SATURDAY BAKER CITY MAN LEADING EFFORT ON NATION’S BIGGEST FIRE: PG. A3 In STATE, A6 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com July 24, 2021 IN THIS EDITION: QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Patti Hall of Baker City. Local, A2 Phoebe Wachtel is ex- pecting hundreds of people for dinner on Tuesday, Aug. 3. Her projection is based on experience — every August, as many as 700 people spend a few hours in Geiser-Pollman Park for Community Night Out. Local • Health & Fitness • Outdoors • TV $1.50 Offi cials Concerned That Fire Season, Which Started Much Earlier Than Usual, Will Persist Throughout Summer, And Even Beyond ‘90-Day August’ COVID cases surging Wolves injure steer near Durkee By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Wolves from the Lookout Mountain pack in eastern Baker County have attacked cattle in the Manning Creek area northeast of Durkee for the second time in a week. In the most recent case, unlike the previous incident, the livestock survived. On the evening of Tuesday, July 20, a rancher, while checking cattle, found an injured steer on a 2,500-acre private land pasture, ac- cording to a report from the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW). The 950-pound steer is about a year and a half old. Local, A3 An 18-year-old Haines man was treated and re- leased from a Boise hospital after the pickup truck he was driving near Haines struck a fl atbed trailer parked on the side of Shurtleff Road Wednesday evening, July 21. Eric Newman was taken by LifeFlight helicopter to Saint Alphonsus Hospital in Boise, where he was treated and released. WEATHER Today See Wolves/Page A3 92 / 49 Sunny Sunday 95 / 54 Umatilla National Forest/Contributed Photo The Elbow Creek fi re burns on July 16 along the Grande Ronde River in northern Wallowa County. The blaze, which has burned about 20,000 acres, is the largest in Northeastern Oregon this summer. Sunny Monday 96 / 60 Sunny Clarifi cation: A story in the Thursday, July 22 issue about the attorney for murder suspect Shawn Quentin Greenwood seeking to have the charges dismissed didn’t make clear that the attorney’s allegation that law enforcement offi cers listened to phone conversations between Greenwood and his attorney involved the Baker City Police Department, not the Baker County Sheriff’s Offi ce. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Noel Livingston slides the cursor across the charts on his computer screen and what he sees, lurking behind the zig-zagging lines and the multiple colors, is trouble. Wildfi re trouble, to be specifi c. Livingston, who is the fi re manage- ment offi cer for the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest, focuses on two lines in particular — a pair of lines for each of six regions on the forest, ranging from different types of forests to the grasslands of Hells Canyon. One line, rendered appropriately in bright fl ame red, depicts the highest daily measurements, from 2010-19 on the Wallowa-Whitman, of a statistic known as the energy release compo- nent. A computer model considers the moisture level in wildfi re fuels, as well as temperature and humidity, to project how much energy a fi re would release — in effect, how rapidly fl ames would spread on a given day. Fireworks suspected in fi re near Huntington Firefi ghters from multiple agencies quickly doused a grass fi re late Wednesday, July 21 near Huntington, a blaze that might have been sparked by the illegal use of fi reworks. The fi re, which started on the north side of the Durbin Creek Road just west of Interstate 84, burned an estimated 10 acres, said Al Crouch, fi re mitigation specialist with the Bureau of Land Management’s Vale District. Multiple drivers on the freeway reported the fi re just after 10 p.m., Crouch said. The blaze was about a quarter-mile west of the freeway. Firefi ghters from the Huntington Fire Department, the Burnt River Rangeland Fire Protection Asso- ciation and the BLM worked on the blaze. Crouch said the fi refi ghters cor- ralled the fi re just before a stretch of gusty winds that could have caused the fl ames to spread quickly through the dry grass in the area. The fi re was contained at 1:50 a.m. on Thursday, July 22. Crouch said Oregon State Police is investigating the fi re, with assistance from BLM. He said investigators have identi- fi ed a person who might have been lighting fi reworks in the area. Fireworks are illegal on public land managed by the BLM. Crouch said the fi re started near the boundary between BLM and private property. — Jayson Jacoby See Danger/Page A3 Car crashes, ignites small wildfire By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com The driver and lone pas- senger were both fl own to a Boise hospital early Friday morning, July 23, after their car crashed into a tree along Highway 7 near Sumpter. The impact started a fi re that engulfed the car and spread a short distance into the forest, said Wes Morgan, chief of the Powder River Rural Fire Protection District, who arrived fi rst at the scene. The driver and passen- ger are both men, but their names weren’t available by press time. See Crash/Page A5 Baker Sanitary opens composting facility By Joanna Mann jmann@bakercityherald.com Baker County’s fi rst large-scale composting facility has been oper- ating for about a month at Baker Sanitary Service’s landfi ll south- east of Baker City. David Henry, president of Baker Sanitary Service, said the operation started composting its initial batch of yard debris about four weeks ago. It takes about eight weeks to complete a batch, and Henry said the composting process is some- what of a “pilot program” right now until he fi gures out the right combi- nation of organic material, weather and temperature to produce the desired composted mulch. “When you think of how many chances you get to tweak the TODAY Issue 32, 12 pages process, you’re not getting a ton of chances,” Henry said. “I expect for the fi rst year or two, there’ll be a lot of learning what works and what doesn’t and taking the time to get to where we get the product that we really want.” Tree trimming services, yard cleaning services and the general public can bring brush, leaves and limbs to the landfi ll. A worker combines the debris with organic materials and covers it with a tarp for about a month. The batch is then completely turned over in order to remix the material and make it more homog- enous. It sits for two weeks like Joanna Mann/Baker City Herald that with the tarp, and then two From left, Garrett Virtue, landfi ll manager, David Henry, Baker Sanitary more weeks without the tarp. Classified ............. B2-B4 Comics ....................... B5 Community News ....A3 See Compost/Page A2 Crossword ........B2 & B4 Dear Abby ................. B6 Health & Fitness ....... B2 Service president, and Stephen Henry stand in front of the initial batch of compost, which is covered by a tarp. Horoscope ........B3 & B4 Jayson Jacoby ..........A4 News of Record ........A2 Obituaries ..................A2 Opinion ......................A4 Outdoors ..........B1 & B6 Senior Menus ...........A2 Turning Backs ...........A2 Weather ..................... B6 TUESDAY — SAINT ALPHONSUS SAFE SLEEP PROGRAM RECERTIFIED