SPORTS A2 SPORTS A3 2 Baker girls qualify for state wrestling meet, Baker boys fi rst at Heppner tourney Reece Dixon’s 3-pointer lifts Powder Valley to stunning win over Baker boys IN THIS EDITION: LOCAL • HOME & LIVING • SPORTS Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com FEBRUARY 8, 2022 • $1.50 QUICK HITS ————— Good Day Wish To A Subscriber COVID cases drop again A special good day to Herald subscriber Jennifer Long of Sumpter. Indoor mask mandate to end by March 31 BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com BRIEFING ————— GOP candidate to speak Feb. 12 in Baker City Marc Thielman, Republican candidate for Oregon governor, will speak Saturday, Feb. 12, in Baker City. Thielman will speak at the Baker County Events Center, 2600 East St. Doors open at 5 p.m. and the event starts at 6 p.m. Thielman, who is being hosted by Baker County United, is the superintendent of the Alsea School District in Western Oregon, where he decided in late January to make face masks optional, in defi ance of an executive order from Gov. Kate Brown. COVID-19 testing, vaccine clinic Feb. 11 A free COVID-19 testing and vaccination clinic is set for Friday, Feb. 11, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at 3175 Pocahontas Road, the former Baker Clinic building just east of Saint Alphonsus Medical Center. All three COVID-19 vaccines — Moderna, Pfi zer and Johnson and Johnson — will be available. Please bring your COVID-19 vaccine card if you have previously been vaccinated. WEATHER ————— Today 34/20 Mostly sunny Wednesday 40/24 Partly sunny Full forecast on the back of the B section. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald Mark Witty, Baker School District superintendent, stands at the north end of the playground at South Baker Intermediate on Friday, Feb. 4, 2022. Witty said the district’s plan to build a new bus lane will require the removal of the backstop and bike rack. Easing congestion at South Baker School School district plans separate bus lane The plan starting in the fall of 2022 is to have buses, which now travel south on Fourth Street to Grace Street, turn right one block north, on Car- ter Street, and then continue south on Fifth Street. That street right-of-way extends BY JAYSON JACOBY south of Grace Street into the north- west corner of the South Baker play- jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Mark Witty isn’t a traffic cop but ground. he worries about congestion just The district will pave a lane for the same. buses and install a fence between that Witty, superintendent of the Baker lane and the playground, Witty said. School District, said a specific con- When buses leave the school, they’ll cern involves South Baker Interme- drive north on Fourth Street, avoiding diate, the school that houses fourth, Grace Street altogether. fifth and sixth graders. Wayne Paxton, the district’s trans- The problem, Witty said, is that portation supervisor, said he came up buses as well as parents pick up and with the proposal a few years ago to drop off students in the same area, alleviate congestion as buses and par- the one-way block of Grace Street ents’ vehicles vied for the same limited between Third and Fourth streets on amount of space. the north side of the school. He said there’s room for three buses The result, he said, is a crowded now in the bus lane on the south side section of street that forces many of Grace Street next to the school. parents to park elsewhere in the “It’s just really tight,” Paxton said. “I neighborhood and requires students, think this is going to open it up quite a in many cases, to cross one or more bit and be safer.” streets. In addition to separating the buses “We’re trying to avoid that,” Witty from parents’ vehicles, Paxton said the said as he stood beside the school on change will help with traffic issues far- the chilly afternoon of Friday, Feb. 4. ther east on Grace Street. “It’s been a goal for a number of years Now, buses, after dropping off or to make this area safer.” picking up students, continue east on The district’s solution, which Witty Grace to Second Street, where there said is slated to happen this summer, are two stop signs in just 50 feet — one is to separate the bus loading and at the Grace Street intersection, the unloading zone from where parents other at Dewey Avenue. pick up and drop off students. Starting this fall, buses will no longer use Grace Street, Paxton said — they’ll be confined to Fourth and Fifth streets. Witty said the change won’t elimi- nate potential conflicts between buses and other vehicles. Buses heading north on Fourth Street, for instance, will cross Grace Street where parents will turn left. But Witty said he’s convinced the situation will be safer since buses and cars won’t be parking close to each other. Witty said district officials are still working on the design, and he didn’t have an estimated cost for the project. He emphasized that it is not one of the jobs that will be done with money from the $4 million bond that district voters approved in May 2021. Witty said the district should be able to make the changes at South Baker using its capital projects budget. The district will have to move a chain link baseball backstop at the north end of the South Baker play- ground, and the lane will reduce the size of the playground, Witty said. He noted that it is a relatively large playground. The district will move the backstop to another part of the play- ground if that’s feasible, although he said that there is already another back- stop on the property. Witty said the district hopes to in- stall some new playground equipment over the next few years, a project it’s working on with the South Baker Par- ent-Teacher Organization. Baker County’s COVID-19 case totals and its rate of positive tests both dropped for the second straight week. That trend mirrors what’s hap- pening in Oregon as a whole, where the peak of the surge re- sulting from the omicron variant has passed, based on statistics from the Oregon Health Author- ity (OHA). The Baker County Health De- partment reported six new cases on Saturday, Feb. 5. That’s the fewest in a day since Jan. 16, when there were four cases. The six cases brought the weekly total (measured Sunday through Saturday) to 115. That’s a 30% drop from the previous week, when there were 165 cases. Since the week of Jan. 16-22, when the county reported a re- cord 183 cases, the decline is 37%. There were three cases on Sun- day, Feb. 6, the lowest one-day total since Jan. 2, when no cases were reported (totals for Sundays tend to be lower due to week- end delays). “We’re headed in the right di- rection,” Nancy Staten, director of the Baker County Health Depart- ment, said on Monday morning, Feb. 7. “We can be cautiously op- timistic that we’re on the down- hill slide. But we still have to protect our most vulnerable pop- ulations.” The rapidly declining case numbers statewide prompted the OHA to announce on Mon- day, Feb. 7, that the state would end the mask mandate for in- door public places no later than March 31. The mask requirement for schools will end on March 31. The OHA also reported that the county’s percentage of tests that are positive dropped from 33.2% from Jan. 16-22, to 24.6% the next week, and to 23.9% from Jan. 30-Feb. 5. Baker County’s case rate per 100,000 people has dipped from 1,076 the week of Jan. 16-22, to 680 the most recent week. The latter rate is the third-low- est among Northeastern Oregon counties. The rate per 100,000 in other counties: • Union: 816 • Wallowa: 964 • Umatilla: 793 • Malheur: 925 • Morrow: 499 • Grant: 506 The statewide rate per 100,000 last week was 689. Search fails to turn up Idaho angler who has been missing since Jan. 17 A steelhead fisherman reported seeing a body in the Snake River on Friday, Feb. 4 Ash said the searchers Idaho fisherman, Alberto Sill- onis, who went missing in the spent a few hours searching but did not find a body. area on Jan. 17. He said the cur- Searchers did not rent in the area is find the body, Sheriff strong and unpre- Travis Ash said on dictable, and the Monday morning, Sheriff ’s Office Feb. 7. does not have the BY JAYSON JACOBY The steelhead ability to put a diver fisherman, who was jjacoby@bakercityherald.com in the water at that A steelhead angler reported fishing on the Ore- site. seeing what he believed was a gon side of the river, Sillonis Ash said no addi- body in the Snake River below reported seeing the tional searches are planned Hells Canyon Dam on Friday body in a back eddy where morning, Feb. 4. the water is about 10 to 12 feet unless the Sheriff ’s Office receives new reports in the A team from the Baker deep, Ash said. County Sheriff’s Office Search The Baker County Dispatch area. The Sheriff ’s Office an- Center received the report at and Rescue team brought a nounced last month that 9:13 a.m. on Friday, Feb. 4. boat to the site, about one it believes Sillonis, 85, of mile downriver from the Hells Ash said he and four others Weiser, drowned after falling Canyon Visitors Center, hop- left the dock at the Visitors Center around 1 p.m. that day. from a dock into the river ing to recover the body of an TODAY Issue 114 12 pages Classified ....................B2-B4 Comics ..............................B5 Crossword ...............B2 & B4 Dear Abby .........................B6 Home & Living ........B1 & B2 Horoscope ..............B3 & B4 below the Visitors Center. Sillonis had left his home on the morning of Jan. 17 and planned to return home that evening. Relatives reported him missing about 6 p.m. that day when he failed to return. Baker County deputies, along with deputies from the Washington County Sher- iff ’s Office in Idaho, began searching the route to Hells Canyon as well as checking hotels in nearby towns. At about 9:07 p.m. on Jan. 17, deputies found Sillonis’ 2008 Nissan Frontier pickup truck in the parking lot at the Hells Canyon Visitors Center. Deputies searched the im- mediate vicinity and found Letters ...............................A4 Lottery Results .................A2 News of Record ................A2 Opinion .............................A4 Senior Menus ...................A2 Sports ........A2, A3, A5 & A6 two fishing poles, with the line from one still in the wa- ter, on the center dock. On the morning of Jan. 18, searchers found a felt, short- brimmed hat on rocks about 60 feet from the dock, which Sillonis’ family confirmed was his. Idaho Power Com- pany employees used a re- mote-operated vehicle with an underwater camera and sonar to search the river, but with no success. Sillonis is a white man who stands 5-foot-8 and weighs about 160 pounds. He has white hair. If anyone has information about Sillonis, they can call Ash at 541-523-6415. Sudoku..............................B5 Turning Backs ..................A2 Weather ............................B6