THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2021 LOCAL & STATE MANDATE OTEC The Baker City Council has dis- cussed pursuing a legal challenge to the governor’s mandates. But during Continued from A1 their most recent meeting, on Sept. 28, councilors decided to have Cannon Most of the rest of the city’s share draft a resolution or ordinance oppos- of property taxes is used for street ing the mandates. A legal challenge is maintenance. “If people refused to pay their prop- still a possibility. The Baker County Board of Com- erty taxes, then obviously that’s our revenue stream for a lot of the things missioners on Sept. 22 declared a local emergency, which states that that we do,” Cannon said. “If there the mandate could leave some local were no property taxes coming into the city, then our budget would be se- agencies unable to respond to traffi c verely slashed and a lot of the services accidents and other emergencies. that people have come to expect out of the city would no longer happen.” Defying mandates Baker County mails property tax Cannon said that even if Baker bills once a year, during late October, City were to offi cially ignore the mandate, it has no ability to “protect so a reduction in payments wouldn’t have an immediate effect on the city’s anybody in the community,” meaning employees who are affected by the operations. mandate, such as health care work- Cannon also encouraged prop- ers, could not expect the city to help erty owners to consider the potential them if state offi cials seek to suspend ramifi cations on themselves before or cancel their license, if they are deciding not to pay taxes. “It’s not just an impact on the city, required to have one. “There’s nothing that we as a city it’s an impact on each person,” Cannon can do to step between that doctor or said. “I would say that before people that clinic, that nurse, that nursing just decide not to pay their property home, and the state,” Cannon said. taxes that I would discourage people If the state voided a license for one from doing that. I understand that they may say ‘Look, we want to take a of the city’s fi refi ghter/paramedics, stand on this’ and they feel like that’s Cannon said, the city could not have their way of taking a stand. But there that worker go out on emergency calls. are a lot of issues that that can open Defying the governor’s vaccine up for them personally for their prop- erties and their homes and whatever mandate could also jeopardize the it may be that they decide not to pay.” city’s liability insurance coverage through City-County Insurance Ser- For property owners who choose not to pay the full tax bill at once, the vices, Cannon said. “Our insurance could potentially fi rst one-third payment is due by Nov. drop us, it could jeopardize our li- 15, the second one-third by Feb. 15, censes with the state,” Cannon said. 2022, and the fi nal one-third by May “I think there’s a lot of liability for 15, 2022. the city if we just fl at out said ‘We For property owners who fail to don’t care, we’re not going to enforce make at least the fi rst one-third this vaccination mandate on our own payment by Nov. 15, interest begins employees.’ It opens up a host of chal- to accrue on the bill starting Nov. lenges.” 16. The interest rate is 1.33% per City-County Insurance Services month, and accrues on the 16th of had not returned a call from the each month as long as there is an Herald by press time on Wednesday, outstanding balance. The fl ier urges residents to not pay Oct. 6. The Baker County United website their property taxes for the “October/ acknowledges the potential effects of November 2021 period ... until our local governments defying the vaccine elected offi cials do their duty and mandate. make our community a priority!” “We do not do this lightly, and are The fl ier contends that the gover- aware of the collateral damage this nor’s requirement that health care action could have on those around workers, including fi refi ghters and us; our friends, family, neighbors and other emergency responders, be vac- cinated or have an approved medical potentially even ourselves, have a or religious exception by Oct. 18, could high likelihood of being impacted by this movement,” the website states. result in worker shortages. “Without our local fi rst responders “As it has become apparent that the we are a community at risk!” the fl ier local elected offi cials of Baker County will choose to not conduct themselves states. According to the fl ier, the group has as representatives of their constitu- sent letters to the Baker City Council, ents, it is incumbent upon us to make change happen for our community. Baker County commissioners and Sheriff Travis Ash requesting a “public When local offi cials begin to lose the funding that they require for the declaration of county wide mandate duties in which they were elected, it defi ance, implementation of a self will be up to them to recognize that governance measure, and a warning that property taxes will be withheld if we are a Government of the People further action is not taken by these lo- and for the People; or they will remain cal government bodies to stand for our headstrong and allow the County’s fi nances to fall to ruin.” freedoms against these mandates.” WOLVES Continued from A1 All the sheep were in the same pasture. Offi cials estimated the sheep were attacked the night of Sept. 28. ODFW employees examined seven sheep carcasses on Sept. 30, three on Oct. 1 and two on Oct. 4. All had pre-mortem wounds, with tissue trauma up to two inches deep and tooth scrapes consistent with wolf attacks on sheep, according to ODFW reports. Attack on guard dogs On the morning of Oct. 1, a sheep herder found two injured Kangal guard dogs on an industrial timber- land grazing allotment. The herder told ODFW employees that at about BAKER CITY HERALD — A3 Continued from A1 The topics are relevant for OTEC employees, because their jobs require that they often work in remote and rugged terrain, said Joseph Hathaway, OTEC’s communications manager. “It’s just good basic knowl- edge to have when you live in Eastern Oregon,” Hathaway said. “We have so many miles of lines in forested areas. This training is pretty integral to our safety mission.” Although the Occupational Safety and Health Administra- tion requires OTEC workers to have basic training in fi rst aid, the course that Tingelstad and Langrell put on through the Baker Technical Institute (BTI) is more thorough, said Maaike Schotborgh, OTEC’s safety and loss control manager. The scenarios that Tingels- tad and Langrell demonstrated — such as stabilizing fractures and safely transporting injured people — are applicable to the types of situations that OTEC workers could potentially have to deal with, Schotborgh said. “These guys are by them- selves or working in groups of two or three,” she said. “They rarely are out of cell service or radio coverage, but they are often an hour or more from emergency services.” Training center plans This week’s training is part of the partnership between OTEC and BTI that was announced in July. The organizations are work- ing to start a utility training center in Baker City that would offer a variety of courses for people who work for electrical companies or other utilities, Hathaway said. The goal, he said, is to have the center attract workers from utilities throughout the North- west. Although this week’s training was mainly for linemen, Hatha- way said eventually the skills will be made available to all OTEC employees. The two-day course featured a mixture of classroom instruction and hands-on training such as Tingelstad and Langrell’s dem- onstration of stabilizing a patient with a broken pelvis. They used the types of materials that OTEC workers carry routinely in their trucks. Tingelstad told the students that in the case of, say, a leg injury, the patient can be safely taken to a waiting ambulance. OTEC workers practiced tech- niques for carrying an injured person. But the situation is quite different, Tingelstad said, with a pelvic fracture. The reason, he said, is that a person with a broken pelvis might also have a spinal injury that makes it more dangerous, not less, to move the patient. In that situation, Tingelstad said, the proper procedure, once the fracture is immobilized, is to summon help, whether a crew to put the patient on a backboard to be carried out, or a helicopter if that’s possible. 2 a.m. on Oct. 1 he heard an appar- ent fi ght between his guard dog and an unknown predator, with barking and growling. Biologists examined both guard dogs. One had a six-inch-long area of matted blood on its throat and the left side of its neck that was drip- ping blood. The dog was agitated and could not be held for further examination, according to an ODFW report. The second dog had a bite punc- ture one-quarter inch in diameter on the inside of its right front leg near the elbow. The dog also had two other bite marks, and a two-inch-long tooth scrape on the inside of its upper right rear leg. The wounds are consistent with a predator attack, and similar to other cases when a wolf attacked a guard dog, according to ODFW. Fending off the chill Once Smart was extricated from his pelvic splint, the group returned to the Anthony Lakes lodge to learn about the dangers of getting too cold. Joseph Hathaway/Contributed Photo Dr. Kaare Tingelstad, top, demonstrates the proper way to wrap a severely hypothermic person for transport to a hospital. The “victim” in this case is Al Dockweiler, an Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative journeyman lineman. Langrell, who grew up in Baker City but also has lived in Alaska and is trained in wilderness survival, gave a PowerPoint presentation about hypothermia. She pointed out that al- though humans have a fairly effective means of cooling themselves — sweating — we are much less capable of keeping ourselves warm. When a person shivers, that’s the body’s main way, through stimulating muscle fi bers to con- tract rapidly, to generate heat. “Shivering is your metabolic engine revving up to redline,” Tingelstad said. A person who is shivering, uncoordinated and confused likely is suffering from mild hypothermia, Langrell said. The much more dangerous situation is severe hypothermia, when a person stops shivering and thus is no longer capable of warming himself without help. Langrell said it can actually hurt a severely hypothermic per- son by warming him too quickly. Rubbing the person’s hands, for instance, can cause chilled blood to rush from the extremi- ties to the heart, potentially causing a heart attack, she said. The key, Tingelstad said, is to recognize the early stages of hypothermia, since that’s when it’s still possible for a person, or a friend or co-worker, to reverse the process. Tailoring his lesson to his audience, Tingelstad said one of the simplest steps could be to simply “get out of the bucket,” meaning the elevated perches that lineman use to access power lines. He said he always carries gummy bear candies, a source of sugar that, using the analogy of starting a campfi re, is equiva- lent to the kindling. (Proteins and complex carbohydrates are akin to sticks that you feed into a small fi re, Langrell said, and fats are the logs that sustain the blaze.) One solution for oxygen at home, away, and for travel Jay & Kristin Wilson, Owners 2036 Main Street, Baker City 541-523-6284 • ccb#219615 Introducing the INOGEN ONE – It’s oxygen therapy on your terms No more tanks to refi ll. No more deliveries. No more hassles with travel. The INOGEN ONE portable oxygen concentrator is designed to provide unparalleled freedom for oxygen therapy users. 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He said that although he knew it was dangerous to be both damp and cold, he was so anxious to get the power restored that he never stopped to build a fi re. Tingelstad said the crucial period is when hypothermia is mild — when it’s still possible for a person to get warm on his own. “You can fi x this on the job site,” he said. But once hypothermia wors- ens to the point the person no longer is shivering, reversing the process is impossible in the fi eld, and trying to do so will imperil the patient even more. “You can keep them from get- ting colder, but you can’t save a severely hypothermic patient in the fi eld,” Tingelstad said. The lifesaving procedure must happen in a hospital, he said, de- scribing the process — inserting a needle in one femoral artery to draw out the chilled blood, warm- ing it in a machine, and then replacing it via another needle in the other femoral artery. 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