SATURDAY COMPELLING DOCUMENTARY EXPLORES OLYMPIANS’ MENTAL HEALTH: A7 October 16, 2021 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com Local • Outdoors • Sports • TV IN THIS EDITION: $1.50 Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Dick Micka of Baker City. By SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com BRIEFING Woodland owners planning fi eld tour WEATHER Today 66 / 36 Sunny Sunday 66 / 40 Sunny Monday 54 / 30 Partly sunny Full forecast on the back of the B section. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Baker ties La Grande County to award visitor center contract to Chamber QUICK HITS The newly revitalized Northeast Oregon chapter of the Oregon Small Woodlands Association is planning a free fi eld tour at the Defrees Ranch in Sumpter Valley on Oct. 30. Although admission and lunch are free, participants are required to register online at https://beav.es/ UYC. The link also includes directions to the Defrees ranch and other details. The tour will run from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Members of the Defrees family will talk about their ranch, which includes expanses of second-growth pon- derosa pine forests. Other speakers will include Jana Peterson of the Oregon Department of Forestry, Misty Beals from the U.S. Natural Resources Conservation Service, and an employee from the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. The tour will be out- doors, rain or shine, and includes moderate walk- ing, of about a tenth of a mile, over uneven terrain. In SPORTS, A8 Old building’s new life Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald From left, Bob Moon, Shannon Moon and Kyra Rohner look over historic photos and information that local historian Gary Dielman assembled for the Baker Loan and Trust Building at the corner of Main and Broadway streets. The Moons and Rohner, who is Shannon’s daughter and Bob’s stepdaughter, bought the 110-year-old building in 2018. Renovation of 110-year-old downtown structure in Baker City a family affair The trio — Kyra is also an attorney, in practice with her stepfather — initially intended to start with the convinced that the fi rst By JAYSON JACOBY second fl oor of the building. stage of renovation for the jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Once they saw the ceiling, historic Baker City building The structure, with an exte- rior that features Pleasant they had bought must be they were sure. Valley tuffstone as well as the fi rst fl oor. The real ceiling, that is. granite, was assembled, in “When we discovered Not the nondescript less than a year, to replace a how beautiful the ceilings dropped ceiling of acoustic structure destroyed in a Jan. were, we couldn’t do any- tiles and fl uorescent lights, thing but restore this space,” 26, 1910, fi re that devastated the sort of anonymous and Bob Moon, a Baker City at- half a block on the west arguably ugly feature you torney, said while sitting in side of Main Street between would expect to see, but his offi ce in the Baker Loan Broadway Street and Wash- scarcely notice, in any of ington Avenue. thousands of offi ce buildings. and Trust building at the (A story in the Jan. 27, Once that banal addition southwest corner of Main 1910, issue of The Evening had been pulled down, and and Broadway streets. Telegraph, a Portland news- “To me it’s just a work the 110-year-old, decora- paper, described the fi re, of art.” tive pressed tin ceiling 16 That revelation changed which started in the base- feet above the fl oor was revealed, Bob and Shannon the renovation schedule the ment of the Weil Mercantile Company’s store, as the Moon and Kyra Rohner — new owners had planned after buying the building in “most destructive fi re Baker Shannon’s daughter and City has ever known,” with Bob’s stepdaughter — were September 2018. losses exceeding $300,000, of which only a bit more than one-third was insured. The loss equates to about $8.3 million today, adjusted for infl ation.) But once they had seen that tin ceiling, they decided to start with the fi rst fl oor. Bob said the offi ce space was “a complete disaster” when they acquired the building. But the challenge of renovating the structure wasn’t nearly as daunting as it would have been if not for fortunate familial con- nections. Shannon’s son and Kyra’s brother, Josh Rohner, is proj- ect manager for Sid Johnson & Co. in Baker City. See, Renovate/Page A3 Veterinary student honored  Alexandra Colton of North Powder is one of 18 students to win $5,000 scholarship a love for animals, from working with calves on our ranch during calving season,” said Colton, a 2014 graduate of Powder Valley High School. Colton, 25, earned a bachelor’s de- gree in animal sciences at Oregon State By JAYSON JACOBY University. She’s in her fourth and fi nal jjacoby@bakercityherald.com year at OSU’s veterinary school, on Even before she was tall enough pace to graduate in June 2022. to look a heifer in the eye, Alexandra That pace is decidedly hectic. Colton knew what she wanted to do “I am typically at the hospital when she grew up. anywhere from 10 to 12 hours a day A couple decades later, Colton is close to achieving her goal of becoming during the week,” Colton said. But Colton recently received a a veterinarian. fi nancial boost, and national recogni- More specifi cally, a veterinarian who specializes in keeping beef cattle tion, when she was picked as one of 18 veterinary students to receive a $5,000 and dairy cows healthy. scholarship from Merck Animal Health. Colton, who grew up on her fam- The company awards the scholar- ily’s FC Colton Ranch near Wolf ships to students who are interested Creek, northwest of North Powder, said she just fi ve when she decided on in beef or dairy veterinary medicine. Recipients were honored during what would be her ideal career. the American Association of Bovine “As long as I can remember I had TODAY Issue 68, 14 pages Calendar ....................A2 Classified ............. B2-B4 Comics ....................... B5 Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B2 & B4 Dear Abby ................. B6 Alexandra Colton/Contributed Photo Alexandra Colton, a Powder Valley High School graduate, is in her fi nal year of veterinary school at Oregon State University. Practitioners (AABP) annual confer- ence Oct. 7-9 in Salt Lake City. Horoscopes ......B3 & B4 Jayson Jacoby ..........A4 News of Record ........A2 The Baker County Commis- sioners voted unanimously on Thursday, Oct. 14 to give notice that they intend to award a new contract to the Baker County Chamber of Commerce to operate a visitor center in Baker City. The Chamber, operating under the Baker County Unlimited corporation, had the previous contract as well. It operates a visitor center at 490 Campbell St., near Interstate 84. Commissioners had been scheduled to meet Thursday morning to consider two competing proposals, from the Chamber of Commerce and Anthony Lakes Outdoor Recre- ation Association. But early Wednesday afternoon, Peter Johnson, An- thony Lakes general manager, emailed a letter to commis- sioners announcing that the organization was withdrawing its proposal. Johnson’s letter reads, in part: “We have been persistent in seeing this process through with the goal of enhancing Bak- er County Visitor Services to better serve our small commu- nities. Unfortunately, actions and statements over the past few months and specifi cally this past week by Baker County and its affi liates has moved us to withdraw our proposal for Visitor Services. It has become evident that any contractual or other agreement or relationship with Baker County can only be considered a liability to ALORA and its enterprises.” In a phone interview with the Herald on Wednesday afternoon, Johnson declined to elaborate on the references in the letter to “actions and statements.” See, County/Page A3 Council adds to COVID emergency resolution By SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com The Baker City Council on Tuesday, Oct. 12 approved a resolution that expands the scope of the resolution coun- cilors adopted in March 2020 proclaiming a local “public health, mental health and economic emergency” in the city due to the pandemic. The revised resolution adds another type of emergency — “access to health care provider.” That addition is related to Oregon Gov. Kate Brown’s mandate that health care workers including emergency responders, school employees and volunteers, and many state workers be vaccinated or have an approved medical or religious exception if they’re to continue working. The deadline for some workers, including health care and school workers, is Oct. 18. See, Award/Page A3 Obituaries ..................A2 Opinion ......................A4 Outdoors ..........B1 & B2 TUESDAY — MAKING THE CREEPY SUMPTER DREDGE EVEN SPOOKIER See, COVID/Page A3 Sports .............. A7 & A8 Turning Backs ...........A2 Weather ..................... B6