HOME & LIVING B1 LOCAL A2 SPORTS A6 Cornbread: Fresh take on an old-fashioned favorite Animal rights initiative won’t make Nov. ballot Gonzaga rallies past Memphis to make Sweet 16 IN THIS EDITION: LOCAL • HOME & LIVING • SPORTS Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com COVID rate hits lowest since June of 2020 QUICK HITS ————— Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Kareen Bybee of Baker City. BRIEFING ————— Baker baseball loses fi rst game in Arizona The Baker baseball team rallied from a 10-0 defi cit but couldn’t come all the way back against Doherty, Colorado, on Monday, March 21, at Phoenix, Arizona. The Bulldogs lost 11-5 in the fi rst of their four games scheduled during a spring break trip to Arizona. Baker, which lost for the fi rst time after opening the season with three wins last week, played Manitou Springs, Colorado, later Monday. Baker is slated to play Buena Vista, Colora- do, on Wednesday, March 23, and Apollo, Arizona, on Thursday, March 24. See Thursday’s issue of the Baker City Herald for more coverage. Baker Relief Nursery plans open house on March 30 The Baker Relief Nursery, 1925 16th St., will be celebrating its fi rst year of operation during an open house on Wednesday, March 30, from noon to 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. The public is invited to tour the facility and visit with the team. Staff will also be sharing their fi rst Annual Impact Report. For more information call 541-523-5054 or email at info@bakerreliefnursery.org. WEATHER ————— Today 57/34 Partly sunny Wednesday 63/37 Partly sunny Full forecast on the back of the B section. TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2022 • $1.50 BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald The Baker City trolley route begins and ends at Community Connection, 2810 Cedar St. Pump prices might make the Trolley I attractive Baker’s Community Connection trolley runs a fixed route on weekdays BY LISA BRITTON lbritton@bakercityherald.com f gas prices make you cringe, it might be time to let someone else do the driving. The Baker City trolley, operated by Community Connection of Northeast Oregon, runs a fixed route around town from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m., Monday through Friday. See, Trolley/Page A3 Agencies brace for effects of record fuel prices much diesel as usual this winter since most of the snowfall was con- fined to about two weeks in late With fleets of vehicles for which December and early January. the concept of fuel economy is “Fortunately, we had kind of a more farcical than reality, officials light winter and in winter we (can) at the Baker County Road Depart- burn a ton of diesel plowing snow ment and Baker City Public Works every single day,” Perkins said. Department are keenly aware of the The road department’s budget for record-high fuel prices. the current fiscal year, which ends Noodle Perkins, Baker County June 30, includes $230,000 for fuel. roadmaster, said the recent price A longer term concern, Perkins hikes are a significant concern, said, is the state gas tax, which is particularly for diesel, the fuel that a major source of revenue for the heavy equipment such as graders road department overall and is not and backhoes burn at a prodigious limited to paying for fuel. rate. The county will receive about “It’s major for us,” Perkins said. $1.6 million from the state this fis- On the positive side, Perkins said cal year. the road department didn’t use as The problem, Perkins said, is By SAMANTHA O’CONNER and JAYSON JACOBY Baker City Herald that as fuel prices rise, people tend to drive less, and since the fuel tax hasn’t increased (the price hikes are due to market issues, not to higher taxes), tax revenue could drop. “It’s nailing us pretty good,” Per- kins said. The road department did have a beginning balance of about $3.5 million for this fiscal year. For Baker City, the comparatively small amount of snowplowing this winter means the fuel budget for the current fiscal year, ending June 30, should be fine, said Michelle Owen, public works director. But based on current fuel prices, she said she’s proposing a 30% in- crease in the budget for fuel for the fiscal year that starts July 1. The difference between the two words is minor, but after two years it’s some- thing of a milestone for Mark Bennett to refer to an endemic rather than a pan- demic. Bennett, a Baker County commis- sioner, has also served as the county’s incident commander since March 2020, when COVID-19 caused a worldwide upheaval like no other infectious disease had in a century. With the county’s number of cases, and its rate of positive tests, plummeting to the lowest levels since the spring of 2020, Bennett said the county is return- ing to a more normal situation. Employees from departments who had devoted some of their time to COVID-19 topics are no longer doing so, Bennett said on Monday, March 21. Although Bennett acknowledged that a new variant could change conditions, at this point he believes those measures are no longer necessary. See, COVID/Page A3 County gets $280,000 to upgrade radio system for police, fire BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com The mountains and canyons that add beauty and variety to Baker County’s landscape also pose obstacles for the people who respond to emergencies ranging from missing hunters to car crashes to wildfires. The county’s rumpled topography cre- ates “dead spots” where the radio signals that link emergency responders can’t al- ways reach, Sheriff Travis Ash said. But a recent influx of federal and state government dollars will help to strengthen that electronic connection. Baker County has received $280,000 in three separate grants to install new ra- dio repeaters on 10 mountaintop sites, and to replace the outdated radio con- soles at the Baker County Consolidated Dispatch Center at the Sheriff’s Office, Ash said. See, Upgrades/Page A3 The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Baker City business curates one-of-a-kind tourism opportunities in Eastern Oregon As the warm season ap- proaches, Sizer and his crew A local business is shining are gearing up for a slate of a light on the natural gems adventures in Eastern Ore- of Eastern Oregon. gon this summer. Go Wild: American Ad- Sizer, who went to Baker ventures, a tourism business High School and graduated based in Baker City, focuses from Lewis & Clark College on local tourism, environ- in Portland, began the busi- mental education, commu- ness after working for the nity partnerships and inter- Forest Service for six sea- national outreach. Through sons. The inspiration for Go custom-curated outdoors Wild: American Adventures adventures, owner Dan Sizer started in Sizer’s college aims to share his love of the days, when he took a group outdoors with others. of international students “From the beginning, the back home to Eastern Or- rural Oregon part was some- egon. Sizer and his friends thing I really wanted to help went backpacking, hiking, people connect to,” Sizer canoeing and participated said. in other outdoor activities The business is in its that the group had never fifth year, but has faced done before. several hurdles related to It was at this point that Sizer the COVID-19 pandemic. saw a potential business op- BY DAVIS CARBAUGH The (La Grande) Observer Go Wild: American Adventures/Contributed Photo Two Go Wild: American Adventures guests jump into an alpine lake in the Wallowas during the summer of 2021. The business, which is based in Baker City, creates curated outdoor experiences in Eastern Oregon. TODAY Issue 131 14 pages Classified ....................B4-B6 Comics ..............................B7 Community News.............A5 Crossword ...............B4 & B6 Dear Abby .........................B8 Home & Living ............B1-B3 Horoscope ..............B2 & B4 Lottery Results .................A2 News of Record ................A2 Opinion .............................A4 Senior Menus ...................A2 Sports ...............................A6 portunity, inviting individuals from out of the area to expe- rience what Eastern Oregon has to offer. The business now provides guides, personal chefs, gourmet outdoor meals, lessons and more at destina- tions across the region. “It was always amazing for me to see the awe and wonder, realizing how many folks ha- ven’t been out in this kind of country,” Sizer said. Go Wild’s main clientele come from larger cities such as Portland, Seattle or the Tri-Cities in Washington. Sizer noted that the business shifted from focusing on day-trip visitors coming through East- ern Oregon toward interested individuals from out of town looking for an extended visit. See, Tourism/Page A3 Sudoku..............................B7 Turning Backs ..................A2 Weather ............................B8