TUESDAY, JULY 6, 2021 BAKER CITY HERALD — A3 CHURCHILL Continued from Page A1 But now, having received a grant, the Vegters plan to use the money to help repair roofi ng and windows, several of which have cracks in the glass panes. It is important that the windows are exact replicas of what they were in 1926 when Churchill opened. The window sills need paint, and some require wood fi ller. Many windows either don’t open or are hard to open after nearly a century of use. Fixing the windows will also make Churchill more energy effi cient — the majority of the building rarely dips below 80 degrees on hot days. “For preservation stan- dards, in order to maintain your status on the historic register, everything on the exterior of the building needs to basically remain the same as it was when it was built,” Vegter said. Churchill was registered on the National Register of Historic Places in 2008. One of the criteria for getting on the register is that the build- ing must have some historical signifi cance, and Churchill is one of two remaining build- ings designed by Charles Lee Miller, who built over 400 projects throughout his ca- reer. It’s the only building he designed that is still standing in Baker County. The building, on Broadway Street between 16th and 17th streets, operated as a school from 1926 until 2002, when the Baker School District closed Churchill. The district sold the building to Jim and Pam Van Duyn in 2006. Vegter said the school didn’t have electricity for much of the next dozen years, during which it was vandal- ized multiple times. “We had a dollar and we had a dream, and this was a project that we thought we could undertake.” — Brian Vegter, who with his wife, Corrine, owns the former Churchill School Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald When the Vegters bought Churchill in 2018 they needed three months to get basic amenities installed, including electricity, a work- ing toilet and running water in one sink. The couple sold their Baker City home and liquidated their savings to pay for reno- vations at Churchill. They lived in a trailer until they got electricity in the school and moved in immediately af- ter they had enough utilities to do so. They worked from dawn till dusk so they could open as soon as possible, as their cash was disappearing fast. “We had a dollar and we had a dream, and this was a project that we thought we could undertake,” Vegter said. “There’s lots of things that, if we had that to do again, we would totally do differently. But at the same time, we never regretted doing this.” Many volunteers, includ- ing local and out-of-state residents, have helped the Vegters with every project for the building. However, Vegter said that the more volunteer hours Churchill has, the less funding they get from the state, so it was a hard balancing act to decide which projects need state funding and which ones they can accomplish with volunteer work. Churchill serves as an integrative space for art- ists to create and sell their An illegal fi rework over Baker City on Sunday night, July 4. FIREWORKS Continued from Page A1 Joanna Mann/Baker City Herald Owner Brian Vegter said renovations to windows at Churchill School will make the historic building, which opened in 1926, more energy effi cient. pieces, musicians to perform and bikers and skiers to rest while they’re in town. The Airbnb space stands in stark contrast to the rest of the building with its modern interior and remote control- operated blinds, which cost $1,000 each. While fi xing the roofi ng and windows with the state grant is a one-time project, there are other grants the Vegters plan to apply for in the future. There’s a lot of tuckpointing that needs to be done, which has to do with color matching the mortar in brickwork, that Vegter plans to do when he has the money for it. He hopes to be able to hire somebody to do this kind of work some day, but at the same time, he really enjoys doing these projects himself. Fortunately, the Vegters have made connections with people who care about the building as much as they do and have helped fund vari- ous projects out of pocket. Charlie Ernst, who the Veg- ters met at a Cycle Oregon event, learned about the project and gave them the money to fi x part of the roof, turning an $80,000 project into a $12,000 one. “Communities rally around preservation in general,” Vegter said. “Through all the other stuff that we do in the community, we eventually developed relationships with people who are like, ‘Oh, yeah, if the Vegters say they’re gonna do something, they’re gonna do it. And we want to be part of that.’ ” Firsthand view gives reporter fresh appreciation for top-notch bicyclists communicating with other race offi cials about traffi c and tending to the needs of I have never seen the limits of human the riders. Mostly I just sat in awe at the endurance pushed so far as I did at the unfl inching determination in front of me. Baker City Cycling Classic June 25-27. Starting at Baker High School on Fri- Every year hundreds of bicyclists day, June 25, the riders peddled through fl ock to Baker City to battle it out in the North Powder, Union, Catherine Creek three-day bicycling event, riding for three State Park and Medical Springs. Potato to fi ve hours each day through nearby sheds, cows, horses and the wonders of towns, forests and fi elds in the athletic the Wallowa-Whitman National For- experience of a lifetime. est whizzed by as the cyclists pushed I had a front row seat for the show, through over 70 miles at an average of although fortunately not in the bike 20 miles per hour. Their close formations saddle itself. I rode alongside the Men’s made me nervous that they would crash Cat 4/5 division race as a radio operator, into one another at any moment, but By Joanna Mann jmann@bakercityherald.com they moved as one cohesive unit in a way that resembled unique choreography and well practiced teamwork. The races were divided into 10 catego- ries that grouped together riders of simi- lar levels, and while men and women raced separately, their payout was the same for the fi rst time in the history of the race. On Saturday, June 26, the cyclists rode laps through downtown Baker City as spectators cheered and rang cowbells on the sidelines behind yellow tape. See Races/Page A6 Regan said there were no reports of fi reworks start- ing fi res in Baker City. “We know we’ve had a dry summer,” he said. Baker City didn’t ban fi reworks, as was the case in some Oregon cities. The Dispatch Center’s log showed that the Haines Fire Department extinguished a fi re about 10:05 p.m. at the Haines Stampede Rodeo grounds. The log entry listed the incident as “fi reworks offense.” No other information was available. Al Crouch, fi re mitigation specialist for the Bureau of Land Management’s Vale District, said Monday morning, July 5, that no human-caused fi res had been reported during the holiday weekend on the district. According to the Dispatch Center log, police didn’t issue citations on any of the fi reworks calls. That’s typical for Baker City Police, Regan said. “The general approach the city police has taken, although we let individual offi cers use their discretion, is to take an education approach,” he said. There were a few fi reworks complaint reports on Saturday, July 3, and in the afternoon and early evening on Sunday, but the majority happened after 8:30 p.m. Regan said Baker City Police don’t patrol specifi - cally for fi reworks violations. “It’s complaint-driven,” he said. Between 8:47 p.m. and midnight there were 16 calls for potential fi reworks offenses, at locations includ- ing: 2600 block of Grove Street; 1000 block of Resort Street; Colorado Avenue and Fourth Street; McCarty Bridge Road northeast of Haines; Broadway and Plum streets; Fourth Street between A and B streets; the Dewey Avenue railroad underpass; Carter Street be- tween 12th and 13th Streets; Highway 7 and Indiana Avenue; Clark Street and Washington Avenue; the 3400 block of Eighth Drive. Although Baker City Police didn’t cite anyone spe- cifi cally for fi reworks offenses, police did cite a Baker City man on a charge of manufacturing a destructive device. Robert Steven Merritt, 47, of Baker City, was cited at 9:14 a.m. Sunday in the 400 block of Spring Garden Ave., Regan said. He said the device, which appar- ently utilized gunpowder rather than disassembled fi reworks, allegedly damaged a vehicle in the area. N EWS OF R ECORD POLICE LOG Continued from Page A2 Baker City Police Arrests, citations FAILURE TO APPEAR (Umatilla County warrant), POSSES- SION OF METHAMPHETAMINE AND HYDROCODONE: Paul Adam Heller, 50, 1:20 p.m. Saturday, July 3 in the 2300 block of Resort Street; cited and released. Baker County Sheriff’s Offi ce Arrests, citations SECOND-DEGREE CRIMINAL TRESPASSING: Jay Byron Bishop, 41, Sumpter, 2:50 p.m. Sunday, July 4 in the 100 block of Mill Street in Sumpter; cited and released. HARASSMENT: Casey Lyn Lick, 47, Baker City, 9:26 a.m. Sunday, July 4 at 22097 Sumpter Stage Highway; cited and released. Oregon’s unusually hot summer political season Legislature this year becomes law 91 days after the adjournment — Summer is normally a relatively Sept. 25. A proposed ballot measure quiet time in Oregon politics. to overturn the restrictions needs to But 2021 has been about as gather 74,680 signatures by Sept. abnormal as a year can be. The 24 to put the law on hold until a Legislature adjourned June 26, a vote in the November 2022 general day before Salem recorded a record- election. shattering high temperature of 117 • Veto deadline: The adjourn- degrees. ment of the House and Senate also Politics remains broiling as well, started the countdown on how long with a special session in September Gov. Kate Brown has to veto bills to decide Oregon’s political map for or line-item veto specifi c appropria- the next decade, electioneering for tions in fi scal legislation. Under the 2022 gearing up, and the reopening Oregon Constitution, the governor of the Oregon Capitol to the public. has 30 weekdays to act. Brown’s Some of the front-burner issues in offi ce confi rmed Friday that the the weeks ahead: deadline is Aug. 6. • Clock running on gun initiative: • Capitol re-opening: The Oregon A gun control bill approved by the State Capitol in Salem will reopen By Gary A. 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The Capitol won’t be very user friendly for a while, with major renovations going on through De- cember 2022. The public has been kept out of the Capitol since March 2020, when Senate President Peter Courtney, D-Salem, and House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Portland, ordered the shutdown at the outset of the CO- VID-19 pandemic. The Legislature has control over the statehouse and for the past 16 months, access has been limited to lawmakers, staff, journalists and a skeleton crew of building workers. The main entrance is fenced off, the House and Senate wings will be closed until winter, the back en- trance will be torn up for another 15 months, and parking will be harder to fi nd with the underground ga- rage shut for an overhaul through the end of next year. • Redistricting road show: Leg- islative hearings have been limited to virtual testimony during the pandemic, but a pair of key commit- tees will be traveling the state in a “road show” in September. The House and Senate redistrict- ing committees are expected to re- ceive long-delayed 2020 U.S. Census data in mid-August. The block-by- block numbers will allow the Legis- lature to re-draw the state’s political maps with enough precision to stand up to court challenges. Lines will shift for the 60 House and 30 Senate seats. New congres- sional district boundaries will also be up for revision, including where to place Oregon’s new Sixth Congressional District, added to Oregon’s delegation because of the state’s rapid population growth since 2010. The committees plan on traveling the state for public hearings prior to taking their plans to the Legislature during a special session scheduled to begin Sept. 20. The maps have to go to the Oregon Supreme Court by Sept. 27. Prepare for unexpected power outages with a Generac home standby generator A Smarter Way to Power Your Home. SCHEDULE YOUR FREE IN-HOME ASSESSMENT TODAY! 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