TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2021 BAKER CITY HERALD — A3 LOCAL & STATE Air Force training could disrupt Owyhee’s ‘Big Quiet’ has a detachment of F-15SG fight- ers on long-term assignment there. This isn’t the first time the USAF has proposed expanding training in the Owyhee Desert from its Mountain Home Air Force Base. Seeking live bombing, missile shooting and low-flying exercises in the area in 1989, the Air Force expected minimal opposition in one of the country’s most remote and lightly populated areas. This turned out to be a miscalcu- lation. Opposition from Idaho-based groups led to nearly a decade of litigation and a compromise that ultimately allowed restricted low-altitude jet fighter training in Idaho’s Owyhee County. ing more than a million acres of wilderness in the Owyhee Canyon- lands, and designating 33 miles of ONTARIO — One of the coun- Wild and Scenic Rivers precisely try’s most sparsely populated and where the military has proposed persistently defended high desert more intensive training. wild lands may soon be subject to The military’s plan would also frequent sonic booms and shrieking impact more than 500,000 combined fighter jets. acres of Wilderness Study Areas The Mountain Home Air Force and Bureau of Land Management Base in southwestern Idaho is pro- lands, according to ONDA. posing to expand military training Much of the Owyhee Desert’s allowances across large portions of sprawling shrub steppe and can- the Owyhee Desert — a 9-million- acre landscape of shrub steppe and yons are on public land. remote canyons spanning three “The Air Force needs to hear that states cherished by tribes, ranchers, there is strong, broad support for sportsmen, paddlers, hikers, conser- ‘Gunfighters’ legacy conservation in the Owyhee Can- yonlands and southeastern Oregon, vationists, scientists and stargazers. Mountain Home Air Force Base and that their proposal threatens to is home to the 366th Fighter Wing The air base’s Proposal for Air- undermine the qualities that make (nicknamed the “Gunfighters”) and space Optimization for Readiness this region so exceptional,” accord- the F-15E Strike Eagle, a dual-role would increase both the frequency and low-flight intensity of jet fighter fighter designed to perform air-to- ing to an ONDA web posting. Environmental impact air and air-to-ground missions. An exercises across giant sections of The deadline for public comment statement pending array of avionics and electronics sys- southwestern Idaho, northern Ne- In Oregon, the USAF’s proposal on the Air Force’s proposal was Oct. tems gives the F-15E the capability could increase the frequency of sonic 25. vada and southeastern Oregon. The Air Force is required to pro- to fight at low altitude, day or night, boom-producing training flights Current airspace restrictions to nearly 19 per day — shatter- in all weather. vide a final environmental impact in the latter two states within the The 366th Fighter Wing’s pri- established USAF training range ing the area’s famed Canyonlands, statement by a date that remains pending. are set above at least 10,000 feet — mary mission is to provide combat nicknamed “The Big Quiet,” and “Given the breadth and depth or 30,000 feet when breaking the distressing indigenous wildlife. airpower and support, as well as of public comment provided on the sound barrier. ONDA has launched a new quick response to the military’s draft plan, we suspect it will take worldwide contingency operations. online story map of the area. “In many cases that’s barely many months just to incorporate Oregon Sens. Ron Wyden and The base is also used for training noticeable — you might see those Jeff Merkley have proposed protect- that (public) input,” says Salvo. by the Singapore Air Force, which planes before you hear them — By JORDAN RANE Columbia Insight but it’s nothing like what’s being proposed in the current plan,” says Mark Salvo, conservation director at Oregon Natural Desert As- sociation (ONDA). “We’re deeply concerned about fighter jet noise and disturbance to wild lands, wild waters, sensitive wildlife and local communities, the risk of wildfire from the increased use of flam- mable flares — and the fact that the Air Force hasn’t explained why it needs to conduct more and more intense training across this huge tri-state area.” Jim Davis/Contributed Photo The Mountain Home Air Force Base in southwestern Idaho is proposing expanded military training allowances across large portions of the Owyhee Desert — a 9-million-acre landscape of shrub steppe and remote canyons spanning three states cherished by tribes, ranchers, sportsmen, paddlers, hikers, conservationists, scientists and stargazers. CRISIS Continued from A1 Loennig said in a previous interview with the Herald that the Bi-Mart pharmacy has been processing about 1,500 prescriptions per week. In addition to the transferring of prescrip- tions from the Bi-Mart pharmacy, Oregon Gov. Kate Brown’s vaccina- tion mandate, which took effect Oct. 18, could also have an effect on staffing, Loennig said. The mandate applies to pharmacists and pharmacy technicians. Loennig said two of the seven employees at the Bi-Mart pharmacy in Baker City had left their jobs due to the mandate. According to the OHA, as of Oct. 4, 87% of pharmacists in Or- egon were vaccinated, and 82% of pharmacy technicians. On Monday morning, Nov. 1, several custom- ers waited in line at the Baker City Rite Aid store, where the phar- macy opens at 10 a.m. One of the waiting customers, Roberta Vanderwall, said “It’s sad.” “I feel bad for the em- ployees because they’re being cut back and then they can’t get help and then people get grouchy with the employees and it’s not fair,” Vanderwall said. “It’s not fair what’s going on.” Another customer, Sherrie Richardson, said a pharmacy employee told her last week that they were “14 days behind on their prescriptions. I think they are doing the best they can.” Customer Shelly Thoms said: “Literally every place in this town is doing this; they don’t have enough people.” Joanna Priestley/Contributed image Paul Harrod was the co-production designer on the film “Isle of Dogs.” ARTISTS Continued from A1 Brian and Corrine Veg- ter, who own Churchill, are offering two- and four-week residencies that overlap with the First Friday art walks. “It’s to bring artists from outside the area, and they have a way to show their work,” Brian said. The residencies, Corrine said, help “expose new creativ- ity from the outside to our community.” Brian said the length of these residencies also give the artists time to explore the local area, and visit shops in town. Long careers in film Both Harrod and Priestley have spent three decades in the film business. They met at California In- stitute of the Arts, where Har- rod earned his undergraduate and graduate degrees, and Priestley earned her master’s degree. “That school had a major impact on both of us,” she said. Her path to animation came when she was in her 20s and living in Sisters. She was an artist — a painter VACCINE and printmaker — and she’d helped start a local film festi- val. One of the first guests did animation. “It snapped in my head — I have to do this,” she said. She bought a pack of index cards and started drawing. Then she rigged a setup to animate the drawings. Her film was her admis- sion to Cal Arts, where she toured studios and heard from people in the film business. “There were a lot of early pioneers who came to the school and talked,” she said. Harrod’s interest in film came much earlier in his life, when he was around the age of 5. “I think it was all written for me when I saw Godzilla and King Kong,” he said. Then he saw “2001: A Space Odyssey” and “Planet of the Apes” at age 10. “Nothing else was even an option after that,” he said. His family encouraged his interest. “From a very early age, my mother said find something you like doing and make a career out of it,” he said. He made his first mask when he was 12. “I just kept on doing that sort of thing,” he said. much of the country, Baker County reported 68 cases. Weekly case totals reached Continued from A1 records in two straight weeks — 128 from Sept. 5-11, and Weekly cases reach 139 from Sept. 12-18 — but 3-month low Baker County reported then declined in four straight 24 COVID-19 cases for the weeks, to a low of 37 cases from Oct. 10-16. week Oct. 24-30. That’s Cases rose to 51 from Oct. the fewest in any week 17-23 but then dropped again since July 18-24, when there were six cases in the the next week. Cases dropped by almost county. 64% in the county during The following week, July 25-31, with the much October, from September’s more contagious delta vari- record total of 465 to 168 dur- ing October. ant spreading rapidly in Remember the California Raisins? Harrod was involved with the final production, a project of Will Vinton Studios in Portland where he was the senior art director. He also, in 1999, was production designer for “The PJs,” which he said was the first stop-motion animation on prime time television. He designed the show, and directed five episodes. More recently, he worked on Wes Anderson’s stop- motion feature “Isle of Dogs,” which earned the Art Direc- tors Guild award in 2019 for Excellence in Production Design for an Animated Feature. Stop-motion animation has changed over the decades Harrod has worked in the business. For instance, a production today may use a 3D printer to create multiple facial expressions, which can be easily swapped during filming — and quicker than molding faces by hand. Harrod and Priestley both discovered that their business is “pandemic proof” thanks to the use of comput- ers and the Internet. “You can do feature films with artists working in differ- ent countries,” Harrod said. Booster doses Staten said last week that residents have been express- ing interest in getting a booster dose of a vaccine. Residents 80 and older have the highest vaccina- tion rate in the county at 71.2% — 787 of the 1,106 residents in that age group. As of Friday, Oct. 29, 5.7% of those people have received a booster dose, according to the OHA. Rates for other age groups in the county: • Ages 70 to 79 — 69.9% Joanna Priestley/Contributed image Filmmakers Joanna Priestley and Paul Harrod are spending two weeks as the resident artists at Churchill School in Baker City. Here they are shown at the premiere of the stop-motion film “Isle of Dogs.” He is currently working for Bix Pix Entertainment, a studio based in Burbank, Cali- fornia (the studio that created “Tumble Leaf” for Amazon). Priestley has her own company, Priestley Motion Pictures. She works solo, but does have an internship pro- gram. She also works with a vaccination rate (1,533 of 2,192 residents); booster dose rate, 6% • Ages 60 to 69 — 57.1% vaccination rate (1,759 of 3,082 residents); booster dose rate, 1.3% • Ages 50 to 59 — 48.5% vaccination rate (1,111 of 2,289 residents); booster dose rate, 1.8% • Ages 40 to 49 — 49% vaccination rate (805 of 1,644 residents); booster dose rate, 1.3% • Ages 30 to 39 — 36.7% vaccination rate (714 of 1,947 composer, sound designer and compositor to finish her films. This film process is not quick — she said it took six years to finish a one-hour feature film. To learn more about these artists, visit their websites: www.joannapriestley.com and www.paulharrod.com. residents; booster dose rate, 0.9% • Ages 20 to 29 — 39.6% vaccination rate (515 of 1,301 residents); booster dose rate, 0.7% People with questions about COVID-19 vaccines or other topics can call the Health De- partment at 541-523-8211. NO MORE GUTTER CLEANING, OR YOUR MONEY BACK GUARANTEED! CALL US TODAY FOR A FREE ESTIMATE 15 % AND! OFF YOUR ENTIRE PURCHASE * Promo Number: 285 1-855-536-8838 10 % OFF SENIOR & MILITARY DISCOUNTS + 5 % OFF TO THE FIRST 50 CALLERS! ** Mon-Thurs: 8am-11pm, Fri-Sat: 8am-5pm, Sun: 2pm-8pm EST *For those who qualify. One coupon per household. No obligation estimate valid for 1 year. ** Offer valid at estimate only. 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