SPORTS A5 OUTDOORS & REC B1 TUESDAY Baker beats Fruitland Snow drifts create a frozen desert High school sports roundup IN THIS EDITION: LOCAL • OUTDOORS & REC • SPORTS BRIEFING ————— Baker County seeks volunteers for committees Baker County is seeking volunteers to serve on several committees, boards and commissions. Anyone interested must submit a volunteer form. Forms are available online at www.bakercounty.org/com- missioners. More information is available by calling the county commissioners’ offi ce at 541-523-8200 or by email- ing Heidi Martin at hmartin@ bakercounty.org. Home Builders group off ers scholarships The Northeast Oregon Home Builders Association is offering two $1,500 schol- arships to help educate and train individuals in a profes- sion related to the building industry. Applicants must currently be a senior enrolled in high school, enrolled as a college student or in a qualifi ed apprenticeship program. The students must be a resident of Umatilla, Morrow, Union, Baker, or Wallowa County and have an interest in or intend to pursue a career in the construction profession. Scholarship application forms are available at: • www.neohba.com • www.columbiabasinstu- denthomes.org • Local high school coun- seling offi ces Deadline for application is April 15, 2022. WEATHER ————— Today 32/16 Partly cloudy Sunday 28/13 Mostly sunny Monday 29/14 Increasing clouds Full forecast on the back of the B section. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com JANUARY 8, 2022 • $1.50 ‘We serve’ Baker City Lions Club continues projects amid declining membership Officials optimistic that omicron effects will be less severe BY LISA BRITTON lbritton@bakercityherald.com The Lions go about string- ing lights, working in a co- ordinated way that shows they’ve done this many, many times. And as they unwind strings and test to make sure the bulbs glow, they catch up on each other’s lives and ask how other members are doing. Decorating several struc- tures at Geiser-Pollman Park for the holiday season is just one community service proj- ect of the Baker City Lions Club. The local Lions club was founded in August 1929. The national organization started to 1917. It went international in 1920. “We do a lot of things for the community and the kids,” said Jeff Nelson, cur- rent president of the Baker City club. “The Lions are wonderful — they have a good time, they enjoy it, and they enjoy each other.” Nelson has been a mem- ber for about 18 years. Gregg Hinrichsen joined about 30 years ago. “It’s a very positive, ener- getic group of people who I enjoy spending time with,” he said. Steve Fiddler joined about seven years ago. “I was a good friend of someone who was a mem- ber and he talked me into it,” Fiddler said. “It’s been a lot of fun. The commitment of the core group is really dedicated to the community.” But this club, like many service organizations, is try- ing to do the same projects with fewer members. Today’s membership is about 35. “Compared to 52 about two years ago,” Nelson said. And of those 35, about 14 actively participate in meet- COVID cases surge BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Baker City Lions Debby Ray, left, Jeff Nelson and Steve Fiddler decorated the gazebo at Geiser Poll- man Park with lights on Dec. 2, 2021. ings and committees. Blake Marlia, who joined the Lions about 18 years ago, is worried about the declin- ing membership. “The biggest thing is to figure out the next genera- tion — how to inspire them to help out,” he said. He saw the Lions Club as a good way to volunteer in Baker City. “I wanted to be involved in the community,” he said. “This was an easy way to do that. It’s a good avenue for people to volunteer.” And he likes the company. “They’re fun,” he said of his fellow Lions. One of their more visible club projects — and fund- raiser — is serving breakfast on Saturday and Sunday of Miners Jubilee every July. In 2021, the Lions recruited extra help from the Kiwanis Club and a local volleyball team. Other projects include serving dinner at Commu- nity Night Out every Au- gust, tending burn barrels and providing hot cocoa at the tree lighting in Decem- ber, and various projects along the Leo Adler Me- morial Parkway, such as the exercise zone near Kirkway and H streets and the me- morial park just north of Broadway Street. Nelson said the summer of 2022 will see the addition of a memorial wall in that park to honor Lions who have passed away. The club is working with Natural Structures. The surge in COVID-19 cases has arrived in Baker County, but local officials say they’re optimistic that because the new omi- cron variant is less viru- lent than ear- lier strains, there won’t be a repeat of the rapid rise in hospital- Staten izations and deaths that followed pre- vious surges. “Hope- fully that’s the case,” Nancy Staten, di- rector of the Bennett Baker County Health Department, said on Friday morning, Jan. 7. “This variant isn’t as viru- lent as the delta variant, but if you have underlying health is- sues there is still that risk,” said Baker County Commissioner Mark Bennett, who has served as the county’s incident com- mander throughout the pan- demic. “There are still folks that this (omicron variant) will be really, really impacting,” Bennett said on Jan. 7. Baker County reported 27 cases on Thursday, Jan. 6. That’s the highest one-day total since 27 cases on Sept. 16, during the peak of the surge driven by the delta variant. There were 17 cases in the county on both Wednesday, Jan. 5, and Tuesday, Jan. 4. See, COVID/Page A3 OREGON LEGISLATURE Owens seeks to curb the Warming shelter unlikely this winter governor’s power “I think if we raise the bar to the level where they’ve got Baker County Commis- to go and they have to meet sioner Mark Bennett said with the officer and they during a meeting Wednesday, have to show something and Jan. 5, that he doesn’t think it then we connect them up will be possible to open a tem- and they have services,” Ben- porary warming shelter for nett said. homeless residents this winter. He said the goal is to en- “I don’t see how we could sure people have some pro- get anything done before tection from winter weather. winter’s over,” Bennett said. Then commissioners and He said the county lacks other officials can continue community support, a de- the discussion later this year tailed plan and people to about potentially opening a work at a shelter. warming shelter. Bennett suggested as an Bennett and Commis- alternative that the county sioner Bruce Nichols voted supply local police agencies for a motion to provide the with sleeping bags and tents sleeping bags and tents. that officers could give, at Commission Chairman their discretion, to people Bill Harvey, who initially who need them. proposed the warming shel- He also said police can ter on Dec. 1, 2021, did not encourage homeless res- vote on the motion. idents to seek services “I still believe there should through agencies such as be something done on an New Directions Northwest emergency basis, my own and the Oregon Depart- personal opinion obviously, ment of Human Services. as far as cold weather con- BY SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com TODAY Issue 101 12 pages Classifieds ........................B3 Comics ..............................B5 Community News.............A2 See, Lions/Page A6 Among the issues Smith cited are how many people would actually use a shelter, the potential that a shelter could attract people from outside the area, and pos- sibly competing with other organizations that work to solve the root causes of homelessness. “Would it not be better to coordinate and support the efforts of those em- Resident expresses concerns ployed in the endeavor al- ready?” Smith said. “Why about fairgrounds During the commissioners do we not make arrange- Jan. 5 meeting, Suzi Smith ments to transport those in expressed concerns about a need right now over to the warming shelter and urged overnight warming center commissioners to not pursue that La Grande already has? opening one in Baker City. Would a supporting role “After listening to Bill with the warming shelter Harvey’s proposal at the in La Grande not solve the Baker City Council work emergency and also give session, I’m convinced that us time to better assess the it’s not necessary, it would problem and seek solutions be both expensive finan- before making unnecessary cially and detrimental to the mistakes?” quality of life in Baker City,” Smith said. See, Shelter/Page A6 cerns that we have from time to time,” Harvey said. After commissioners ini- tially discussed a warming shelter Dec. 1, the Baker City Council had a work session on Dec. 29. Baker City Police Chief Ty Duby said his officers have been interacting with about 10 homeless people in town recently. Crossword ...............B3 & B4 Dear Abby .........................B6 Horoscope ..............B3 & B4 Letters ...............................A4 Lottery Results .................A2 News of Record ................A2 Obituaries ................... A2-A3 Opinion .............................A4 Outdoors & Rec ...............B1 BY STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle CRANE — A state lawmaker from Eastern Oregon will look to trim the powers of state gov- ernment during an emergency when the Legislature meets for a short session in February. A bill written by Rep. Mark Owens, R-Crane, whose dis- trict in- cludes Baker County, would amend Oregon’s Constitution Owens to spell out when gover- nors can declare emergencies, what powers they can exercise and, more importantly, how long they can unilaterally keep them in place. See, Owens/Page A3 Senior Menus ...................A2 Sports ...............................A5 Weather ............................B6