SATURDAY BAKER GIRLS BASKETBALL TEAM HAS A NEW COACH: SPORTS, PAGE A8 In OUTDOORS, B1 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com November 13, 2021 IN THIS EDITION: Local • Outdoors • Sports • TV $1.50 QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Marge Murphey of Baker City. BRIEFING FULL THROTTLE Baker County Seniors to meet Tuesday, Nov. 16 Baker County Seniors Inc. will have its annual meeting Tuesday, Nov. 16 from 2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. at the Senior Center, 2810 Cedar St. Everyone is invited. More information is available by calling 541- 523-6591. Mary Jo Carpenter, president of Baker County Seniors Inc., said the or- ganization was formed in 1977 and has worked with Community Connection of Baker County to sustain programs for seniors citizens. Baker County Seniors Inc. owns the Se- nior Center at 2810 Cedar St., which is operated by Community Connection through an agreement. Today See, Veterans /Page A6 See, Mayor/Page A5 VIRTUE FLAT — Cole Hauter twists the throttle and his motorcycle suddenly races up a rock-strewn slope that looks like a fi ne place to fall down. The rear knobby tire fl ings a stream of dirt more than 20 feet in his wake, the sort of brown fountain a grenade explosion might spawn. In a few seconds Hauter has disappeared, the only evidence of his presence the banshee- like rasp of the Yamaha YZ450FX’s 450 cc single-cylinder engine echoing through the sagebrush gullies. His progress through the contorted terrain at this off-highway vehicle riding area east of Baker City is so rapid that it confuses the eye. WEATHER See, Baja/Page A3 Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald 56 / 39 Partly sunny Sunday 56 / 37 Tribute to veterans Mostly cloudy By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Monday 58 / 30 Mostly cloudy The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Duncan Pierce speaks during the Veterans Day ceremony Thursday morning, Nov. 11 outside the Baker County Courthouse in Baker City. By SAMANTHA O’CONNER and JAYSON JACOBY Baker City Herald As a chilly drizzle dripped from the fl ags and the war memorial outside the Baker County Courthouse, Duncan Pierce talked about another November morn- ing, this one 103 years in the past. It was the day, Pierce said, when “the guns fell silent and the bells tolled to mark the end of World War I.” That milestone of Nov. 11, 1918, prompted the creation of the commemorative day known fi rst as Armistice Day and now as Veterans Day. About 60 people gathered in the damp on Thursday morning for a ceremony that started at the traditional hour of 11 a.m. By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Bisnett Insurance is hosting a pet supply drive to benefi t Best Friends of Baker through Dec. 17. Donations of kitten and cat food (wet or dry), dog food, and cat litter can be brought to Bisnett at 2001 Main St. (corner of Main Street and Washington Avenue). Resident: Mayor shouldn’t vote on vacancy A Baker City resident has asked the City Council to publicly discuss whether Mayor Kerry McQuisten should recuse herself from voting on motions to fi ll the one vacancy on the City Council because one of the candidates contrib- uted fi nancially to McQuisten McQuisten’s guber- natorial campaign. Susan Bland addressed council- ors during their meeting Tuesday, Nov. 9, noting that twice the Council, with six members since Lynette Perry resigned in August due to health reasons, has deadlocked on 3-3 votes. There are two candidates for the position — Thomas Hughes, and former councilor Randy Daugherty. Although Bland didn’t mention Hughes by name, he, unlike Daugh- erty, has contributed to McQuisten’s campaign, according to Oregon campaign fi nance reports. “There was one piece of informa- tion that was not discussed openly,” Bland said. “One of these candidates has donated to the mayor’s campaign for governor, the candidate she voted for twice, resulting in deadlock twice.” McQuisten voted for Hughes dur- ing the Council’s Sept. 14 meeting. The vote deadlocked when Hughes and Randy Daugherty each received three votes. During the Council’s Sept. 28 meeting, Councilor Shane Alderson’s motion to appoint Daugherty also failed by a 3-3 vote. McQuisten voted against the mo- tion to appoint Daugherty. Bland told councilors she was not suggesting that anyone had “done anything illegal.” But she contends that having a council candidate who has donated to the mayor’s campaign looks like “pay to play.” Bland’s husband, Jason Bland, a member of the city’s budget commit- tee, last month accused McQuisten of defaming him. Jason Bland, who has multiple sclerosis and sometimes slurs his words, cited McQuisten telling City Manager Jon Cannon that she had voice mails from Bland, and that she suspected he might have been intoxicated when he left them due to the slurred speech. COLE HAUTER OF BAKER CITY TO COMPETE IN BAJA 1000 RACE, FULFILLING HIS LIFELONG DREAM Pet food collection drive underway Fall grass is green gold for deer Commissioners discuss Greater Idaho concept Blood donors tion, Baker County voters, in Oregon his entire life By SAMANTHA O’CONNER looking into the process of meet the except his service during the with about 56.5% in favor, soconner@bakercityherald.com how it would work with approved a measure that Baker County Commis- their particular counties if Vietnam War. challenge requires commissioners to “This movement is a sioners on Wednesday, Nov. they were to become part of 10 had their second discus- sion of the year regarding the effort to add most of Eastern Oregon, including Baker County, to Idaho. Commissioners met with Mike McCarter, president of Move Oregon’s Border and leader of the Greater Idaho movement. McCarter told commis- sioners that the proposal is not about counties seceding from Oregon but “to start TODAY Issue 79, 14 pages the state of Idaho.” “Our concern has been that most of Oregon’s leadership and it seems the legislature is dealing with issues out of Northwest Oregon and the urban side of our state and the lack of input from our state representatives and state senators or the fact that they’re just not listening to us,” McCarter, 74, said. He said he has lived Calendar ....................A3 Classified ............. B2-B4 Comics ....................... B5 movement to try to main- tain our traditional values of faith, family, freedom, independence, and self- suffi ciency,” McCarter told commissioners. “And not be over governed or lorded over by the government.” He described Move Oregon’s Border as a grassroots movement of rural Oregonians, with no corporate support. In the May 2021 elec- Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B3 & B4 Dear Abby ................. B6 meet at least three times per year to discuss the Greater Idaho proposal. Commis- sioners had their fi rst such discussion on July 14. The measure doesn’t require the commissioners to take any action. McCarter noted that last week Harney County voters passed a similar measure, with 63% support. By SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com The American Red Cross chal- lenged Baker County residents, and they responded. A two-day blood drive at the Church of the Nazarene on Monday, Nov. 8 and Tuesday, Nov. 9 brought in about 130 units of blood (a unit is about one pint), said Myrna Evans, the local blood drive coordinator. See, Border/Page A6 Horoscope ........B3 & B4 Jayson Jacoby ..........A4 News of Record ........A2 Obituaries ..................A2 Opinion ......................A4 Outdoors ..........B1 & B6 See, Blood/Page A6 Sports ........................A8 Turning Backs ...........A2 Weather ..................... B6 TUESDAY — BAKER MAN TALKS ABOUT ‘MIRACLE’ RECOVERY FROM COVID