TUESDAY POTENTIAL FATAL VIRUS SPREADING IN BAKER VALLEY DEER, A3 In SPORTS, A6 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com August 24, 2021 Local • Home & Living • Sports IN THIS EDITION: $1.50 QUICK HITS Fair sale shatters record Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscribers Tom and Kathy Fisk of Baker City. BRIEFING  Steer sales alone break former record Baker County Cultural Coalition off ering grants In 2022, the Baker County Cultural Coalition will return to its traditional grantmaking schedule. The fi rst deadline for ap- plications is Dec. 15, 2021, for projects in the fi rst half of 2022. The second deadline is May 15, 2022, for projects slated in the second half of 2022. Proj- ect reports are due Oct. 31, 2022. The BCCC typically awards up to $500 per project. Grant applications are available online at https://www.bakercounty. org/cultural_plan/grants. html. Two free movies to be shown in Baker City Two free outdoor movies are happening this week in Baker City. “Goonies” will be shown Thursday, Aug. 26, at 8 p.m. in Central Park. Con- cessions will be available. The second event is a Back-To-School drive-in movie featuring “Toy Story 4” at Churchill School on Saturday, Aug. 28. Gates open at 7:30 p.m., and the movie starts at 8 p.m. Con- cessions will be available. These events are sponsored by the Baker County Safe Communities Coalition, Baker School District, and New Direc- tions Northwest. WEATHER Today 78 / 41 Sunny Wednesday 78 / 46 Partly sunny The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Beavers, Ducks prepare By SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com watch other competitors at later rodeos, Brown ended up fi nishing in 15th place, by a margin of $1,560. Due to the pandemic, the 2020 National Finals, which take place on 10 straight nights, were moved from Las Vegas to Arlington, Texas. Brown, a 2011 Baker High School graduate who played football at Washington State University before transferring to Montana State University and taking up rodeo full time, tied for fi rst in the fi rst round at Arlington, bringing down his steer in 3.9 seconds and earning a $20,872 check. Brown tied for second in the fourth round to win $18,192. He ended up ranked 13th for the season, with total winnings of $88,558. This year, Brown’s situation is quite different. Baker County’s annual 4-H livestock auction didn’t just break the sales record this year. Shattered is the more ap- propriate verb. The culminating event of the Baker County Fair set multiple records on Aug. 6, most notably in total sales. The fi gure of $517,026 trounced the previous record, which held the title for only one year. The 2020 sale brought in $327,069. “It was, fi nancially, our best auction to date,” Jake Collier, a member of the sales committee, said of this year’s auction. “It was a heck of a sale.” For steers, specifi cally. This year’s auction featured a record number of steers, with 62. And those animals fetched $362,350, which would alone have broken the 2020 record for the entire auction, includ- ing lambs, goats, swine and rabbits. Collier said fair offi cials worried that with the pan- demic continuing, the record slate of steers might not all fi nd buyers. They needn’t have been concerned. “But everybody showed up and really stepped up and participated with that,” Col- lier said. See, Rodeo/Page A3 See, Auction/Page A2 Jackie Jensen Baker City steer wrestler Jesse Brown competes at the National Finals Rodeo in Arlington, Texas, in December 2020. Ready For Rodeo  Jesse Brown of Baker City is ranked second in professional steer wrestling By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com While almost everyone is sleep- ing, Jesse Brown is apt to be in the driver’s seat of a pickup truck, chasing his headlights through the night on one of the great byways of the West, to a city where steers wait to be wrestled to the ground. When the sun emerges, Brown might be in Kalispell, Montana. Or Tremonton, Utah. Or Prineville, Oregon. Or any of a dozen other places where people gather in bleachers to watch men in jeans grapple with steers and try to stay aboard bulls or broncs for eight seconds. Brown, who grew up in Baker City and still lives here — at least when there’s not a rodeo going on, which isn’t all that often — is one of the top steer wrestlers in the world. Brown, 29, is ranked second this season, with earnings of $75,184. That puts Brown in a great posi- tion to achieve one of his top goals — qualifying for the “Super Bowl of Rodeo,” the National Finals Rodeo Dec. 2-11 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas. In 2020, Brown made it to the National Finals for the fi rst time. But it was a near thing. The top 15 nationally ranked competitors in each rodeo event can compete in the National Finals. In late September 2020, with two rodeos left in the season, Brown was in 16th place, just $500 short of 15th- place. In a rodeo at Rapid City, South Dakota, Brown won the second round and claimed $2,010. Although he had to wait, and Firefi ghters, others to protest vaccine mandate  that health care employ- ees be vaccinated against COVID-19. Members of the group also hope to express their By SAMANTHA O’CONNER concerns to the Baker City soconner@bakercityherald.com Council, which meets at Baker City Fire Depart- 7 p.m. inside City Hall. Casey Johnson, presi- ment fi refi ghters and other dent of the Baker City health care workers plan to rally at Baker City Hall Firefi ghters Association union, has asked to have Tuesday evening, Aug. 24, to protest Oregon Gov. the issue added to the Council’s agenda. Kate Brown’s mandate They’ll gather Tuesday evening at Baker City Hall The vaccination man- date, which the governor announced last week, includes city fi refi ghters because they also work as paramedics, responding to emergency medical cases with ambulances. Firefi ghters actually handle far more ambu- lance calls than they do fi res. Johnson contends the governor has bypassed Or- egon’s law passed in 1989 that says it is unlawful for employers to mandate vaccines. “She changed that through her executive power in her emergency declaration to say that all health care workers and associated fi elds will be mandatorily vaccinated,” Johnson said. an investigation on Thurs- day, Aug. 19. Lookout Mountain Wolves from the Lookout wolves have killed three Mountain pack in eastern head of cattle and injured Baker County killed a two others over the past three-month-old calf on a month northeast of Durkee, private grazing pasture last week, and the Oregon according to ODFW reports. Attacks during the Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) responded second half of July, in which wolves killed two animals by extending for three and injured two others, weeks the permit allow- ing the killing of two more prompted Mark Bennett, Baker County commissioner wolves from the pack. and chair of the county’s ODFW confi rmed the wolf committee, to send a wolf attack on a calf after TODAY Issue 45, 14 pages Calendar ....................A2 Classified ............. B3-B6 Comics ....................... B7 letter to ODFW Director Curt Melcher seeking a permit allowing the rancher who owns or manages the cattle herds that have been attacked to kill some of the wolves. Oregon’s wolf manage- ment plan allows ranchers to kill wolves that are in the act of attacking livestock or working dogs, but a lethal take permit gives ranch- ers, or their designated agents or ODFW employees, authority to kill wolves that Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B4 & B6 Dear Abby ................. B8 By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com are in a certain area, even if they’re not directly threat- ening livestock. Melcher approved the le- thal take permit on July 29, the fi rst issued in Oregon since 2018. The permit allowed ranchers Deward and Kathy Thompson, their agents or ODFW employees, to kill up to four subadult wolves from the Lookout Mountain pack. Baker City’s public works director recommends the City Council hire a forestry consultant to design a timber sale on city-owned property near Goodrich Creek in the Elkhorn Mountains about 10 miles northwest of town. In a report to councilors for their meeting this eve- ning, Aug. 24, Michelle Owen proposes a fi ve-year contract with Lane Parry Forestry Consulting of Baker City. The city would pay the company based on the scope of specifi c projects yet to be determined. Councilors will meet at 7 p.m. at City Hall, 1655 First St. In her report, Owen wrote that the city has previously contracted with Lane Parry Forestry Consulting (LPFC), but that contract has expired. See, Wolves/Page A2 See, Council/Page A3 See, Protest/Page A3 Wolves kill calf north of Durkee By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com City Council to consider hiring forestry consultant Home ....................B1-B3 Horoscope ........B4 & B6 Letters ........................A4 Lottery Results ..........A2 News of Record ........A2 Obituaries ..................A2 THURSDAY — GO! MAGAZINE ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE Opinion ......................A4 Sports ........................A6 Weather ..................... B8