TUESDAY BAKER CROSS-COUNTRY TEAMS PLACE NINTH AT STATE MEET: PAGE A6 In SPORTS, A7 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com November 9, 2021 Local • Home & Living • Sports IN THIS EDITION: $1.50 QUICK HITS NO PAPER ON THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11 The Baker CIty Herald will not publish on Thurs- day, Nov. 11, Veterans Day, because there is no postal delivery on that federal holiday. Breaking news will be posted on the Herald’s website at www. bakercityherald.com. Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscribers Dave and Joyce Hunsaker of Baker City. BRIEFING Baker County Garden Club to meet Wednesday The Baker County Garden Club will meet Wednesday, Nov. 10 at 10:30 a.m. at the Senior Center, 2810 Cedar St. Helen Loennig will help members with Medicare updates, so please bring information. Janice Cowan will present the program. Lunch is $5 per person. New members are always welcome. Veterans Day ceremony set for Thursday The Veterans of Foreign Wars and American Legion will have a ceremony for Veterans Day on Thursday, Nov. 11 at 11 a.m. in front of the veterans memo- rial on the east side of the Baker County Courthouse, 1995 Third St. WEATHER Today 47 / 26 Rain or snow Wednesday 44 / 33 Mostly cloudy Full forecast on the back of the B section. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Judge: County can survey Pine Cr. land The POW- MIA flag’s Baker connection  After Michael Hoff, a 1954 BHS grad, was shot down over Laos in 1970, his wife, Mary, sought a symbol for families waiting for word from their loved ones By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com The black-and-white fl ag that honors America’s military members who are prisoners of war or are miss- ing in action has a direct connection to Baker City. The connection is Mi- chael George Hoff. Hoff, who was born in Baker City on Sept. 11, 1936, was fl ying an A-7 Corsair over Laos, a country bordering Vietnam, on Jan. 7, 1970. Hoff’s jet was shot down. Hoff, a 33-year-old com- mander in the U.S. Navy, was listed as missing in action. He was never found, alive or dead. His wife, Mary Helen Hoff, waited in her Florida home with the couple’s fi ve children, the oldest just seven, the youngest not yet two. The second-youngest of Michael Hoff’s children, and the only daughter, is Su- zanne Hoff Ogawa. She was just two when her father’s plane was shot down. “I have no memories of my father at all,” Ogawa, who lives in Bowling Green, Kentucky, said in a phone interview on Nov. 4. But as she grew up, Ogawa learned not only about her dad, but about Baker’s season ends By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Samantha O’Conner/Baker City Herald A 50th anniversary version of the POW-MIA banner hangs inside Baker City Hall. but no answers, that Mary Hoff was thinking about. “She really felt like they didn’t have a symbol,” Ogawa said. “She wanted something she could put in her window, to let people know what we’re going through.” In 1971 Mary Hoff got in touch with Annin & Company, an Ohio fi rm that has been making fl ags and banners since 1847. The result was the black-and-white banner, with the phrase “You Are Not Forgotten,” that has become a common sight across the country. “Now we have this national fl ag,” said Ogawa, who emphasized that the original design was in fact Contributed Photo a banner, designed to be placed in a window, rather US Navy Commander Michael Hoff was listed as than a fl ag. “It’s a pretty missing in action after his A-7 Corsair jet was shot neat thing.” down over Laos on Jan. 7, 1970. Hoff graduated Earlier in 2021, a Ken- from Baker High School in 1954. tucky nonprofi t, Charging Forward For America Inc., Star banners hanging in her mom’s diligent efforts contacted Annin Flagmak- windows. to ensure that the families Blue Star banners are for ers with the goal of recreat- of other missing aviators, ing the original banner soldiers, sailors and Marines families who have a mem- with an inscription, which ber serving in the armed had a way to publicly dis- Ogawa designed, recogniz- forces. play their plight. Families with a Gold Star ing the 50th anniversary. “My mother was really Charging Forward For banner have had a member an amazing lady,” Ogawa America has been traveling killed while serving. said. the U.S., donating the com- But it was the families (Mary Hoff died Nov. 10, memorative banners. who, like the Hoffs, were 2015.) mired in the purgatory Mary Hoff had seen where there only questions, the Blue Star and Gold See, Flag /Page A8 A judge has ruled that Baker County can survey a section of property owned by the man who sued the county this spring over the status of the Pine Creek Road in the Elkhorn Mountains northwest of Baker City. David McCarty fi led the civil suit in Baker County Circuit Court on April 30. He is asking for either a declaration that the disputed section of the Pine Creek Road crossing his property is not a public right-of-way, or, if a jury concludes there is legal public access, that the limits of that access be defi ned and that the county pay him $730,000 to compensate for the lost value of the land based on the legal public access and for other costs he has incurred as a result of the county’s actions. The Pine Creek Road, which accesses public land in the Elkhorns, runs for about 2½ miles through the 1,560-acre property that McCarty bought in September 2020. On June 16, Baker County commissioners started a process intended to declare the disputed section of road as a public right- of-way. See, Survey /Page A8 Baker County commissioners to discuss change in selecting chair By SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com Baker County Commissioner Bruce Nichols wants to discuss with his two fellow commission- ers the possibility of changing how the chairman, who works full time as the county’s chief administrator, is chosen. Now, voters elect the chair- man, which is a specifi c position on the ballot. Bill Harvey is the current chairman, serving his second four-year term after being reelected in 2018. Nichols and Commissioner Mark Bennett work part-time. See, County/Page A8 Tiny town, big bucks Koellermeier, who also has a home in West Linn, said he and his wife are retired and spend six to Greenhorn has no year-round eight months per year in Green- residents but it does have almost horn. $86,000 to fi x its streets. He said they’re considering mov- Although those streets — about one mile in total — are buried under ing full-time into the cabin they’ve been working on for the past 15 feet of snow about half the year. years. Gravel streets, specifi cally — Koellermeier said a couple who the nearest stretch of pavement to had been living most of the year Greenhorn is Highway 7, several in Greenhorn, despite its being ac- miles to the east. cessible by snowmobile during the Wintry impediments aside, the winter and well into spring most sudden infl ux of dollars for this years, has decided not to winter in unique incorporated city in Baker the remote spot this year. County is welcome, said Dennis Although $85,900 wouldn’t Koellermeier, one of Greenhorn’s make a massive difference in the fi ve appointed city councilors and, street budget for even a city of he says with a rueful chuckle, its modest size such as Baker City, for mayor pro tem. Greenhorn it’s an unprecedented “No one else will volunteer,” sum, Koellermeier said. said Kollermeier, who has owned “We’re kind of excited about property in Greenhorn for about 20 it,” he said in a phone interview years. By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Greenhorn, at the far western edge of Baker County, doesn’t have any year-round residents or a property tax base. But the historic gold mining town does have a network of gravel streets, marked with signs. TODAY Issue 78, 18 pages Calendar ....................A2 Classified ............. B4-B7 Comics ..............B8 & B9 Community News ....A3 Crossword ........... B4-B7 Dear Abby ............... B10 Home ....................B1-B4 Horoscope ........... B4-B7 Letters ........................A4 on Thursday, Nov. 4. “This is a big thing for us.” Greenhorn collects no money from property taxes, although Baker County does get a share of the taxes its 30 or so property own- ers pay. The city’s main revenue source is the yearly dues assessed to property owners, said Dale McLouth, a longtime Greenhorn property owner whose eight-year tenure as the city’s mayor ended Dec. 31, 2020. Owners who have a cabin or other structure on their property pay $100 per year, and those with- out pay $50, McLouth said. The dues — which were just $20 per year for all property owners as recently as 2008 or so — bring in about $2,500 per year. Lottery Results ..........A2 News of Record ........A3 Obituaries ........ A2 & A3 INSIDE TODAY — GO! MAGAZINE ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE See, Greenhorn/Page A3 Opinion ......................A4 Sports .................. A5-A7 Weather ................... B10