TUESDAY BAKER FOOTBALL HAS FOUR INTERCEPTIONS IN WIN OVER ONTARIO: A6 In SPORTS, A5 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com October 19, 2021 Local • Home & Living • Sports IN THIS EDITION: QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Bill Quigley of Baker City. BRIEFING Tickets on sale for Baker City Police K9 fundraiser Tickets went on sale Monday, Oct. 18 for the Baker City Police Depart- ment’s K9 Drug Prevention Fundraiser raffl e. Tickets support the department’s K9 program and drug prevention efforts. The grand prize is a 2021 Can-Am Maverick XDS RR turbo side-by-side. Second prize is a .300 Winchester Magnum hunting rifl e, donated by Patton Excava- tion, with a Vortex Viper scope donated by D&B Supply. Third prize is a Trae- ger Pro 780 barbecue do- nated by Lew Brothers Les Schwab Tires. A maximum of 500 tickets will be sold. They’re available at the Baker City Police Depart- ment, 1768 Auburn Ave., Cliff’s Saws and Cycles, and Carole’s Mad Dog restaurant and saloon in Sumpter. Tickets are $100 each, and buyers must be 18 or older. The raffl e draw- ing will take place Feb. 12, 2022. Winners need not be present to win, and they will be notifi ed by phone and email. $1.50 Ducks rally to nip Cal Vaccine mandate could limit ambulances in east county The mandate, which Gov. Kate Brown announced in August, requires health care workers, including ambu- lance employees, to be vacci- nated or to have an approved medical or religious excep- tion if they are to continue treating patients. In an Oct. 12 letter to the Baker County Board of Com- missioners, Nora Aspy, chair of the Halfway/Oxbow Am- bulance Service, and team By JAYSON JACOBY and SAMANTHA O’CONNER Baker City Herald The district that provides ambulance service to the northeast corner of Baker County, including the Half- way and Oxbow areas, has notifi ed county offi cials that it can’t meet its minimum response time due to Or- egon’s COVID-19 vaccination mandate, which took effect Monday, Oct. 18. leader Dana Simrell wrote that due to the mandate, “our service is unable to meet the minimum response time of 45 minutes, 90% of the time.” The letter does not say how many employees are affected by the mandate be- cause they’re not vaccinated or don’t have an exception. Jason Yencopal, the county’s emergency manager, said ambulance services, which are overseen by the county, are required to notify the county if they anticipate a change in their service level. The minimum response time is one such criteria, Yencopal said. The nearest ambulance service to Halfway/Oxbow is operated by Eagle Valley, in the Richland area about 12 miles by Highway 86 from Halfway. The Oct. 12 letter notes Volunteers transform the hulking structure into a giant haunted house tic spiders and generally turned the Sumpter Dredge into a giant SUMPTER — Marsha Demaris haunted house on Tuesday, Oct. 12. This project, organized by Lara- strides in, her grin a stark contrast mie Shanks, owner of the Sumpter to the meat cleaver embedded in Stockade, is for the Haunted Dredge her skull. “I just found this!” she says, still experience scheduled for Friday, beaming as she removes the head- Oct. 29, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. The dredge, which mined gold band — it’s just a Halloween prop, after all — and places it on the head from the Sumpter Valley from 1935 to 1954, is the centerpiece of the of skeletal mannequin. Sumpter Valley Dredge State Heri- A group of about 10 volunteers tage Area, managed by the Oregon stretched cobwebs, placed plas- By LISA BRITTON lbritton@bakercityherald.com Parks and Recreation Department in Sumpter, about 27 miles west of Baker City. Shanks rushed around, adjust- ing a web here, hanging a ghost there. “Is there still a creepy mask left?” she hollers to the other workers. This is the second year they’ve decorated the dredge for Halloween. They skipped 2020. See, Dredge/Page A3 Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald The Sumpter Dredge, which mined the Sumpter Valley for gold from 1935 to 1954, has been transformed inside into a giant haunted house for a free event Friday, Oct. 29. BHS senior class planning party See, Mandate/Page A3 Bi-Mart pharmacy won’t reopen DREADING THE DREDGE that the Halfway/Oxbow am- bulance service checked with Eagle Valley, and that the latter, “due to the mandates ... will not able to provide consistent mutual aid.” The letter concludes with a request for an “ambulance and crew to help keep the response rate low for those located in our assigned ser- vice area.” The Baker High School senior class is raising money for its drug- and alcohol-free party. Find more information at bhs- seniorclass.com. WEATHER Today 63 / 44 By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com The pharmacy at the Bi-Mart store in Baker City is scheduled to close Nov. 9, and it will not be reopened under the Walgreens name. Helen Loennig, pharma- cist and pharmacy manager at the store, wrote to the Bak- er City Herald that when she interviewed with Walgreens, “they made it clear the closest Walgreens would be Ontario.” Bi-Mart announced on Sept. 30 that Walgreens was buying Bi-Mart’s pharmacy inventories and patient prescription fi les at 56 stores in Oregon, Idaho and Washington. Walgreens offi cials said the company would oper- ate pharmacies, under the Walgreens name, inside some Bi-Mart stores. Loennig said the Baker City store is not among those. The closure is limited to the pharmacy; the Baker City Bi-Mart store will remain open. A sign posted at the phar- macy in the Baker City store states that Nov. 9 is the last day of business for the phar- macy, and that the store will help patients transfer their prescriptions to Safeway, Rite Aid or Albertsons. Sunny Wednesday ODFW probes possible wolf attack on calf 58 / 36 Rain showers The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. COVID cases down 74% in past month By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com The number of COVID-19 cases in Baker County has dropped for the fourth straight week, down nearly 74% from the weekly record high in mid-September. The county reported 37 new cases from Oct. 10-16, the lowest weekly total since July 18-24, when there were six cases. Weekly case totals for the past month or so: • Sept. 12-18 — 139 (the county’s highest weekly total during the pandemic) • Sept. 19-25 — 86 • Sept. 26-Oct. 2 — 69 • Oct. 3-9 — 48 The number of COVID-19 tests done in the county has also declined over the past month, although not as rapidly as the number of infections. TODAY Issue 69, 12 pages Weekly test totals: • Sept. 12-18 — 580; test positivity rate of 23.8% • Sept. 19-25 — 383; test positivity rate of 22.2% • Sept. 26-Oct. 2 — 370; test positivity rate of 19.2% • Oct. 3-9 — 329; test positivity rate of 18.2% • Oct. 10-16 — 224 (preliminary fi gure); test positivity rate of 10.7% With three new cases reported on Sunday, Oct. 17, the fi rst day of the new re- porting week, October’s total was at 95 cases, an average of 5.6 per day. September set records with 465 cases and a daily average of 15.5. August ranks second in both categories, with 300 cases and a daily average of 10. “We’re clearly pleased to see our case counts decline Calendar ....................A2 Classified ............. B2-B4 Comics ....................... B5 four weeks in a row, and the total cases for this week are less than half of what they were in the week ending September 25,” said Nancy Staten, director of the Baker County Health Department. “The Health Department is grateful to everyone in the community who is taking precautions to keep them- selves and others healthy. The virus is still very much at large in our community, so everyone needs to keep their guard up — we’d re- ally like to not see another spike before or during the holidays.” cent weekly report from the Oregon Health Authority (OHA), 12 of Baker County’s 48 cases from Oct. 3-9 were breakthrough cases, a rate of 25%. That’s an increase from the 23.2% breakthrough rate from Sept. 2-Oct. 2 (16 of 69 cases), 20.9% from Sept. 19-25 (18 of 86) and 10.8% from Sept. 12-18 (15 of 139). Vaccination rate Baker County’s vaccina- tion rate is the sixth-lowest among Oregon’s 36 counties, with 52.4% of residents 18 and older vaccinated. The statewide average is Breakthrough cases These infections in fully 76.3%. Baker County’s seven- vaccinated people are ac- day running average of vac- counting for an increasing cine doses administered per percentage of the county’s day has dropped from 29 on total. According to the most re- Sept. 29 to 13 as of Oct. 14. Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B2 & B4 Dear Abby ................. B6 Home ................B1 & B2 Horoscopes ......B3 & B4 Letters ........................A4 By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Biologists from the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife are investigat- ing what could be the fi rst wolf attack on cattle in the Lookout Mountain area in almost a month. A possible wolf depreda- tion was reported about 11:22 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 16 in the Manning Creek area northeast of Durkee, ac- cording to the Baker County Sheriff’s Offi ce. Wolves from the Lookout Mountain pack, in the east- ern part of Baker County, have killed at least six head of cattle, and injured three others, since mid July. But there haven’t been any confi rmed wolf at- tacks on cattle since ODFW employees shot and killed three wolves from the pack, including its breeding male, on Sept. 17. Lottery Results ..........A2 News of Record ........A3 Obituaries ..................A2 THURSDAY — SPECIAL SECTION LOOKS AT EFFECTS OF THE DROUGHT See, Wolves/Page A3 Opinion ......................A4 Sports .............. A5 & A6 Weather ..................... B6