BAKER CITY HERALD • THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 2022 A3 LOCAL & STATE Dr Sanders specializes in all aspects of the foot and ankle. Anything from foot & ankle pain to diabetic foot care & limb salvage, injuries, surgery, skin or toe nail conditions, sports medicine, he covers it all! 2830 10th St Baker City, Oregon Brian Sanders, DPM Accepting most insurances 541-524-0122 Baker City office hours: Mon-Thurs 8am-5am Clinic hours: Tuesday 8am-5pm Thursday 8am-12pm Clinic offices in Ontario (every other Monday) La Grande (every Wednesday) Rachel Pregnancy Center 2192 Court Avenue, Baker City • 541-523-5357 Services Provided: Free Pregnancy Tests A resource center for Referrals for Free Ultrasounds families Pregnancy Options Counseling Adoption Referrals Prenatal, Infant Care & Parenting Classes Maternity & Baby Clothing Post Abortion Recovery Helping women & men in an Open Tues -Thurs unexpected pregnancy. unplanned pregnancy. All services free & confidential. 10 am - 5 4 pm (closed for lunch) Mobile Mobile Service Service Outstanding Computer Repair Fast & & Reliable Reliable Fast Open for all 24/7 your Call or Text Call or Text 24/7 Dale Bogardus 541-297-5831 Dale Bogardus 541-297-5831 Stay up-to-date Microsoft’ If your with computer is s most advanced operating system to date, in despair call Outstanding Windows 11 Computer Repair! Desktops and laptops in stock www.outstandingcomputerrepair.com Or upgrade yours today for the best security! Refurbished Desktop & Laptops For Sale House calls (let me come to you!) Drop Offs & Remote Services are Available All credit cards accepted The years have not been kind to the John Day totem pole. A quarter-century of wind and rain, sun and snow have taken a toll on the local land- mark, leaving its once-bright wood darkened, weathered and cracked. That doesn’t sit well with Margot Heiniger-White, the widow of Ralph White, the Canyon City chainsaw artist who carved the pole. “I would like that totem pole cleaned up,” she said. And she’s not crazy about the location, either, tucked be- tween a telephone pole and a two-story building just off the city’s main drag. “It’s not a very good place for it because nobody can see it,” she said. “It’s in a bad spot.” American or Alaska Native. Perhaps more to the point, Oregon tribes didn’t carve to- tem poles. That was something the coastal tribes of what is now Washington, British Co- lumbia and Southeast Alaska were known for. So what’s it doing here? The answer to that question comes back to Ralph White. Mountain Man Ralph White died on Jan. 28, 2018, at the age of 79. In life, by all accounts, he was a colorful character. He wore a bushy beard and a bearclaw necklace, and he called himself the Mountain Man. According to an article by C.J. Gish in the July 20, 1995, edition of the Blue Mountain Eagle, he made his living for many years as a chainsaw art- ist. White had a love for the Old West and Native Ameri- can art forms — and a knack for turning tree trunks into animal figures. See, Totem/Page A5 Get strong, fast Wi-Fi to work and play throughout your home. ^ FEEL THE SPEED, EVEN AT PEAK TIMES. No annual contract. Based on wired connection to gateway. Power multiple devices at once— everyone can enjoy their own screen. Number of devices depends on screen size/resolution. Over 99% reliability. AT&T INTERNET 100 †† Excludes DSL. Based on network availability. 45 $ /mo * Contact your local DIRECTV dealer For 12 mos, plus taxes & equip.fee.$10/mo equip. fee applies. Limited availability in selectareas. *Price after $5/mo Autopay & Paperless bill discount (w/in 2 bills). IV Support Holdings 888-486-0359 Limited availability in select areas. May not be available inyour area. 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Below the eagle are three more carved figures: a salmon, a turtle and a beaver. It’s perched atop a concrete footing at the intersection of Main and Dayton streets, at the east end of downtown John Day. Yet despite its imposing size and central location, the totem pole is surprisingly easy to overlook. Driving down Main Street from the east, the totem pole is hidden behind the impos- ing bulk of the Grant County Ranch and Rodeo Museum. Coming from the west, the view is partially obscured by a telephone pole. And why is there a totem pole in John Day at all? Grant County doesn’t have much of a Native American presence these days — ac- cording to the 2020 census, only 1.7% of the county’s residents identify as Native Bennett Hall/Blue Mountain Eagle The John Day totem pole is showing its age, but the city has plans to clean it up and refinish it this spring. There are also discussions about possibly moving it to a more prominent location. GU Providing quality and compassion to all his patients. BY BENNETT HALL Blue Mountain Eagle TE 1 R GU ’S County has authority to choose ambulance provider The Council’s notification to commissioners about the pos- sible cessation of ambulance service is the latest move in a city-county conundrum that dates back several years. At the center of the matter are the state law that gives the county the sole authority to choose the ambulance service, as well as the city’s costs to pro- vide the ambulance service, which makes up the majority of the fire department’s calls. The Baker City Fire Depart- ment is the longtime provider for a “ambulance service area” Financial challenge has been mounting for many years In his report to councilors, Cannon outlined the history of the city’s fire department and in particular the financial bur- den of providing ambulance services even though the fed- eral Medicare and Medicaid programs, as well as private insurance, don’t pay the full amount that the city bills for ambulance runs. “When the city bills insur- ance, Medicaid, and Medicare for a call, we do not recover enough revenue to cover the financial break-even point,” Cannon said. In response to a question from Councilor Joanna Dixon, Cannon said about 80% to 85% of ambulance calls are for patients who have Medicare or Medicaid. Those sources typically pay only about 20% of the amount the city bills. Meanwhile, the city’s labor and materials costs are rising. “The City anticipates sig- nificant increases in the per- sonnel costs necessary to provide ambulance services,” Cannon wrote in the March 22 letter to commissioners. “The cost of medical supplies, ambulance equipment, and fuel is also increasing signifi- cantly every year.” County officials have dis- cussed in the past asking voters within the ambulance service area to approve a tax levy that would raise money for ambu- lance services. The idea is that a levy would be a more sustain- able source than ambulance billing and yearly contributions from the county to supplement the city’s general fund. Talking totem N Under state law, the county has the authority to designate ambulance service providers. Nichols said that contract was ready to be sent to the city on Tuesday, March 22, but that didn’t happen. Cannon said the timing is “a real shame.” “I was unaware they had a response prepared,” he said. Nichols said he recognizes that the city needs additional financial assistance to oper- ate the ambulance service, as well as a written contract designating the city as the ambulance provider. “I understand where they’re coming from, I really do,” Nichols said. “Baker City is in a difficult position. The ambu- lance service has been a money loser for them for a long time.” The proposed contract the county prepared, but didn’t send to the city, was a re- sponse to a proposal the city submitted to the county on Jan. 11, 2022, Nichols said. The city proposed a three- year contract. Although the proposal didn’t include a spe- cific dollar amount for the county’s contribution, Can- non said that based on a for- mula the city suggested, the county’s payment to the city to support the ambulance ser- vice would have been about $137,000 for the first year — $7,000 less than the amount the county offered in its pro- posed contract. In a report to councilors on Tuesday, Cannon mentioned the proposed contract that Nichols cited — the docu- ment that the county failed to send prior to the City Coun- cil meeting — noting that the county was “working on a response” but without know- ing the response had been fin- ished but not yet sent. Cannon also noted that the county has committed to pay- ing the city $100,000 for am- bulance service for the current fiscal year, which ends June 30. The city has received $25,000 so far, Cannon wrote in his report, “and we have been told that an additional $50K is coming. We greatly appreciate those funds.” Nichols said he under- stands the financial burden that the city is under in pro- viding ambulance services, given that revenue from am- bulance billing doesn’t cover the costs. Cannon in his letter noted that those costs are ris- ing due both to inflation and to higher call volumes. In his report to councilors, Cannon wrote that the differ- ence between the cost of the ambulance service, and ambu- lance billing revenues, “could approach a million dollars a year in the very near future.” Ambulance billing is a sig- nificant source of revenue for the city’s fire department, amounting to around 38% of the budget. Most of the rest of the de- partment’s approximately $2.3 million annual budget comes from the city’s general fund. Nichols said he was optimis- tic that the county’s proposed $130,000 contribution to the city for the next fiscal year would be sufficient to keep the ambulance service going for at least the coming fiscal year. Cannon said that al- though he can’t say for certain whether the city would have set a Sept. 30 date for ceasing ambulance service had the county sent its proposed con- tract prior to Tuesday’s meet- ing, it would have altered his conversation with councilors. “If the county has a pro- posal obviously we will look at that,” he said. But even with the county’s proposed $130,000 contribu- tion, Cannon said that with- out a “larger, more sustainable funding source” for ambulance service, the city will at some point reach a threshold where it’s no longer possible to con- tinue that service. outside the city limits as well as inside. Cannon notes that the city “appreciates” the county’s contributions in his letter to commissioners. “The city recognizes the county was not required by a contract to provide funds but chose to do so regardless,” he wrote. “Unfortunately, the contributions do not cover the budget shortfalls for operating such an expensive service.” The federal grant ended in 2021, leaving the city solely responsible for paying the sal- aries and benefits of the three firefighter/paramedics that the city hired after accepting the grant. 15 % & 10 % 2 Continued from Page A1 that includes the city as well as much of Baker Valley and other parts of the county, cov- ering about 1,600 square miles, or slightly more than half of Baker County’s area. During a Jan. 19, 2022, meeting of the county com- missioners, Cannon told commissioners that the city wants to continue to provide ambulances within the city and the rest of the ambulance service area. This was formal- ized in the proposed contract the city had sent to the county on Jan. 11. Although that proposal was for a three-year pact, Cannon suggested that city and county officials negotiate a new 10- year agreement. Commissioners started the process in 2019 when they is- sued a request for proposals for ambulance service. Baker City and two private compa- nies submitted bids. In early 2020, commission- ers tabled the matter. Baker City continues to provide ambulance service in what Cannon described in his March 22 letter as a “hand- shake agreement.” Both the city’s Jan. 11 three- year contract proposal, and the county’s one-year pro- posal, are designed to formal- ize that agreement. The root of the problem, as councilors discussed Tues- day, is that the city’s cost to operate ambulances contin- ues to rise. “Currently there is not a significant and stable funding source available to Baker City which fully covers the cost of the Ambulance Service with- out city taxpayers heavily sub- sidizing the service for Baker County,” Cannon wrote in his letter to commissioners. “The city taxpayers, City Council, and the Baker City budget can- not continue in this fashion.” Starting in 2018, the city received a three-year federal grant that allowed the city to hire three new firefighter/ paramedics. The grant was for about $462,000, and the city spent about $265,000 over the three years. Baker County, meanwhile, gave the city $33,000 per year over the three-year grant pe- riod, an acknowledgement that the expanded fire de- partment staff continued to respond to ambulance calls RD Ambulance A OFF YOUR ENTIRE PURCHASE * FINANCING THAT FITS YOUR BUDGET! 1 Promo Code: 285 1 Subject to credit approval. Call for details. CALL US TODAY FOR A FREE ESTIMATE + 5 % OFF OFF SENIORS & MILITARY! WE INSTALL YEAR-ROUND! TO THE FIRST 50 CALLERS ONLY! ** LIFETIME WARRANTY 1-855-536-8838 Mon-Thurs: 8am-11pm, Fri-Sat: 8am-5pm, Sun: 2pm-8pm EST For those who qualify. One coupon per household. No obligation estimate valid for 1 year. *Off er valid at time of estimate only 2The leading consumer reporting agency conducted a 16 month outdoor test of gutter guards in 2010 and recognized LeafFilter as the “#1 rated professionally installed gutter guard system in America.” Manufac- tured in Plainwell, Michigan and processed at LMT Mercer Group in Ohio. See Representative for full warranty details. CSLB# 1035795 DOPL #10783658-5501 License# 7656 License# 50145 License# 41354 License# 99338 License# 128344 License# 218294 WA UBI# 603 233 977 License# 2102212986 License# 2106212946 License# 2705132153A License# LEAFFNW822JZ License# WV056912 License# WC-29998-H17 Nassau HIC License# H01067000 Registration# 176447 Registration# HIC.0649905 Registration# C127229 Registration# C127230 Registration# 366920918 Registration# PC6475 Registration# IR731804 Registration# 13VH09953900 Registration# PA069383 Suff olk HIC License# 52229-H License# 2705169445 License# 262000022 License# 262000403 License# 0086990 Registration# H-19114 Clarene Powell Rohner June 3, 1924 - March 18, 2022 Clarene Powell Rohner, 97, quietly passed away at home, March 18, 2022. Clarene was the corner stone of a prosperous Baker County farm since 1942. Her graveside service will be held at Mount Hope Cemetery, Saturday, March 26, at 11:00 a.m. with Reverend Suresh Telagani of St. Francis de Sales Cathedral Baker City officiating. A reception will be held afterward, for family and friends, at the Baker Elks Club, 1896 Second Street, in Baker City. Mrs. Rohner was born in Durkee, June 3, 1924 to Authur Powell and Anna Silvers. She lived in Durkee on the family cattle ranch until 1932 when the family moved to Bowen Valley. Clarene graduated from Baker High School in 1942. Clarene grew up in an era that was without cell phones, social media, jet planes, indoor plumbing or refrigeration. Cooking was done on wood stoves and the main source of transportation was the horse. She rode to school on a horse, traveled to work on a horse and farmed with a team of horses. She sewed her own clothes, processed meat and dairy products by hand and canned vegetables and fruit from crops her family raised. Some would say that she lived a tough and primitive life style. She lost her mother when she was 11 to pneumonia and helped raise her brother Bryce who was 10 and sister Jeanine 5. In 1938 her horse rolled on her and shattered her ankle to a degree that she had bones protruding through her boot and spent 6- weeks in the hospital. Over the years she had both her hips and both knees replaced. With all this you would never notice her limp, never hear her complain and she never failed to accomplish the necessary tasks that farm life demands. One day in 1939 her father hired a young man to help work the ranch. “He came through on horse back and asked about a job,” she said. “He had the biggest, blackest beard. I asked Dad where he found that bum.” That man’s name was Orville Rohner. Clarene and Orville married on June 6, 1942. They moved into a house adjacent to Orville’s father’s dairy farm off Pocahontas road and began a partnership with him in the dairy business. That business grew and expanded over the next 66 years and became a “Dairy of Honor” Clarene’s achievements in life and community involvement are long and impressive. 1994 Legacy Woman of the Year, 1999 Diamond Pioneer Agriculture Career Achievement Award from OSU, President of Soroptimist International, Board member and treasurer of the Soil and Water Conservation District, Dairy Heard Improvement treasurer and member of three different Granges. She was a 4-H leader when she was 17 and taught 4-H sewing and home economics for over 60 years. She judged at the county and state level and was a member of the state and local 4-H Leaders Association and the Home Extension Club. The number of people whose lives Clarene touched in creative and positive ways spans generations. Clarene especially en- joyed sewing. She was a very accomplished seam- stress, making everything from tailored suits to ma- chine embroidery crafts. She often wore clothes she created. She spent many years traveling to La Grande to take machine embroidery classes with her good friend Marie Savage. Her keen eye for fabrics, color, and attention to detail were evident in the beautiful quilts she made for her children and grandchildren. As accomplished as she was, she considered her family the most precious to her. She raised four children; Anna, Norma, Jean, and John. Over the years the family increased to include 12 Grand Children, 22 Great Grand-children and 5 Great-Great- Grand Children. Their love and devotion to her tells a story greater than volumes of words could achieve. Grandma never forgot a birthday or Christmas present and she never forgot to smile or hug, but most importantly she always managed to give guidance when necessary and love in abundance. Survivors include her son and daughter- in-law, John and Kate Rohner; daughters and sons-in-law, Norma and Leonard Nemec and Jean and Dave Justus, all of Baker City and Anna and Jerry Hortsch of Sun City West, Arizona. Grand Children, Josh Rohner and Cindy, Kyra Rohner, John Taylor Rohner and Alysia, Joel Rohner and Whitney, Mike and Nita Troupe, Don and Cathi Bigspring, Brian Troupe, Kathy and Mike Colton, Barry and Anne Nemec, Jesse and Jaime Justus and Daniel and Erin Justus, 27 Great and Great-Great Grand Children, sister Jeanine Culver and many nieces and nephews. She is preceded in death by her Father and Mother, Husband Orville, Brother Bryce and Grandson Christopher. Those wishing to make memorial contributions in memory of Clarene may direct them to the Baker County 4-H Association, this maybe done through the Coles Tribute Center 1950 Place St. Baker City, OR 97814. If one wishes to light a candle in memory of Clarene, please visit www. colestributecenter.com