A2 — BAKER CITY HERALD SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2021 BAKER COUNTY CALENDAR WEDNESDAY, NOV. 3 Baker County Board of Commissioners: 9 a.m. at the Courthouse, 1995 Third St. TUESDAY, NOV. 9 Baker County Economic Development Council: 3 p.m. at the Courthouse, 1995 Third St. TURNING BACK THE PAGES 50 YEARS AGO from the Democrat-Herald October 30, 1971 Led by 172-pound senior Bill Gee, the Baker Bulldog defense clamped onto a perfect string of zeros for its 1971 home battles as Baker closed out its home encounters 24-0 over Hermiston Friday night. 25 YEARS AGO from the Baker City Herald October 30, 1996 More than 200 people helped Behlen Mfg. Co. celebrate the grand opening of the Nebraska fi rm’s Baker City live- stock equipment factory Tuesday. The celebration at the $4 million, 107,000-square-foot factory at 4000 23rd St. included tours of the plant, a wel- coming ceremony and ribbon cutting. 10 YEARS AGO from the Baker City Herald October 31, 2011 A 24-hour Maverik gas station and convenience store is scheduled to open Wednesday at 1520 Campbell St. The Baker City store is the company’s fi rst Oregon loca- tion. ONE YEAR AGO from the Baker City Herald October 31, 2020 The Wallowa-Whitman National Forest is planning its largest project in about 20 years to reduce the risk of a wildfi re spreading through Baker City’s watershed. The campaign, which likely won’t start until 2022, involves several tactics, some to be employed inside the 10,000-acre forested watershed, but with a focus on its fringes, said Kendall Cikanek, ranger for the Whitman District. “What we’re trying to do is create defensible zones be- tween likely sources of ignition and the watershed itself,” Cikanek said. Almost all of the watershed is public land, managed by the Forest Service. The city taps a dozen streams and springs in the wa- tershed to supply almost all of its drinking water. The city also has one supplementary well — which is also used as an underground reservoir to store excess water from the watershed — and a company is drilling a second well now near Quail Ridge Golf Course. The focus of the Baker City Watershed Fuels Manage- ment Project is on the east and south sides of the water- shed, including the Washington Gulch and Elk Creek areas. In those areas a swath of national forest land lies be- tween private property and the watershed. The Forest Service’s goal, Cikanek said, is to thin over- crowded forests and light prescribed fi res in that buffer zone, reducing the amount of combustible material and, ideally, creating zones where fi refi ghters would have a better chance to stop a fi re before it burned into the watershed. OREGON LOTTERY MEGABUCKS, Oct. 27 13 — 17 — 18 — 21 — 23 — 47 Next jackpot: $5 million POWERBALL, Oct. 27 3 — 6 — 26 — 35 — 51 PB 17 Next jackpot: $116 million MEGA MILLIONS, Oct. 26 6 — 14 — 19 — 56 — 62 Mega 9 Next jackpot: $22 million WIN FOR LIFE, Oct. 27 2 — 15 — 30 — 51 PICK 4, Oct. 28 • 1 p.m.: 0 — 2 — 6 — 0 • 4 p.m.: 1 — 5 — 9 — 4 • 7 p.m.: 6 — 2 — 6 — 2 • 10 p.m.: 3 — 0 — 1 — 1 LUCKY LINES, Oct. 28 1-7-9-14-18-21-27-31 Next jackpot: $25,000 SENIOR MENUS MONDAY: Chicken fried steak, mashed potatoes with gravy, biscuits, corn, green salad, cookies TUESDAY: Orange-glazed chicken strips, rice, broccoli, rolls, coleslaw, bread pudding WEDNESDAY: Herb-baked chicken with gravy, red potatoes, peas and carrots, rolls, macaroni salad, apple crisp THURSDAY: Chili cheese dogs, potato wedges, mixed vegetables, cottage cheese with fruit, pudding FRIDAY: Meatloaf, mashed potatoes with gravy, carrots, rolls, green salad, cookies Public luncheon at the Senior Center, 2810 Cedar St., from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.; $5 donation (60 and older), $7.50 for those under 60. CONTACT THE HERALD 2005 Washington Ave., Suite 101 Open Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Telephone: 541-523-3673 Fax: 541-833-6414 Publisher Karrine Brogoitti kbrogoitti@lagrandeobserver. com Jayson Jacoby, editor jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Advertising email ads@bakercityherald.com Classifi ed email classified@bakercityherald.com Circulation email circ@bakercityherald.com ISSN-8756-6419 Serving Baker County since 1870 Published Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays except Christmas Day by the Baker Publishing Co., a part of EO Media Group, at 2005 Washington Ave., Suite 101 (P.O. Box 807), Baker City, OR 97814. Subscription rates per month are $10.75 for print only. Digital-only rates are $8.25. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Baker City Herald, P.O. Box 807, Baker City, OR 97814. Periodicals Postage Paid at Pendleton, Oregon 97801 Copyright © 2021 School lunches disrupted by supply chain woes By ALEX WITTWER EO Media Group LA GRANDE — Supply chain issues gripping the nation have found a new, unex- pected victim — local schools. Those issues prompted state leaders with the Oregon De- partment of Education to issue temporary waivers for schools for nutritional requirements. That meant that longtime staples of the cafeteria such as pizza or spaghetti were absent. Offi cials grappled with brokering deals with new suppliers to get food to the students. With supplies short on hand, local school lunch cooks had to improvise to get food out to hungry students. “There are products we’re only supposed to serve for child nutrition, and all of the pizza was zeroed out — it was nothing — so basically I did pizza that I put my own top- pings on,” said Tanya Corta, a kitchen supervisor with Imbler School District. “We’re running on a tight ship here.” Tight ship or not, the supply chain woes leave little certainty about the menus — typically planned a month in advance — and whether or not the ingredients will even be available. That puts extra strain on kitchen workers and supervisors. “I’ll have to do a last-min- ute menu change and that’s sometimes hard — and some- times impossible,” Corta said. “It’s diffi cult and stressful, but we still get those kids fed.” From shortchanged orders to out-of-stock staples and favorites, schools are making do with less. As well, the time it takes to order supplies has increased dramatically as fi lling the pantry now in- volves dealing with multiple vendors to fulfi ll ingredient requirements. Michelle Glover, business director at La Grande School District, said that creating orders once took little over an hour on Fridays. That same order now takes as long as four to fi ve hours to fi nish as kitchen supervisors scramble and broker with different suppliers to get ingredients More Coverage Alex Wittwer/EO Media Group Kristi Ritchie, head cook with La Grande High School, hands out lunches on Tuesday, Oct. 19, 2021. A shortage of fi ve-compartment lunch trays led to students receiving plastic bag lunches. Ritchie, who has been an employee with La Grande High School for 21 years, laments the ordering hiccups and menu changes due to the pandemic and supply chain issues. shipped out in time for next week’s lunch. And even then, some sup- plies might be entirely out of stock, or orders arrive with less than was expected. “Our orders are not being fully fulfi lled, and so that’s what’s caused the real chal- lenges,” Glover said. “It looks like it’s coming and it doesn’t arrive. We don’t get any notice in advance, so they’re having to be creative and on their toes with alternate plans in place.” Even though school dis- tricts use different suppliers and ordering methods, the same issue has affected many local school districts, includ- ing Imbler. Corta said that each week is a struggle to get orders in for the Imbler schools. She now orders two weeks ahead of time, a method she employs to help dampen the effects of a supply chain that has been dis- rupted by worker shortages at manufacturing and processing plants, truck driver shortages, and delayed shipments from cargo ships. She’s not alone. Schools both big and small across Union County — and East- ern Oregon — have suffered similar supply chain woes. Those issues aren’t limited to just food. At La Grande High School, foam lunch trays have been particularly diffi cult to procure, leading to lunches NEWS OF RECORD FUNERALS PENDING Roscoe Curry: Memorial service Saturday, Oct. 30 at 2 p.m. at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Halfway. Military honors will follow at the Pine Valley Cemetery. Friends are invited to join the family at the church following the interment. For those who would like to make a donation in Roscoe’s memory, his family suggests the Gary Si- nise Foundation or The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Halfway branch, through Tami’s Pine Valley Funeral Home & Cremation Services, P.O. Box 543, Halfway, OR 97834. Online condolences can be made at www.tamispinevalleyfuneral- home.com. POLICE LOG Baker City Police Arrests, citations FIRST-DEGREE CRIMINAL TRESPASSING, CONTEMPT OF COURT (Baker County Justice Court warrants), FAILURE TO APPEAR (Baker County Circuit Court warrant): John Marsik Guthrie Jr., 50, Baker City, 3:32 a.m. Friday, Oct. 29 in the 1100 block of Washington Avenue; jailed. SECOND-DEGREE CRIMI- NAL TRESPASSING, HARASS- MENT: Jonathon Dale Fields, 34, Baker City, 12:54 a.m. Friday, Oct. 29 in the 1700 block of Val- ley Avenue; cited and released. SECOND-DEGREE CRIMI- NAL TRESPASSING, UNAU- THORIZED USE OF A MOTOR VEHICLE: Megan Rebecca Beam, 34, Richland, 9:02 a.m. Thursday, Oct. 28 in the 3200 block of 14th Street; cited and released. PROBATION VIOLATION (Baker County Circuit Court warrant): Zachery Ryan Chayse Smith, 26, Baker City, 4:04 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 27 at the sher- iff’s offi ce; cited and released. DISORDERLY CONDUCT (out-of-county warrant): Joseph Wayne Baechler, 26, transient, 3:32 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 27 on Campbell Street; cited and released. Oregon State Police Arrests, citations HINDERING PROSECUTION, SECOND-DEGREE THEFT (Mal- heur County warrant): Lacey Dawn Kolb, 40, Huntington, 9:17 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 27 on Highway 7, Milepost 7. being served in plastic bags as opposed to trays. As well, the school has been shorthanded one kitchen staff member, meaning that lunches that once offered a variety of foods such as enchiladas or pizza have been diminished to sandwiches nearly every day of the week. “They are defi nitely strug- gling with the supply chain for food items so defi nitely menu preparation (suffers),” Glover said. “If we’re plan- ning on serving this and then product doesn’t arrive, or comes in short, and it’s not enough to cover all sites — we are having to be fl exible in meal preparation.” Pendleton shared similar worries with regard to supply chain problems — though like other schools, the situation is varied as different districts broker with different suppli- ers for food. “We weren’t able to get hamburger patties for a while, and so we would substitute chicken nuggets or burritos,” In an email to the Baker City Herald, Lindsey Mc- Dowell, public informa- tion and communications coordinator for the Baker School District, wrote that the district’s food services director, Kristi Hensley, said that “any short- ages, so far, have been manageable and handled by ordering from backup vendors or substituting a different menu item.” ”We are preparing for the possibility of more severe disruptions to the distribution chain by placing large orders for frozen products that we will keep in freezers,” McDowell wrote. said Suzanne Howard, direc- tor of nutrition services with Pendleton School District. “Or, we weren’t able to get pizza for a while, so again we would ei- ther not serve them that day if we had other options to serve, like at the middle school/high school we served more than one. And then otherwise we would just have to replace it.” Programs such as the Summer Seamless Option — which provides free lunches to lower-income students over the summer — were also hit by supply chain interruptions. Those programs will continue to operate and feed students, according to Howard. Still, the districts aren’t worried about having to deny students lunch just yet. “We’re not always able to serve what I have on the menu, but we always have a backup. I feel a lot more for- tunate than what I’m hearing in other parts of the country,” Howard said. Mobile Mobile Service Service Outstanding Computer Repair Fast for & Reliable Open all your Call or Text 24/7 Dale Bogardus 541-297-5831 If your computer is in despair call Outstanding Computer Repair! www.outstandingcomputerrepair.com Refurbished Desktop & Laptops For Sale House calls (let me come to you!) Drop Offs & Remote Services are Available All credit cards accepted “You’ll love the work we do. 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