SPORTS A5 SPORTS A6 Baker girls hoops beat La Grande and Vale Bulldog boys rout La Grande, 67-47 IN THIS EDITION: LOCAL • HOME & LIVING • SPORTS Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com FEBRUARY 1, 2022 • $1.50 QUICK HITS ————— Good Day Wish To A Subscriber COVID cases dropped slightly last week A special good day to Herald subscribers Mary and Keith Romtvedt of Baker City. BRIEFING ————— Lecture, sneak peek of Oregon Trail Experience Feb. 8 at Heritage Museum The Baker Heritage Mu- seum’s monthly lecture on Tuesday, Feb. 8, features Bar- bara Mahoney and her talk “The Salem Clique: Oregon’s Founding Brothers.” The event starts at 6 p.m. at the museum, 2480 Grove St. Following the talk, at 7 p.m., there will be a celebra- tion of Oregon’s birthday with treats and a sneak peek at the new Oregon Trail Experi- ence exhibit designed by the National Historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center. BAKER CITY HERALD Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald Public hearing set on North Baker transportation plan The Baker City Planning Commission will have a public hearing on Feb. 16, to discuss proposed revisions to the city’s comprehensive plan related to the North- ern Baker Transportation Improvement Plan. That plan covers proposed changes to Cedar Street, Hughes Lane, 10th Street and Pocahontas Road. The public hearing is scheduled for 6 p.m. at City Hall, 1655 First St. Materials that will be used in the hearing will be avail- able by Feb. 9 at the Court- house, 1995 Third St., and copies can be emailed for free by emailing tandrews@ bakercounty.org. WEATHER ————— Today 32/12 Mostly sunny Wednesday 27/13 Light snow Full forecast on the back of the B section. Although little snow has fallen in Northeastern Oregon since the first week of January, cold temperatures have preserved the snowpack along the Powder River just below Mason Dam, seen here on Friday, Jan. 28, 2022. Snowpack starts fast, turns sluggish Remains close to average, and drought severity has eased a bit morning of the month, but that hardly compensated for the previous three weeks of placid weather. Despite the lack of recent progress, the prospect for a hefty snowpack to diminish BY JAYSON JACOBY the severe drought that has plagued Northeastern Ore- jjacoby@bakercityherald.com The mountain snowpack gon remains. in Northeastern Oregon The snowpack — the most sprinted off the line when important source of water 2022 began. for irrigation, recreation, fish But then it got stuck. habitat and, in places such as Or mired. Baker City, for drinking wa- Or pulled a hamstring. ter — remains above average Or whatever term best in some places. captures the concept of Moreover, February and March often bring the bulk a nearly complete lack of of the winter snow, and the progress. After prodigious amounts snowpack typically doesn’t of snow piled up during the reach its annual peak, espe- first week of January, push- cially at higher elevations, until April. ing the snowpack to well “It’s awfully early,” Wes above average in many parts Morgan, manager of the of the region, a persistent pattern of stagnation domi- Burnt River Irrigation Dis- trict in southern Baker nated thereafter. A meager storm brought County, said on Monday morning, Jan. 31. “I’m more light snow on the final U.S. Drought Monitor The drought situation has improved a bit in Baker County since the start of 2022. interested in what I’ve got at the end of February and the end of March.” Morgan pointed out that much of the current moun- tain snowpack accumulated during a two-week period spanning the end of 2021 and the debut of 2022. “One or two more pe- riods like that could help us a whole bunch,” said Morgan, whose irrigation district covers the Burnt River Valley below Unity Reservoir. New COVID-19 cases in Baker County dropped slightly late last week, and the weekly total, for the first time this month, was lower than the previous week. The Baker County Health Department reported 15 cases on Friday, Jan. 28, and 16 cases on Saturday, Jan. 29, the last day of the reporting week. The county’s total for the week Jan. 23-29 was 165 cases. That’s the third-highest weekly total during the pan- demic, but it’s down from the record-setting weeks of Jan. 16-22 (183 cases) and Jan. 9-15 (176). The county’s rate of positive tests also appears to be declin- ing for the first time in more than a month. The Oregon Health Au- thority (OHA) reported the county’s test positivity rate, for the week Jan. 23-29, at 24.8% as of Friday, Jan. 28 (the complete weekly statis- tics weren’t available by press time). The positivity rate was 33.2% for the previous week, Jan. 16-22, the fourth straight week with an increasing posi- tivity rate. Cases in children According to OHA data, Baker County has had 96 COVID-19 cases in residents younger than 18 since Jan. 2. The county has had a total of 473 pediatric cases during the pandemic, out of a popu- lation of about 3,081 residents 17 and younger. The county’s pediatric case rate of 15,354 per 100,000 residents is the 10th-high- est among Oregon’s counties, but one of the lower rates in Northeastern Oregon. See, COVID/Page A3 5 train Hatchet proves cars carrying invaluable for stranded hunters grain derail The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Baker County Sheriff’s Office/Contributed Photo Baker County Sheriff Travis Ash and Marine Deputy Wayne Paxton rescued three stranded hunters along Brownlee Reservoir late on Sunday, Jan. 30, 2022. TODAY Issue 111 14 pages Classified ....................B4-B6 Comics ..............................B7 Community News.............A3 With his feet freezing and the prospect of a long and snowy winter night ahead with a bloody elk hide the only shel- ter, Noah Chaney was never so glad to hear the rumble of a boat motor. Although his affinity for his brother’s new hatchet was, if anything, greater still. Noah, 20, along with his older brother, Neil Chaney Jr., 22 (who goes by John), and Noah’s best friend, Isaac Lo- gan, 20, were in quite a predic- ament as the sun went down on Sunday, Jan. 30, at the east- ern edge of Baker County. The trio had started the day hoping to fill their elk tags in the steep country above Crossword ...............B4 & B6 Dear Abby .........................B8 Home & Living ............B1-B4 See, Snowpack/Page A3 Brownlee Reservoir, several miles southeast of Richland. Isaac killed a big cow around 9:30 a.m. The friends, along with the Chaneys’ dad, Neil Sr., 43, of Baker City, came up with a plan. They were too far below their rigs to haul 400 pounds or so of elk meat up the precip- itous, snow-covered slopes. Better, they figured, to take advantage of gravity to ease their burden. Neil Sr. agreed to hike to the ridge, drive back to Baker City and haul the family’s boat. He’d meet the trio on the shore, more than 1,000 feet below. Horoscope ..............B5 & B6 Letters ...............................A4 Lottery Results .................A2 See, Hatchet/Page A3 News of Record ................A2 Opinion .............................A4 Senior Menus ...................A2 BAKER CITY HERALD Five cars on a westbound freight train derailed Friday afternoon, Jan. 28, near Baker City, spilling grain. The incident happened about 4 p.m. near Old High- way 30 about one mile south of the Milepost 306 inter- change in south Baker City, said Susan Stevens, manager of communications for Union Pacific Railroad. The train crew was not injured, and the railroad re- sumed normal operations af- ter several hours. The case of the derailment is under investigation, Ste- vens said. Sports ..................... A5 & A6 Turning Backs ..................A2 Weather ............................B8