TUESDAY TRACK EVENTS PLANNED AT BAKER HIGH SCHOOL THIS SUMMER: PG. A6 In HOME, B1 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com July 13, 2021 Local • Home & Living • Sports IN THIS EDITION: QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Dixie Amis of Baker City. BRIEFING $1.50 Work Continues On Baker City’s Wastewater Lagoon, Pipeline Baker’s Big Dig WEATHER Today 94 / 50 Sunny Wednesday 97 / 53 Sunny The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Jubilee parade is on By Joanna Mann P.E.O. awards fi ve scholarships Five local women have received scholarships from P.E.O. after being nomi- nated by the organization’s Chapter CJ in Baker City. • Torie Andrews received a $2,800 Program of Continuing Education scholarship to continue her education in Biblical Counseling at Calvary University in Kansas. Her goal is to work with teens and support their spiritual and religious growth. • Mckenzie Hall received a $2,250 Marguerite Scholarship to continue her education at Eastern Oregon University, where she is studying to become a registered nurse. • Naomi Potter received a $1,250 Marguerite Schol- arship to continue her education at Blue Moun- tain Community College, where she is pursuing a degree in psychology. • Savanna Potter received a $1,250 Oregon scholarship to continue her education at Eastern Oregon University, where she is pursuing a degree and hopes to become an ophthalmologist. • Keegan Masterson received a $7,000 Oregon Cottey scholarship to continue her education at Cottey College in Missouri, where she is studying international relations. Appetizers that outdo entrees jmann@bakercityherald.com The Miners Jubilee pa- rade will happen after all. The parade had been in jeopardy due to a lack of entries, even though other Miners Jubilee events return this weekend after being canceled in 2020 due to the pandemic. But a late fl urry of entries was enough to justify the parade Satur- day morning, July 17. See Parade/Page A5 Anderson-Perry and Associates/Contributed Photo This view from a drone shows the wastewater lagoon under construction in Baker Valley. County vaccine rate 10th lowest in state By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com By Samantha O’Conner soconner@bakercityherald.com Work continues on Baker City’s biggest public works project in years, a $5.7 million job to build a new wastewater storage lagoon and a pipeline between the new and existing lagoons. Michelle Owen, the city’s public works director, expects the project to be fi nished around May 2022. The City Council voted in Janu- ary of this year to hire Gyllenberg Construction of Baker City, the lowest among 10 bidders, to do the work. In May, councilors approved a $150,000 addition to the initial $5.57 million contract due in part to winter storms that damaged petro- chemical plants on the Gulf Coast and increased the cost of pipe. The construction is the culmina- tion of a project that’s been on the city’s agenda for about a decade. Since the early 1960s the city has piped its wastewater to a complex of four lagoons off Imnaha Road about a mile north of town. The city adds chlorine to the wastewater to kill bacteria, then uses sulfur dioxide into the river because the water could promote algae blooms and otherwise pollute the river. “Baker City Public Works has At an estimated $5.7 million, it’s been working on a new method of one of the bigger public works disposing our effl uent for a number projects in Baker City in the past of years and we fi nally got the go few decades. The job involves: ahead to move to a land application as opposed to depositing our effl u- • Building a new wastewater ent into the Powder River,” Owen storage lagoon on a 51-acre said, parcel the city bought in 2019 for City offi cials considered several $123,000. alternatives, including using the • Building a seven-mile pipeline treated wastewater to irrigate non- between the city’s existing food crops near the current lagoons, storage lagoons, off Imnaha but settled on the current plan that Road about one mile north includes building a new pipeline of town, and the new lagoon, and lagoon. In 2017, the city entered which is at the northeast into a Mutual Agreement and Order corner of Baker Valley, south of (MAO) with DEQ that required the Highway 203. city to pursue a modifi cation to the wastewater treatment process. Owen said the new lagoon will in- to remove the chlorine before the crease the city’s wastewater storage wastewater is released into the capacity, making the city better able nearby Powder River. to deal with population growth. But several years ago the Oregon The additional storage also will Department of Environmental allow the city to hold water when Quality (DEQ) told city offi cials that there’s no need for irrigation water. the agency would eventually prohib- See Big Dig/Page A6 it the city from piping wastewater The Project State restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic have ended, and Baker County’s rate of new cases has remained well below a spring peak during April, but Nancy Staten is concerned that the county’s relatively low vaccination rate makes the county vulnerable to future outbreaks. Staten is director of the Baker County Health De- partment. “COVID has Staten not left our community,” Staten said on July 6. “I still encourage vaccina- tion.” As of July 9, Baker County’s vaccination rate — 44.9% of residents 16 and older — ranked as 10th lowest among Or- egon’s 36 counties. See Vaccine/Page A5 Honoring a vet ■ Patrick Morrissey recognized for his service during World War II in Europe By Samantha O’Conner soconner@bakercityherald.com A smile of excitement and joy crossed Patrick Morrissey’s face as his family gathered at Settler’s Park with him Thursday afternoon, July 8. Rick Gloria, Baker County’s Veteran Services Director, stood in his military uniform and saluted Morrissey for his service in World War II. Morrissey, who turned 96 in March, was drafted into the military in 1943, not long after he had turned 18. After D-Day, the June 6, 1944, Allied invasion of Nazi- controlled France, the Army needed tens of thousands of fresh troops. Morrissey, a private fi rst class, went to France as a member of the 99th Infantry Division in September 1944. In December 1944 Morrissey fought in one of the worst battles of the war, a German counterattack in Belgium known as the Battle of the Bulge. Samantha O’Conner/Baker City Herald See Honor/Page A3 World War II veteran Patrick Morrissey was honored for his service on Thursday, July 8. TODAY Issue 27, 14 pages Calendar ....................A2 Classified ............. B4-B6 Comics ....................... B7 Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B5 & B6 Dear Abby ................. B8 Home ....................B1-B3 Horoscope ........B5 & B6 Letters ........................A4 Lottery Results ..........A2 News of Record ........A2 Obituaries ..................A2 THURSDAY — THE NEWLY EXPANDED, 20-PAGE GO! MAGAZINE Opinion ......................A4 Sports ........................A6 Weather ..................... B8