1 SECTION HEADER JUNE 22�29, 2022 JUNE 22-29, 2022 WWW.GOEASTERNOREGON.COM Celebrate High Country Days SECTION DESCRIPTION LANEY JONES and the Spirits PAGE 4 Create Challenge art show PAGE 8 PAGE 16 Enjoy Shakespeare Festival PAGE 19 GO! INSIDE LOCAL A2 NATION A6 Concert coming to Churchill School State OKs killing of more Wallowa County wolves Offi cial slams response to Texas shooting Laney Jones, on tour from Nashville, Tennessee, plays at Churchill School in Baker City on Saturday, July 2, along with Kathryn Claire and Margot Merah. Libby Danforth/Contributed Photo Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com IN THIS EDITION: : LOCAL • BUSINESS & AG LIFE • SPORTS QUICK HITS ————— Good Day Wish To A Subscriber $200,000 state grant kickstarts renovation of historic Main Street theater A special good day to Herald subscriber Mickey Lane of Richland. BRIEFING ————— Nominees sought for Baker County Fair Family Baker County Friends of the Fairgrounds are seeking nominees for the 2022 Fair Family of the Year. Nomi- nations are due by July 10. Nomination letters can be emailed to bakercityfriend- softhefair@gmail.com. BY LISA BRITTON lbritton@bakercityherald.com THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 2022 • $1.50 Orpheum’s rebirth Amelia Wentz on dean’s list at George Fox NEWBERG — Amelia Wentz of Baker City was named to the dean’s list for the spring 2022 semester at George Fox University. To be eligible, stu- dents must earn a GPA of at least 3.5 and take 12 or more hours of graded courses. Wentz is a senior majoring in nursing. Four local women awarded scholarships Four Baker County women have received scholarships through the sponsorship of Chapter CJ, P.E.O., Baker City. • Savannah Potter, who is attending Eastern Oregon University, received a $4,000 Marguerite scholarship. • Naomi Potter, who is at- tending Eastern Oregon Uni- versity, received a $2,000 Marguerite scholarship. • Makenzie Hall, who is at- tending Eastern Oregon Uni- versity, received the $1,000 Marguerite scholarship. • Karissa Kingsbury, who is attending Oregon State University, received a $500 Vivan Crawford Memorial scholarship. Contributed image which will make its home in the Orpheum when it is complete. The grant was one of 28 awarded to Oregon Main Street Network organiza- tions across the state for projects that “encourage economic revitalization.” Baker City Downtown solicited applications for local projects, and a BCD committee selected the Orpheum to submit to the state. A 3D computer rendering of what the interior of the renovated Orpheum Theater will look like. See, Orpheum / Page A3 “Now we’re starting to build. These two grants have been spectacular.” — Aletha Bonebrake, Orpheum building committee Today Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald This photo, taken on June 3, 2022, before construction started again, shows the interior of what will be the Baker Orpheum Theatre in downtown Baker City. 74/40 Sunny 74/41 Sunny The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. A downtown Baker City business is reviving a major summer event that seemed destined to be canceled for the third straight year. Shameless Tees, a screen-printing store at 1921 Main St., is coordinating what it calls the Resurrection Rally 2022. The event, planned for July 8-10, the weekend after Inde- pendence Day, is intended to bring hordes of motorcycle riders back to Baker City. The annual Hells Canyon Motorcycle Rally, a tradition for almost two decades that attracted thousands of visi- tors to the city, was canceled in 2020 and 2021 due to the pandemic. In February of this year, Mark Dukes, a partner in High Desert Harley-David- son of Meridian, Idaho, the dealership that has organizes the rally for the past few years, said the business wouldn’t be putting on the rally in 2022. Dukes said in February that the issue this year isn’t so much concerns about how the pandemic would progress, but a shortage of employees at the dealership, and an Oregon Department of Transportation project to build more than 300 wheelchair-accessible curb cuts in Baker City this sum- mer, including on Main Street. See, Rally / Page A3 WEATHER ————— Friday Baker City event is set for July 8-10 BY IAN CRAWFORD icrawford@bakercityherald.com A recent grant has kickstarted work again on the Baker Orpheum Theater renovation proj- ect for phase five of the six-phase endeavor on the historic building at 1812 Main St. The $200,000 grant came from Oregon Heri- tage, a division of Oregon Parks and Recreation De- partment. “This is a big deal,” said Aletha Bonebrake, chair of the Orpheum building committee. “The $200,000 is the largest amount they’re allowed to give.” Bonebrake is also a board member for Eastern Oregon Regional Theatre, Business reviving major biker rally Mining plan study released Wallowa-Whitman proposing to OK 22 small-scale mining operations BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com The Wallowa-Whitman National Forest is propos- ing to approve 22 mining operation plans along Pow- der River tributaries south- west of Baker City and near Sumpter. The Wallowa-Whitman last week released a draft en- vironmental impact state- ment (EIS) that’s been in the works for about four years. Some of the miners, how- ever, have been waiting even longer for their plans to be approved. The 224-page draft EIS an- alyzes the potential environ- mental effects from the pro- posed mining operations on the national forest. See, Mining / Page A5 TODAY Issue 18 34 pages Business .................B1 & B6 Classified ....................B2-B4 Comics ..............................B5 Celebrating Leo’s legacy BY IAN CRAWFORD icrawford@bakercityherald.com D avid Blair had to suppress a sincere laugh when asked to share a story about Leo Adler. “Well! The ones I can tell,” Blair said as he stood outside Adler’s long- time home, now a museum, on Tues- day afternoon, June 21. On the lawn of the Adler House Museum, 2305 Main St., residents gathered to celebrate the 127th birth- day of Adler, who died Nov. 2, 1993, and left $20 million to the community he loved for scholarships and a variety of local projects. “Leo would sometimes come down to the fire station,” said Blair, a division chief with the Baker City Fire Department and a 31-year em- ployee. “He would come right in, and he had a kind of walk, a saun- ter, and then a cane in his later years. And he would ask to speak with the fire chief. He’d ask the chief directly: ‘What do you need?’ and whatever they needed he would just get out his checkbook, sign one and hand it to the fire chief.” See, Adler / Page A3 Ian Crawford/Baker City Herald Residents gathered on the front lawn of the Adler House Museum on Tuesday, June 21, 2022, to honor the late Leo Adler, who was born on June 21, 1895. Adler, who left his $20 million estate to the community for scholarships and local projects, died Nov. 2, 1993. Community News.............A2 Crossword ...............B2 & B3 Dear Abby .........................B6 Horoscope ..............B2 & B3 Lottery Results .................A2 News of Record ................A2 Opinion .............................A4 Senior Menus ...................A2 Sports ...............................A8 New trailer aims to curb city speeders BY SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com Prompted by an increase in complaints from residents about cars ignoring speed lim- its on city streets, the Baker City Police Department has augmented its campaign to deal with speeders. And this new officer doesn’t need lunch breaks. Baker City Police recently deployed a trailer that mea- sures vehicles’ speed and dis- plays the figure in bright lights on a screen. The trailer also features a sign showing the speed limit at that spot, so passing driv- ers can see if they’re com- plying. The trailer was manufac- tured by MPH Industries and cost about $8,000, Police Chief Ty Duby said. The City Council included money for the trailer in the budget for this fiscal year. Duby said the trailer will be set up based on complaints from residents. “We get a lot of complaints regarding speeding vehicles in certain areas and in neigh- borhoods,” Duby said. “We thought that if we could get a new, updated speed trailer it would really help us with those complaints.” See, Trailer / Page A3 Sudoku..............................B5 Turning Backs ..................A2 Weather ............................B6