THURSDAY BAKER VOLLEYBALL, GIRLS SOCCER TEAMS IN ACTION: SPORTS, PAGE A5 SEPTEMBER 8–15, 2021 Look ACE art show Learn Pioneer skills Listen Jon Deshler PAGE 4 PAGE 13 PAGE 18 WWW.GOEASTERNOREGON.COM DISCOVER THE Union County Museum AND LEARN ABOUT HERITAGE APPLES AT A SPECIAL TALK SEPT. 21 PAGE 8 Janet Dodson/Contributed photo Cowboys: Then and Now is an exhibit at the Union County Museum. “The food is fresh, locally sourced and unbelievably delicious. Their IPAs are distinct and clearly not copy-cats of each other or anyone else making NW IPAs.” - Yelp Review, Bend. Oregon 1219 Washington Ave • La Grande, OR 97850 www.sideabeer.com GO! Magazine September 9, 2021 IN THIS EDITION: Your weekly guide to arts and entertainment events around $1.50 Northeast Oregon Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com Local • Business & AgLife • Go! magazine Truck driver killed on I-84 QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber David Justus of Baker City. BRIEFING Red Cross plans blood drive in Baker City on Monday, Sept. 13 The American Red Cross has scheduled a blood drive for Monday, Sept. 13, 2021, at the Baker City Nazarene Church, 1250 Hughes Lane, from noon to 6 p.m. To schedule an appointment, call Myrna Evans at 541-523-5368, or go to redcrossblood.org. Donors can still donate after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine. Please note which vaccine you received. Fishing time limits lifted in Oregon With water tempera- tures dropping, the “hoot owl” restriction that banned fi shing after 2 p.m. for some species and some waterways has ended in Oregon. The restriction was in- tended to protect salmon, steelhead, trout and sturgeon. Fishing is now allowed for those species from one hour before sunrise until one hour after sunset. Other in-season fi shing regulation changes are still in effect including a number of salmon and steelhead closures or special restrictions. WEATHER FOREST OWNERS’ GROUP REVIVED  Windshield was struck by detached axle from a different truck Baker City Herald Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald, File, 2019 Caleb Hawkins drills a core sample on a tree at Steve and Mickey Edwardses’ property near the Elkhorn Mountains west of Baker City in 2019. Managing private forests is the main goal of the Oregon Small Woodlands Association, which is a local chapter that has recently been revived and expanded to include Baker, Grant, Union and Wallowa counties.  Local chapter of Oregon Small Woodlands Association now includes Baker, Grant, Union and Wallowa counties By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Private forest owners in Baker County are reviving an organization that helps members better manage their timber ground, and this version has expanded its geographic boundar- ies considerably. The newly constituted Northeast Oregon chapter of the Oregon Small Woodlands Association covers four counties, said Jacob Putney, extension forester for the Oregon State Univer- sity Extension Service in Baker and Grant counties. Besides those two adjoining coun- ties, the new chapter includes mem- bers in Union and Wallowa counties. “We all share the Blue Mountains, and although there are differences, for the most part the forest types are somewhat similar,” Putney said. See, Forest/Page A3 City consults with att orneys on possible suit  City Council voted Aug. 24 to look into legal while indoors at school. Councilors discussed challenge to governor’s vaccine mandate options including fi ling a law- suit, or joining a lawsuit fi led Councilors voted unani- by another city or county. By SAMANTHA O’CONNER Cannon said on Tuesday, mously during their Aug. jjacoby@bakercityherald.com 24 meeting to have Cannon Sept. 7 that he has been Baker City Manager speaking with attorneys. investigate the city’s pos- Jon Cannon has been “I have a couple potentials sible options. busy over the past week Councilors heard during for them to think about, but carrying out the City that meeting from residents I haven’t gotten anything Council’s order to look who object to both the vac- that the council has wanted into a possible lawsuit to call a meeting for and talk cine mandate, which also challenging Oregon Gov. about,” Cannon said. applies to teachers and Kate Brown’s mandate He said he is gathering in- other school workers, and that health care workers formation to present to coun- to the requirement that be vaccinated against cilors at a future meeting. students wear face masks COVID-19. The Council’s next regular meeting is set for Tuesday, Sept. 14. Cannon said he has also received many phone calls from city, county and school district offi cials from across the state who are also interested in possible legal avenues to challenge the governor’s executive orders. “From east to west, north to south, from a lot of different entities,” Can- non said. See, Lawsuit/Page A3 Today 90 / 53 Mostly sunny Friday No growth on Rock Creek fi re 68 / 43 By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Rain and storms The Rock Creek fi re in the Elkhorn Mountains about 13 miles northwest of Baker City is 75% con- tained, and it has not grown beyond the estimated 60 acres that burned on Aug. 30, the day the blaze was reported. The 25% of the fi re perimeter that lacks control lines is in rocky terrain so steep that it’s not accessible, Peter Fargo, public affairs offi cer for the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest, said on Tuesday, Sept. 7. Full forecast on the back of the B section. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Firefi ghters will continue to check for hotspots every other day this week, with help from a helicopter, Fargo said. The Rock Creek Lake trail, No. 1626, remains closed. The fi re was reported about 3 p.m. on Aug. 30 in the upper part of the Rock Creek canyon, a remote section near the center of the Elkhorns about 1 1/4 miles northwest of Rock Creek Lake. There are no roads within one mile of the fi re, and it was too dangerous on the afternoon and evening of Aug. 30 to bring in fi refi ghters by helicop- ter, fi re offi cials said. But fi ve airplanes dropped fi re re- tardant, and two helicopters dumped water on the fl ames that day, the pilots taking advantage of cliffs and rockslides that served as natural fi re barriers. 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. See, Fire/Page A3 A truck driver from Idaho was killed Monday evening, Sept. 6 on Inter- state 84 in Baker County when an axle with dual tires detached from a fl atbed trailer being towed by another truck driving the opposite direction, bounced across the concrete barrier in the center of the freeway and crashed into the wind- shield of his truck. James Green, 50, of Caldwell, was killed, accord- ing to Oregon State Police. The incident, which closed the freeway for about six hours, happened at about 6:40 p.m. on I-84 near Milepost 338, about 34 miles southeast of Baker City near the Lookout Mountain exit. According to OSP, Has- sen Ibrahim, 38, of Dublin, Ohio, was driving a com- mercial truck westbound, towing a fl atbed trailer. The axle broke loose from beneath the trailer and went airborne. Green was driving his truck in the eastbound lanes, and the tires landed on the cab and windshield of his truck. According to OSP, Ibrahim stopped his truck, chained up the broken axle and continued driving west. OSP troopers located him in Baker City. OSP didn’t re- lease any more information about troopers’ encounter with Ibrahim. Neither Ibrahim nor his passenger, Mohamed Kulale, 61, was hurt. OSP troopers are asking anyone who saw the inci- dent, and who haven’t been interviewed, to contact OSP and reference case SP21- 256040. Also, witnesses reported seeing a white male in a commercial truck stop and talk with Ibrahim. Troopers also want to fi nd and inter- view that driver as part of OSP’s ongoing investigation. Brown: curtailing school activities could curb COVID By GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau full and case reports are still 12 times what they were in early July. The fragile ebb in the worst of the crisis will be challenged by the fl ood of school- children returning Schools should cancel or curtail some extracurricular activities to help Or- egon maintain what Brown appears to be the beginning of a decline to class. from record high numbers “It is with mixed emotions of COVID-19 infections, Gov. that we are welcoming our Kate Brown said Tuesday, kids back to school at this Sept. 7. time,” said Brown during a Multiple forecasts over the past week showed a peak Tuesday morning press call. Brown was joined by in the two-month surge of infections driven by the highly health and education offi cials to announce additional, contagious delta variant. voluntary efforts to go along Hospitals remain nearly TODAY Issue 52, 32 pages Business ...........B1 & B2 Classified ............. B2-B4 Comics ....................... B5 with the mandatory vaccina- tion of school employees and mask mandates for students and staff. The state will issue School Health Advisories on a regular basis. The fi rst one, announced Tuesday, asks schools to cancel or curtail extracurricular activities through at least Oct. 1. Back-to-school events should be done online, if pos- sible. Schools should hold as much activity outdoors as possible, including school meals and physical educa- tion classes. Community News ....A2 Crossword ........B2 & B4 Dear Abby ................. B6 “The safety protocols put in place by your school not only make it safer for every- one, but they also help ensure that our kids actually get to stay in school,” said Colt Gill, Oregon Education Depart- ment director. While children can get ill from COVID-19, they rarely get severely sick, Gill said. But they can bring the infections home with them and spread it to at-risk people such as the elderly and immu- nocompromised. Brown confi rmed her order for mandatory vaccinations, saying that staff who are not Horoscope ........B2 & B4 Letters ........................A4 Lottery Results ..........A2 fully vaccinated cannot have contact with students or other school employees. Dr. Dean Sidelinger, the state’s epidemiologist, said the Oregon Health Author- ity was looking into an 8.8% increase in the number of new COVID-19 infections in Marion County. The uptick comes as the Oregon State Fair in Salem has just concluded. Brown had ordered that crowded out- door events have mandatory masking rules, but television reports from the fair showed News of Record ........A2 Obituaries ..................A2 Opinion ......................A4 SATURDAY — TRAILHEAD STEWARDSHIP PROJECT’S SUMMER WORK See, Brown/Page A3 Senior Menus ...........A2 Sports ........................A5 Weather ..................... B6