SATURDAY BAKER VOLLEYBALL OPENS SEASON BY SWEEPING POWDER VALLEY: A5 In SPORTS, A6 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com August 28, 2021 Local • Outdoors • Sports • TV IN THIS EDITION: QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Harold Huntington of Baker City. BRIEFING Baker County Garden Club to meet Sept. 1 The Baker County Garden Club will meet on Wednesday, Sept. 1 at 10:30 a.m. at Oregon Trail Nursery, 600 Elm St. The topic will be plants for sale this time of year, and Lisa Constantine will be the speaker. Please bring a sack lunch and a chair. $1.50 Murder trial set for Sept. 8 By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Judge Matt Shirtcliff of Baker County Circuit Court has declined to dismiss murder charges against Shawn Quentin Greenwood in the January 2020 shooting death of Angela Parrish in Baker City. Shirtcliff issued a writ- ten ruling Thursday, Aug. 26, two days after a three- hour hearing in Circuit Court. The judge did rule that district attorney Greg Baxter will not be allowed to use certain evidence dur- ing a trial, which is sched- uled to start Sept. 8 at the Baker County Courthouse. Greenwood’s attorney, Jim Schaeffer of La Grande, fi led a motion on June 25, 2021, seeking dismissal of charges, or suppression of evidence. Schaeffer contends that dismissal of charges is the appropriate remedy based on allegations, which Baxter has not contested, that Detective Shannon Regan of the Baker City Police Department listened to fi ve phone calls between Greenwood, 50, of Vale, and Schaeffer on Sept. 14, 2020. Regan is on paid admin- istrative leave during a WEATHER Today 79 / 37 Sunny Sunday 86 / 42 Sunny Monday 83 / 41 Sunny Full forecast on the back of the B section. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. criminal investigation into the matter. Baxter said he will not call Regan, the lead inves- tigator in Parrish’s murder, as a witness during trial. In his fi ve-page written decision on Schaeffer’s motion, See, Charges/Page A3 A cow, a missing tongue, and a mystery  Biologist perplexed by scene in eastern Baker County Suicide Awareness Walk planned for Sept. 11 in Baker Baker County Safe Communities Coalition is sponsoring a Suicide Awareness Walk on Satur- day, Sept. 11, in honor of World Suicide Awareness Day. The organization invites the community to “come show your support and help raise awareness about suicide prevention.” The walk starts at 5:30 p.m. at Geiser-Pollman Park. For more details, visit the Facebook page for Baker County Safe Com- munities Coalition. Baker soccer begins By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com they had tested positive or had been exposed to some- one who did. In a post on the Vale District’s Facebook page on Wednesday, Aug. 25, Super- intendent Alisha McBride wrote that “If we do not act now, it is possible that our children will be forced into distance learning shortly after the school year begins.” To avoid that outcome in Baker, Witty said the district will employ most of the same tactics used during the previous school year. That includes asking any students and staff who feel ill to stay home, conducting daily health checks of students at the start of the day, encour- aging frequent handwashing, and following a three-foot social distancing protocol. Brian Ratliff has sliced open and probed the innards of quite a number of cows, but he’s never come across a case as confounding as the missing tongue. “This is a stumper,” Ratliff said on Thursday, Aug. 26. “I don’t have an answer.” The mystery started the day before for Ratliff, the district wildlife biologist at the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife’s (ODFW) Baker City offi ce. A ranch manager found the carcass of a three-year-old cow that morning on a public grazing allotment near the head of Fox Creek. That’s near Lookout Mountain, about 14 miles north of Huntington. Ratliff investigated the case as a possible wolf attack. Wolves from the Lookout Mountain pack have killed three head of cattle, and injured three others, this sum- mer several miles to the west. Wolves didn’t kill the cow at Fox Creek — Ratliff is sure about that. He’s also confi dent in his conclusion about why the cow died. Almost the whole of the cow’s tongue — at least a couple pounds of fl esh — was missing. The wound severed two arteries at the base of the tongue, and Ratliff said a vet- erinarian told him that a cow with that injury would bleed to death relatively rapidly. That was the only injury which happened prior to the cow’s death, Ratliff said. See, Schools/Page A3 See, Cow Tongue/Page A3 S. John Collins/Baker City Herald, File Frequent cleaning of desks will be a common task this year in Baker schools, as was the case last year. In early March 2020, Stormie Stuart, 9, helped clean her third grade classroom at Brooklyn Primary School. School chief ‘thrilled’ for classes to start  Baker students return differently from last, Witty acknowledges that “there are challenges with the pan- demic.” A key one, naturally, is striving to prevent the virus on computer monitors in By JAYSON JACOBY their home when the school from spreading in schools jjacoby@bakercityherald.com during the county’s biggest year started — the same “Normal” isn’t an adjec- surge in cases during the situation that prevailed tive that any school offi cial pandemic. during the spring term in is apt to use currently, From Aug. 1-26, the coun- 2020, in the early stages of but Baker School District ty reported 254 cases, the Superintendent Mark Witty the pandemic. most in any single month, Elementary students, is excited about what schools surpassing the 196 cases in in grades K-6, returned to will look like when classes December 2020. convene on Monday, Aug. 30. in-person classes for a full Last year the district was four-day weekly schedule on They’ll look busy, most largely successful at avoiding Oct. 14, 2020. notably. the virus. During the school Middle school and high “We’re looking forward to year, 36 staff or students school students began at- a new school year starting tending classes one day per tested positive. with students in person,” Witty noted that the Vale week on Nov. 9, 2020, moving Witty said on Thursday School District in Malheur to two days per week on afternoon, Aug. 26. County, in its fi rst four days That alone distinguishes Jan. 25, 2021, and to a full of classes this week, had the 2021-22 school year from four-day schedule on April more than 50 students or 12, 2021. its immediate predecessor. staff members who were But even though this A year ago, Baker stu- quarantining either because dents were watching classes school year will start much on Monday, Aug. 30 Elks collect $1,215 in donations during parades  Donations were much higher than usual this year By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com The $50 bill caught Staci Erickson’s eye as it fl uttered onto the surface of the American fl ag. The slip of currency also made her heart swell. Erickson is a member of the Baker Elks Lodge. She’s also one of the Elks who hold the huge fl ag that is at the front of local parades. TODAY Issue 47, 12 pages Classified ............. B2-B4 Comics ....................... B5 Community News ....A3 Another of the fl ag-holders is Doug Riggs. He exhorts parade-watchers to toss coins or bills onto the fl ag to support a variety of veterans programs that the Elks contribute to statewide, Erickson said. In 2021, following a 2020 when most parades were canceled due to the pandemic, that fl ag col- lected quite a lot more cash than in the past. “The magnitude of generosity was over- whelming this year,” Erickson said on Thursday, Aug. 26. “This year for some reason there was just such charity. It’s pretty amazing.” In previous years the Elks collected a few hundred dollars in donations during parades, Crossword ........B2 & B4 Dear Abby ................. B6 Horoscope ........B3 & B4 Jayson Jacoby ..........A4 News of Record ........A2 Obituaries ..................A2 including the Haines Fourth of July, Miners Jubilee and Shrine parades, Erickson said. This year the total was $1,215.50. That includes: • Haines Fourth of July, $225.50 (including that $50 bill, the fi rst Erickson has seen donated during any parade) • Miners Jubilee, $350 on July 19 • Shriners, $640 on Aug. 7 Erickson said the high volume of donations was obvious as the Elks marched through Haines and downtown Baker City. See, Elks/Page A2 Opinion ......................A4 Outdoors ..........B1 & B2 Senior Menus ...........A2 Sports .............. A5 & A6 Turning Backs ...........A2 Weather ..................... B6 TUESDAY — GRIM NEWS FOR BAKER COUNTY’S BIGHORN SHEEP HERDS