THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2021 BAKER CITY HERALD — A3 LOCAL Commissioners discuss warming center for homeless By SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com Sherrie Kvamme/Contributed Photo Everyone in New Bridge decorated for Christmas last year — residents even put lights and decor on the row of mailboxes. LIGHTS Other Richland events Continued from A1 Local residents Mib and Jacque Dailey were Santa and Mrs. Claus for the carol- ing event and handed out candy. Although the caroling was fun, Cole wanted something more to brighten the dark December nights. “We talked about decorat- ing houses and lighting up the community,” she said. She presented the idea to members of the New Bridge Grange, who decided to sup- port it and sponsor the prizes for the Christmas lighting contest: $100 for fi rst place, then four $25 awards for the runner up displays. Cole put up posters about the contest, and articles ran in Halfway’s Hells Canyon Journal newspaper. “And when I saw some- Eagle Valley Grange’s holiday fl ea market and auction is Saturday, Dec. 4. The market starts at 9 a.m. and the auc- tion begins at 2 p.m. There will also be food to purchase (soup, chili, pies and cinnamon rolls). On the following weekend, the Richland Christmas tree lighting happens on Friday, Dec. 10, at 6 p.m. Santa will be in attendance, and warming fi res to ward off the cold. one, I asked if they would do lighting,” Cole said. “It was to get people out of their house and think of something other than COVID.” She had 18 people enter the contest. “But we had others who didn’t enter but still decorat- ed,” she said. “One guy kept decorating until Valentine’s Day.” She said Richland Feed & Seed couldn’t keep lights in stock. “He had to keep ordering,” Cole said. Sherrie Kvamme/Contributed Photo Residents of Eagle Valley illuminated their yards and homes during December 2020 for the fi rst lighting contest sponsored by the New Bridge Grange. The tradition is continuing this month. She brought in anony- mous judges from out of town, and said people came from around Eastern Oregon and Boise to see the light displays in Eagle Valley. “The whole town of New Bridge was full of lights. It was wonderful,” she said. (New Bridge is an unincorporated community about three miles north of Richland.) Cole is already spread- ing the word for the 2021 version of the contest, which she’s calling “Light Up Eagle Valley.” Prizes are again sponsored by the New Bridge Grange. Cole is accepting entries now. Judging will happen between Dec. 18-21, and the winners will be announced before Christmas. “I’m hoping to have more entries,” she said. “It’s to get everyone in a better mood and feeling good. It’s just a happy time.” For information about the lighting contest, or to enter, call Cole at 541-893-3285. LOCAL BRIEFING CASA plans multiple events in December CASA of Eastern Oregon has a busy month, beginning Friday, Dec. 3, with the tour of gingerbread creations at businesses in downtown Baker City. This year’s theme is Santa’s Village. A map of where to see the gingerbread displays will be available at the CASA offi ce, 2024 Main St., Crossroads Carnegie Art Center and the Chamber of Commerce. Also on Friday, the Baker Heritage Museum will have a pop-up exhibit featur- ing sleigh bells and other wintery artifacts in front of CASA during the First Friday art walk. Also, the museum is holding a toy drive for CASA during this pop-up exhibit. Friday is also when gin- gerbread houses decorated by youth will be delivered to the former location of The Little Bagel Shop. These will be on display for a week. On Saturday, Dec. 11, CASA will sponsor a walking tour of historic home porches. Maps can be picked up at Lew Bros. Les Schwab, the CASA offi ce, and the Cham- ber of Commerce. Donations will be accepted — this tour is in lieu of CASA’s tradition- al fundraiser of the historic homes tour, which isn’t hap- pening for the second year in a row. CASA is also holding the annual toy drive for children in foster care. Toys can be delivered to Lew Bros. Les Schwab. Gift tags are also available at Crossroads Carnegie Art Center — gifts can be returned there or to the CASA offi ce by Dec. 15. Inquires about gift donations can be directed to CASA, 541-403-0405. Mary Collard, CASA executive director, said items for teens are especially welcome, such as gift cards. Cultural Coalition seeking grant applications The Baker County Cultural Coalition (BCCC) is welcoming grant applications for arts, culture and heritage projects through Dec. 15. BCCC receives a grant annually from the Oregon Cultural Trust to support local heritage, arts and culture projects in the county. Over the past 18 years, the coalition has awarded more than $100,000 in grants to local artists, programs such as “Chalk It up to Art,” local orchestra, children’s program, Halfway music events, heritage events such as restoring the Haines School bell, history summer program at Baker Heritage Museum and the Baker 5J School District oral history collection. Grants are typically $500 and are not restricted to nonprofi t organizations. Oc- casionally grants are given in larger amounts where a project warrants critical support. The BCCC board of directors seeks applications from any individual or group who has a program or project addressing arts and culture in Baker County and it looks forward to receiving creative ideas. The local grant process through BCCC for 2022 is in two stages. The fi rst deadline is Dec. 15 for grants given in January; the second stage is May 15 for grants giving in June for projects taking place before the end of 2022. Grant applications and instructions for reports can be found on the Baker County website at www.bakercounty.org/cultur- al_plan/contact_us.html. Since few grants were able to be given during 2020 and 2021 because of COVID limitations on programming, BCCC has money left over from those years to support more cultural activities. With winter just around the corner, Baker County Commissioners discussed the homeless situation in Baker County and the pos- sibility of fi nding a building where people could stay overnight. During the Wednesday, Dec. 1 meeting, Commis- sion Chairman Bill Harvey said he called the warming center in La Grande and asked operators there about their center. “They basically open up right about four in the afternoon and they lock the door at nine o’clock at night and it’s locked down until seven o’clock in the morn- ing when everybody has to go out,” Harvey said. The facility serves breakfast daily and allows people to sleep overnight during the winter. Harvey told fellow com- missioners Mark Bennett and Bruce Nichols that the La Grande warming center has a separate area for women and children, a kitchen to serve meals, and a common area with tables and chairs. “I’m thinking we have to have maybe a two-pronged approach — one as a tem- porary start up, trying to accommodate basic needs we have for this winter, because it’s going to be quick COUNTY Continued from A1 The county disposed of that material, as well as fi berglass insulation and treated and painted wood, in an open pit on Orr Road near Halfway, where the materials were burned, according to the letter. Oregon law prohibits those materials from being burned. Asbestos, a known carcino- gen, was used in many build- ing materials in past decades. The debris remained in the pit until May 2021, when the county “properly packaged and disposed of the material as asbestos-containing waste material,” O’Donnell wrote. Laura Gleim, public af- fairs specialist for the DEQ’s Eastern Region, wrote in an email to the Baker City Her- ald that the agency learned about the incident several months after the demolition when “a county employee contacted DEQ to ask if they should have followed asbestos rules. The answer is yes. The county then hired an asbestos contractor to survey and properly dispose of the remaining ash and debris.” The county has 20 days to decide whether to appeal the fi ne. Mosier said county of- fi cials will be discussing the matter with DEQ, including the possibility of reducing the fi ne by doing an environ- mental improvement project somewhere in the county. “So, the county’s going to investigate that and try to and down and dirty, if you want to say that,” Harvey said. “What I would like to do is look at a building that we could quickly facilitate, throw some walls up, I’m looking for something that’s got enough space to accom- modate dormitory style sleeping and a common area and some sort of kitchen facilities with ideally bath- rooms and showers.” Harvey said this is not a permanent housing scenario, but rather a temporary emergency services program to get through this winter, so offi cials have more time to plan a permanent situation. “And then a long-term strategy — funding, staffi ng, facility,” he said. Harvey said the county needs to coordinate with New Directions North- west, the Baker City Police Department and the Baker County Health Department. He said the long-term goal should be to help people fi nd permanent homes. “I don’t want to be spend- ing tons of money every year just to keep them as they are,” Harvey said. Bennett said the county’s emergency management department has cots and blankets that could be used at a warming center, as well as sleeping bags. Harvey said he was prompted to raise the issue by recent comments from the public about an increas- ing number of homeless residents in Baker City. “We need to do some- thing,” Nichols said. “If we don’t, we’re only going to be reactive,” Ben- nett said. Baker City Police Chief Ty Duby said last month that he plans to ask the Baker City Council to ap- prove an ordinance limiting where, and when, people can camp on public property within the city limits. Duby said the city’s homeless population seems to have increased over the past few years, based on his own observations and from what he’s heard from other police offi cers and from the public. This summer the police department received mul- tiple complaints from resi- dents about people camping beneath the bridges along the Leo Adler Memorial Parkway, Duby said. Nichols said he wants to talk with New Directions and Community Connection, and get Baker City offi cials involved in the discussion. The commissioners will also be looking into funding opportunities for the project. “We know there are state funds out there, so what we need to know is what we have as a match, because that’s the fi rst thing they are going to ask,” Bennett said. make a good outcome,” Mosier said. “There are some things that we may be able to appeal but it’ll be up to the commis- sioners to decide if they want to go that route or invest in a local project with the penalty funds.” In addition to the county’s proposed fi ne, the DEQ has notifi ed Rodney Tarter, who owns the property where the material was disposed of, that the agency is fi ning him $3,300 for maintaining an il- legal solid waste disposal site. According to DEQ docu- ments, on April 19, 2021, an accredited inspector collected samples from the material in the pit on Tarter’s property. A subsequent analysis showed the 60% chrysotile asbestos concentration in the wallboard. On May 5, a licensed as- bestos abatement contractor removed about 10 cubic yards of material from the pit and disposed of it. The proposed $7,400 pen- alty includes three separate violations: • $3,200 for failing to have an accredited inspector exam- ine the mobile home before demolition. • $2,400 for performing an asbestos abatment project (the demolition qualifi es as such) without a license. • $1,800 for disposing of material in a non-permitted site. In her email to the Herald, Gleim wrote: “DEQ under- stands the county’s goal in demolishing the mobile home was to eliminate the safety hazards it posed to the public. But in doing so, the county put the public, as well as its employees, at risk of exposure to asbestos and other harmful chemicals.” An Independent Insurance Agency Associates Reed & Associates for for vice excellent service LOCALLY! 10106 N N. ‘C’ • Island City 541-975-1364 Toll Free 1-866-282-1925 www.reedinsurance.net ance.net Second asbestos-related issue in 2021 In late March, DEQ noti- fi ed the county of a proposed $8,400 fi ne, also related to the removal of asbestos-contain- ing material. The agency alleged that Bill Harvey, chairman of the Baker County Board of Commissioners, had removed asbestos-containing fl ooring in the summer of 2020 from the building at 2200 Fourth St. that the county bought as headquarters for the Baker County Health Department. Harvey, who is a building contractor, denied that the fl ooring he removed contained asbestos. DEQ later rescinded its proposed fi ne after the county’s attorney provided evidence that the fl ooring Harvey removed matched other sections of fl ooring in the building that tests showed did not contain asbestos. Gleim, the DEQ public affairs specialist, said in July 2021 that although the county did not have photos or other documentation confi rm- ing that the two sections of fl ooring were the same, the agency also did not have evi- dence to contradict the county attorney’s claim that the fl oor- ing Harvey removed was the same as the sections that did not contain asbestos. Medicare, Auto, Home Insurance and Annuities