BAKER CITY HERALD • THURSDAY, JANUARY 6, 2022 A3 LOCAL & STATE Snow Continued from A1 Without the jet stream to shove storms through, the snow-producing front has been parked across Eastern Oregon for most of the week. When the front is north of Baker City, the winds tend to blow from the south, bring- ing slightly warmer air, Breidenbach said. When the front moves the opposite di- rection and dives south of Baker City, the wind direction shifts, with northerly winds usher- ing in colder air. This fluctuating pat- tern played out earlier in the week. On Tuesday, Jan. 4, the front, acting as a warm front, pushed north toward Washing- ton. The temperature at the Baker City Airport rose to 35 degrees — the warmest so far in 2022 — about 5:30 a.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 5. But then the front re- versed course, passing through Baker County again and prompting north winds that cooled the temperature to 31 degrees at 9 a.m. The front isn’t fin- ished, though. Breidenbach said it will move north again, this time bringing even warmer air from the south. Temperatures in Baker City are forecast to rise into the low 40s on Thursday, Jan. 5 and Friday, Jan. 6. Over the weekend a major change in the pattern is likely, he said, with a ridge of high pressure replacing the low pressure trough that has dominated the first week of the new year. “The ridge will put an end to the stormy pat- tern,” Breidenbach said. The shift also likely will result in a tem- perature inversion, with colder air trapped in Baker and other val- leys, potentially lead- ing to fog. Breidenbach said the ridge could persist for a week or longer, with little chance of precip- itation. Snowplow priority map for Baker City. Witham Continued from A1 Witham said she worries about the long-term effects on children of mask require- ments. She said she is also trou- bled by people losing their jobs due to the vaccine man- date. Witham said that although she lacks experience as an elected official, she believes she’s well-positioned to rep- resent county residents due to her familiarity with the county, its history, customs and culture. Cattle Continued from A2 “They were all acclimated to this climate, but not all accli- mated to this specific terrain. Some do not know how to navigate canyons, so they have wandered in the wrong direc- tion as we searched for them and brought in other groups. New cows are more difficult to gather than cows that have run on the same range for several consecutive years and know the way home. These cows are not calving in the snow; the ranch’s fall calving season was October through November. When we began gathering in September, there were 1,613 mother cows on summer range.” He acknowledged bovine ca- sualties in the recovery efforts. “Despite the efforts of our crew and the community, 10 cows have been found unre- coverable,” he said, adding that “1,548 Dean Oregon Ranches mother cows were success- fully gathered by Dean Oregon Ranches crew before the snow. After the snow, 34 mother cows have been gathered through the joint efforts of our crew and the community. Of those, 26 were Dean Ore- gon Ranches cattle; the others were owned by neighboring ranches.” Warnock expressed his grat- itude to fellow ranchers assist- ing in the recovery. “We truly appreciate the ef- fort the community has shown in this final push to gather the remaining cows,” he said. “We plan to continue aerial searches and hope to bring in the ma- jority of the remaining 29 mother cows.” County involved At an emergency meeting of the Wallowa County Board of Commissioners on an unre- lated matter Dec. 30, Nash — who is a rancher and president of the Oregon Cattlemen’s As- sociation — said information on the situation at present was limited. “The things we do know is that this was a Forest Service permit for the Upper Big Sheep Creek and the Upper Imnaha,” Nash said after the meeting. “It Taxes Continued from A1 Baker City Public Works Department “I know so many people and businesses and issues in the county just through my work over the last three de- cades,” she said. Witham, who was born in Baker City, moved away with her family in 1976, when she was a second-grader, and then returned during her se- nior year in high school. She’s been here since. Although Witham em- phasizes that she’s not a politician, she has experi- ence in political advocacy, most notably as a supporter of maintaining access for motor vehicles to the Wal- lowa-Whitman National For- est and other public land in the county. Witham is a longtime member of a local group of four-wheel-drive enthusiasts who use local roads and trails and also have hosted many events to clean up trash on public lands. Witham said she believes natural resource issues will continue to be vital to Baker County, including forest management. “Our forests need help,” she said, citing recent large wildfires in and around the county. About half of Baker Coun- ty’s 2 million acres is public land, managed by either the Forest Service or the Bureau of Land Management. Witham said that if she’s elected she’s eager to con- front a new challenge. “I do look forward to div- ing into it — I think it’s an in- teresting position,” she said. “I want to come at it with a commonsense approach. I don’t have an agenda. My agenda is the people of the county, and that’s it.” Witham pointed out that although this has no influ- ence on her decision to run, she would be, if elected, the county’s first female commis- sioner. takes in a large area — 72,000 acres — known as the Marr Flat Grazing Allotment. They had a viable permit to go on sometime in the spring. They were supposed to have all cattle removed according to the For- est Service permit. By the 15th of October, there were still cat- tle that remained out there and are in very deep snow, some of them have expired. There is a rescue effort being made right now to try and rescue as many as possible. We’ve committed county resources to it. There’ve been a number of people who have volunteered or have con- tributed time. There’s been he- licopters that have flown feed into some that were extremely isolated and the rescue contin- ues. Those are the basic facts that I do know.” Nash went on to specify the county resources. “The Road Department cleared about 10 miles of road in a heavy snowfall area on the Upper Imnaha,” he said. “They cleared about 90 trees out of the road. Compounding the heavy snowfall that came all at once, we had an event where we had rain and heavy snow- fall afterword. There are trees across a lot of the access roads that they’re trying to get down right now that has exasperated those efforts to try to extricate the cattle from their situation.” He was unsure how many cattle were involved, but was aware some had young calves. Rancher Casey Tippett said he called the Forest Service in November after hearing re- ports from hunters that cat- tle were on land where they weren’t supposed to be, but he never heard back from the federal agency. “Those cattle should’ve been taken off that land a long time ago,” Tippett said Dec. 30. “When they take strange cattle to an allotment, when winter hits they don’t know how to get out. The people who know that country should’ve been getting them out.” hero in all of this,” she said of the Joseph construction con- tractor. “It was Adam Stein who got the ball rolling.” She said he started gathering people to help after viewing the cattle from the air. Warnock added his take on Stein’s assistance. “I contacted Adam Stein to fly for the ranch and flew with him to look for cows multiple times,” Warnock said. “I am very thankful we reached out to Adam — he has been awe- some through all this and his expertise in the snow and in the air has been an invaluable resource.” Nash said various agencies have been apprised of the sit- uation, ready to lend what aid they could. He said the Wal- lowa County Sheriff’s Office and the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest are aware, as well as others. “I’ve had some discussion with the Oregon Department of Agriculture on this situ- ation,” he said. “They’re the ones with the Brand Depart- ment a lot of the (state laws) concerning the current situa- tion.” Peter Fargo, public affairs officer for the Wallowa-Whit- man National Forest based in Baker City, said in an email Dec. 31 that the county, the sheriff’s office and volunteers not only had been rescuing cattle, they “have been hauling hay and water with snowmo- biles, side-by-sides and he- licopters. The priority of the operation is first on everyone’s safety and then saving as many cattle as possible.” He said the Forest Service instructed the permittee and ranch manager to remove all the cattle in October. Fargo estimated there were an estimated 70 head of cattle still on the allotment Dec. 21 and as of Dec. 30, there were up to 25 animals still unac- counted for. Tom Birkmaier, president of Wallowa County Stockgrowers, said he has heard the numbers are higher, but couldn’t say exactly how many. But mostly it’s people in Wallowa County who are get- ting out the effort to rescue the stranded cattle and calves. “There’s a lot of people who are quite concerned,” Nash said. Birkmaier, who ranches on Crow Creek where he and wife, Kelly, have been caring for some of the rescued calves, was emphatic in his concern for the situation. “Several factors created near perfect storm that led to an unfortunate series of event impacting a group of cattle in southern Wallowa County. Ap- parent mismanagement, ex- treme weather events and lac- tating cows with young calves all played a part,” Birkmaier said. “Over 40 folks nearly all volunteers, mostly led by Adam Stein’s common sense and tireless commitment both in the air and on the ground have been working the past 10 days on an incredible rescue of many livestock.” Humane Society Carol Vencill, president of the local Humane Society, said she, too, was unsure of the numbers, but said the snow was 7 feet deep in some places. “Adam Stein is really the The six-year average is 87.9%, Durflinger said. Property tax bills were mailed in late October 2021. Durflinger said the county received one letter from a property owner who with- held paying taxes as a protest against the governor’s vaccine mandate. That property owner had two separate properties, how- ever, and the withheld pay- ment, for about $200, was less than the taxes for the other parcel. The tax for that prop- erty was paid by the owner’s lender, and was made auto- matically, Durflinger said. She said her office also re- ceived one phone call from a resident who expressed oppo- sition to the vaccine mandate. The county typically re- ceives a majority of the prop- erty taxes it levies before the end of the year. Property owners who pay their full bill by Nov. 15 receive a 3% discount. Those who pay at least two-thirds of their bill by Nov. 15 receive a 2% dis- count. To avoid having any inter- est added to their bill, prop- erty owners have to pay at least one-third of the bill by Nov. 15. The second one-third payment is due by Feb. 15, and the final one-third by May 15. Earlier in the fall of 2021, the group Baker County United produced a flier noting that the governor’s mandate that health care workers be vacci- nated, or receive a religious or medical exception, could result in worker shortages. The group also sent letters to the Baker City Council, Baker County commissioners and Sheriff Travis Ash requesting a “public declaration of county wide mandate defiance, imple- mentation of a self governance measure, and a warning that property taxes will be withheld if further action is not taken by these local government bod- ies to stand for our freedoms against these mandates.” Baker County United called the property tax withholding idea “Operation Boston Tea Party.” In a newsletter dated Dec. 30, 2021, posted on its website, www.bakercountyunited.com, the group states that “Our reach is gaining traction, but not enough for this effort cur- rently, so we decided to put a hold on Operation Boston Tea Party. As a reminder, the pen- alty is 1.33% every month so those penalties versus the re- ward are greater right now so go ahead and pay, but it’s your choice.” In an email response to a question from the Herald, Jake Brown, a member of Baker County United, wrote that the group is now encourag- ing people who withheld their property taxes to pay them because decisions by local offi- cials to grant religious or med- ical exemptions to most emer- gency responders who aren’t vaccinated meant that “emer- gency services were preserved.” Brown wrote that the group’s concern about the governor’s mandate resulting in a shortage of paramedics and other emergency workers was legitimate. He noted that county commissioners ap- proved a resolution stating as much in late September 2021. Brown wrote that the pur- pose of Operation Boston Tea Party was intended to support emergency workers, not to de- fund city and county services. “I can’t emphasize enough that it wasn’t to defund our emergency services, but rather, to make a statement that if we lost half of our rural fire emer- gency personnel, as was being talked about as well as others in law enforcement and med- ical services, then why would we continue to pay?” Brown wrote. “What were we fund- ing? This was being done to put pressure on the county commissioners to stand by the people instead of buckling to pressure from Salem.” Brown noted that County Commissioner Mark Ben- nett stated, during a Dec. 15 commissioners meeting, that property taxes bring in about $6 million of an annual county budget of about $42 million. “Many residents of the county took his comment to mean that we will always be second to the demands of Sa- lem and DC,” Brown wrote. Property taxes are a signif- icant source of revenue for Baker City’s budget. The city receives about $3.6 million per year in property taxes, and the largest share of that money, almost $3 million for the cur- rent fiscal year that started July 1, 2021, goes to the general fund. That fund includes the po- lice and fire departments. Most of the rest of the city’s share of property taxes is used for street maintenance. Baker City Manager Jona- than Cannon said in early Oc- tober 2021, after Baker County United began distributing the flier encouraging people to withhold property taxes, that a significant reduction in prop- erty tax revenue would force the city to cut services, poten- tially including police and fire, that residents have come to de- pend on. Baker County United’s Dec. 30 newsletter urges property owners, when they pay their property taxes, to include a let- ter or email to the three county commissioners “explaining that you are paying in protest and express your support for Baker County declaring itself a constitutional county.” Baker County United rep- resentatives attended the com- missioners’ Dec. 15 meeting and called on them to pass a resolution declaring Baker County a “constitutional county.” The resolution states, among other things, that “all actions by the federal government and its agents will conform strictly and implicitly with the prin- ciples expressed within the United States Constitution, Declaration of Independence, and the Bill of Rights.” County commissioners took no action Dec. 15, but they scheduled a work session for Jan. 12 to continue the dis- cussion. Baker County United’s Dec. 30 newsletter encourages people to attend the Jan. 12 session “to show us and the county commissioners that they must uphold their oaths and adopt this resolution.” Rachel Pregnancy Center 2192 Court Avenue, Baker City • 541-523-5357 Services Provided: Free Pregnancy Tests A resource center for Referrals for Free Ultrasounds families Pregnancy Options Counseling Adoption Referrals Prenatal, Infant Care & Parenting Classes Maternity & Baby Clothing Post Abortion Recovery Helping women & men in an Open Tues -Thurs unexpected pregnancy. unplanned pregnancy. All services free & confidential. 10 am - 5 4 pm (closed for lunch) 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 Medicare, Auto, Home Insurance and Annuities