SATURDAY BAKER GIRLS BASKETBALL, WRESTLING TEAMS IN ACTION: SPORTS, A5 In SPORTS, A5 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com December 11, 2021 IN THIS EDITION: Local • Outdoors • Sports • TV $1.50 Two county residents die after contracting COVID-19 QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber John Anderson of Baker City. BRIEFING By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Ladies Golf and Bridge Christmas lunch set Dec. 15 The Quail Ridge Ladies Golf and Bridge Associa- tion is hosting a Christmas lunch, free for all past, pres- ent and future players. The lunch will be Wednesday, Dec. 15 at 11:30 a.m. at the clubhouse, 2801 Indiana Ave. Please call Dianne at 541-519-4703 to confi rm a seat. Dielman to speak at Baker Heritage Museum Dec. 14 Local historian Gary Dielman will be the featured speaker at the next monthly lecture series held at the Baker Heritage Museum, 2480 Grove St. His talk begins at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 14. Baker County YMCA plans fi rst Tinsel Trot Dec. 18 The Baker County YMCA is planning the fi rst Tinsel Trot fun run and walk on Saturday, Dec. 18, rain, snow or shine. The event starts at 11 a.m. at Geiser- Pollman Park. Same-day registration begins at 9:30 a.m. Register online at www.bakerymca.org. WEATHER Today 38 / 31 Snow likely Sunday 41 / 28 Rain showers Monday 42 / 26 Rain showers The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Baker rally falls just short Samantha O’Conner/Baker City Herald Residents from the Hope House, a Marsing, Idaho, facility that provides a home to children from failed adoptions, sang Christmas carols during the Baker Rotary Club meeting Monday morning, Dec. 6, at the Baker Tower. House of Hope “We’ve always felt that sharing our faith in the simplest way, by our lives, was going to be the best way to let people know about us,” she said. Jay Multanen, a member of the Boise Sunrise Rotary Club, said the Hope House is his favorite charity. “It is a group home in Marsing, Idaho, and it’s a home for children to come to,” said Multanen, who attended the Baker Rotary Club’s meeting. “So these are children who have fallen through the cracks of the federal foster care program. Many of them have come from multiple failed adoptions and they end up at the Hope House.” Hope House is home to about 80 residents, including 25 of high school age, as well as some adults who are not able to live on their own. Omicron variant surveillance Baker City is one of 40 Oregon cities where OHA is testing sewage for the new omicron variant of COVID-19. The agency started testing sewage samples in September 2020, and the program, which includes Baker City, helped identify the presence of the delta variant in the state ear- lier this year. The most recent Baker City sample tested was collected on Nov. 16, according to OHA. The agency has been testing samples from Baker City on a weekly or biweekly schedule. Earlier this year, samples of sewage in Baker City showed sustained increases in the con- centration of the delta variant starting in early August. That coincides with a surge in infec- tions caused by that variant, which is much more contagious than previous variants. Cases in Baker County rose from 91 in July to 300 in August, and peaked in September with 465. See, Hope/Page A3 See, COVID/Page A2 Baker Rotary Club welcomes residents, staff from the Hope House, an Idaho facility that provides a home to children from failed adoptions so there was an in-born desire for kids to have an actual address,” Velvick said. “So when I was 31, I was fi nally able to The Baker City Rotary Club get that started.” welcomed guests from Idaho’s Hope According to the Hope House’s mis- House Home for Children at the club’s sion statement, it provides “a home for meeting Monday afternoon, Dec. 6 at children who are emotionally impaired, the Baker Tower. developmentally disabled, and/or come The Hope House choir sang Christmas carols as well as the facility’s from disrupted adoptions or dysfunc- tional families.” theme song, “Every Child (Deserves a There is no charge for children Home). Hope House founder Donnalee Vel- to live at the Hope House, which is vick told Rotary Club members that the licensed by the Idaho Department of Education. home, in Marsing, is designed to give Hope House is a nonprofi t, faith- children a place where they feel safe, are healthy, and know they are valued. based organization that accepts no local, state or federal money, except “For me, 49 years ago, I was one of what is paid as benefi ts to its resident the kids,” Velvick said. She said she grew up in an orphan- children. Velvick said the facility is Christian- age for a while and then lived with based, but emphasizes what it offers to many different foster families. “They were all very kind to me and children. By SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com ‘All I wanted to do was help him’ kneeling on the tracks near a trestle across the Powder Amber Gabiola said she River southeast of Wade begged her younger broth- Williams Park. Amber, who is four er, Michael, to seek help for years older than his drug addiction her brother and and mental health grew up with him problems. in Baker City, “I was in tears,” doesn’t believe Amber said. “He her brother was would say he didn’t suicidal. need help.” But she said Now it is too Myers- that Michael, late. Gabiola through the combi- Michael Steven Myers-Gabiola, 30, of Baker nation of drug use and his City, was hit and killed by a mental issues, sometimes freight train in Baker City felt he was “invincible.” “I’ve seen him in one of the evening of Nov. 14. those moods,” Amber said. Baker City Police said She thinks he might the train crew reported have knelt on the tracks that Myers-Gabiola was By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com TODAY Issue 90, 12 pages Calendar ....................A2 Classified ............. B2-B4 Comics ....................... B5 that evening because he was confused or intoxicat- ed, or both. But she fi nds it “hard to believe” that her brother intended to end his life. This, of course, is a ques- tion Amber will never be able to answer defi nitely. But about one thing she is sure. Her brother needed help, but that help, due to his own stubbornness and to limitations in the criminal justice system, was elusive. “It takes a lot of work to succeed, and I don’t think that’s something that my brother wanted to do,” Am- ber said. “My brother got Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B2 & B4 Dear Abby ................. B6 Two more Baker County residents have died after testing positive for COVID-19, the Oregon Health Authority (OHA) reported this week. A 62-year-old Baker County woman died Dec. 1, after test- ing positive for COVID-19 on Nov. 16, the Oregon Health Authority (OHA) reported on Wednesday, Dec. 8. And the state agency reported on Friday, Dec. 10 that a 67-year-old Baker County man had died Dec. 7 at Saint Alphonsus Medical Center in Boise after testing positive on Nov. 17. He had underlying medical conditions. OHA has not confi rmed whether the woman had underlying medical conditions. The agency did not report whether she died in a hospital or elsewhere. They are the 34th and 35th county residents to die after testing positive for the virus, and the fi rst two deaths during December. away with so much stuff, many years of probation. The justice system swept him under the rug.” Amber has personal experience with addiction. She was cited in 2015 for possession of metham- phetamine. Amber pleaded guilty to the charge in July 2016 and was sentenced to fi ve days in jail and 18 months probation. In 2016 she entered a detox center in Pendleton to overcome her addiction. Amber said she was motivated by the possibility that she would lose custody of her son, who is now 8. Driver shortage could slow snow removal By DICK MASON The (La Grande) Observer LA GRANDE — A short- age of road maintenance employees could create delays in snow removal this winter in Eastern Oregon. “Fewer people will be run- ning plows. Anytime you have fewer operators it means that work will take longer,” said Oregon Department of Transportation spokesperson Tom Strandberg. See, Michael/Page A3 Horoscope ........B3 & B4 Jayson Jacoby ..........A4 News of Record ........A2 Obituaries ..................A2 Opinion ......................A4 Outdoors ..........B1 & B2 See, Snow/Page A3 Sports ........................A5 Turning Backs ...........A2 Weather ..................... B6 INSIDE, PAGE B1 — DEER, ELK DISEASE CONFIRMED IN WESTERN IDAHO