All citizens of the district are welcome to attend. Your guide to arts, entertainment and other events happening around Northeast Oregon A fi re sparked by farm equipment on the hottest June day on record in Baker County raced through dry grass and sagebrush in Keating Valley, threatening several homes before crews from multiple agencies, with help from a pair of air tankers, stopped the blaze Tuesday evening, June 29. “It really took off in 110-degree heat with 20 mile an hour winds behind it,” said Buzz Harper, chief of the Keating Rural Fire Protection District. “In that heat and wind it could have been real bad.” The fi re, which was fully lined Tuesday night, burned about 100 acres, Harper said. No homes were damaged. Crews from the Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management were mopping up Wednesday morning, he said. Baker County Sheriff Travis Ash said the Sheriff’s Offi ce gave evacua- tion notices to about 10 residents as a precaution. Flames came within about 50 yards of one home, Harper said. The fi re was reported to Baker County Dispatch at 2:52 p.m. Harper said the blaze started in a fi eld near Middle Bridge Road, where a swather was operating. He suspects a disc on the swather hit a rock, caus- ing a spark. areas where there aren’t people around to watch for Mountaintop cam- wildfi re smoke around the eras are the newest tool clock. for fi nding wildfi res, and “These cameras are actu- unlike human lookouts, the ally posted at places where cameras are on duty all the our radio sites are,” said time. Andy Robertson, manager The hundreds of cameras of the fi re dispatch center across the West that make at the Bureau of Land up the Alert Wildfi re sys- Management’s (BLM) Vale tem are mainly in remote District. “So there wouldn’t TODAY Issue 22, 22 pages Business ...............B1-B3 Classified ............. B4-B6 Comics ....................... B7 be anybody there. They are defi nitely a nice tool to have, especially in the very remote places that we have here.” Five of the cameras are in the southeast part of Oregon, but the BLM hopes to install two, and possibly three, cameras this year in Northeastern Oregon, including two in Baker Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B5 & B6 Dear Abby ................. B8 Hottest June day on record By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com County, Robertson said. The planned camera sites are Lookout Mountain in eastern Baker County north of Huntington, Beaver Mountain, east of Dooley Mountain and Highway 245, and Cot- tonwood Mountain west of Vale. See Cameras/Page A3 See Hottest/Page A3 See Fire/Page A3 Cameras keep an eye out for fires jmann@bakercityherald.com See COVID/Page A3 An already sizzling June in Baker City etched itself even deeper into the temperature record books on the month’s penultimate day. The temperature crested at 103 degrees on Tuesday, June 29 at the Baker City Airport. That’s the hottest tempera- ture ever recorded during the month at the airport, where records date to 1943. The previous record was 102 degrees, on June 17, 1961. Tuesday was the second straight triple-digit day at the airport, following the 100-degree high on Monday, June 28. Both temperatures set new daily records. Two New Cameras Slated To Be Installed This Year In Baker County By Joanna Mann After more than a year of closures, occupancy limits and other restrictions due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Baker City restaurant own- ers are excited about the end of those limits. Oregon Gov. Kate Brown announced last week that she would cancel executive orders June 30. “I’m thrilled,” said Theresa Perkins, who owns The Little Pig on 10th Street. “I think it’s wonderful. I would love to go back to normal. It would be great.” Restaurant and bar own- ers have endured a variety of restrictions since March 2020. Since Dec. 1, 2020, Or- egon has used a county-based risk level system. At times since then, Baker County has been in the extreme risk level, which bans indoor din- ing in bars and restaurant. Horoscope ........B5 & B6 Letters ........................A4 Lottery Results ..........A2 News of Record ........A2 Obituaries ..................A2 Opinion ......................A4 Senior Menus ...........A2 Sports ........................A6 Weather ..................... B8 SATURDAY — SWEET WIFE BAKERY READY TO OPEN IN NEW LOCATION