THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 2021 BAKER CITY HERALD — A3 LOCAL & STATE Pendleton to join Baker in GOL By ANNIE FOWLER East Oregonian PENDLETON — Pend- leton Athletic Director Mike Somnis knew about six weeks ago the Bucks were destined to drop from 5A to 4A and join the Greater Oregon League. The executive board of the Oregon School Activities Association made that fi nal Monday, Dec. 13, when it ap- proved the last recommenda- tion of the Classifi cation and Redistricting Committee. The decision will bring changes to several leagues throughout the state starting with the 2022 fall season. “I think everyone is excited and ready to make the move,” Somnis said. “We have been very competitive at the 5A level. The reality of it is, with Hermiston going to the WIAA, and Hood River going to 5A and to the Northwest Oregon Conference, if we stayed, we would be in the Bend league. It will be a seamless fi t.” Pendleton will join GOL teams La Grande, Baker City and Ontario. McLoughlin is moving down to the 3A East- ern Oregon League. La Grande and Baker are ecstatic that Pendleton is join- ing their league. “We are very pleased to have Pendleton in our league,” La Grande AD Darren Goodman said. “It will help strengthen our league. Ev- eryone will have to raise their game, for sure.” “The GOL will defi nitely be more competitive now,” Baker AD Buell Gonzales added. “The issue with the schedul- ing is still there with just four teams. Losing Mac-Hi and gaining Pendleton, our league is more competitive and balanced. We didn’t want to lose La Grande. This worked out the best for everyone involved.” Pendleton is one of a hand- ful of local teams the redis- tricting affects. In addition to Mac-Hi moving to 3A, Irrigon will drop down to the 2A Blue Moun- tain Conference, and Pilot Rock will drop to the 1A Old Oregon League with Griswold and Nixyaawii. The Mac-Hi, Irrigon and Pilot Rock moves benefi t the schools, which have recently seen enrollment drop. Schools at the 3A level will have an enrollment of 146 to 310 in grades 9-11, while 2A is 75 to 145, and 1A is under 74 students. At the 4A level, enrollment is 311 to 607. Pendleton will be one of the largest schools in the division with 588 — larger than any school in the Greater Oregon League by more than 100 students. Only St. Helens and Crook County are larger. While travel will be re- duced for Pendleton, the hunt for nonleague games begins now. The GOL athletic directors will meet in Baker City on Thursday, Dec. 16, to discuss standard operating proce- dures, schedules and the like. “We are hitting the ground running,” Somnis said. “For us, it has been a long, long time since we have been connected to these schools. In 5A and 6A we have scheduling meetings. It’s a collaborative effort. I’m not sure how it is in 4A. Being at a small school before, it was a free-for-all. In the past, we haven’t played 3A schools. It’s a different world we are step- ping into.” Goodman and Gonzales know the challenges of sched- uling nonleague games, which can be upward of 14 games or more for basketball, volleyball, soccer, baseball and softball. “We have to work hard for those games,” Goodman said. “If you have teams that are good, it’s easier to get those games. Sometimes people don’t want to travel that far. Some are good about hosting a game and coming here the next time. It can be challeng- ing.” Gonzales said Pendleton could help open up avenues for new nonleague opponents. “If they can open us up to some new travel destinations, that would be great,” he said. Kathy Aney/East Oregonian, April 2021 Baker’s Gabe Gambleton, left, tries to elude Pendleton’s Zaanan Bane on April 2, 2021, at Pendleton. The two teams will become league opponents starting in the fall of 2022. Adding Pendleton to the GOL has benefi ts, according to Goodman. “You want your teams to be prepared to go into the playoffs,” Goodman said. “You want to challenge them so they will be ready. We have always had a little rivalry with Pendleton. Instead of friendly rivalries, now they mean something.” Gonzales said he likes that Pendleton can offer junior varsity and freshman teams to play, and they have swim- ming, which adds another team to their league. “On the competitive level, we match up well,” he said. “It will be good for the region. They were very competitive in baseball and softball, and they are a good 5A football team. I think they will continue to dominate at that. Baker is going to have to step up their game.” Work session set on proposed ‘constitutional county’ resolution should get people behind, and that we should come out to Salem and lobby it,” Brown said. Baker County Commissioners He said the proposed resolution is have scheduled a work session for Jan. 12 to continue a discussion about Baker County United’s effort at the county level to do that same thing. a proposed “constitutional county” “We are merely asking you com- resolution that local residents submit- ted to commissioners and are urging missioners to double down on the lib- erty that we already are afforded in them to approve. The work session will be at 1 p.m. the Constitution and Bill of Rights,” Brown said. at the Courthouse, 1995 Third St. Brown addressed a fl ier that On Wednesday, Dec. 15, commis- Baker County United distributed in sioners heard from proponents of the resolution, which states, among October, urging county residents to other things, that “all actions by the oppose Gov. Kate Brown’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate for health care federal government and its agents workers by refusing to pay their will conform strictly and implicitly with the principles expressed within property taxes and instead setting the money aside. the United States Constitution, “This was done in support of those Declaration of Independence, and the emergency services, not against Bill of Rights.” The group promoting the resolu- them,” Brown said. He said he has collected $2,500 tion is Baker County United. from supporters to ensure that Jake Brown of Halfway spoke adopting the resolution wouldn’t cost fi rst to commissioners, saying he the county any money. once attended a town hall meeting Commissioner Bruce Nichols with U.S. Rep. Cliff Bentz who told said the county respects the rights to the audience that if they wanted individual freedoms. He noted that to champion the causes that really the county was actually violating the meant something to them, they governor’s executive order requir- needed to stop complaining to him ing people to wear masks in public about it. “He basically said that we should indoor spaces, as commissioners weren’t wearing masks during the pull an effort together, that we By SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com meeting. Of the 30 or so people in the audience, only a couple of those were wearing a mask. One of those is Gary Dielman of Baker City. He was escorted from the room by Sheriff Travis Ash after repeatedly asking Commission Chairman Bill Harvey about the lack of compliance with the mask mandate. Dielman described the meeting as a “super spreader event.” Carrie Matthews of Baker City, talking about the proposed consti- tutional county resolution, said it is time to take a stand. “There is an emergency legislative session now that is trying to change history forever, telling us what to wear, what to inject into our bod- ies, who we can or cannot assemble with, and blatantly violate our lives, liberties, and happiness,” Matthews said, describing the situation as “slavery and involuntary servitude. We cannot stand one more day, one more minute, or one more second of this tyranny.” She encouraged people to write letters, email, or testify in opposition to the OHA proposed rules before Jan. 24. “If we become a constitutional county now and pass further resolu- DOSES month, so we waited 30 days until after we got our fl u shot to get this one. We’re good.” Continued from A1 Macy Eisland, who was with two friends who de- At the drive-thru clinic On Monday morning, Dec. clined to comment, said they each had a booster shot. 13, Becky and Bruce Litke “We’re from Portland and were among those who took our friend has property out advantage of the opportu- nity for inoculation from the in Sumpter and so we were just in town,” Eisland said. comfort of their car. The couple both got their “We were like, it was going to booster dose of the Moderna take at least three hours and two weeks waiting time in vaccine. Portland to get it so we were “We’re elderly, we just like, we’ll just drive through want to stay healthy and here. Very painless.” we’ve been around a lot of people we knew who became sick that didn’t get their COVID-19 case trends shots, and died,” Becky Litke For the fi rst 14 days of said. “Several people. And December, Baker County so, we’re just not ready to reported 49 cases, an average die yet. We would have got- of 3.5 cases per day. ten our booster earlier, but That would be the lowest we didn’t get our last shot monthly rate since July, until the end of March and when the daily average was then we got our fl u shot last 2.9. 36th death reported in county The OHA reported on Wednesday, Dec. 15 that a 71-year-old man from Baker County who tested posi- tive for COVID-19 on Nov. 13 died Dec. 10 at Saint Alphonsus Medical Center in Nampa, Idaho. The presence of underly- ing conditions had not been confi rmed. It was the county’s third COVID-19-related death during December. causing some concern. “It was a little nerve wracking for a while,’’ Rether- Continued from A1 ford said. The cause of the accident Fortunately, the railroad was contacted and the train, which remains under investigation. According to Aydelotte, Or- was moving slowly, was able egon requires a local medical to stop with plenty of dis- tance to spare but not before examiner to investigate the cause and manner of death when the death is unat- tended. The accident blocked both active rail lines until approxi- mately 8:45 a.m., when one of the lines was cleared. The crash did not close I-84 and no other vehicles were involved. CRASH tions, we will be proactive instead of reactive by telling them not in our county, not on our watch, or you will see the inside of the sheriff’s jail. Plain and simple,” Matthews said. Bert Ramos, manager for Lander County, Nevada, which has passed a similar resolution, also addressed Baker County commissioners Wednesday. Ramos said that by supporting the Constitution, law enforcement, emergency medical services and other local agencies is how “we keep our communities great.” Art Clark, who is a commissioner from Lander County, said he does not understand why anyone would be opposed to “ending all this treason.” Nichols said he is a student of the Constitution, is married to a teacher, has a son who is a principal, and is a veteran who strongly supports the Second Amendment, which is cited in the proposed resolution. “I am not opposed to the course or the causes that you guys are pointing out,” Nichols said. Nichols said he appreciates the comments from the public, but that commissioners need to spend more time studying, and discussing, the proposal. “Unfortunately, that’s painful have had two doses, and 37% have had a booster dose. The comparable percent- ages statewide are 82.5% and 49.8% (booster). • 50 to 64: 49.5% have had two doses, and 18.2% have had a booster dose. The comparable percent- ages statewide are 79.1% and 27.9% (booster). • 20 to 49: 39.4% have had two doses, and 8.2% have had a booster dose. The comparable percent- ages statewide are 76.9% and 16.8% (booster). • 18 to 19: 44.9% have Vaccination percentages had two doses, and 4.8% Baker County continues to have the fi fth-lowest vac- have had a booster dose. The comparable percent- cination rate among Oregon’s ages statewide are 65.6% 36 counties, with 54.7% of and 5.1% (booster). residents 18 and older hav- • 12 to 17: 25.8% have ing had at least one dose. had two doses, and 0.7% Baker County’s break- down by age group: • 65 and older: 65.4% have had a booster dose. The comparable percent- ages statewide are 65.3% and 1.1% (booster). • 5 to 11: 8.4% (not eli- gible for boosters). The comparable percent- age statewide is 26.3%. residents live in the 97814 ZIP code, which includes Baker City, parts of Baker Valley and the Keating and Medical Springs areas. The vaccination rate is 49.3% — 6,089 of 12,348 residents 18 and older hav- ing had at least one dose. Other areas: Vaccination rate by • 97834, Halfway/Pine ZIP code Valley: 461 of 904, 51% The Sumpter area has • 97907, Huntington: 220 the highest vaccination rate in Baker County at 60.6% of of 501, 43.9% • 97833, Haines: 405 of residents 18 and older — 171 of 282 — having had at least 740, 54.7% • 97870, Richland/Eagle one dose, according to OHA. The area with the lowest Valley: 271 of 798, 34% vaccination rate is Oxbow, • 97905, Durkee: 45 of 85, at the far eastern edge of 52.9% the county, where 33 of 216 • 97819 and 97837, residents 18 and older have Bridgeport/Hereford: 24 of had at least one dose, a rate 77, 31.2% of 15.3%. • 97884, Unity: 59 of 129, A majority of the county’s 45.7% An Independent Insurance Agency Associates Reed & Associates for for vice excellent service LOCALLY! 10106 N N. ‘C’ • Island City 541-975-1364 but that’s the way our government works,” Nichols said. The proposed resolution states that “the Baker County Commission- ers proudly join the Constitutional Sheriffs and Police Offi cers Asso- ciation and that the undersigned commissioners do hereby denounce any acts or agencies that promote the aforementioned practices. All actions by the federal government and its agents will conform strictly and implicitly with the principles expressed within the United States Constitution, Declaration of Indepen- dence, and the Bill of Rights.” “If we become a constitutional county now and pass further resolu- tions, we will be proactive instead of reactive by telling them not in our county, not on our watch, or you will see the inside of the sheriff’s jail. Plain and simple,” Matthews said. “Commissioner Mark Bennett said a lot of county residents are still worried about the pandemic. “I had one lady that just literally called and talked to me for over half an hour,” Bennett said. “She was bawling and she was accusing me of killing her. And my heart went out to her. My heart went out that anyone would be that scared, just fl at out scared.” Toll Free 1-866-282-1925 www.reedinsurance.net ance.net Medicare, Auto, Home Insurance and Annuities