TUESDAY DUCKS HOLD ON TO STUN NO. 3 OHIO STATE BUCKEYES: PAGE A5 In SPORTS, A6 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com September 14, 2021 Local • Home & Living • Sports IN THIS EDITION: QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber $1.50 Storm spawns smelly mess A special good day to Herald subscriber Doug Schwin of Baker City. Ribbon cutting planned at new fl oral business By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com A ribbon cutting is planned for 1 p.m. Thurs- day, Sept. 16, at a new business, Baker Floral & Botanicals, 2300 Broadway St. (corner of Broadway and Fourth streets). The event includes refresh- ments and a raffl e drawing for a fl oral or plant display. Learn more on the shop’s Facebook page. The grand opening celebration con- tinues until 5 p.m. A community rummage sale set for Friday, Sept. 17 and Saturday, Sept. 18 will raise money for the Baker High School Class of 2022 alcohol-free graduation night celebration. The sale is by donation only. The sale will take place at Leo Adler Field, Clark and D streets, on Sept. 17 from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. and on Sept. 18 from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. People who want to donate items for the sale can drop them off at Leo Adler Field on Wednesday, Sept. 15 from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., or on Thursday, Sept. 16 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. WEATHER Today 78 / 41 Sunny Wednesday 76 / 32 Partly sunny Full forecast on the back of the B section. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Sheriff : Kill all wolves in pack  Lookout Mountain pack killed another calf last week BRIEFING Rummage sale benefi ts Baker High School Class of 2022 Bulldogs cap busy week Samantha O’Conner/Baker City Herald Muddy water pooled at the intersection of Birch Street and Court Avenue on Friday evening, Sept. 10.  Downpour causes mud, manure to fl ow into eastside neighborhood By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com The downpour lasted for less than half an hour but the muddy mess still lingered more than two days later at Kim Nelson’s house in east Baker City. So did the stench. And the fl ies. “It’s disgusting,” Nelson said on Monday morning, Sept. 13. A brief but potent deluge in Baker City on Friday evening, Sept. 10 turned streets into streams, created temporary lakes at several intersec- tions and washed a sticky mixture of debris, including livestock manure, down a hillside and into an eastside neighborhood. Nelson, who lives at 730 Valley Ave., between Plum and Birch streets near the base of Spring Garden Hill, said the smelly stuff washed into her yard and garage. “We could see it coming down the road,” said Nelson, who has lived there for nine years. She said her son tried to clear catch basins to allow the mucky water to drain, but the volume was too great and the basins too thoroughly clogged. She said water reached to the door handles of a Camaro that was parked at the curb at her home. On Monday morning, Nelson said the manure aroma was so intense that she kept her doors and windows closed. There was also an infl ux of fl ies, she said. Nelson said she is angry because most of the mess fl owed into her neigh- borhood from Thomas and Sharon Oliver’s property on the nearby hill, which includes a pasture for cattle that is bare of vegetation. “There’s a lot of people over here that are really frustrated,” Nelson said. “We need to do something. We shouldn’t have to deal with this, living in town.” Michelle Owen, the city’s public works director, said this isn’t the fi rst time heavy rain has resulted in mud and manure streaming down the hill from the Olivers’ property and into the neighborhood below. Owen said city offi cials have talked with Thomas Oliver, but the condi- tions that create the problem persist, including a hillside largely devoid of vegetation that could catch some of the debris and lacking terracing that could interrupt the debris fl ow. Several years ago the city built a catch basin at the base of the hill, in- cluding a 2,300-gallon vault intended to intercept and collect debris fl owing off the hill, said Tom Fisk, the city’s opera- tions supervisor. But Friday’s downpour over- whelmed the basin, he said, in part be- cause the mud and manure clogged it. Although the Baker City Airport, about three miles northeast of town, recorded 0.24 of an inch of rain Friday, Fisk said he talked with a couple of people who live in town and have rain gauges. One reported about two-thirds of an inch of rain, the other 1 1/4 inches. “That’s a lot of rain in a hurry,” Fisk said. See, Storm/Page A3 Helping Smoky fi nd his way home been posed in all sorts of places. Kim continues to post photos on Facebook in the The Sumpter Valley Railroad has a new mascot, hope that the animal’s owner but operators of the historic returns to claim it. In the meantime, Smoky steam train are hoping it has had quite the adven- goes home soon. Crew members found the tures. It rode in the engine of small stuffed puppy after train rides on the weekend of the No. 19 steam engine. Jace took it on the Aug. 28 and 29. In an effort to reunite the speeder, which pulls all the animal with its owner, Depot fi re tools and a water tank Manager Kim Svaty made a behind the train. Smoky posed on the front post on Facebook: of the orange diesel engine “This precious much called the Great Pumpkin. loved puppy was left at our Sumpter Depot...Please help That photo was accompanied me fi nd his home and much by this post: “This is the engine we will loved kiddo...” “I just did a random fi rst be using for the Halloween Train, The Great Orange post and the crew went Pumpkin. Maybe my family crazy,” Svaty said. will come again at Hallow- Her son, Jace Svaty, een and take me home. Have started packing the animal to say I’m really starting to around in his pocket as he went about SVRR business. like it here...” In the last few weeks, Soon the animal’s adven- tures were documented with Smoky helped clean out the fi re box with Loretta Don- photos. nelly, and even experienced “From there it’s gone a staged robbery by the Gold wild,” Kim Svaty said. The fi rst post was shared Rush Bandits. Here’s what Smoky said about that — 89 times. Since then, the animal — with the help of Kim: “Ok friends tell me this Jace named it Smoky — has By LISA BRITTON lbritton@bakercityherald.com TODAY Issue 54, 14 pages Calendar ....................A2 Classified ............. B4-B6 Comics ....................... B7 Sumpter Valley Railroad/Contributed Photo Smoky, the stuffed animal that Sumpter Valley Railroad operators hope to reunite with its owner, poses on the No. 19 locomotive. isn’t the coolest thing ever!!! I got to meet the Gold Rush Bandits and even ride on one horse. This was their last run of the season but they are coming back next year. You gotta come meet them Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B5 & B6 Dear Abby ................. B8 sometime, they are just the best.” Anyone who has informa- tion about Smoky’s owner is encouraged to call the Sumpter Valley Railroad at 541-894-2268. Home ....................B1-B3 Horoscope ........B5 & B6 Lottery Results ..........A4 Senior Menus ...........A2 News of Record ........A2 Obituaries ..................A2 THURSDAY — GO! MAGAZINE ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE Wolves from the Lookout Mountain pack in eastern Baker County killed a calf in the Lawrence Creek area north of Durkee last week, according to the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Ash (ODFW). Baker County Sheriff Travis Ash is calling on the state agency to kill all the wolves from that pack, citing an “unaccept- able” level of depredation on livestock. Wolves from the pack have killed fi ve head of cattle and injured two others since mid July. ODFW employees shot and killed two wolf pups from the pack on Aug. 1, but the permit that authorized that also prohibits the killing of the pack’s breeding pair. ODFW biologists believe the pack consists of the breed- ing pair, two yearlings born in the spring of 2020, and the fi ve remaining pups from this spring’s litter of seven, two of which were killed Aug. 1. See, Wolves/Page A3 Council to discuss $1 million in fed aid By SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com The Baker City Council on Tuesday evening, Sept. 14 will discuss potential uses of al- most $1.1 million the city has received from the American Rescue Plan Act that Presi- dent Joe Biden signed into law in March. That’s the fi rst of two pay- ments the city will receive. The second, for the same amount, will arrive in 2022. Councilors will meet at 7 p.m. at City Hall, 1655 First St. City Manager Jon Cannon suggests councilors approve a resolution that distributes the fi rst federal payment this way: • $250,000 to the fi re department • $200,000 to the police department • $150,000 to the adminis- trative services department • $150,000 to the water utility construction depart- ment • $150,000 to the waste- water utility construction department • $133,750 to the adminis- trative services department’s contingency fund • $75,000 to the fi re equip- ment reserve fund See, Council/Page A3 Opinion ......................A4 Sports .............. A5 & A6 Weather ..................... B8