COMMUNITY TUESDAY, AUGUST 17, 2021 Baker City Population Baker City’s population has been unusually steady, among Oregon cities with more than 5,000 residents. Most of those cities have grown over the past several decades, at varying rates, but Baker City’s population has stayed between 9,134 and 9,986 since the 1940 Census. The city’s population, at each U.S. Census: 1880 — 1,258 1890 — 2,604 1900 — 6,663 1910 — 6,742 1920 — 7,729 1930 — 7,858 1940 — 9,342 1950 — 9,471 1960 — 9,986 1970 — 9,354 1980 — 9,471 1990 — 9,140 2000 — 9,860 2010 — 9,828 2020 — 10,099 Contributing trends Based on statistics over the Continued from Page A1 past decade, it appears that The city didn’t approach the city’s population increase that level during the three over the past decade was subsequent national censuses, driven by people moving to although its population didn’t the area. drop signifi cantly either. According to the Oregon The fi gure of 9,140 for the Health Authority, Baker 1990 Census was the city’s County recorded 2,096 deaths lowest since 1930 (7,858). and 1,625 births from 2010-19 In the two ensuing head — a net loss of 471 residents. counts, however, Baker City Those are county totals, but again pushed close to the about 80% of the total births 10,000 ceiling — 9,860 in were to residents in the 97814 2000 and 9,828 in 2010. ZIP code, and about 77% of the deaths. That ZIP code, What does it mean? however, does include parts of Besides that additional Baker Valley and other areas digit, the city’s jump above outside the Baker City limits. 10,000 means Baker City is Another telling statistic is now considered a “medium- the number of active utility sized” city rather than a small accounts inside the city. one, said Holly Kerns, director That number rose by 128 of the Baker City/County from December 2015 to De- Planning Department. cember 2020, according to the “It triggers a number of city — from 4,151 to 4,279. new requirements for Baker History of population City that haven’t been in stability place before,” Kerns said. Longtime Baker County “Medium-sized cities are re- quired to do an annual report historian Gary Dielman, who on the housing units that are lives in Baker City, said the city reaching 10,000 popula- permitted and produced.” Baker City is also required tion is a “milestone.” But Dielman, a 1957 Baker to conduct a housing needs High School graduate, said he analysis every six to eight hopes that milestone doesn’t years, followed by a housing signify the sort of trend that production strategy, Kerns almost every sizeable Oregon said. city has experienced over the Baker City Mayor Kerry past few decades. McQuisten said the Census “Growth is not a good word fi gure wasn’t surprising, con- for me,” Dielman said. “I’ve sidering Portland State had projected the city’s population been very happy that Baker’s population has remained had surpassed 10,000. “We were anticipating that stable.” Dielman cited Bend as this would be the case for the most notable example in several months,” McQuisten Oregon of the sort of popula- said. 10,000 SURGE Continued from Page A1 But the trend reversed starting with the fi nal week of July, with the then-record of 68 cases. Due to a backlog of case investigations, Staten said she doesn’t have data for August regarding breakthrough cases — fully vaccinated people who test positive for COVID-19 — or an age group breakdown of cases. Those statistics are avail- able through July, however. Breakthrough cases According to the Oregon Health Authority (OHA), Baker County has had 15 breakthrough cases through July 31. That represents 2.3% of the county’s total cases — 647 — recorded from Jan. 1, a week or so before the fi rst county residents were fully vacci- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention A coronavirus particle. nated, through July 31. Based on OHA reports, the rate of breakthrough cases has risen recently as the more contagious delta variant became the predominant coro- navirus strain. The agency’s most recent report showed that 19% of cases statewide during July were in fully vaccinated resi- dents. That report did not list MOSQUITOES The Baker Valley Vector Control District maintains a network of more than two dozen mosquito traps across the 200,000-acre district, which includes most of Baker, Bowen and Keating valleys. Matt Hutchinson, the director’s manager, sends “pools” of mosquitoes — generally 10 to 50 insects — to a lab at Oregon State University in Corvallis where the bugs are tested for West Nile virus. In 2020 Hutchinson sent more than 230 pools of mos- quitoes for testing, but none was positive for the virus. It was just the second year in the past decade — the other was 2018 — when West Nile virus was not found in mosquitoes in Baker County. In 2019, by contrast, the virus was detected in four mosquito pools. Two Baker County residents also con- tracted the virus that year, as did one horse. This summer, West Nile was fi rst confi rmed in mosqui- toes trapped on July 19 about 15 miles east of Baker City. It was the fi rst confi rmation of the virus in Oregon in 2021. The infected mosquitoes were collected from a trap put out by the Oregon Depart- ment of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW). Ontario Population Pendleton Population La Grande Population 1910 — 1,248 1910 — 4,460 1910 — 4,843 1920 — 2,039 1920 — 6,837 1920 — 6,913 1930 — 1,941 1930 — 6,621 1930 — 8,050 1940 — 3,551 1940 — 8,847 1940 — 7,747 1950 — 4,465 1950 — 11,774 1950 — 8,635 1960 — 5,101 1960 — 14,434 1960 — 9,014 1970 — 6,523 1970 — 13,197 1970 — 9,645 1980 — 8,814 1980 — 14,521 1980 — 11,354 1990 — 9,392 1990 — 15,126 1990 — 11,766 2000 — 10,985 2000 — 16,354 2000 — 12,327 2010 — 11,366 2010 — 16,612 2010 — 13,082 2020 — 11,645 2020 — 17,107 2020 — 13,026 tion growth he hopes never happens in Baker City. Baker City and Bend were of similar size until the 1970s, when the latter city began a growth spurt that accelerated rapidly in the last decade of the 20th century. In 1930, Bend was only slightly larger than Baker City, with 8,848 residents to Baker City’s 7,858. Bend’s margin widened over the next few decades but not dramatically — in the 1970 Census Bend’s population had grown to 13,710, while Baker City was home to 9,354 residents. By 1990 Bend was more than twice as large, with 20,469 residents to Baker City’s 9,140. During the 1990s, though, Bend’s population more than doubled, reaching 52,029 by the 2000 Census. Baker City, meanwhile, has had comparatively minor fl uctuations in its population over the decades, gaining residents during the 1950s, 1970s and 1990s, but losing residents during the 1960s, 1980s and 2000s. None of those changes, however, was more than 7.9% (an increase from 1990 to 2000). Neighboring cities along the I-84 corridor, by contrast, have all grown during that period, albeit at rates much below those of Bend. La Grande, for instance, gained residents every de- cade from 1950 to 2010, with the largest increase being 17.7% during the 1970s. La Grande surpassed Baker City during the 1960s, reaching a population of 9,645 in the 1970 Census, to Baker City’s 9,354. Ontario has added resi- dents in every decade since the 1930s, and Pendleton’s population has grown every decade except the 1960s, when it dropped by 8.6%. how many of Baker County’s 15 total breakthrough cases happened during July. Of the 55 COVID-19-relat- ed deaths in Oregon during July, 82% were people who weren’t vaccinated, according to OHA. The two age groups with the highest vaccination rates in Baker County — 80 and older, at 68.4%, and 70 to 79 years, at 65.8% — accounted for 6.8% of the county’s cases during July. Lamb blamed Baker County’s vaccination rate for the surge in cases in the Aug. 12 press release. The county’s vaccination rate of 47.7% among residents 18 and older ranks eighth- lowest among Oregon’s 36 counties. The statewide aver- age is 70.2%. The rest of the July age group breakdown in Baker County, along with vaccina- tion rates. • 40 to 49 years, 19% Vaccination rate in Baker County, 40.2%; statewide, 69.6% • 50 to 59 years, 13.8% Vaccination rate in Baker County, 42.7%; statewide, 70% • 60 to 69 years, 12.9% Vaccination rate in Baker County, 53.2%; statewide, 75.8% • 30 to 39 years, 12% Vaccination rate in Baker County, 30.4%; statewide, 66.3% • 10 to 19 years, 7% Vaccination rate in Baker County, 23.3%; statewide, 52.8% • 70 to 79, 4.3% Vaccination rate in Baker County, 65.8%; statewide, 84.9% • Ages 80 and older, 2.5% Vaccination rate in Baker County, 68.4%; statewide, 78.6% • Ages 5 to 9, 0.9% (Not eligible for vaccines) Staten said that although she doesn’t have fi nal statis- tics for the county for the fi rst half of August, preliminary data show that the largest percentage of new cases this month are among people in their 30s. on Sunday, Aug. 15. Hutchinson and his work- ers have also been spreading larvicide — products that kill mosquito larvae before they hatch into biting adults — in the Keating Valley and elsewhere in the district. In parts of Baker Valley between Baker City and Haines, including the area where the infected mosqui- toes were trapped on Aug. 3, culex tarsalis populations have been rising but aren’t as high as in the Keating Valley. Hutchinson said he has been using fogging trucks, which spray insecticide that kills adult mosquitoes, in the Baker Valley, but he will call in the airplane if numbers rise high enough. Inside Baker City, com- plaint calls about mosquitoes have been about half the rate from 2020, Hutchinson said. The Vector Control Dis- trict, which receives money from two property tax levies, uses backpack and truck- mounted foggers to deal with infestations inside the city, Hutchinson said. He advises people, and in particular those who live and work in places where mos- quitoes are prevalent, to take precautions to avoid bites, including applying repellent, wearing pants and long- sleeved shirts, and trying to avoid being outside at dawn and dusk, when the bugs tend to be most active. Hutchinson also reminds residents to check their prop- erties for sources of standing water, such as old tires or bird baths, where mosquitoes can lay their eggs. Age breakdown The largest share of Baker County cases during July — 27.6% — were people in their 20s, according to the Health Department. That age group has the third-lowest vaccination rate in the county, at 30.7% (state- wide, 60.2% of residents from age 20 to 29 are vaccinated, according to OHA). The second-lowest vaccina- tion rate is among the 30-39 age range, at 30.4%. The low- est is 12- to 17-year-olds, who have been eligible only since May. Their vaccination rate is 19.5%. The rate among 18- and 19-year-olds is 39%. West Nile virus in Baker County Continued from Page A1 2020 No positive tests 2019 4 mosquito pools, 2 people, 1 horse 2018 No positive tests 2017 9 mosquito pools Michelle Gabel/mgabel@syracuse.com-TNS 2016 Mosquitoes can transmit West Nile virus to humans. 9 mosquito pools Hutchinson said ODFW for the past few years has been collecting mosquitoes in habitat for sage grouse, a bird that has been a candidate for federal protection due to its dwindling populations. He said sage grouse are among the birds that are vulnerable to West Nile virus. The virus can also kill crows, ravens, magpies and jays, and Hutchinson said birds of prey are also susceptible. More recently, the virus was detected in mosquitoes from fi ve additional pools in the county. Four were trapped on Aug. 4 in the Keating Valley, about 12 miles east of Baker City, and one pool was collected Aug. 3 from a trap set about four miles north of Baker City, 2015 Hutchinson said. Mosquitoes from an ODFW trap, in the same area of sage grouse habitat, also tested positive for West Nile in late July. The county’s total of seven infected pools of mosquitoes is “pretty typical,” Hutchin- son said. In general, mosquito num- bers have been below average this summer, he said, a trend he attributes to the drought and the resulting scarcity of standing water where mos- quito eggs hatch. But the populations of culex tarsalis mosquitoes, the permanent water species most likely to carry the virus, have been rising over the past couple weeks, espe- cially in the Keating Valley, BAKER CITY HERALD — A3 4 mosquito pools 2014 8 mosquito pools, 4 people, 1 horse 2013 13 mosquito pools Source: Oregon Health Authority Hutchinson said. All fi ve of the recent infected pools of mosquitoes were culex tarsalis. Due to that trend, Hutchin- son had arranged to have an airplane spray insecticide in parts of the valley. The fi rst fl ight, scheduled for Friday, Aug. 13, was postponed due to low visibility from wildfi re smoke, but the plane did fl y “So much of who we are is where we have been.” Baker Valley Travel (541) 523-9353