SATURDAY FLAUNTING FORESTS: CELEBRATING THE TAMARACK, OUTDOORS, PG. B1 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com November 6, 2021 IN THIS EDITION: Local • Outdoors • Sports • TV $1.50 Missing teen returns home By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Marvin Endicott of Baker City. BRIEFING OTEC canned food drive going on through Nov. 19 Oregon Trail Electric Cooperative is having a canned food drive through Friday, Nov. 19. You can drop off canned, nonper- ishable food items at any OTEC offi ce during regular business hours. The Baker City offi ce is at 4005 23rd St. All donated food will be given to food banks in the four counties that OTEC serves: Baker, Union, Grant and Harney. WEATHER Today 50 / 25 Rain showers Sunday 47 / 24 Partly sunny Monday 46 / 35 Partly sunny Full forecast on the back of the B section. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald Royce Peterson inoculates Sloan Defrees, right, with the Pfi zer COVID-19 vaccine on Friday morning, Nov. 5, at the Baker County Health Department. Sloan’s mom, Jess Defrees, sits beside her. Ready for the shot  First group of kids, ages 5 to 11, receive COVID-19 vaccine to receive the vaccine that gained federal approval ear- The pair of fi ve-year-olds lier in the week. There are about 1,200 children in that are discussing COVID-19 vaccinations, and it’s a seri- age group in the county. Although the vaccine ous conversation. wasn’t available everywhere “I hate waiting,” says in Oregon on Friday, Nancy Gwen Swart. “It just makes it scarier,” Staten, director of the Health Department, said says Sloan Defrees, her the agency took advantage fellow Baker City kinder- of a brief opportunity to gartner. place an order for doses and “Sloan,” Gwen replies the smaller needles that are with an earnestness that belies her age, “you already used to administer the vac- cine to small children. got your shot.” “We’re fortunate in that Sloan’s gentle response: regard,” Staten said. “Gwen, don’t worry.” Gwen’s and Sloan’s Five minutes later, both mothers, Anna Swart and these girls had received their fi rst dose of the Pfi zer Jess Defrees, agreed. Anna Swart said she vaccine at the Baker County and her husband, Tony, Health Department. who both work at Saint Gwen and Sloan were Alphonsus Medical Center among about 25 children, in Baker City, have been ages fi ve to 11, who were inoculated Friday morning, eagerly anticipating the approval of the vaccine for Nov. 5, the fi rst group in that age range in the county younger children. By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Swart, who also works in Baker schools, said she and her husband were both inoculated soon after the vaccines became available in December 2020. Swart said she’s also had a booster shot. “We just want to do our part in ending this,” she said. “COVID has affected all of our lives so much.” Swart said it was an easy decision to have Gwen vaccinated. “She doesn’t have a high risk of becoming very sick, but she could still spread it to others,” Swart said of her daughter. Once Gwen is vaccinat- ed, Swart said she hopes that should her daughter be exposed to the virus at school, she would not have to quarantine. Swart said she is completely confi dent in the safety of the vaccine, and that the possibility of a reaction to the vaccine is much lower than the chance that Gwen could be More Information Parents interested in scheduling a vaccination for children ages 5 and older can call the Baker County Health Department at 541-523-8211. infected with the virus. “I trust the doctors, the CDC, the FDA, in making the right choice for our kids,” Swart said. She said she has talked often with Gwen about COVID-19 and the vac- cines. “I don’t want her to be scared of COVID, and she isn’t,” Swart said. “We’ve talked more about protect- ing her and others from getting sick.” Defrees, whose hus- band, Nathan, is a doc- tor, said they also had no qualms about having Sloan vaccinated as soon as doses were available. Michelle Gately, the mother of Kaitlyn Rose Gately, the 17-year- old Baker City girl who was reported as missing and endan- gered earlier in the week, said late Thursday, Nov. 4 that her daughter has returned home. In a message to the Baker City Herald, Michelle Gately wrote that she’s “so happy that she’s home and will defi nitely be working on bettering the relationship so she doesn’t feel she has to run away when there is friction between us.” Michelle said she slept through the night for the fi rst time since Kaitlyn went missing on Oct. 28. Michelle thanked all those who shared Kaitlyn’s photo and helped her search for her daughter. The Baker City Police department posted on its Facebook page on Nov. 1 that Kaitlyn Gately was “missing and endangered.” Michelle Gately said in an interview with the Herald that she had seen her daughter at Baker High School on the morn- ing of Oct. 28. They argued about a cellphone Kaitlyn had been using, which was not her own, and Kaitlyn didn’t return home that afternoon. COVID cases continue to drop By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com The wave of COVID-19 cases that swept Baker County during the late sum- mer continues to recede as autumn pro- gresses. Both the number of cases, and the Staten percentage of tests that are positive, have declined over the past two weeks, to their lowest levels since mid-July. Breakthrough cases — in- fections in people who are See, Vaccine/Page A3 See, COVID/Page A3 Pharmacy crisis Pine Creek resident seeks no-shooting zone continues for the source of the noise, he found a bullet hole in his home. A resident in the Pine Davis, who reported the Creek area northwest of Baker City has asked county incident to the Baker County Sheriff’s Offi ce, said the bullet commissioners to enact a no-shooting zone in that area had come from the north, after his home was twice hit went through one exterior and two interior walls, pass- by stray bullets. Ted Davis, who made the ing over his bed and hitting a closet. request of commissioners “As you can imagine, that during their regular meet- ing Wednesday, Nov. 3, said kind of rattled me a little bit. his house was hit by the fi rst But in no way do I think it’s intentional,” Davis said. bullet during the summer He said he wrote it off to a of 2020. once-in-a-lifetime accident. “I didn’t know it at the But then it happened time but I was home,” Davis again in August of this year. told commissioners. “I was Davis said he started talk- sitting there and I heard this huge bang and I had no idea ing to neighbors to see how they felt, fi nding most felt what it was.” He said that after looking agreed with him that some- By SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com TODAY Issue 77, 12 pages Calendar ....................A2 Classified ............. B2-B4 Comics ....................... B5 thing needed to be done. He gathered about 30 signatures from neighbors on a petition. Davis emphasized to com- missioners that he has noth- ing against guns or shooting. “I’m not trying to take any- one’s guns. I own guns. I’m not trying to take anyone’s guns away. I just don’t want my house shot,” Davis said. “There’s just, with all those houses, I would feel really bad if someone got hurt and I didn’t bring this forward.” Commissioner Mark Bennett said Davis’ request is a starting point. Bennett suggested the county sched- ule a meeting to hear from other residents. Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B2 & B4 Dear Abby ................. B6 See, Zone/Page A3 By SAMANTHA O’CONNER slated for Nov. 9, combined soconner@bakercityherald.com with staffi ng shortages in Amid the bustle of shop- pers, one group of customers stood still, their patience waning, Thursday morning, Nov. 4 at the Safeway store in Baker City. The members of this group were waiting for their turn at the pharmacy. Some near the front of the line said they had been waiting for more than an hour. Similar lines have formed at times leading to the three pharmacies in Baker City, in the Safe- way, Albertsons and Rite Aid stores. The closure of the phar- macy in the Bi Mart store Horoscope ........B3 & B4 Jayson Jacoby ..........A4 News of Record ........A2 Obituaries ..................A2 Opinion ......................A4 Outdoors ..........B1 & B2 TUESDAY — BAKER COUNTY’S SMALLEST CITY GETS BIG GRANT the remaining pharmacies, has created a situation that’s frustrating for cus- tomers and employees alike. Paul Musser, one of those waiting in line at Rite Aid on Thursday morning, said he transferred his pre- scriptions from Bi Mart to Rite Aid. Musser was upset as he waited with about 15 other customers. “My prescription was called in on Monday to here,” he said. “Today the line is short. Yesterday it was all the way down and around. It’s all because of Bi Mart and Kate Brown.” See, Pharmacy/Page A3 Sports ........................A6 Turning Backs ...........A2 Weather ..................... B6