BAKER CITY HERALD • THURSDAY, MAY 5, 2022 A3 LOCAL Firefighters the fire department — and “doesn’t expect police to write enough traf- fic tickets to pay for itself.” Johnson also notes that the city, despite the difference between the amount it bills for ambulance service and the amount it collects over many years, has not had to cut other departments within the city’s general fund, including police and fire, which make up about 62% of general fund costs, to keep the fire department afloat. Johnson does agree that if ambu- lance call volume trends continue, the city would need to hire more staff eventually. He said the union’s goal is to keep the city’s ambulance service operating for at least the next fiscal year, which starts July 1, 2022. That would give city and county officials time to look for a new, stable reve- nue source. They have recently dis- cussed asking voters to approve a property tax levy or to form a new taxing district for public safety. Continued from Page A1 Taking the message directly to residents Johnson joined Ron Morgan, a district vice president for the Fire- fighters Council, to talk to residents in northeast Baker City, along H and Birch streets, on a sunny but blustery Tuesday morning. Johnson said it is “real humbling to see the support and have like- minded firefighters from through- out the state who see the crisis that’s been created and want to help get the message out.” Johnson said he believes it’s cru- cial that Baker City residents hear directly from firefighters. He and Morgan encouraged resi- dents to support the firefighters and to express their concerns to the City Council. “People need to actually take ac- tion and not just be mad about it,” Johnson said. The firefighters’ effort was prompted by the Baker City Coun- cil’s decision on March 22 to notify Baker County, which by Oregon law is responsible for providing ambulance service, that the city intended to stop operating ambu- lances Sept. 30, 2022. If that happened, the county would have to find a different pro- vider, likely a private ambulance company, to replace the city fire department. Baker City Manager Jonathan Cannon, who recommended the City Council send the notice to the county on March 22, contends that the city can’t afford to con- tinue operating ambulances be- yond Sept. 30. Cannon cited the shortfall be- tween what the city spends to oper- ate ambulances and the amount it collects from patients. The city, for at least a couple decades, hasn’t collected the full amount it bills, largely because a majority of the patients it transports — about 80% — don’t have private insurance but are covered by either of two federal programs, Medicare and Medicaid. The city, for at least a couple decades, hasn’t collected the full amount it bills, largely because a majority of the patients it transports — about 80% — don’t have private insurance but are covered by either of two federal programs, Medicare and Medicaid. Trial Continued from Page A1 “I have reviewed Mr. Yervasi’s motion. I believe that he has satisfied the Court’s parame- ters to get a continuance.” In his April 27 motion, Yer- vasi wrote that Gonyer was not able to participate in a trial starting May 9. “Mr. Gonyer’s chemother- apy has affected his cognitive abilities through the well-doc- umented condition known as ‘chemobrain’ or ‘chemo fog,’ ” Yervasi wrote. “Mr. Gonyer’s chemotherapy and other health conditions prevent him from actively participating in his defense by potentially analyzing the facts or pre- paring to testify. He is unable because he is often too sick, tired, or confused.” Yervasi also cited another factor that has left the defense unprepared to go to trial this month. He wrote that an investiga- tor the defense hired to review electronic devices and data that police seized from Gonyer estimated it would take up to 100 hours to analyze the docu- ments and devices. As of the end of March, the defense investigator had spent Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald Baker City firefighter/paramedic Casey Johnson, left, president of the local union chapter that represents Baker City firefighters, and Ron Morgan, a dis- trict vice president for the Oregon State Firefighters Council, went door to door in Baker City on Tuesday morning, May 3, 2022, to urge residents to oppose a city proposal to end ambulance service Sept. 30, 2022, forcing Baker County to find a different provider. “If the city does not put in a proposal (by the June 3 deadline), then it’s pretty much a done deal, we’re a sinking ship.” — Casey Johnson, president of local union chapter representing Baker City Fire Department firefighter/paramedics Those programs reimburse the city for only about 20% of the amount it bills, according to the city. The shortfall averaged about $730,000 for the past five fis- cal years, and the city projects a $581,000 gap for the current fiscal year, which ends June 30, 2022. Cannon said that with ambu- lance call volumes increasing, he expects the city would need to hire three more firefighter/paramedics later this year, which would widen that financial gap. Baker City’s firefighter/para- medics are cross-trained, meaning they respond to both fires and to ambulance calls and other emer- gencies. Ambulance runs account for 80% to 85% of the depart- ment’s calls. Johnson, the local union presi- dent, disputes both Cannon’s con- 40 hours reviewing the materi- als, Yervasi wrote. The process takes consider- able time because the defense investigator is allowed to exam- ine the data only at an Oregon Department of Justice office, Yervasi wrote. The next visit was scheduled for May 3-4. “Forcing the defense to go to trial without finalizing this ex- amination creates an extreme prejudice against the Defen- dant,” Yervasi wrote. He also wrote in the April 27 motion that a different defense investigator has been unable to work on the case recently while caring for a severely ill family member. Baxter said Gonyer has been living in the Boise area. Gonyer no longer is required to wear an ankle monitor, which allows police to monitor his movements, because a doc- tor determined that the moni- tor was restricting blood flow, Baxter said. Gonyer, who lived on Stices Gulch Road about 12 miles south of Baker City, was ini- tially arrested on Dec. 28, 2019, in Ada County, Idaho, where he was receiving med- ical care. He was extradited to Baker County in early Jan- uary 2020 and was held at the Baker County Jail until tention that the city would need to hire three new employees later this year, and that the city can’t afford to maintain ambulance service for at least the fiscal year that starts July 1. “The city manager is railroad- ing this idea that the city is going to be bankrupt, and many of the city councilors are buying into it hook, line and sinker,” Johnson said. “I don’t think that’s the real- ity of the situation.” He said the city is not a business, and due to the lower reimburse- ment rates for Medicare and Med- icaid, and the predominance of ambulance patients who have that coverage, the city is never going to break even. But Johnson points out that the city spends even more for its police department — about $2.56 million budgeted for the current fiscal year, compared with $2.32 million for December 2020, when Judge Thomas B. Powers granted a motion from Yervasi to grant Gonyer a conditional release so he could get medical treat- ment at the Boise VA Hospital and other facilities. Gonyer lived in a motel in Baker City during 2021, but he was required to wear the ankle monitor at that time. Gonyer originally was in- dicted on several crimes re- lated to the sexual assault of a girl younger than 14 who was known to him, the crimes al- legedly happening between May 1, 2019, and Dec. 20, 2019. • Five counts of first-degree sexual abuse, a Class B felony. • Two counts of second-de- gree sexual abuse, a Class C felony. • Six counts of third-degree sexual abuse, a Class A misde- meanor. • Two counts of second-de- gree unlawful sexual penetra- tion, a Class B felony. • Two counts of contributing to the sexual abuse of a minor, a Class A misdemeanor. • One count of first-degree rape, a Class A felony. • One count of second-de- gree rape, a Class B felony. • One count of third-degree rape, a Class C felony. 2022 I Northeast Oregon PHOTO CONTEST Visit bakercityherald.com and enter today! State union president calls city plan ‘irresponsible’ Koenig, president of the Oregon State Firefighters Council, called Baker City’s proposal to cease am- bulance service and cut the fire- fighting staff by six “irresponsible and political suicide.” “We’ve got a problem here, it’s going the wrong way,” Koenig said. He said the Firefighters Council, which represents about 3,700 ca- reer firefighter/paramedics in Or- egon, responds to situations where both public safety and the safety of firefighters is threatened. Baker City is such a case, Koe- nig contends. Replacing Baker City Fire De- partment ambulance crews with a private company is not acceptable, he said. Koenig believes Baker City resi- dents will respond to the firefight- ers’ plea to tell city councilors they oppose the proposal to cease am- bulance service Sept. 30. When residents call 911, Koenig said, they “expect to hear the siren before they hang up the phone.” He urges city and county officials to work together to find “creative ways” to increase revenue for am- bulance service, and to “solve this problem way before Sept. 30” — the deadline the city has set to dis- continue ambulance service. “These firefighter/paramedics have never quit on the city,” Koe- nig said. Budget Continued from Page A1 The average shortfall has averaged about $730,000 per year over the past five fis- cal years, and the city projects a $581,000 gap for the current fiscal year, which ends June 30, 2022. “This issue about fund- ing kept coming up over and over and over again until around 2016 where the city said, ‘look, the money’s not there, we can’t do this, we need a funding source’ and the county said we’ll release Cannon an RFP,” Cannon said — meaning a request for proposals to provide ambulance service. The county did so in 2018 and ultimately received three bids, one from Baker City and two from private firms. The county ta- bled the matter, however, and the city has continued to serve as ambulance provider without a contract. Cannon said city and county officials have discussed a potential long-term, new revenue source such as a property tax levy that covers the entire ambulance service area, not just Baker City, or an ambulance service district, which would have a similar revenue source. But either option would require voter ap- proval, and it’s not likely that such a proposal could get on the ballot before May 2023. As of now, Cannon said, “we just don’t have the money for it.” The city has not had to make significant cuts in its general fund, however, despite the shortfalls in ambulance revenue, compared to its cost, over the past five years. During that period the police depart- ment’s annual budget — the biggest in the general fund — has increased from a bit less than $2 million to $2.56 million in the cur- rent fiscal year. The city’s beginning fund balance — in effect, its cash on hand at the start of the fis- cal year — has risen from about $1.2 million in the 2018-19 fiscal year to $1.63 million in the current fiscal year. City Councilor Dean Guyer said the Council didn’t decide to suddenly pull the rug out from beneath the county with the March 22 notice setting the Sept. 30 dead- line for stopping ambulance service. “The city is just the contractor now and we don’t even have a contract that’s signed and we haven’t been receiving the proceeds from the county,” Guyer said. City Councilor Shane Alderson said what he had come up with if the city continued for another fiscal year with ambulance ser- vice and the current staffing in the fire de- partment, the city would realize a loss of about $425,000 more in the general fund. • One count of luring a mi- in prison after pleading guilty younger than 14, court docu- nor, a Class C felony. to one count of first-degree ments state. That crime took • One count of using a child sexual abuse involving a girl place in February 1998. in a display of sexually explicit conduct, a Class A felony. • Six counts of felon in possession of a firearm, a Class C felony. In February 2021 several other charges were added, in- cluding four counts of first-de- gree encouraging child sexual abuse and four counts of sec- ond-degree encouraging child 2036 Main St. sexual abuse. Those charges are Baker City related to child pornography 541-523-6284 discovered on Gonyer’s com- CCB#219615 puter during the course of the investigation, Baxter said. The pornography doesn’t in- volve the child who is Gonyer’s alleged victim in the other in- cidents, which police said hap- pened between May 1, 2019, Linda Koplein and Dec. 20, 2019. Jan. 20, 1949 - Sept. 14, 2021 Gonyer is a registered sex offender. He was convicted May 21st, 2022 • 1 PM - 4 PM of the felony crime of sexual Baker City Elk’s Lodge abuse in Clackamas County Please bring memories, smiles and laughter. in 1999. Gonyer, who was liv- ing at Gladstone at the time, Luncheon will follow was sentenced to 75 months Celebration of Life Recommended candidates by the Baker County Republican Executive Committee Baker City Precincts Precinct #1 (Vote for 5) Sharon Bass Brandy Bruce Chuck Chase Bradley Golar Duane Morris Precinct #2 (Vote for 6) Nora Bass Michael Bennett Sue Holtz Megan Langan Marilyn Shollenberger Johnny Waggoner Sr. Precinct $3 (Vote for 6) Tisha Bass Bill Brown Debbie Brown Joanna Dixon Ray Dixon Jodi Furtney Precinct#4 (Vote for 7) Doni Bruland John Beatty Shelly Cutler Ed Hardt Rebekka Hughes Candis Lee Kerry McQuisten Precinct #5 (Vote for 7) Janice Burchard Donn Christy Terrie Evarts Kimberly Hughes Thomas Hughes Justin Langan Samantha Tugman Precinct #13 - Baker County(Vote for 4) Mike Miller Shannon Black Whitney Black Tom Van Diepen Precinct #17 - Haines (Vote for 3) David Sherman Kathleen Sherman Connie Pound Lewis Precinct #18 - Hereford (Vote for 2) Keith L. Jones Suzan Ellis Jones Precinct #22 Halfway (Vote for 1) Kathryn Grace Precinct #24 - Poco- Wing (Vote for 4) LeeAnn Haberle Peggie Longwell Jeff Nelson Joshua Srack Precinct #25 Sumpter (Vote for 1) Jullie McKinney Precinct #28 Unity (Vote for 2) Patty Trost Jim Juhola