CRANE RALLIES PAST BAKER GIRLS BASKETBALL TEAM: SPORTS, PAGE A6 DECEMBER 29, 2021– JANUARY 5, 2022 WWW.GOEASTERNOREGON.COM Ring in the new year PAGE 8 Read ‘A Series of Small Maneuvers’ PAGE 6 Celebrate New Year’s Eve Watch Fishtrap Fireside PAGE 9 PAGE 12 Taylor Scroggins/Contributed image This “2022” will illuminate downtown La Grande on Dec. 31 as the lighted ball drops to count down to the new year. GO! Magazine Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com December 30, 2021 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 31, 2021 WHAT YOU’LL FIND INSIDE: 12 months. 12 pages. Each featuring excerpts from that month’s top stories. Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald DECEMBER 16 — The waning sun shining on the Wallowa Mountains created a stunning scene Tuesday afternoon, Dec. 14 in Baker City. With the foothills in the foreground in shade, this view from Hillcrest shows the peaks of the Wallowas glowing in shades of pink, orange and white. Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald APRIL 15 — Alex McDonald, left, and Nick Schramm, both members of the La Grande Hot Shots firefight- ing crew, talk tactics during a prescribed fire at Phillips Reservoir. Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald MAY 13 — Baker City Downtown spearheaded a project to hang baskets of flowers along Main, First and Resort streets. Lisa Britton/For the Baker City Herald JANUARY 5 — Retreating clouds revealed the summit of Elkhorn Peak, second-highest point in the Elkhorn Mountains at 8,932 feet, on Sunday afternoon, Jan. 3. 2022 May your home be filled with joy, happiness BAKER CITY HERALD — C1 YEAR IN REVIEW 2021: THE YEAR IN PICTURES JULY 17 — Delicioso restaurant had a colorful float in the Miners Jubilee parade, which returned in 2021 after being canceled in 2020 due to the pandemic. Local • Business & AgLife • Go! magazine Your weekly guide to arts and entertainment events around Northeast Oregon And flooring you love! LA GRANDE 541-963-6033 BAKER CITY 541-523-1533 ENTERPRISE 541-426-9228 www.CarpetoneEO.com COMING IN FRIDAY’S ISSUE The Baker City Herald’s annual special section looking back at the top stories from the year. 14-page section includes one page for each month, as well as a selection of photos from 2021. QUICK HITS Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Ken Kritchen of Baker City. Publication schedule for New Year’s week The Baker City Herald will publish issues on Thurs- day, Dec. 30 and Friday, Dec. 31. There will not be an issue on Saturday, Jan. 1. WEATHER Today 21 / 14 Snow likely Friday 20 / 0 Partly sunny Full forecast on the back of the B section. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. 2021 bids a chilly farewell PROPOSED BOARDMAN-TO-HEMINGWAY POWER LINE IDAHO POWER GOES TO COURT  And 2022 is likely to start cold, too to gain access to properties for B2H surveys S. John Collins/Baker City Herald, File The proposed Boardman-to-Hemingway power line would follow the route of an existing line that crosses Highway 86 between Baker City and the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center.  Company has fi led civil actions against fi ve local property owners line, as proposed, would also cross several dozen parcels of private land in multiple counties, including Baker, Union, Wallowa and Morrow in Oregon. Idaho Power would have to pay private landowners By JAYSON JACOBY for an easement to build jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Idaho Power Company is the power line across their property. This would be a asking a judge to order the owners of fi ve Baker County one-time payment, not an annual lease, according to properties to allow the company to survey their land the boardmantohemingway. as part of its plan to build a com website. Sven Berg, a corporate major electric transmission communications specialist line through Northeastern for Idaho Power, said the line Oregon starting as early would affect about 30 private as 2023. landowners in Baker County, Attorneys represent- who combined own about 60 ing Idaho Power fi led civil separate parcels. petitions regarding two of The properties listed in the properties on Dec. 17 in Baker County Circuit Court, the fi ve recent court fi l- ings include parcels owned two others on Dec. 21, and by Hans and Susan Finke one on Dec. 28. of Wilsonville, Justin and The company is repre- Savannah Gyllenberg of sented in all fi ve cases by Baker City, Dean, Rex and Timothy Helfrich and Zach Olson of the Yturri Rose fi rm Susan Nelson of Baker City, the Harrell Land and Cattle in Ontario. LLC of Baker City, and Mike The company has been Ragsdale of Baker City. working since 2007 on the The Gyllenbergs’ 175-acre Boardman-to-Hemingway property is along Highway project, a 293-mile, 500-ki- 30, just south of Interstate lovolt line that would run 84 between Baker City and from near Boardman to Hemingway, near Murphy in Pleasant Valley. The Finkes’ land, covering Owyhee County, Idaho. about 288 acres, is in the Although sections of northern part of Baker Val- the proposed route runs ley, near Highway 203 east of through public property — the freeway. Idaho Power has received The Nelson property, permission from the federal north of Interstate 84 near government to do so — the the Pleasant Valley inter- change, is about 941 acres. The Harrell property, which is about two miles east of the freeway and just south of Highway 86 near the base of Flagstaff Hill, covers about 120 acres. Ragsdale’s property is just north of the Harrell par- cel, and covers about 50.5 acres, according to records from the Baker County As- sessor’s Offi ce. Savannah Gyllenberg said she and her husband have lived on their property for about seven and a half years. She said they re- ceived packages from Idaho Power a few months ago with forms to sign granting the company access, but the couple haven’t had time to review the documents. Gyllenberg said an exist- ing Idaho Power transmis- sion line crosses their prop- erty, and they have never objected to company workers entering the property to maintain the line. The fi ve petitions have nearly identical wording in most sections, differing mainly in the legal descrip- tions of the specifi c parcels involved. In each petition, Idaho Power states that either the company or its contractor, Cornerstone Energy Inc. 21, acting on the company’s See, Power/Page A3 Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Snow clings to a barberry bush in Baker City on Wednesday morning, Dec. 29. By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com The new year is likely to start much like the old one is ending. Snowy. Chilly. The wintry weather that dominated the fi nal week of 2021 is forecast to persist into at least the fi rst few days of 2022 in Baker County, according to the National Weather Service. The latest in a series of storms should bring light snow to the area Thursday, Dec. 30, followed by brief clearing on Friday and Friday night. With few clouds to hold in the heat, and arctic air intruding from Canada, temperatures could dip to near or even below zero in parts of Baker County Friday night. New Year’s Day should be dry and chilly, with high temperatures in the teens or low 20s. A stronger storm is pro- jected to move in from the Pacifi c Ocean on Monday, Jan. 3. Although tempera- tures will be moderate, and potentially rise above freez- ing on Tuesday, it’s possible that all the precipitation will fall as snow even in the valleys, according to the Weather Service. See, Chill/Page A3 Scouts to pick up Christmas trees Jan. 2 Baker City Herald Local Boy Scouts will be picking up Christmas trees in Baker City starting at 9 a.m. Sunday, Jan. 2. This community service is free, but donations are greatly appreciated, said Scoutmaster James Simpson. Trees need to be placed by the curb in front of the house before 9 a.m. on Sunday. Simpson said there will be about 18 Scouts — plus their parents — gathering trees. Busy beginning in Baker City  City Manager Jonathan Cannon refl ects on his fi rst year handling the day-to-day operations of the city and its departments. He works under the direction of the seven-member City Council, fi ve of whom started their terms the same week in January 2021 By SAMANTHA O’CONNER that Cannon moved into his offi ce soconner@bakercityherald.com As he approaches the end of his in City Hall. Cannon, 44, replaced Fred fi rst year as Baker City manager, Jonathan Cannon looks back on a Warner Jr., who retired at the end of 2020. 2021 when, more often than not, In addition to the usual chal- his schedule was full. lenges of adjusting to a new job in “It’s been very busy. We’ve a new city and state — Cannon had a lot going on this year,” said Cannon, who was hired in late No- moved from North Carolina, where vember 2020 and offi cially started he was city manager of Saluda, a city of about 800 residents — Can- work Jan. 1, 2021. In Baker City’s council-manag- non also arrived in the midst of the er form of government, Cannon is COVID-19 pandemic. As a result, Cannon had to deal in effect the CEO, responsible for with a variety of issues related to the pandemic, including Gov. Kate Brown’s mask and vaccination mandates, and restrictions that affected businesses. “Trying to adjust to that, yet still operate things ... every busi- ness in town, everybody in town, we’re no different from anybody else, have had to deal with that and navigate,” Cannon said. “That’s been very interesting, to say the least.” In particular, the requirement that some workers either be vac- cinated or request a religious or medical exemption has affected the city. Business ...........B1 & B2 Classified ............. B2-B4 Calendar ....................A2 Dear Abby ................. B6 Horoscope ........B3 & B4 Letters ........................A4 Issue 97, 32 pages Comics ....................... B5 Community News ....A3 Crossword ........B2 & B4 Samantha O’Conner/Baker City Herald See, Manager/Page A3 Jonathan Cannon in his offi ce at Baker City Herald. He is nearing his fi rst anni- versary as Baker City manager. Lottery Results ..........A2 News of Record ........A2 Obituaries ..................A2 Opinion ......................A4 Sports .............. A5 & A6 Weather ..................... B6