OUTDOORS B1 WORLD A5 SPORTS A6 Meeting snowshoe hares in the Elkhorns Russia pledges not to start war in Ukraine Powder Valley beats Griswold IN THIS EDITION: LOCAL • OUTDOORS & REC • SPORTS QUICK HITS ————— Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Mindy Sherrieb Baker City. BRIEFING ————— Morgan Stone earns academic honors WALLA WALLA, Wash. — Morgan Stone of Baker City earned academic distinction for the most recent semes- ter at Whitman College. To qualify, students must com- plete at least 12 credits with a GPA of at least 3.5. Baker County Garden Club to meet Feb. 2 The Baker County Garden Club will meet Wednesday, Feb. 2 at 10 a.m. at the Senior Center, 2810 Cedar St. Dave Cowan will give a class on lawn care. Lunch is $5 for 60 and older, or $7.50 for those younger, or you can bring your own lunch. New members are always welcome. Public hearing set on North Baker transportation plan The Baker City Planning Commission will have a public hearing on Feb. 16, at 6 p.m. at City Hall, 1655 First St., to discuss proposed revisions to the city’s com- prehensive plan related to the Northern Baker Trans- portation Improvement Plan. That plan covers proposed changes to Cedar Street, Hughes Lane, 10th Street and Pocahontas Road. WEATHER ————— Today 26/13 Mostly sunny Sunday 29/20 Cloudy Monday 33/17 Partly cloudy 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 Two COVID- related deaths reported ‘A life- changing experience’ Baker City’s Kerry McQuisten talks about her campaign to become Oregon governor “My campaign is steadily gaining traction,” said Mc- Kerry McQuisten has Quisten, who is Baker City’s met many thousands of Or- mayor, elected to that posi- egonians during her cam- tion by her fellow Baker City paign to be the state’s next Council members in Janu- governor, a blur of faces ary 2021. “I’m reaching out and handshakes and fo- across the whole state.” rums and events in each of the 36 counties in the Amassing the miles 10th-biggest state. McQuisten didn’t antici- But one face remains espe- pate how familiar her favor- cially vivid in her memory. ite oil change place would And she suspects that it al- become. ways will be. She doesn’t know pre- McQuisten, a sev- cisely how many miles she enth-generation Baker has driven since she declared County resident who is seek- her candidacy in late June of ing the Republican nomina- 2021. tion in the May 22 primary, “I didn’t even start pay- was in Tygh Valley, near The ing attention until I was at Dalles, for the Wasco County 10,000 miles,” McQuisten Fair in late August. said with a chuckle. An older gentleman ap- She’s been changing the oil proached. in her car every three or four He was wearing a cap weeks. identifying him as a military “The people at the oil veteran. change place know my first The man pulled out his name now,” she said. “They wallet, reached in and ex- didn’t before.” tracted the only bill tucked McQuisten, 49, said those in the folds. miles are at least as import- It was a $5. ant, and perhaps even more He handed the bill to Mc- so, than the dollars her cam- Quisten, insisting that she paign has accumulated. take it. Although she acknowl- “Something has to change edges that advertising is vi- in Oregon,” the man told her. tal to any candidate — she’s “I will never forget it,” Mc- bought space on 11 bill- Quisten said in an interview boards, is planning TV ads on Wednesday, Jan. 26. and also uses social media That moment in the as a platform — McQuisten wheat country of Wasco said there is no substitute County, one of so many in for meeting people, shaking seven months of campaign- their hands and listening to ing, continues to inspire their concerns. McQuisten. “That’s how you excite It’s not the amount of the your base, and you have to donation, of course. do that with Republicans,” But that brief conversa- she said. “You have to have tion, and the man’s insistence that grassroots support. I’m that she accept his modest meeting an awful lot of peo- contribution, convinced her ple.” then, and reminds her still, McQuisten, who grew up that some of her fellow Ore- on a cattle ranch in Baker gonians believe she can help County, graduated from Wil- to fix some of the problems lamette University in Salem that she — and they — be- and also lived for a year or so lieve are plaguing the state. in Wilsonville, said she had BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Kerry McQuisten/Contributed Photo Kerry McQuisten stands outside Mahonia Hall, the Oregon gov- ernor’s mansion in Salem. McQuisten, a Baker County native, is seeking the Republican nomination for governor in the May 22, 2022, primary. table electoral foundation, McQuisten believes. “The more Kate Brown mandates, the worse it gets for the Democrats,” McQuis- ten said. And although Brown can’t run for reelection due to term limits, McQuisten con- tends that the Democratic nominee, whoever that is, will be linked to Brown’s leg- acy, to the benefit of the Re- publican on the November A unique opportunity for a general election ballot. (McQuisten thinks Tina Republican After so many miles and Kotek, the former Speaker so many meetings, McQuis- of the House in the Oregon ten said she is even more Legislature, is the Demo- confident now than she was cratic frontrunner.) when she started that 2022 McQuisten said she has presents an opportunity that talked with, and received Republicans haven’t had in emails from, many Demo- Oregon for more than four crats and nonaffiliated voters decades. who are troubled by what’s No member of her party happening in Oregon. has been elected governor She was surprised to re- since November 1982, when ceive a $25 donation from Victor Atiyeh won the sec- an Ontario Democrat who ond of his four-year terms. voted for, and formerly sup- But McQuisten believes ported, Brown. that voters are more dissat- “That’s when you know isfied with their state’s con- something is really shifting,” dition under the leadership McQuisten said. of Democratic governor She said a few issues have Kate Brown than at any time come up at virtually all of since Atiyeh’s tenure. her campaign events, con- Brown’s executive orders cerns that seem universal in during the pandemic, with the state. their effects on businesses Public safety is one of and schools in particular, these. have seriously weakened the Democrats’ once-indomi- See, Campaign/Page A3 been to each of Oregon’s 36 counties before she started her campaign. But that happened over decades of normal travels. Now she has been to every county in little more than half a year — and some she’s visited four or five times, to meet with residents at infor- mal events or to participate in forums featuring multiple Republican candidates. City planning pipeline work Long-term project to replace water pipeline set to continue BY SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com Baker City Public Works Department/Contributed Photo, File Baker City crews install new water pipe in the Elkhorn Mountains in the sum- mer of 2020. The long-term project to replace old, leak-prone concrete pipe will continue this summer between Elk and Salmon creeks. TODAY Issue 110 12 pages Classified ....................B2-B4 Comics ..............................B5 Community News.............A2 JANUARY 29, 2022 • $1.50 Crossword ...............B3 & B4 Dear Abby .........................B6 Horoscope ..............B2 & B4 The Baker City Public Works Department will be busy this summer with the continuation of a long-term project to replace the city’s main water supply pipeline. Michelle Owen, the city’s public works di- rector, said the pipe for this summer’s project, which will cover about half a mile, was delivered recently. “We’re just going to kind of take off where we left off last go around,” Owen said. City crews will start near Elk Creek and move north toward Salmon Creek. Those are two of the streams in the 10,000- acre watershed, on the east slopes of the Elkhorn Mountains, that the city taps for drinking water. Owen said the pipe is slated to be installed be- fore July 1, when the city’s new fiscal year starts. “We may do a second project that would basi- cally finish out the mile (north from Elk Creek) after July 1 but we’re going to see what the bid numbers come in at,” Owen said. Two more Baker County res- idents have died after testing positive for COVID-19. The Oregon Health Authority reported on Thursday, Jan. 27, that an 82-year-old man who tested positive on Jan. 22 had died Jan. 25 at Saint Alphonsus Medical Center in Baker City. The presence of underlying medical conditions has not been confirmed. The man was the 41st county resident to die after testing positive for COVID-19. The Baker County Health Department on Thursday, Jan. 27, reported another COVID- 19-related death, but details about that death, including gen- der, age and date of death, were not available by press time. Four county residents have died during January after test- ing positive. The number of COVID- 19-related deaths during De- cember was three, following four deaths in November, five in October and six, the most in any month during the pan- demic, in September. The Health Department re- ported 33 new cases on Thursday, Jan. 27, and 36 the previous day. For the first five days of the current measuring week — Jan. 23-29 — the county re- ported 134 new cases. That’s on pace to set a new weekly record high for the third straight week. Previous weekly totals were 183 (Jan. 16-22) and 176 (Jan. 9-15). With 596 cases in January through the 27th, the month has set a new record. The pre- vious record was 465 cases during September 2021, the peak of the surge driven by the delta variant. Baker schools continue in-person Despite the record number of cases this month, the Baker 5J School District has continued to have in-person classes. See, COVID/Page A2 Wolves kill calf near Keating BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Wolves killed a 500-pound, year-old calf near Keating late Monday, Jan. 24, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wild- life (ODFW) confirmed after an investigation the following day. A rancher found the dead calf on the morning of Tues- day, Jan. 25, on a 25-acre pri- vate pasture near Tucker Creek, according to ODFW. Tucker Creek flows into the Powder River near Keating School, at the intersection of Keating Cutoff Road, Keat- ing Grange Road and Miles Bridge Road. Brian Ratliff, district wild- life biologist at ODFW’s Baker City office, said on Friday See, Pipeline/Page A3 Lottery Results .................A2 News of Record ................A2 Opinion .............................A4 Outdoors ................B1 & B2 Senior Menus ...................A2 Sports ...............................A6 See, Wolves/Page A3 Sudoku..............................B5 Turning Backs ..................A2 Weather ............................B6