Travel Baker County/Contributed photo The Easter egg hunt returns to Geiser-Pollman Park in Baker City on April 16. APRIL 13–20, 2022 WWW.GOEASTERNOREGON.COM INSIDE LOCAL A2 Go! Magazine The hunt is on! The Easter egg hunt begins in Go! School district announces new hires PAGE 8 Explore Chemistry fun Experience Excursion Train Listen EOCenes in concert PAGE 3 PAGE 4 PAGE 12 Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com IN THIS EDITION: LOCAL • BUSINESS & AG LIFE THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 2022 • $1.50 Council votes to let voters decide on the train quiet zone QUICK HITS ————— Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Julie Paxton of Baker City. BRIEFING ————— Easter egg hunt, All Kids Rodeo set for Saturday The annual Easter egg hunt returns this Saturday, April 16, to Geiser-Pollman Park in Baker City. Organized by the Baker City Rotary Club, the hunt offi cially begins at 10 a.m. — but be there early because prizes go fast once the siren sounds. Following the hunt is the Baker County Shrine Club’s All Kids Rodeo, held at Geiser Pollman Park for the fi rst time. Participation is free, but regis- tration is required. Registration forms are available in advance at the Baker County Chamber, 490 Campbell St., and Guyer & Associates, 2790 Main St. On Saturday, registration starts at 9 a.m. at the park. Activities will begin after the hunt, with organized events starting at 10:30 a.m. A hot dog lunch will be avail- able for free to participants, and $5 for all others. Pro- ceeds from the rodeo support the Baker County Shrine Club. BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Work session could happen April 25 or 26 Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald Patrick Foss, left, and David Van Dyke of the Baker City Fire Department with one of the department’s ambulances on Tuesday, April 12, 2022. BY SAMANTHA O’CONNER AND JAYSON JACOBY Baker City Herald Councilors decided during their meeting Tuesday evening, April 12, at City Hall to invite Baker County commissioners to a joint work session later this month. “I think we’re in a position that we still need to sit down with the county commissioners and explain where we’re at and then see if they can offer a solution,” Councilor Shane Alderson said. “I’ve called for a work session twice and I think we still need to go ahead with it. I just want to make enough money to keep going and offering the best protection that we can.” Mayor Kerry McQuisten agreed. “We do need to get that work session sched- uled and get the commissioners here,” she said. Councilors suggested as a possible date April 25, one day before the next regular City Council meeting, or prior to the April 26 meeting. Under Oregon law, Baker County is solely re- sponsible for picking ambulance service provid- ers in each of the county’s four current ambu- lance service areas. The Baker City Fire Department is the pro- vider for the Baker ambulance service area, which covers the city as well as about two-thirds Free fi rewood permits available soon Beginning May 1, the Wal- lowa-Whitman National Forest will offer free personal-use fi rewood permits, with a limit of 10 cords per household, per year. Permits will be available, at no charge, over the counter at local Forest Service offi ces and through a variety of local vendors. A processing fee of up to $2 per transaction may be charged when obtaining the permits from local businesses. WEATHER ————— Today 40/18 Snow showers Wednesday 43/26 Dixon Alderson McQuisten of the rest of the county, excluding the Halfway, Richland and Huntington areas. The City Council decided on March 22 to send a notice to the county that the city, due to projections that its financial losses for am- bulance service could exceed $1 million per year, intended to cease ambulance services Sept. 30, 2022. If that happened, the county would have to find a new ambulance provider, likely a pri- vate company. The city, meanwhile, is working on a plan that calls for laying off about half of its firefighter/ paramedics (the budget includes 12 employees, but two positions are vacant now). Ambulance calls account for more than 80% of the fire de- partment’s volume, with fires being much less common. And although the city spends more money to provide ambulance services than it receives from billing, the ambulance revenue is projected to slightly exceed $1 million for the current fiscal year. Without that revenue and without operating ambulances, the city would neither need, nor could it afford, the current fire department workforce. See, Ambulance/Page A6 Snow late The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Pinwheels spin with purpose Colorful displays promote April as Child Abuse Prevention Month BY LISA BRITTON lbritton@bakercityherald.com The blue pinwheels pop- ping up around Baker City are getting quite a workout in the wind this month. But at least the spinning decorations catch eyes — the whole purpose of the “Pinwheels for Prevention” campaign, which happens every April for Child Abuse Prevention Month. The root of this yearly campaign dates to 2015, when the Ford Family Foun- dation dedicated money to start development of the Protect Our Children proj- ect, which includes trainings on how to recognize and re- spond to child abuse. TODAY Issue 141 28 pages Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald The wind twirls a pinwheel on Tuesday, April 12, 2022, at a pin- wheel garden placed at the corner of Second Street and Auburn Avenue in recognition of April as Child Abuse Awareness Month. The training is “Stewards of Children” provided by the prevention organiza- tion Darkness to Light. “This prevention train- ing teaches adults how to prevent, recognize and react responsibly to child sexual abuse,” Dalton said. Trainings continued during the pandemic, but moved to a virtual format. Dalton, who is a trained facilitator for “Stewards of Children,” said the Protect Our Children project has provided the training for more than 30,000 people. Next training Building Healthy Fami- “This project would lead Dalton, site coordinator for lies will offer the next vir- tual training on Tuesday, 11 areas across the state the Protect our Children April 19, from 9:30 a.m. and Siskiyou County in project in Wallowa and to 11:30 a.m. The final California in presenting Baker counties. day to register is Monday, trainings to build aware- Building Healthy Fami- ness of child sexual abuse lies was selected to bring the April 18. and learning steps to pro- program to Wallowa, Baker tect children,” said Marilyn and Malheur counties. See, Pinwheels/Page A2 Business .................B1 & B2 Classified ....................B2-B4 Comics ..............................B5 Community News.............A2 Crossword ...............B2 & B4 Dear Abby .........................B6 Horoscope ..............B3 & B4 Lottery Results .................A2 News of Record ................A2 Baker City voters apparently will get a chance to weigh in on the city’s plan to pursue a railroad quiet zone after all, and potentially override a January vote by the Baker Damschen City Council. The City Coun- cil voted 4-2 on Tuesday night, April 12, to ask city staff to pre- pare a measure for the Nov. 8, 2022, ballot. Spriet Councilor Jo- anna Dixon, who made the motion, said the measure would ask voters whether they support or oppose a quiet zone. Dixon said she intends that if voters oppose a quiet zone, that would overturn the Council’s Jan. 25 decision to apply for a quiet zone. The Federal Railroad Adminis- tration decides whether to approve quiet zones, in which train engi- neers are not required to sound their whistles at public crossings. See, Zone/Page A3 School board buys 2nd home for international student housing BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com After hearing from a local res- ident who objected to the plan, the Baker School Board voted 4-0 during a special meeting on Tues- day, April 12, to buy a home for $490,000 to house foreign exchange students while they attend Baker High School starting this fall. It’s the second home the school district has bought this year for its budding Oregon International School charter school. In early March the district bought a home, at 1706 Washing- ton Ave., for $295,000. The second home, also a historic house, is at 1503 Second St. Before voting to transfer $500,000 from the district’s capi- tal projects fund to buy the Second Street home, board members — chairman Chris Hawkins was ab- sent from the Zoom meeting — re- viewed financial projections for the International School. Those project that the district will bring in about $28,000 more from the charter school than it will spend for the first year of operation, with estimated surpluses increasing to $134,000 the second year and to $248,000 the third year. Those figures include repay- ments to the district’s budget for the home purchases, which is projected to take about 14 years. Obituaries .........................A3 Opinion .............................A4 Senior Menus ...................A2 See, Housing/Page A3 Sudoku..............................B5 Turning Backs ..................A2 Weather ............................B6