TUESDAY HOT DOG EATING CONTEST, AND A PREFERENCE FOR BURGERS: PAGE A6 In HOME, B1 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com July 6, 2021 Local • Home & Living • Sports IN THIS EDITION: QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Mitch Thomas of Baker City. State, A3 Summer is normally a relatively quiet time in Oregon politics. But 2021 has been about as abnormal as a year can be. The Legislature adjourned June 26. $1.50 Independence Day In Haines: Parade, Arts, Rodeo & Fireworks Back In The Saddle Imagine Bend being Oregon’s eastern most city, a short drive from Redmond, Idaho. “Greater Idaho,” the concept of transferring parts of southern and eastern Oregon to Idaho — making Redmond, Idaho, a reality — is gaining trac- tion in some rural areas. According to Mike Mc- Carter, the chief petitioner of Move Oregon’s Border, a nonprofi t advocating for Greater Idaho, the change would give rural Oregon counties a longed-for Re- publican-led legislature by leaving liberal strongholds like Portland and Eugene behind in Oregon. By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com BRIEFING Baker County Garden Club to visit lavender farm Travel Baker County/Contributed Photo After a one-year hiatus in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Fourth of July parade returned to Haines on Sunday, July 4. The Haines Stampede Rodeo, which wasn’t canceled last year, had a good turnout. By Joanna Mann and Jayson Jacoby Baker City Herald WEATHER Today 97 / 57 Sunny Wednesday 92 / 51 Sunny The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Fireworks calls kept police busy ■ Baker City Police, Baker County Sheriff’s responded to 26 complaints during holiday weekend The West, A5 The Baker County Gar- den Club will meet July 7 at Curtis Lavender Farm, 44368 Pocahontas Road. Everyone is welcome to meet at 10 a.m. at Ace Nursery to carpool to the farm. Bring a sack lunch and chair. Some shade will be provided. A bounty of flaky biscuits Haines was its usual bustling self on Independence Day, a distinct change from the relatively placid 2020 version of the holiday. A year ago, with the COVID-19 pandemic well underway, some of the traditional events in the community, population about 415, were canceled. The list included the parade, cow- boy breakfast and arts festival. In 2020 two other cornerstones of the holiday — the two-day Haines Stampede Rodeo and a fi reworks display after dark on the Fourth — did happen. This year, on a sizzling Sunday, the regular roster of Haines festivities was on display. Garla Rowe, of Friends of Haines, the volunteer group that organizes the events with the exception of the Haines Stampede, said this spring that she was excited about the return of the favorite events after the one- year hiatus. “I’m really excited for the Fourth this year,” Rowe said in May. “I think the community needs to have some- thing positive to celebrate.” The Haines Stampede had a large turnout of spectators on both days, July 3 and 4, despite the persistent heat wave that pushed temperatures to near triple digits. See Haines/Page A5 Baker City Police and deputies from the Baker County Sheriff’s Offi ce responded to more than two dozen calls about fi reworks during the Independence Day weekend, most of those on Sunday, July 4. Most of the complaints were in Baker City, but there were also calls from Haines, Halfway, Hunting- ton and Unity Lake State Park. Detective Mike Regan of the Baker City Police said the volume of fi reworks complaints was comparable to recent years when the holiday also coincided with a weekend. In 2020, when Indepen- dence Day was on Saturday, there were 25 complaints, and in 2015, when it was also on Saturday, there were 30 calls, Regan said. In 2018, by contrast, when Independence Day was on Wednesday, the Baker County Dispatch Center re- corded just eight complaints about potential fi reworks offenses. Regan said that as in previous years, calls ranged from people who were an- noyed by loud fi reworks late at night, some who reported illegal fi reworks, and others concerned about fi reworks potentially sparking blazes. See Fireworks/Page A3 Brian And Corrine Vegter Receive State Grant Churchill renovation project gets a boost ■ Couple will use money for roof and window repairs gatherings, and we see ourselves as a key part of the arts and culture community Turning a 95-year-old schoolhouse into for the county and Eastern Oregon in a modern venue for music, art and hos- general.” pitality is no easy task, especially when The state grant program is for historic virtually every part of the building needs property preservation and archaeology renovation. projects across the state. Brian Vegter That’s why it meant so much for said he had applied for the grant four Brian and Corrine Vegter, the Baker times, but this is the fi rst year he has City couple who bought Churchill School been successful. in May 2018, to receive a Preserving The application process is intense, he Oregon grant from the Oregon Parks and said, with no communication between Recreation Department. the applicant and the reviewers during The $4,607 grant, which the Vegters the judgment-making period. The ap- will match with $4,645, will help the plication has to explain in detail every- couple as they continue work on the thing the grant money would be used project of a lifetime. for, and Vegter believes he didn’t receive “Corrine and I both look at what we’re the grant the fi rst three times because doing as preserving a piece of shared of miscommunication in the application history for the entire community,” Brian process. Vegter said. “What we do with the space See Churchill/Page A3 is provide opportunities for community By Joanna Mann jmann@bakercityherald.com TODAY Issue 24, 14 pages Classified ............. B4-B6 Comics ....................... B7 Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B4 & B6 Dear Abby ................. B8 Home ....................B1-B3 Joanna Mann/Baker City Herald Brian Vegter shows some of the windows in the Churchill School that he and his wife, Corrine, plan to repair with help from a state historic preservation grant. Horoscope ........B4 & B6 Letters ........................A4 Lottery Results ..........A2 News of Record ........A2 Obituaries ..................A2 Opinion ......................A4 Senior Menus ...........A2 Sports ........................A6 Weather ..................... B8 THURSDAY — THE NEW, EXPANDED GO! MAGAZINE MAKES ITS DEBUT