Watch Eastern Oregon Film Festival PAGE 3 THURSDAY BAKER VOLLEYBALL SWEEPS ONTARIO TO IMPROVE TO 12-2: SPORTS, A6 OCTOBER 6–13, 2021 Look Josephy ‘Little Works’ show Read ‘The Happiest Man on Earth’ PAGE 4 PAGE 6 WWW.GOEASTERNOREGON.COM WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE! PAGE 8 Lisa Britton/Go! Magazine Actors rehearse “The Jungle Book” production for Eastern Oregon Regional Theatre. “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 October 7, 2021 IN THIS EDITION: QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Tim Mahoney of Baker City. BRIEFING Fun run/walk set Oct. 16 to benefi t BHS cross-country The inaugural Okto- berfest 5K fun run/walk, a benefi t for the Baker High School cross-country teams, is set for Saturday, Oct. 16. The event is in con- junction with Crossroads Carnegie Art Center’s drive-thru Oktoberfest dinner and virtual auction that day. The run/walk will start at 8 a.m. at Central Park, along the Leo Adler Me- morial Parkway between Washington and Valley avenues, and end at the Baker County Fairgrounds. At the midway point, along Hughes Lane, participants will pick up as many pota- toes as possible and carry them to the fi nish line, where the spuds will be donated to the Northeast Oregon Compassion Cen- ter for its food boxes. Costumes are encour- aged. Registration will start at 7 a.m. at Central Park on the day of the event, or go to https://one. bidpal.net/21oktoberfest. Gold cards for sale Bulldog Gold Cards, which benefi t the BHS football team and offer discounts at local busi- nesses, are for sale for $10 at the front offi ce at BHS, 2500 E St. WEATHER Today 58 / 32 Partly sunny Friday 63 / 28 Partly sunny 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 Preparing for trouble  OTEC linemen learn to deal with emergencies in remote work areas By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Dr. Kaare Tingelstad is looking for someone with a fractured pelvis. A volunteer. Travis Smart springs to his feet with an agility not generally associ- ated with pelvic fractures. He also has a splint on his lower right leg but this seems not to im- pede him either. Smart lies on his back, reclin- ing on a blanket spread across the granitic sand near Anthony Lakes Mountain Resort’s lodge. Tingelstad and Robbie Langrell each grab one end of a bright orange swath of nylon which is rolled into a makeshift rope. Then they start a curious routine, rather like a square dance, circling Smart as he lies still, the nylon pull- ing tight against his hips. “Is that pretty tight?” Tingelstad asks the supine Smart. “It’s pretty tight,” Smart confi rms. “What do we do with him now?” Tingelstad asks the 10 or so people who stand in a rough circle, watching as Smart is trussed up. The correct answer is what you don’t do with someone whose pelvis is broken — which is move him. “He stays there, as comfortable and warm as you can make him,” Tingelstad says. Smart, whose sense of humor, unlike his pelvis, has not been con- stricted, chimes in. “Hand me a beer and go get the helicopter,” he says. Laughter spreads through the thin alpine air on this sunny, but a bit blustery, early October morning. This is serious business, to be sure. But it’s not an emergency. Smart’s pelvis is perfectly intact. So is his right leg. The purpose of this gathering on Tuesday, Oct. 5 isn’t to save some- one’s life — or even their pelvis. The goal is to learn. By SAMANTHA O’CONNER and JAYSON JACOBY Baker City Herald Joseph Hathaway/Contributed Photo Dr. Kaare Tingelstad, left, and Robbie Langrell, right, demonstrate the method for splinting a fractured pelvis. Their “patient” during a training on Tuesday, Oct. 4 at Anthony Lakes Mountain Resort is Travis Smart, a lineman for Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative in La Grande. Joseph Hathaway/Contributed Photo Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative employees practice the stair carry method of transporting an injured person during a training on Tuesday, Oct. 4 at Anthony Lakes Mountain Resort. From left, Tyler Thomas, a substation technician, Blake Eckstein (being carried), general foreman, and Al Dockweiler, a journeyman lineman. The students are linemen from Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative in Baker and Union counties, as well as two Anthony Lakes employees. Tuesday was the second day of a two-day session where Tingelstad and Langrell taught the workers how to deal with a variety of potentially life-threatening situations, including injuries and hypothermia. See, OTEC/Page A3 Baker City Manager Jon Cannon said the actions encouraged in a fl ier distrib- uted recently in the city, including calling on city and county of- Cannon fi cials to defy Gov. Kate Brown’s vaccine mandate, could put the city’s insurance coverage at risk. Cannon also said that the fl ier’s call for residents to withhold their property taxes if city and county offi cials fail to act on the mandate could leave the city unable to provide its usual services. The one-page fl ier, head- lined “Community Call To Action,” includes an offer to “join the movement at www. BakerCountyUnited@proton- mail.com.” The group also has a web- site, bakercountyunited.com. Property taxes are a sig- nifi cant source of revenue for Baker City’s budget. The city receives about $3.6 million per year in property taxes, and the largest share of that money, almost $3 million for the current fi scal year that started July 1, goes to the general fund. That fund includes the police and fi re departments. See, Mandate/Page A3 Wolves kill 12 sheep north of Elgin Baker City Herald Stepping up to preserve history steel and wood on a concrete foundation. “When you look at the A project to replace the courthouse, you see this granite steps and stone (tuff) stone all over, you facade leading to the main think it’s a stone building,” entrance of the Baker he said. “But really, what County Courthouse should you’re looking at would be be fi nished by the end of thick stone siding. It’s liter- November. ally just a facade on the exte- The work is in its fi nal rior part of the building.” phase, said Dan McQuisten, The deterioration of the the county’s facilities man- tuffstone facade around ager. the steps threatened the “In general, the scope of integrity of the structures, the project or the intent of McQuisten said. the project was to address The county sought to fi nd some long-term deteriora- replacement materials simi- tion in the stone facade lar to the originals, he said. that surrounded the steps Workers have removed at the courthouse and it’s Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald been a long, ongoing project Workers are replacing the steps leading to the main the granite steps below the main entrance, on the over the last several years,” entrance at the Baker County Courthouse. east side of the Courthouse, McQuisten said. as well as the underlying it’s rotted out,” McQuisten McQuisten said the The project has a material that was wicking said. facade, made of a type of $65,000 budget, and The tuffstone is also used moisture and accelerating compressed volcanic ash McQuisten said he’s not the deterioration. in several other historic known as tuffstone, which yet sure whether the With everything dried, county will spend the entire was quarried near Pleasant buildings, including Baker City Hall and St. Francis de workers are installing new Valley between Baker City amount. steps and facade stone. Sales Cathedral. and Durkee, has deterio- Workers over the past “Hopefully that will be McQuisten said the several years have replaced rated over the decades due another 100 plus year fi x,” Courthouse, fi nished in to the ravages of weather. other sets of steps at the “For lack of a better term, 1909, is mainly built of brick, McQuisten said. Courthouse, 1995 Third St. By SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Cannon: Defying mandate could harm city TODAY Issue 64, 32 pages Business ...........B1 & B2 Calendar ....................A2 Classified ............. B2-B4 Comics ....................... B5 Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B2 & B4 Dear Abby ................. B6 Horoscope ........B2 & B4 Letters ........................A4 Lottery Results ..........A2 News of Record ........A2 Obituaries ..................A2 A wolf pack in Union County north of Elgin has killed 12 ewe sheep and injured two guard dogs protecting sheep over the past week or so, according to the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW). The attacks are attributed to the Balloon Tree pack, according to ODFW investi- gations. That pack’s breeding pair produced pups for the fi rst time in 2020, with at least three surviving through the end of that year. Attack on sheep An employee of a sheep rancher found three dead adult ewes on Sept. 29 on a private, timbered pasture, according to ODFW. Offi cials from ODFW and from the federal USDA Wild- life Service agency arrived on Sept. 30 and found four more dead ewes. Wildlife Service employees then found three more dead ewes on Oct. 1, and one dead and one injured ewe on Oct. 1. Workers euthanized the injured ewe that day. See, Wolves/Page A3 Opinion ......................A4 Sports ........................A6 Weather ..................... B6 SATURDAY — BAKER RESIDENT RECALLS HER POLIO DIAGNOSIS, 75 YEARS LATER