BAKER CITY HERALD • THURSDAY, JANUARY 27, 2022 A3 LOCAL Quiet wrote that, based on comments needed to be on the ballot in he and other promoters have the very beginning as well,” Sells Continued from A1 heard from residents said. “I stated this in over the past three the last discussion. As The City Council most re- years, he believes train I learned more about cently discussed the quiet zone whistles “are a relent- the group who is put- issue in October 2021, when it less insult to their qual- ting the funds together, was still a six-member group. ity of life, sleep, and I don’t feel that that During the Oct. 12 meeting, health ... and/or the needs to be on a ballot councilors deadlocked twice on horns impact their kids because it’s no taxpayer 3-3 votes. at South Baker School.” dollars. If there was McQuisten The first motion was to put taxpayer money, abso- the quiet zone matter on the Cost questions and lutely, that’s something May 2022 primary election bal- citizen opposition everyone needs to have lot, letting city voters decide Dixon, who opposes a voice in.” whether the city should pursue the quiet zone, cited Dixon countered that the designation. Mayor Kerry costs. she was elected to rep- McQuisten and Councilors “We’ve got issues with resent all city residents, Johnny Waggoner Sr. and Jo- the staffing on our po- not just what she called anna Dixon voted in favor. lice department, we’ve special interests. She ad- Alderson Councilors Shane Alderson, got issues on our fire vocated for letting vot- Jason Spriet and Heather Sells department, public works, there ers decide whether to pursue a voted against the motion. are other areas that our funds quiet zone. The second motion was sim- need to be going to,” Dixon said. McQuisten, citing Facebook ilar to what Guyer proposed on However, a citizens group polls she has done as well as Tuesday, Jan. 25 — to have the has offered to raise the esti- personal conversations, said city make a formal application mated $150,000 to upgrade five 85% of the respondents are urg- with the Federal Railroad Ad- crossings in the city to make it ing her to oppose a quiet zone. ministration for a quiet zone more difficult for vehicles to She said 416 people who re- designation. reach the tracks when a train is sponded to the polls oppose a The vote on the motion was passing. quiet zone, while 44 supported divided the same way. This time The proposal from Guyer it so long as there are no costs the trio of Alderson, Spriet and that passed by the 4-3 vote on to the city. Sells was in favor, and the three- Tuesday states that the city “I presented these numbers some of McQuisten, Waggoner would install those safety mea- last time and they were ignored and Dixon was opposed. sures “when sufficient external mostly by council because of Peter Fargo, a Baker City res- funds are available to improve where they came from — per- ident who has been promoting each crossing.” sonal contact one-on-one with the quiet zone for about three The proposal states that city me or Facebook polls, which years, wrote in an email to administrators can “spend the are completely valid,” McQuis- the Herald, in response to the time necessary to support the ten said. Council’s vote: Quiet Zone as part of their City She said she believes council- “The railroad quiet zone work, understanding that their ors can’t ignore such input from will improve the safety of our time is already budgeted and citizens even if people with a kids and community. On Tues- need not draw on externally different viewpoint are passion- day night, the City Council af- raised funds.” ate in supporting the quiet zone. firmed that safety comes first. Sells, who voted in favor of “I’m not for or against, hon- the quiet zone plan, said that We are grateful for their deci- estly,” McQuisten said. “I will based on information the citi- sion and look forward to shar- support the will of the people zens group has provided, and ing more information about and if we put this on the bal- how Baker City’s quiet zone will the experience of other cit- lot and the majority say ‘yeah, benefit everyone’s safety, health, ies, including La Grande, she’s we want a quiet zone,’ OK, let’s and/or economic opportunity.” convinced that the quiet zone roll with it. So far I’m not get- ting that. That’s why I’m against In a letter he sent to council- would benefit Baker City. “I personally felt like this pushing this through.” ors prior to the meeting, Fargo Watershed Continued from A1 In the late 1990s the Wal- lowa-Whitman spent more than $2.2 million to cut trees and light prescribed fires to create fuelbreaks on the fringes of the watershed. Most of the work was on the south end and along the road under which is buried the city’s water pipeline, with a goal of giving fire crews a place to head off a blaze mov- ing toward the watershed. The project the Wal- lowa-Whitman is working on now would expand on those ef- forts, Cikanek said. He hopes to distribute to the public what’s known as a “scoping letter” by the end of February. That letter in effect intro- duces the watershed project and gives its basic outline. Cikanek said the field stud- ies for the project have been done, and the next major step for the Wallowa-Whitman is to write an environmental assessment, a document that examines the project in detail and studies its potential envi- ronmental effects. A 1969 federal law, the Na- tional Environmental Policy Act, requires federal agencies to conduct such environmen- tal studies. Cikanek said his goal is to finish the environmental as- sessment for the watershed project in early 2023. Once Wallowa-Whitman officials have approved that, work could get started, barring legal challenges. Work outside the watershed, and inside The project calls for some type of work, whether cutting trees or prescribed burning, on about 22,600 acres. Most of the commercial logging would happen outside the watershed, on its fringes on the south and east sides, including below the pipeline road, which forms the eastern boundary of the watershed, Cikanek said. The other ma- jor tactic is lighting prescribed fires to reduce fuel loads on the ground. This includes ar- eas that were thinned and burned about 20 years ago — what’s known as “mainte- nance” work, Cikanek said. “What we’re trying to do is create defensible zones between likely sources of ignition and the watershed itself,” he said in a 2021 interview. Although lightning has sparked several fires inside the watershed over the past 25 years or so, firefighters have quickly doused all of those blazes. In August 2019 lightning from a single storm started three fires in the watershed, the largest of which burned about 3 acres. That’s in part because smoke wafting out of the wa- tershed is readily visible from most of Baker Valley, and in part because fire crews can reach the area relatively quickly, Cikanek said. “Detection up there is pretty good,” he said. He said the Wallowa-Whit- man strives to have a heavy helicopter stationed at either the Baker City or La Grande airport when the fire danger is high. A helicopter from Baker City potentially can be drop- ping water on a fire in the wa- tershed less than 10 minutes after taking off. Although the fuel load is high in parts of the watershed — a function of the many de- cades that have passed since the last major blaze — Cikanek said he worries more about a fire starting outside the water- shed and then pushing into the 10,000-acre area. “A fire moving into the wa- tershed likely is going to carry more energy,” he said, com- pared with, say, a lightning bolt that starts a blaze high in the watershed, where the for- est is more sparse and inter- spersed with rocky outcrops and alpine meadows. That said, the risk of a fire starting inside the watershed and growing rapidly absolutely exists, Cikanek said. To deal with that danger, the project also proposes work in- side the watershed. The focus, he said, would be on creating fuelbreaks on ridgelines be- tween the major streams such as Salmon, Marble and Mill creeks. The idea is to thin the forest and light prescribed fires late in the season when the risk of fire is “basically zero.” The one area where more intensive thinning, including commercial logging, could happen is along the Marble Creek Pass road, since that area, unlike most of the rest of the watershed, is accessible to motor vehicles. The overriding goal of work inside the watershed, Cikanek said, is to create a series of interconnected fu- elbreaks where firefighters could potentially stop a blaze and minimize the number of streams or springs that the city might have to temporar- ily stop using for drinking water in the case of a blaze. “The way I look at it is try- ing to give firefighters the saf- est chance to be successful,” he said. Improvements to Marble Creek Pass Road Creating a more significant fuelbreak in the Marble Creek corridor requires commercial logging, and that means log trucks. But the Marble Creek Pass road, which more resem- bles a stream bed in places, is far from suitable as a Alderson, who voted in favor of the quiet zone, said when he goes to look at the social media polls, he cannot find them but instead reads comments arguing back and forth, including some calling him and Guyer liars and accusing them of taking bribes. “When I ran, I promised that I would give fair and equal voice to anybody that would come talk to me and if you want to come and talk to me, I will always be willing to,” Alderson said. “The quiet zone (support- ers) were willing to come talk to me and I heard them out.” Alderson said 51 businesses have signed a letter asking the city to pursue a quiet zone. He said he received more than 60 emails in the past week, and more of those are from people who support the quiet zone. “The people who are in op- position of this, need to come forward with as much effort and enthusiasm, not a day late and a dollar short, to do what you are proposing to do,” Alderson said. “You’ve had since 2019 to ask that this be put on the ballot.” Although the citizens group has volunteered to raise money for the crossing upgrades, res- idents have raised the question of ongoing maintenance. Common improvements needed to qualify for a quiet zone include building con- crete medians that block vehi- cles from reaching the railroad tracks when a train is passing and the crossing arms are down. Spriet, who voted in favor of pursuing a quiet zone, asked Michelle Owen, the city’s public works director, about long-term maintenance costs. Owen said the most common maintenance task could be re- placing reflectors on arms and other items at crossings. “I would guess $500 a year to maintain those,” Owen said. Arrest Continued from A1 Anders was arrested about 10:41 a.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 25, following a brief pursuit by police in the Hun- tington area about 45 miles southeast of Baker City. According to Oregon State Police, officers, who had been alerted that Anders was a suspect in the Baker City incident, saw him driving a silver Dodge Avenger near Huntington. During the ensuing chase, Anders drove head-on toward an unmarked OSP detective’s vehicle, nearly causing a collision, according to OSP. The pursuit ended when Anders drove over a spike strip and an OSP patrol car forced his car off the road on Old Highway 30 near Farewell Bend. OSP was assisted by the Baker County Sheriff’s Office, Baker City Police Department, Ontario Police Department and Malheur County Sheriff’s Office. Anders, who was convicted in 2013 of first-de- gree burglary and is on probation for that felony conviction, is also charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm, a Class C felony. Other charges include pointing a firearm at another per- son, an unclassified misdemeanor; coercion, a Class C felony; and menacing constituting domestic vi- olence and second-degree criminal mischief, both Class A misdemeanors. The incident happened Sunday evening, Jan. 23. According to records from the Baker County District Attorney’s office, Anders allegedly broke into a home and pointed a gun at a woman with whom he had a previous relationship. A 10-year-old was in the home at the time and witnessed part of the episode. Anders then left the home but later sent threat- ening text messages to the woman, according to court records. In addition to the charges from the Jan. 23 inci- dent in Baker City, Anders was cited to appear in Malheur County on charges of driving under the influence of intoxicants, eluding in a motor vehi- cle, reckless driving, reckless endangerment and unlawful possession of methamphetamine, ac- cording to OSP. Anders pleaded guilty to harassment on Feb. 11, 2021, in Baker County Circuit Court for an incident on Jan. 10, 2021, in Baker City. He also pleaded guilty on on March 3, 2021, to resisting arrest, a Class A misdemeanor, for an incident on Feb. 17, 2021. On June 10, 2021, Judge Robert Raschio ex- tended Anders’ probation for 18 months, to Dec. 9, 2022. Limestone Led To Road The Marble Creek Pass road was built as a haul route for trucks carrying limestone from a quarry at Baboon Creek, on the west (Sumpter) side of the pass, to a lime-processing plant in Baker Valley near the intersection of Wingville Road and Highway 30, about five miles north of Baker City. There were two such quarries, the other being on the Baker side of the Elkhorns, along Marble Creek, hence the name of the pass. The two quarries, owned by the Chemical Lime Co., produced an estimated $8 million in chemical-grade lime between 1957 and 1971, according to a 1989 report, “Limestone Deposits in Oregon,” from the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries. The Marble Creek quarry was the first to be mined. It closed in 1963 in part because the limestone deposit was cut by a different type of rock. Chemical Lime then opened the Baboon Creek quarry, which operated from 1963 until 1971, when both the quarry and the pro- cessing plant closed. Lower-grade lime from the processing plant is still piled at the site; the bright-white mounds are conspicuous even from the top of Elkhorn Peak, more than 5,500 feet above. Both quarries tapped deposits of limestone formed from the re- mains of billions of shellfish that hardened into calcium carbonate at the bottom of a tropical sea about 250 million years ago. The de- posits are the biggest in the Elkhorns but only of moderate size for Northeastern Oregon. There are massive outcroppings of limestone in parts of the Wallowa Mountains, including the imposing west face of the Matterhorn, and along the Burnt River, where Ash Grove Ce- ment Co. mines limestone to produce portland cement near Durkee. The name “Marble” for the creek and the pass refer to the metamor- phic form of limestone. Marble is created when limestone, a sedimen- tary rock, is subject to heat or pressure, or sometimes both, over millions of years. Some of the rock in the Marble Creek area isn’t a true marble, but rather a sort of intermediate stage between limestone and marble. Mike Upmeyer of Baker City, who died in 2010, told the Herald in 1995 that he drove limestone-laden trucks over the pass in 1970 and 1971. “We just locked up the trailer and let it slide,” he said, re- ferring to places where the grade reaches 15 percent, more than twice as steep as Ladd Canyon on Interstate 84. One driver was killed in October 1968 when his truck plunged off the road. log-hauling route, Cikanek said. The road is accessible to high-clearance four-wheel drive vehicles and ATVs. The condition of the road prompted the Wal- lowa-Whitman to apply for almost $1.3 million in For- Jay & Kristin Wilson, Owners 2036 Main Street, Baker City 541-523-6284 • ccb#219615 Celebration of Life Mary Jean Henry October 30, 1936 - January 1, 2022 Quail Ridge Golf Course, Baker City OR Sunday, January 30, 2022 ~ 12:00 p.m. Please join us to share memories, stories and lunch. Baker City Public Works/Contributed Photo One of the intakes in the Baker City watershed where water is diverted into the city’s supply pipeline. est Service capital improve- ment money to rebuild about 6 miles of the road, creating a 21-foot-wide route with a fresh layer of gravel. Cikanek said the Wal- lowa-Whitman will receive the money for road improve- ments once it approves the watershed project. Besides making it feasible to haul logs from the Mar- ble Creek corridor, the road project will make it easier for hikers, mountain bikers and other recreationists to reach Marble Creek Pass from the east (Baker Valley) side of the Elkhorns. (The road continues west into Sumpter Valley, but that section, which is steep and rough but in somewhat bet- ter shape, isn’t slated for im- provements.) Marble Creek Pass, eleva- tion 7,542 feet, is the south- ern trailhead for the Elkhorn Crest National Recreation Trail, the 23-mile route that follows the Elkhorns north to Anthony Lakes. Dwight E. Brooks October 25, 1929 - January 17, 2022 Dwight Brooks, 92, of Union, Oregon, died Monday, Jan. 17, 2022, in the comfort of his home. Friends are invited to join the family for a graveside service at the Union Cemetery at 11 a.m. on Friday, Jan. 28, 2022. Dwight Elbert Brooks was born on Oct. 25, 1929, in Half- way, Oregon. He was raised and educated in Richland, graduat- ing from Eagle Valley High School in 1947. He mar- ried schoolmate Lorraine Thompson of Richland and together they had three children. Dwight met Donna Van Housen while working at Ronde Valley Lumber Company. They were married in Union, Oregon, at Donna’s folks’ house on March 10, 1967. Dwight spent his career working in the lumber indus- try. He worked at the Melvin Hess Sawmill in Richland, Oregon, Louisiana Pacific Lumber in Rexburg, Idaho, and Linton Plywood in Portland, Oregon. And 27 years at Ronde Valley Lumber in Union as a head sawyer. Dwight loved horseback riding, camping and golf- ing. He enjoyed the seasons of summer and fall and anything Western-themed. When asked about mem- orable times in his life, Dwight replied, “Raising my children and living with my wife. Donna made me hap- py.” Dwight will be remembered for not being afraid to work, helping others and his discipline to get things done. He was preceded in death by his daughter, Debbie Fifer; parents, Paul and Olga Brooks; brothers, Stanley and Charles Brooks; and son-in-law, Jim Collier. Dwight is survived by his wife, Donna Brooks of 55 years; sons, Larry (Prinipa) Brooks, Bart (Karen) Mitchell and Dalton (Yulia) Brooks; daughters, Tanya Collier and significant other Gary Moe, and Sharon (Field) Paine; 20 grandchildren and 24 great-grandchil- dren; and his faithful cat, “The cat with no name.” For those who would like to make a memorial do- nation in memory of Dwight, the family suggests the Union Ambulance Service or the charity of your choice through Tami’s Pine Valley Funeral Home and Crema- tion Services, PO Box 543, Halfway, OR 97834. Online condolences can be shared at www.tamispinevalleyfu- neralhome.com.