THURSDAY BAKER GIRLS SOCCER TAKES ON PENDLETON/WESTON-MCEWEN: PG. A6 Gauge Bloomer Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com September 2, 2021 IN THIS EDITION: QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber Local • Business & AgLife • Go! magazine INSIDE TODAY Section previews the high school $1.50 football season in Northeast Oregon Aerial armada cools blaze A special good day to Herald subscriber Donna Kanyid of Baker City. Local, A2 ADRIAN —Kevin Purnell was fi red Monday, Aug. 30 as superintendent of the Adrian School District just one week after students returned to school. School workers discuss vaccine mandate  President of teachers union doesn’t expect large number of resignations or fi rings BRIEFING By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com County seeking volunteers for boards, committees Baker County is seeking volunteers for the follow- ing boards/committees: • Baker County Cultural Coalition • Baker County Planning Commission • Fair Board Advisory Committee • Early Learning Re- gional Council • Transportation/Traffi c Safety Committee • Baker County Mental Health Advisory Commit- tee • NEOEDD Budget Board • Local Public Safety Coordinating Council Volunteers must submit a form, which can be found at www.baker- county.org/commission- ers. More information is available by calling the commissioners’ offi ce at 541-523-8200 or by email- ing Heidi Martin at hmar- tin@bakercounty.org. WEATHER Today 74 / 34 Sunny Friday 79 / 35 Sunny Full forecast on the back of the B section. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. elsewhere, interspersed with meadows along the creek. Rock Creek starts at Rock Creek Lake, one of the most scenic spots in the range, at the northern base of Rock Creek Butte, highest peak in the Elkhorns at 9,106 feet. The fi re started about 1 1/4 to 1 1/2 miles northwest of the lake, McCraw said. The situation would have been even more dangerous had the fi re started far- ther down the canyon, he said, because the forest is more contiguous, with fewer of the rock barriers that prevail at the head of the canyon. The La Grande Interagency Hot Shot crew of 20 fi refi ghters hiked into the fi re on Tuesday afternoon, McCraw said. The initial plan was to have smoke- jumpers work on the fi re, but conditions were too dangerous, in part due to the terrain, to have them parachute into the fi re Tuesday afternoon. The leaders of the two unions that represent more than 200 employees in the Baker School District, includ- ing teachers, said they don’t think a state- wide mandate that school employees be vacci- nated against Myers COVID-19 will result in a large number of workers either resigning or being fi red. Teachers and other union- represented employees in the Baker School District have met with district offi cials regarding options for workers who choose not to be vaccinat- ed against COVID-19 before the Oct. 18 deadline set by Oregon Gov. Kate Brown, said Toni Myers, president of the Baker Education Association. The governor’s vaccine mandate for school and health care workers includes two exceptions — one for medi- cal reasons, which requires corroboration from a doctor, and one for religious reasons, which an employee can fi ll out individually. Myers, who is a teacher at Keating Elementary School, said the Baker Education Association represents the district’s 111 teachers. Rachelle Lemmon is presi- dent of the Baker Chapter 20 of the Oregon School Employ- ees Association, the union that represents the district’s 110 classifi ed employees, which includes most workers who aren’t teachers. Myers said on Tuesday, Aug. 31 that she believes a ma- jority of Baker teachers who are not vaccinated, and don’t plan to get the shots, will opt See, Fire/Page A3 See, Vaccines/Page A3 Wallowa-Whitman National Forest/Contributed Photo The Rock Creek fi re burning in the Elkhorn Mountains on Tuesday, Aug. 31.  Offi cial says fi re near Rock Creek Lake had potential to spread fast By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com An aerial armada that dumped thousands of gallons of fi re retardant and water within several hours slowed a fast-moving wildfi re that fl ared up Monday afternoon, Aug. 30 and has burned about 60 acres in one of the more inaccessible parts of the Elkhorn Mountains. The human-caused blaze in the up- per reaches of the Rock Creek canyon, about 13 air miles northwest of Baker City, started in a forest type where fl ames can race through in certain con- ditions, said Joel McCraw, fi re manage- ment offi cer for the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest’s Whitman Ranger District. But as of early Wednesday afternoon, Sept. 1, the fi re was showing minimal growth, and ground crews had arrived to dig a fi re break and set up hoses connected to pumps in Rock Creek, said Peter Fargo, public affairs offi cer for the Wallowa-Whitman. More than 50 people were working on the fi re, with a goal of building a line around the entire blaze within 48 hours. “We’re still not out of the woods yet, but we feel pretty good about it for sure,” McCraw said on Tuesday afternoon. Fire offi cials were considerably more concerned a day earlier, and in part because of the type of forest where the fi re started. Most of the trees in that part of the Rock Creek canyon are subalpine fi rs, a species that has high concentra- tions of fl ammable oil in the needles, and branches that tend to start near the ground, making it easier for fi re to spread from the ground to the trees’ crowns. “When it does get established in sub- alpine fi rs it can be a challenge to fi ght,” McCraw said. “Very volatile.” Indeed, the fi re, reported about 3 p.m. Monday by the lookout on Mount Ireland and by citizens, was torch- ing trees and spreading through tree crowns, conditions too dangerous to have fi refi ghters rappel from helicop- ters, McCraw said. There are no roads within a mile of the fi re, and the only access is by foot on the Rock Creek trail, which starts along a rough, four-wheel drive road, he said. Given the limited access, all fi refi ght- ing Monday evening and into Tuesday afternoon was from the air, McCraw said. Two helicopters dropped water on fl ames, while fi ve tankers — three multi-engine planes from Moses Lake, Washington, and a pair of single-engine planes from La Grande — spread retardant. The air crews took advantage of natural fi re barriers, McCraw said, in- cluding rock cliffs and fi elds of boulders and scree. “In some areas the fi re ran up into the cliffs and ran out of fuel,” he said. The Rock Creek canyon, which runs roughly north-south, is bordered on the west by cliffs, with the Elkhorn Crest trail running just on the west side of the ridgetop. There are thickets of subalpine fi r Wallowa-Whitman National Forest/ Contributed Photo Fires burning in subalpine fi r thickets along Rock Creek on Tuesday, Aug. 31. Ages 20-59 have largest share of county’s COVID cases Wolves kill ty’s COVID-19 cases through tween the state and county county residents in this age By JAYSON JACOBY calf north Aug. 22 were in people ages vaccination rates — 37.1% range, about 7.8% of the jjacoby@bakercityherald.com — is the largest among age population. The age group 20 to 59. Baker County residents of Durkee That age range accounts groups. accounts for 14.8% of the ages 20 to 59 have accounted for a disproportionate per- centage of COVID-19 cases during the pandemic, accord- ing to data from the Baker County Health Department. The department has compiled a pie chart showing the percentage of cases, by age range, from the start of the pandemic through Aug. 22, 2021. The county reported 1,344 cases during that period. (The breakdown of cases by age is not available start- ing Aug. 23. The county had 82 cases from Aug. 23-31.) Almost 61% of the coun- TODAY Issue 49, 52 pages for 41% of the county’s population. The largest share of cases through Aug. 22 was in residents in the age range 30 to 39. That group accounted for 17.6% of the county’s COVID-19 cases. There are about 1,950 county residents in that age range, which constitutes about 11.7% of the county’s population of 16,668. Among Baker County residents in their 30s, the vaccination rate is 31.9%. Statewide, the vaccination rate for that age group is 69%. The difference be- Business ...........B1 & B2 Classified ............. B2-B4 Comics ....................... B5 The rest of the age break- county’s COVID-19 cases. down of COVID-19 cases in The vaccination rate for Baker County, in order of Baker County residents in percentage: their 20s is 33%. The state- wide rate is 63.1%. Ages 50 to 59 This group, with about Ages 40 to 49 2,290 residents in the county, This age group, with has had 15% of the county’s about 1,640 county resi- cases, and it makes up 13.7% dents, constitutes about 9.9% of the population. of the county’s population. The vaccination rate for It accounts for 13.2% of the people in their 50s in Baker county’s COVID-19 cases. County is 44%. The state- Baker County’s vaccina- wide rate for that age range tion rate for people in their is 72.2%. 40s is 42.6%. The Oregon rate is 72.1%. Ages 20 to 29 There are about 1,300 See, COVID/Page A3 Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B2 & B4 Dear Abby ................. B6 Horoscope ........B3 & B4 Letters ........................A4 Lottery Results ..........A2 News of Record ........A2 Obituaries ..................A2 Opinion ......................A4 SATURDAY — AN EERIE HIKE ON A FOGBOUND MOUNTAIN TRAIL  600-pound calf killed late Sunday or early Monday Baker City Herald Wolves from the Lookout Mountain have killed another calf in eastern Baker County, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) reported on Tuesday, Aug. 31. Wolves from that pack have killed four head of live- stock and injured two others since mid July, according to See, Wolves/Page A3 Senior Menus ...........A2 Sports ........................A6 Weather ..................... B6