SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2021 BAKER CITY HERALD — A3 LOCAL & STATE North Powder is getting a new playground New At The Library By ALEX WITTWER The Observer NORTH POWDER — Mike Morse, the in- terim mayor of North Powder, looked out at the nearly two dozen volunteers from across the state congregated just behind the old firehouse in North Powder. They were putting in the final structures of what will be the new playground in the small town on the edge of Union County. “It’s about damn time,” he said. The new playground replaces older di- lapidated structures at the park, which sits at Fourth and D streets in North Powder. Many of those structures — a roundabout, swings, teeter totters and a climbing structure for kids — were worn down, with decaying wood and deteriorating metal. “It was falling apart,” Morse said. Funding for the project came from a sizable donation — $10,000 — from the Masonic Lodge. The project broke ground on Aug. 25, and officials expect it to be finished before the end of October. George Marston, the de facto project man- ager for the new playground, said the donation helped jumpstart the project but it wasn’t nearly enough to cover all of the replacement structures. The rest of the funds — totaling nearly $57,000 — were gathered through grants and donations. “The Masons had donated $10,000 for a POLIO Continued from A1 “The last time I saw her, she walked into a clinic with crutches and braces up to her hips,” Schott said. She left the hospital on her fourth birthday — Feb. 28, 1947. “They saved my life,” she said. “I wasn’t supposed to live. They told my parents I would die.” But though polio spared Schott’s life, the virus never truly left her. She used crutches until she was 13, and wore a brace on her right leg for many years. “They were terrible. Solid metal,” she said. The hospital stay was followed by physical therapy and hydrotherapy during the week, as well as four surger- ies — three on her right leg, one on her left. Schott became an ambas- sador for the hospital, and participated in fashion shows COUNTY Continued from A1 He described the federal money as a “once in a lifetime community improvement opportunity,” and a chance to maximize the county’s ability to maintain and enhance the livability of the county and its cities, ensure that the county remains and moves forward in a stable financial posi- tion and focus on long term benefits to the county and its residents. Some of the areas commis- sioners discussed Wednesday: Infrastructure Bennett discussed the pos- sibility of expanding broad- band internet and cellphone coverage countywide. “That’s probably our number one project that we’re looking at,” he said. Bennett said county of- ficials learned last year, when students were taking virtual classes from home due to the pandemic, that there were “large areas where kids just absolutely had no access to Alex Wittwer/The (La Grande) Observer Jordan Stout, a volunteer from Elkhorn Valley Wind Farm, assembles a teeter totter at the North Powder playground on Thursday, Sept. 30, 2021. piece of playground equipment in the park,” Marston said. “The city really hadn’t done much with the $10,000 for a year, and a deci- sion was going to be made to do something with it or return it. I was asked by one of the Mason members here in town to help the city come up with more funds.” The bulk of the cost would come from labor — from surveying to installation. Volunteers from Elkhorn Valley Wind Farm, as well as playground equipment installation profes- sionals from the Oregon Recreation & Park Association and workers with the La Grande Parks & Recreation Department helped allevi- ate that cost, leaving the funds for purchasing expensive playground equipment. “A lot of hands came together to help us today,” Marston said. to help raise money for a new building. She also became a poster child for the March of Dimes. Schott still has the posters and flyers, as well as the blue dress she wore. The March of Dimes was founded by President Frank- lin D. Roosevelt in 1938 as a nationwide effort to eradicate polio. Much of the money raised helped fund research to develop a vaccine. Some of that funding went to Dr. Jonas Salk, who devel- oped a vaccine made from dead polio cells. Schott received that vac- cine. Although she’d already contracted polio, doctors told her parents that she could still catch the other strains. The vaccine would protect against all three. Growing up, the crutches and braces limited her physical activity, so jacks and marbles helped pass the time. And reading — a love that she credits to her second grade teacher, Ms. Holmes. During that year, every day the internet whatsoever.” “It’s starting to be more prevalent in other coun- ties,” Martin said. “I know that there’s been a lot of the smaller counties that are also working on this project and there’s just a lot of funding for these types of projects. It seems to be more of a priority not only at the federal level but also at the state level for these types of projects.” Roadmaster Nolan Per- kins discussed the possibility of paving some gravel roads, such as Brown Road and low- er Hunt Mountain Road, both in Baker Valley. The number of homes along those roads has doubled in that area over the past several years. County officials will also look into possible bridge construction, improvements at county parks, the Mason Dam hydroelectric project, which dates back more than a decade but has not been constructed, and other clean energy projects. Other possible uses for federal money include a veterans resource center, remodeling at the Health De- • 10 points, timeline for delivery • 10 points, budget Continued from A1 • 10 points, performance The Request for Proposals measures and reporting requirements that the county sent out in • 5 points, references early September included a • 5 points, conclusion scoring system for a variety of Tyler Brown, chairman of criteria: the lodging tax committee, • 5 points, cover letter said the final tally, by consen- • 25 points, introductory statement and proposed plan sus of the committee, was 98 points for the proposal from of execution the Anthony Lakes Outdoor • 15 points, staff Recreation Association, and • 15 points, location PROPOSAL Patrons can reserve materials in advance online or by calling 541- 523-6419. See every- thing new this week to Baker County Library District at wowbrary. org. Materials featured, and in library collec- tion, does not indicate endorsement or ap- proval of contents by the library. Selections are based on factors such as demand, public interest, diversity of viewpoint, community relevance, and others. Laden: The Untold Story of the 247-Day Hunt to Bring the Mastermind of 9/11 to Justice,” Chris Wallace • “Peril,” Bob Wood- ward and Robert Costa • “Poet Warrior: A Memoir,” Joy Harjo • “Preparing for the Inevitable: How We Get Back to Normal and How We Survive the Next Epidemic,” Scott Gottlieb • “Vanderbilt: The Rise and Fall of an American Dynasty,” Anderson Coo- per and Katherine Howe FICTION • “Apples Never Fall,” Liane Moriarty • “Enemy at the Gates,” Vince Flynn and Kyle Mills • “Harlem Shuffle,” Colson Whitehead • “The Sweetness of Wate,” Nathan Harris • “The Wish,” Nicholas Sparks MOVIES • “Dear Zindagi” (Musical) • “Garry Winogrand: All Things are Photog- raphable” (Documen- tary) • “Man With The Screaming Brain” (Hor- ror) • “Mare of Easttown: The Complete Limited Series” (Drama) • “You Might As Well Live” (Comedy) NONFICTION • “Countdown bin Schott could choose a friend to eat lunch with in the class- room. As they ate, Ms. Holmes read “The Little House on the Prairie” series of books. “She instilled a love of reading,” Schott said. There were some times when her special abilities were sought for a playground game. “They’d get me sometimes for kickball. If I had a cast, it was solid,” she said, chuckling at the memory. “I could kick it out of the field, and someone would run for me.” An invisible virus changed her life three quarters of a century ago, but Schott said it also created the person she is today. “I think who I am, my passions, and my concerns for those who are hurting, stem from this,” she said. But she’ll never forget that virus. “I’m never free of it,” she said. “I thought with time I would be, but polio still has a hold of me. I have no memory of not having polio.” analysis that was completed last year gave us really good data on where our gaps are, where specifically we are missing housing types by income as far as apartments, single family, duplexes, that type of thing,” Kerns said. “We have really good data on where the needs are and where the demands are pro- jected to be over the next ten years. So the key is trying to begin unlocking some of the challenges that are creating barriers to that housing need development.” 96 points for the Chamber of Commerce’s proposal. Brown said both groups “knocked the proposal out of the park.” Both were “incredibly well done,” he said. “It was very close.” Brown said one of the lengthier discussions among committee members was about the proposed location of the visitor center. The Chamber of Com- merce proposes to continue Continued from A1 Breakthrough cases accounted for 10% of total cases in Baker County during August, compared with about 18.6% statewide. That trend continued through the first half of Sep- tember. For the week Sept. 12-18, for instance, Baker County’s breakthrough case percentage was 10.8% — 15 of 139 cases that week. Statewide, breakthrough cases accounted for 23.6% of total cases that week — 2,821 of 11,968 cases. But for the next week, Sept. 19-25, Baker County’s breakthrough cases were 20.9% of the total — 18 of 86. That’s only slightly below the statewide figure of 21.6% for that week. During the most recent week for which statistics are available, Sept. 26-Oct. 2, Baker County had 16 break- through cases out of a total of 69 cases — a rate of 23.2%, the highest weekly rate the county has recorded. Oregon’s overall break- through case percentage also rose that week, to 24.4% — 2,542 of 10,411 cases. Staten said Dr. Eric Lamb, the county’s public health offi- cer, said it’s to be expected that the number of breakthrough cases will rise as more county residents are vaccinated — breakthrough cases, by definition, can only be in fully vaccinated people. But although the goal is to reduce cases overall, both in vaccinated and unvaccinated people, Staten said statistics showing that the vast majority of people who have break- through infections have minor symptoms or none at all, is encouraging. According to the most re- cent breakthrough report from the OHA released Thursday, Oct. 7, of the state’s break- through cases, 4.5% have been hospitalized — a total of 1,263 people — and 0.8%, a total of 237 people, have died. Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Gloria Schott, after spending months in the hospital with polio as a toddler, was later was a poster child for a hospital fundraiser and the March of Dimes, a nationwide effort to eradicate polio. She still has the blue dress she wore for promotional photographs. These included: • Administrative services: $150,000. This could include money for new accounting software and training, and computers. • Fire department: $325,000. Possible uses in- clude new equipment, includ- ing self-contained breathing apparatus, and overtime. Sheriff’s Office • Police department: Sheriff Travis Ash dis- $200,000. This could include cussed hiring a community hiring a new officer and buy- resource deputy to focus on community livability issues, ing a new patrol car. homelessness, and at risk • Water fund: $150,000 youth. to continue the long-term “We have a liaison person project to replace the pipeline that would be tied in to that brings water to town Baker City folks that are experiencing from the city’s watershed in Cities will also receive a houselessness, and we would share of American Rescue the Elkhorn Mountains. work with our community In other business Wednes- Plan Act money — $2 million partners not just to identify for Baker City in two install- day, county commissioners the problems, see if we could ments, one this year and one adopted an updated mask come up with some solu- policy that follows state regu- next. City Councilors met for a lations. The county’s initial tions,” Ash said. work session on Sept. 23 to mask policy was approved discuss possible uses for the Sept. 2, 2020. Housing federal money. Like county Commission Chairman Holly Kerns, director of Bill Harvey said he opposes the Baker City/County Plan- commissioners, councilors ning Department, discussed didn’t take any action on ap- the section in the policy that the recently completed hous- proving dollar amounts, but requires county employees to wear a face mask outdoors ing needs analysis in partner- City Manager Jon Cannon when six feet of social dis- ship with cities in the county. presented a list of possible expenditures. “The housing needs tancing can’t be maintained. partment building on Fourth Street, and staffing support for the temporary Oregon Trail experience at the Baker Heritage Museum while the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center is closed for more than two years for energy- efficiency upgrades. COVID operating at its current loca- tion. Anthony Lakes, mean- while, would have a visitor center at 1828 Main St. in downtown Baker City. Other committee mem- bers are Toni Thompson, Tori Thatcher, Buell Gonzales Jr., Mandy Clark, Brian Vegter and Shane Alderson. Alderson was absent from the meeting. Gonzales said he was im- pressed with both proposals. “Both of them were well-done,” he said on Friday afternoon, Oct. 8. Gonzales said he also believes that whichever proposal the commissioners choose, the county is in a good position in the future now that it has a specific list of performance expectations for the contractor. “I was really happy walking out of that meeting yesterday,” he said. Vegter had a similar as- sessment. Age breakdown Residents younger than 50 continue to account for a ma- jority of Baker County’s cases. During September, 65.5% of cases were in residents younger than 50, compared with 61.4% from Aug. 16-31. The age groups with the largest share of cases during September were 10-19 years, with 19.4%, and people in their 30s, with 17.1%. Those two age groups have lower vaccination rates than other groups of county residents. The vaccination rate among residents ages 12-19 (those younger than 11 are not yet eligible to be inoculated) is 28.4%. The statewide rate for that age group is 61.5%. The 30-39 age group has the second-lowest vaccination rate in the county, at 35.3%. The statewide vaccination rate for that age range is 73.6%. Residents 70 and older, who have much higher vac- cination rates, accounted for 12.5% of the county’s cases during September, and about 11.5% during August. The vaccination rate for Baker County residents ages 70 to 79 is 68.5%, compared to a statewide average of 88.2% for that age group. For residents 80 and older, the vaccination rate in Baker County is 70.5%, compared with a statewide rate of 80.7%. “Both proposals were re- ally good, both were extreme- ly competitive and detailed,” he said. Vegter said he thinks it was vital for the county to compile a list of benchmarks it expects the visitor center operator to address, and the RFP, with its list of criteria, provides that. “We’re telling them this is what we expect, and now we have a way to measure how well they’re doing,” he said.