SATURDAY MEAT OF THE UPLAND BIRD HUNTING SEASON BEGINS TODAY: PAGE B1 In SPORTS, A5 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com October 9, 2021 Local • Outdoors • Sports • TV IN THIS EDITION: $1.50 Locals win two Main St. awards QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Ross Fritz of North Powder. 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. Living with polio Baker City Herald  Gloria Schott was diagnosed with the disease 75 years ago today By LISA BRITTON lbritton@bakercityherald.com A virus changed Gloria Schott’s life. Not the virus that has so dramatically affected society today, but one of many years ago — a virus that mostly affected children and is now nearly eradicated from the world. Schott was diagnosed with polio when she was 3 ½ years old. “On Oct. 9, it’ll be 75 years. I lived instead of died,” she said. Schott was living with her family in Weiser, Idaho. She’s heard stories of how her illness began. “I’ve been told it was my uncle’s birthday and I wouldn’t eat ice cream. Shortly thereafter I started to fall,” she said. Her parents took her to the local doctor. “He immediately diag- nosed me,” she said. And immediately isolated her. Schott was admitted to St. Luke’s Hospital in Boise on Oct. 9, 1946. Her parents were not allowed to see her. She said her mom got a job at the Table Rock Cafe in Boise, and would come to the hospi- tal after work to peer at her daughter through a crack in the door. Schott remembers want- ing her mother. She would call out: “Mother, mama, Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Gloria Schott on her front porch in Baker City on Oct. 5, 2021. Schott was diagnosed with polio 75 years ago, on Oct. 9, 1946. where are you? I need you!” “And she was standing right there,” she said. Schott had contracted the type of polio that caused pa- ralysis. When she regained some movement, the hospi- tal staff would put her on the fl oor and let her explore. “I did the army crawl,” she said. She distinctly remem- bers crawling down the hall and into a room fi lled with patients in iron lungs — a tube-like machine that provided breathing support for polio patients suffering paralysis of the diaphragm. “The whole fl oor was polio,” she said. Schott had heard the voice of a patient through her wall — the voice was deep and raspy, and she re- ferred to it as “my boyfriend.” But when she crawled in there, and lay beneath the iron lung to see the patient’s face, she discovered that her “boyfriend” was in fact a teenage girl. See, Polio/Page A3 COUNTY TO AWARD CONTRACT FOR OPERATING VISITOR CENTER IN BAKER CITY WEATHER Today 60 / 33 Sunny Sunday 57 / 31 Rain showers Monday 47 / 25 Rain showers Full forecast on the back of the B section. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Committ ee gives A. Lakes proposal slight edge By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Baker County’s Transient Lodging Tax Committee met Thursday morning, Oct. 7, to review the two proposals for operating a visitor center in Baker City, and the com- mittee, which advises the Baker County Board of Com- missioners, gave a narrow edge to the proposal from Anthony Lakes Outdoor Recreation Association. The other proposal is from the Baker County Chamber of Commerce (under the Baker County Unlimited umbrella), which had the previous visitor center contract. The Board of Com- missioners, who have the fi nal say on awarding the contract, will meet Thursday, Oct. 14 to discuss the com- mittee’s recommendation. Two of the three commis- sioners, Bruce Nichols and Commission Chairman Bill Harvey, attended the com- mittee’s meeting Thursday. The new contract will continue through Jan. 1, 2024. The previous visitor services contract, for about $77,000 per year, expired Aug. 31. The Chamber of Com- merce has continued to operate its visitors center at 490 Campbell St., near the freeeway, since. Money for the contract comes from the tax that guests at motels, bed and breakfasts and other lodging establishments pay. County commissioners initially were slated to award a new contract in early 2020. The same two groups — the Chamber and Anthony Lakes — were the only ap- plicants then as now. The lodging tax commit- tee, as well as the county’s Economic Development Committee, both recom- mended commissioners award the contract to An- thony Lakes. But commissioners decided to postpone a deci- sion, and the contract with the Chamber to operate the visitor center was extended several times over the next 20 months or so. October, the county reported 51 new cases, an average of 7.3 per day. The rate of new COV- September’s total was 465 ID-19 cases in Baker County during the fi rst week of Octo- cases, a daily average of 15.5. The previous records were ber was down by about half both set in August, with 300 compared with the record- total cases and an average of setting pace in September. The percentage of break- almost 10 per day. After two consecutive re- through cases — infections cord-setting weeks, with 128 in people who are fully cases from Sept. 5-11 and 139 vaccinated — has more cases from Sept. 12-18, the than doubled since mid- county’s weekly total dropped September. But Nancy Staten, direc- in two straight weeks, to 86 from Sept. 19-25, and to 69 tor of the Baker County Health Department, pointed from Sept. 26-Oct. 2. With two days left, the out that vaccinated people current week, Oct. 3-9, was who do test positive are on pace to make it three much less likely to have se- vere symptoms or to require consecutive weekly declines in total cases. hospital treatment. “It looks better than it did “Vaccine is still our best a few weeks ago,” Staten said. tool,” Staten said on Friday During September, 23 of morning, Oct. 8. For the fi rst seven days of the 30 days had at least 10 TODAY Issue 65, 12 pages Calendar ....................A2 Classified ............. B2-B4 Comics ....................... B5 cases, including eight days with more than 21 cases. Two of the fi rst seven days of October had double-digit cases — 10 on Oct. 4, and 18 on Oct. 6. From the start of the pandemic through Thursday, Oct. 7, Baker County has reported 1,940 cases. That’s about 11.5% of the county’s population. County’s 26th and 27th COVID-related deaths The Oregon Health Authority (OHA) reported on Friday afternoon, Oct. 8, that two Baker County residents had died in the past week after testing positive for COVID-19. A 70-year-old Baker County woman died on Oct. 5, after testing positive on Sept. 23. Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B2 & B4 Dear Abby ................. B6 A local organization’s cre- ative way to replace an annual holiday event thwarted by COVID-19 has won statewide recognition. CASA of Eastern Oregon’s Gingerbread Tour in Baker City was named the outstand- ing promotion during the Or- egon Main Street Excellence on Main awards, announced on Thursday, Oct. 7. And it wasn’t the only local winner. Tom Novak, a Baker City artist, was also awarded as a volunteer for his work with Baker City Downtown, the promotional group he has helped since 2017, including serving, with perfect atten- dance, on its design commit- tee. Baker City Downtown nominated both Novak and CASA of Eastern Oregon for their respective awards. Gingerbread tour CASA of Eastern Oregon, a nonprofi t that helps represent the interests of children who are in state care, usually spon- sors a holiday tour of some of Baker City’s historic homes. But the pandemic prompt- ed CASA to cancel the event in 2020. As an alternative, CASA invited residents to create gingerbread structures. See, Awards/Page A2 County discusses use of federal aid By SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com Breakthrough cases Baker County’s rate of infections in fully vaccinated people had been much lower than the statewide average during most of the surge in cases, driven by the more contagious delta variant, that started in late July. Baker County Commis- sioners on Wednesday, Oct. 6 approved a general concept for how the county will spend the $3.13 million it will re- ceive over the next two years from the American Rescue Plan Act. President Joe Biden signed the COVID-19 aid bill into law in March 2021. Commissioners didn’t dis- cuss specifi c dollar amounts for any of the projects; those budgeting decisions will be made later. They heard from several county department heads about potential uses for some of the federal money. Commissioner Mark Bennett said he, along with Christena Cook, the county’s administrative service direc- tor, and Heidi Martin, the human resource director, have worked with department heads to put together a list of possible projects. “We believe that the most appropriate thing is to use these funds for long term benefi ts and enhancement of livability of the county and it’s our role as commissioners to also put forward a vision and to use these funds,” Ben- nett said. See, COVID/Page A3 See, County/Page A3 See, Proposal/Page A3 COVID cases continue to drop By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Baker holds off Tigers The presence of underly- ing medical conditions hadn’t been confi rmed. A 71-year-old man from Baker County died Oct. 4 at Providence St. Mary Medical Center in Walla Walla, Wash- ington. He tested positive on Sept. 21, and had underlying conditions. The deaths were the 26th and 27th during the pan- demic in Baker County, and the fi rst two in October. Horoscope ........B2 & B4 Jayson Jacoby ..........A4 News of Record ........A2 Opinion ......................A4 Outdoors ..........B1 & B2 Senior Menus ...........A2 Sports ........................A5 Turning Backs ...........A2 Weather ..................... B6 TUESDAY — LOCAL COWBOY PREPARING FOR NATIONAL FINALS RODEO