FEBRUARY 2–9, 2022 INSIDE WWW.GOEASTERNOREGON.COM The Big Read features ‘The House on Mango Street’ page 8 Join A drum circle PAGE 7 Listen Music show at EOU PAGE 12 Watch ‘Pride@ Prejudice’ PAGE 14 Keith Dannemiller/Contributed image “The House on Mango Street” by Sandra Cisneros is the featured book for The Big Read, which kicks off virtually Feb. 16, 2022. Go! Magazine Arts and entertainment magazine IN THIS EDITION: LOCAL • BUSINESS & AG LIFE • SPORTS SPORTS A5 SPORTS A5 Baker boys beat Nyssa, 62-40 Nyssa ends Baker girls’ streak, 58-48 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com QUICK HITS ————— Good Day Wish To A Subscriber Surprise snowstorm snarls freeway traffic A special good day to Herald subscriber Robert McKim of Baker City. BRIEFING ————— Brooklyn Primary throws taco fundraiser Brooklyn Primary School is again organizing a Taco Tues- day fundraiser in February in place of its traditional taco feed event organized by the school’s PTO. Throughout the month, four restaurants will donate a percentage of proceeds every Tuesday to Brooklyn. Participating businesses are D&J Taco Shop, El Erradero, Delicioso Mexican Restau- rant, and MC Taco Bus. Brooklyn students are sell- ing raffl e tickets throughout the month ($1 each, six for $5, or 25 for $20). Tickets will also be sold by a PTO member every Tuesday from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. in front of TEC Copiers, 2019 Main St. Raffl e winners will be drawn Feb. 24. Sneak peek of Oregon Trail Experience Feb. 8 at Heritage Museum The Baker Heritage Museum’s monthly lecture on Tuesday, Feb. 8, features Barbara Mahoney and her talk “The Salem Clique: Oregon’s Founding Brothers.” The event starts at 6 p.m. at the museum, 2480 Grove St. At 7 p.m., there will be a celebration of Oregon’s birth- day with treats and a sneak peek at the new Oregon Trail Experience exhibit designed by the National Historic Ore- gon Trail Interpretive Center. WEATHER ————— Today 31/17 Partly sunny Wednesday 30/16 Afternoon snow Full forecast on the back of the B section. FEBRUARY 3, 2022 • $1.50 Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Beverly Calder, center, held a “Give More” fundraiser in December 2021 at BELLA shops in Baker City and La Grande to support three organizations, including the Baker Relief Nursery. She presented a replica check on Jan. 26, 2022, to Kim Mosier, left, chair of the relief nursery board of directors, and RaeAnn Butler, right, program coordinator. Fundraiser benefits Baker Relief Nursery cording the OARN, are: • Keeping children safe in their homes. • Reducing the number of children in foster care. • Reducing stressors for families. BY LISA BRITTON lbritton@bakercityherald.com RaeAnn Butler plans to hang the larger-than-life check on the wall of the place it supports — the Baker Relief Nursery. “We are so grateful,” Butler said, holding the giant replica of the $5,399 donation from BELLA. Butler is the program co- ordinator for the Baker Re- lief Nursery, which was one of three organizations to re- ceive donations from BEL- LA’s “Give More” campaign in December 2021 Throughout that month, customers at the BELLA shops in Baker City and La Grande were given one nut for every $10 they spent. Each nut represented $1. Customers then dropped the nuts into a stocking for their chosen organization — Baker Relief Nursery, Baker City Quiet Zone, or La Grande’s Angel Fund. “We got an incredible re- sponse,” said Beverly Calder, owner of the BELLA shops. In addition to donating 10% of the month’s sales, BELLA held a raffle for two $200 shopping sprees, with ticket sales benefiting the cause in each store that received the most nuts. In Baker City, raffle profits went to the Relief Nursery. Baker Relief Nursery/Contributed photo The Baker Relief Nursery classroom includes hands-on activi- ties, books and toys. Calder said customers at both stores supported organizations in the neigh- boring county. “Our La Grande store customers dropped 1,513 nuts into the Baker City Relief Nursery stocking, and I wouldn’t be surprised if they started an effort to get a similar program go- ing in La Grande,” she said. “We introduced the con- cept to thousands of peo- ple.” Funding for the Baker Relief Nursery is a pub- lic-private partnership — of the annual operat- ing cost, 30% is provided through the Oregon De- partment of Education, 30% by grants, and 40% by private donations. By statute, a 25% cash match is required from the local community. Baker Relief Nursery The Baker Relief Nurs- ery opened in the spring of 2021 at 1925 16th St. The start of relief nurs- eries dates to 1976 when women of the Junior League of Eugene created a childcare center “in re- sponse to a growing crisis of child abuse and neglect,” according to the Oregon Association of Relief Nurs- eries (OARN). The model, which is now replicated by relief nurseries across Oregon, was to provide respite care and support to families. The key outcomes, ac- The program Butler works closely with local agencies to en- sure families know about the relief nursery. Fami- lies can be referred to the program, or self-refer, Butler said. Relief nurseries use a therapeutic, individual ap- proach with an emphasis on social-emotional sup- port in small class settings. Right now, the relief nursery has a toddler class on Tuesday and Thurs- day mornings, and an in- fant class on Wednesday mornings. The “classroom” is stocked with colorful rugs, books, toys, a play kitchen and more. A stroller with six seats al- lows outdoor adventures in warmer weather. “We had it out quite a bit in the fall,” Butler said. Enrollment is capped at eight toddlers and six infants. “We had to start a wait list,” Butler said. Sections of I-84 closed Tuesday night and again early Wednesday BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com A snowstorm that was more po- tent than predicted dropped about 3½ inches in Baker City in just a couple hours Tuesday night, Feb. 1, and con- tributed to two multihour closures of Interstate 84. Snow started falling in the after- noon in the Blue Mountains between La Grande and Pendleton, and there were several crashes involving com- mercial trucks, said Tom Strandberg, a spokesman for the Oregon Depart- ment of Transportation. In many of those cases, the trucks were not chained up, a problem that resulted in several freeway closures earlier this winter. “It’s definitely a recurring theme,” Strandberg said. Commercial trucks with trailers pose a particular problem because they’re wide enough that when they jackknife the combination can block both freeway lanes, he said. And if two or more trucks tangle, it can require several hours for multiple tow trucks to clear the way. Both eastbound and westbound lanes were closed around 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 1, between Pendleton and Baker City. See, Closures/Page A3 See, Fundraiser/Page A3 Samantha O’Conner/Baker City Herald The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. County commissioners all oppose River Democracy Act Resolution was unanimously approved BY SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com Baker County Commissioners voted unanimously on Wednesday, Feb. 2, to approve a resolution opposing the River Democracy Act, a bill in Congress that would add about 163 miles of streams in the county to the federal Wild and Sce- nic Rivers Act list. Oregon’s two U.S. senators, Democrats Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, intro- duced the River Democracy Act exactly one year ago, on Feb. 2, 2021. The resolution notes that the bill, which is pending in Congress and has not been voted on, would nearly triple the river mileage in Baker County under the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act. Local streams on the list The following stream segments in Baker County are included in the River Democracy Act, which U.S. Senators Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley intro- duced in February 2021. • Black Canyon, 2.8 miles • Burnt River, 12.6 miles • East Eagle Creek, 3.7 miles • West Eagle Creek, 5 miles • Bullrun Creek, 2.6 miles • Middle Fork Burnt River, 6.1 miles • North Fork Burnt River, 16.2 miles • South Fork Burnt River, 5.3 miles • West Fork Burnt River, 3.8 miles • Clear Creek (Halfway area), 9.1 miles • East Fork Pine Creek (Halfway area), 4.6 miles • East Pine Creek, 7.9 miles • Elk Creek (Halfway area), 8.1 miles • Fish Creek, 8.4 miles • Lake Fork Creek, 13.5 miles • Middle Fork Pine Creek, 1.1 miles • Pine Creek (Halfway area), 1.3 miles • Trail Creek (Halfway area), 4.4 miles • West Fork Pine Creek, 0.5 miles • Flat Creek, 3.4 miles • Horseshoe Creek, 2.9 miles • North Fork Elk Creek, 3.8 miles • Sheep Creek, 5.2 miles • South Fork Elk Creek, 1.3 miles • Swamp Creek, 5.4 miles • Dutch Flat Creek (Elkhorns), 6.7 miles • Killamacue Creek (Elkhorns), 4 miles • North Fork North Powder River (Elk- horns), 2.5 miles • North Fork Rock Creek (Elkhorns), 3.3 miles • Rock Creek (Elkhorns), 5.9 miles • Van Patten Creek (Elkhorns), 1.6 miles Firefighters from the Baker City Fire De- partment and Baker Rural Fire District re- sponded to a blaze in a home at 1249 Fifth St. on Monday, Jan. 31, 2022. Fire damages home near South Baker School BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com A fire caused significant structural damage to a house near South Baker School on Monday night, Jan. 31. The fire was reported about 9:24 p.m. at 1249 Fifth St. That’s at Fifth and Grace streets, one block west of South Baker, and just north of the railroad tracks. Six firefighters from the Baker City Fire Department responded, along with two from the Baker Rural Fire Protection District, said Cameron Kiyokawa, a division chief with the Baker City Fire Department who was incident commander. See, Fire/Page A3 See, Act/Page A3 TODAY Issue 112 28 pages Business .................B1 & B2 Classified ................B3 & B4 Comics ..............................B5 Community News.............A3 Crossword ...............B3 & B4 Dear Abby .........................B6 Horoscope ..............B3 & B4 Letters ...............................A4 Lottery Results .................A2 News of Record ................A2 Obituaries .........................A3 Opinion .............................A4 Sports ...............................A5 Turning Backs ..................A2 Weather ............................B6