SATURDAY BAKER BOYS 1ST, GIRLS 2ND AT DISTRICT CROSS-COUNTRY MEET: PAGE A6 In OUTDOORS, B1 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com October 30, 2021 Local IN THIS EDITION: • Outdoors • Sports • TV $1.50 High-tech simplifies rescues Good Day Wish To A Subscriber Booster shots in demand A special good day to Herald subscriber Pat Braswell of Baker City. By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com QUICK HITS Baker County offi cials are bracing for a rising demand for COVID-19 vaccinations. But this time the interest is not so much in fi rst or second doses, but third, or “booster” doses. “People are wanting booster doses,” said Nancy Staten, director of the Baker County Health Department. The demand is driven by the Food and Drug Administration’s Oct. 14 approval of booster shots of the Moderna vaccine, Staten said. A large majority of the COVID-19 vaccine doses given in Baker County so far were the Moderna product. Local, A2 LA GRANDE — Supply chain issues gripping the nation have found a new, unexpected victim — local schools. BRIEFING Haines Fire Protection District meeting Nov. 8 The Haines Fire Protec- tion District’s board of directors will have its monthly meeting on Nov. 8 at 7 p.m. at the main fi re station, 816 Cole St. in Haines. All residents in the district are welcome to attend. COVID-19 protocols will be in effect. Soil, water districts set meetings during November Baker County’s four soil and water conservation districts have scheduled call-in meetings during November. To receive details for calling in to any of the meetings, call 541-519-2496. The meeting schedule: • Burnt River, Nov. 2, 5:30 p.m. • Baker Valley, Nov. 4, noon • Eagle Valley, Nov. 15, noon • Keating, Nov. 16, noon WEATHER Today 54 / 31 Sunny Sunday 54 / 33 Partly sunny Monday 57 / 39 Rain showers The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. See, COVID/Page A3 Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald This view from a drone shows the intersection of 10th Street, Hughes Lane (to the right) and Pocahontas Road (to the left). 10th Street improvement plan progressing  Project also includes sections of Hughes Lane, Cedar Street, Pocahontas Road By SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com Baker City offi cials are continu- ing preparations for a major project to improve traffi c fl ow, including bicycles and pedestrians, on sec- tions of 10th Street, Hughes Lane and Cedar Street. The Northern Baker Transpor- tation Improvement Plan focuses on these street sections: • 10th Street from Hughes Lane to Broadway Street • Cedar Street from Hughes Lane to Campbell Street • Hughes Lane from 10th Street to Cedar Street • Pocahontas Road from 10th Street to 17th Street/Chico Street The project is still in the plan- ning stage, said Michelle Owen, Baker City’s public works director. “This is kind of a concept plan, it’s a 20-year plan,” Owen said. “We’re going to have some money in 2024 to actually implement some of this plan. We do have some House bill funding that came through that’s allocated to some of these projects.” One of the more contentious proposals unveiled earlier in the process was the potential to change the lane striping on 10th Street from the current four-lane confi gu- ration, with two travel lanes in each direction, to three lanes, with one travel lane in each direction and a center turn lane. That’s the design in place on Campbell Street from Main Street east. The current proposal retains the current four-lane striping on 10th Street. “I think the biggest point of dis- cussion over the course of this is the four-lane, three-lane thing for 10th street and clearly there was sup- port for keeping four lanes,” Owen said. “We had support for both but there was more support for keeping four lanes on 10th Street.” Owen said 10th Street would have crosswalks along with curb extensions at several intersections to shorten the crossing distance for pedestrians. Gretchen Stadler, a member of the advisory committee for the project, said the committee met recently with three members of the Baker City Council and Bill By ALEX WITTWER EO Media Group Harvey, chairman of the Baker County Board of Commissioners, along with offi cials from the Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT). During that meeting the issue of the lane striping on 10th Street was a topic of discussion, Stadler said. “ODOT was presenting infor- mation about the difference in safety and showing from studies that had been done that a three- lane is a safer option,” Stadler said. “But the council members who were in attendance and Mr. Harvey felt strongly, even coming into the meeting, that a four-lane road was the only thing that was going to work.” Stadler said that although some residents oppose the three-lane con- fi guration on 10th Street because they don’t like that set up on Camp- bell, 10th Street is actually wider than Campbell, so the comparison isn’t necessarily appropriate. Stadler said she’s concerned that the elected offi cials haven’t adequately considered the infor- mation that ODOT presented about the potential safety benefi ts of a three-lane confi guration on 10th Street. See, Streets/Page A3 Man sentenced to 75 months in prison Several other counts were dis- missed in a plea agreement with the district attorney’s offi ce. Those A Baker City man was sen- tenced to 75 months in state prison charges are fi rst-degree burglary, fi rst-degree theft, menac- after pleading guilty to ing, pointing a fi rearm at breaking into a Baker another and fi rst-degree City home in September criminal trespassing. and stealing a handgun. A grand jury indicted Alexander Prentice Griffi n on those charges Griffi n, 30, of Baker City, based on an incident that pleaded guilty on Oct. 14 happened Sept. 17 at Den- to attempted fi rst-degree nis Glerup’s home at 1305 robbery, a Class B felony. Griffi n Seventh St. Griffi n was initially Glerup told police that when he charged with fi rst-degree robbery, a returned home he found a person Measure 11 crime that on convic- tion carries a mandatory minimum inside, wearing a mask. Glerup told police the person pointed at prison sentence of 90 months. Glerup’s head a .44 Magnum pistol The 75-month sentence for attempted robbery is not a manda- that belongs to Glerup, then fl ed. Baker City Police linked the tory minimum, and Griffi n could Sept. 17 incident to a Sept. 15 bur- potentially qualify for a reduction glary at a vacant home and shed at in the sentence. 2610 Clark St., where an estimated Griffi n also pleaded guilty to $10,000 in tools, along with copper being a felon in possession of a items, had been taken. fi rearm. By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com TODAY Issue 74, 12 pages Calendar ....................A2 Classified ............. B2-B4 Comics ....................... B5 Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B2 & B4 Dear Abby ................. B6 Police obtained a search war- rant for a travel trailer parked at 2260 Wabash St. in south Baker City, where police believed Griffi n was living. Police executed the search warrant the evening of Sept. 17 and found several items that had been stolen from the Clark Street home, and the gun stolen from Glerup’s home earlier that day. Police also found other items that they suspect were stolen elsewhere, possibly from local stor- age units over the past year. Police also found methamphetamine and “items indicative of drug traffi ck- ing,” according to a press release from Baker City Police. Police arrested Griffi n the eve- ning of Sept. 17. He was taken to the Baker County Jail on a parole violation charge. He had been re- leased from the jail recently after spending three days there on a separate parole violation charge. Horoscope ........B3 & B4 Jayson Jacoby ..........A4 News of Record ........A2 Jobless rate dips to pandemic low LA GRANDE — Eastern Oregon is back on track to recovering jobs lost due to the COVID-19 pandemic, according to state economists. According to reports by regional econo- mists Christopher Rich and Dallas Fridley at the Oregon Employment Department, unemployment rates have dipped to the lowest level since the pandemic began in the spring of 2020. Union and Wallowa counties saw a 1.5% and 1.6% decrease in unemployment from September 2020 to September 2021, respectively, closing out with 5.3% and 5.4% total unemployment rates. Baker County saw a 2.2% drop during the same period, from 7.1% to 4.9%, the largest drop of the Northeastern Oregon counties. See, Jobs/Page A3 Northern lights could be visible tonight By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Lori Rowland is hoping one of nature’s great light shows will make a rare appear- ance tonight, Oct. 30, in Baker County. A geomagnetic storm on the sun could make the northern lights — aurora bo- realis — visible tonight in Baker County, said Rowland, a local photographer who captured images of the phenomenon earlier this month. There are no guarantees, to be sure, in celestial matters. But Rowland is excited about the potential. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Space Weather Prediction Center, a coronal mass ejection on Oct. 28 could result in “elevated auroral activity” today extend- ing into the morning of Oct. 31. “The warning is a G3, a ‘strong’ watch level,” according to the Space Weather Prediction Center. The terrestrial weather also is promis- ing. The National Weather Service is fore- casting mostly clear skies Saturday and Saturday night in Baker County. Rowland recommends people who want to get a glimpse of the northern lights to fi nd a vantage point away from city lights and with an unobstructed view to the north. When she photographed the northern lights on Oct. 11 at Pilcher Creek Reser- voir, west of North Powder, Rowland said she couldn’t actually see the colors with her naked eye. A 20-second exposure on her camera revealed the colors. Obituaries ..................A2 Opinion ......................A4 Outdoors ..........B1 & B2 Sports ........................A6 Turning Backs ...........A2 Weather ..................... B6 TUESDAY — BAKER VOLLEYBALL TEAM SEEKS TO ADVANCE IN PLAYOFFS