A2 BAKER CITY HERALD • SATURDAY, JULY 2, 2022 Local TURNING BACK THE PAGES 50 YEARS AGO from the Democrat-Herald July 2, 1972 HALFWAY — The search for a new Pine-Eagle High School coach ended here yesterday as Michael James Murray was named as the head football and baseball mentor and assis- tant baskeball pilot for the ’72-’73 season. 25 YEARS AGO from the Baker City Herald July 2, 1997 The fi rst stages of work will begin on the new back nine holes of the Baker City Golf Club soon, possibly as early as next week. The Baker City Council, meeting in special session Tues- day evening, voted to enter into a personal services contract with Willie Hall, owner of Hall and Lindsay Inc. of Victoria, B.C., Canada. 10 YEARS AGO from the Baker City Herald July 2, 2012 Jason and Stacy Bingham are living a double nightmare, watching hearts fail in both their son and daughter. It’s happened before for the couple, who live near Haines. Different child, same diagnosis. Lindsey Lou, 8, and Gage, 3, are now next door to each other at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital in Palo Alto, Calif. Lindsey hasn’t felt quite right for a while, but she got really sick. Her diagnosis: dilated cardiomyopathy, a disease of the heart muscle that causes it to become enlarged. It is the exact same diagnosis the Binghams heard six years ago when their oldest daughter, Sierra, got sick. ONE YEAR AGO from the Baker City Herald July 1, 2021 A fi re sparked by farm equipment on the hottest June day on record in Baker County raced through dry grass and sagebrush in Keating Valley, threatening several homes before crews from multiple agencies, with help from a pair of air tankers, stopped the blaze Tuesday evening, June 29. “It really took off in 110-degree heat with 20 mile an hour winds behind it,” said Buzz Harper, chief of the Keating Rural Fire Protection District. “In that heat and wind it could have been real bad.” The fi re, which was fully lined Tuesday night, burned about 100 acres, Harper said. No homes were damaged. Crews from the Forest Service and Bureau of Land Man- agement were mopping up Wednesday morning, he said. Baker County Sheriff Travis Ash said the Sheriff’s Offi ce gave evacuation notices to about 10 residents as a precau- tion. Flames came within about 50 yards of one home, Harper said. The fi re was reported to Baker County Dispatch at 2:52 p.m. Harper said the blaze started in a fi eld near Middle Bridge Road, where a swather was operating. He suspects a disc on the swather hit a rock, causing a spark. When he was notifi ed about the fi re, Harper said he took one engine, with a water capacity of 250 gallons, while his son, Steven Harper, and another Keating volunteer, Brad Bottoms, headed out with a 1,000-gallon engine. OREGON LOTTERY MEGABUCKS, JUNE 29 6 — 13 — 55 — 68 3 — 13 — 15 — 24 — 29 — 39 Next jackpot: $2.8 million PICK 4, JUNE 30 POWERBALL, JUNE 29 8 — 40 — 49 — 58 — 63 PB 14 Next jackpot: $20 million • 1 p.m.: 2 — 8 — 8 — 3 • 4 p.m.: 3 — 2 — 9 — 7 • 7 p.m.: 3 — 3 — 1 — 0 MEGA MILLIONS, JUNE 28 7 — 12 — 21 — 43 — 55 Mega 11 • 10 p.m.: 4 — 0 — 2 — 9 Next jackpot: $360 million 3-8-10-14-19-24-28-30 WIN FOR LIFE, JUNE 29 Next jackpot: $25,000 MONDAY (July 4): Closed for Independence Day TUESDAY (July 5): Salisbury steak, scalloped potatoes, corn, biscuits, fruit cup, ice cream WEDNESDAY (July 6): Chicken cordon bleu with hollandaise, rice pilaf, peas and carrots, rolls, green salad, cookies THURSDAY (July 7): Chicken fried steak, mashed potatoes with gravy, mixed vegetables, rolls, green salad, bread pud- ding FRIDAY (July 8): Baked ham, candied yams, green beans, rolls, ambrosia, cinnamon rolls Public luncheon at the Senior Center, 2810 Cedar St., from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.; $5 donation (60 and older), $7.50 for those under 60. CONTACT THE HERALD 2005 Washington Ave., Suite 101 Open Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. ISSN-8756-6419 Serving Baker County since 1870 Jayson Jacoby, editor jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Advertising email ads@bakercityherald.com Classifi ed email classifi ed@bakercityherald.com Circulation email circ@bakercityherald.com WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden an- nounced the proposal to make the Jonathan M. Wainwright Memorial VA Medical Center in Walla Walla an outpatient clinic is coming to an end. Wyden in a press release Wednesday, June 29, said he welcomed the news this week that Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee Chairman Jon Tester, D-Montana, U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, D-Washing- ton, and a bipartisan group of senators will block the vet- erans Asset and Infrastruc- ture Review Commission’s proposals to reclassify the Walla Walla veterans facility as a community-based out- patient clinic and to move its 31-bed residential rehabilita- tion treatment program 180 miles north of Walla Walla to Spokane. Associated Press, File Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., speaks about the child tax credit during a news conference, Wednesday, Dec. 15, 2021, on Capitol Hill in Wash- ington. This comes as Wyden has been pressing the Veterans Administration through town halls he hosted for Eastern Oregon veterans, their fami- lies and veterans service pro- viders to ask top VA officials about proposed VA cuts and service changes that would have gone to the AIR Com- mission for consideration. Wyden shared Eastern Or- egon veterans’ concerns at a June 4 town hall about VA rec- ommendations to the Walla Walla VA medical center. “What I heard earlier this month from veterans in Uma- tilla, Union, Wallowa, Baker and Morrow counties was their deep and well-justified concern about how these pro- posals would undercut the quality and accessible care they earned with their service to our country,” said Wyden, who also wrote a letter last month to the VA detailing the rural Oregon veterans’ con- cerns. “The end to the process that could have led to poorer and more distant care for East- ern Oregon veterans is good news, and I’ll continue to ad- vocate for these rural veterans to ensure these ill-considered proposals don’t resurface.” Forest Service sets up firewood cutting area Baker City Herald The Whitman Ranger District has created a special firewood cutting area near Eagle Creek, northeast of Baker City, to encourage residents to cut trees burned in the 2015 Eagle fire. An infestation of Douglas-fir bark beetles is also killing trees in the area, according to the Whitman District. Kendall Cikanek, Whitman District ranger, ap- proved the firewood area and allowed woodcut- ters to use two roads that had been closed after a 1993 timber sale. The roads are in the O’Brien Creek area. The special firewood cutting area will be open until Aug. 24. Many of the burned trees have been falling across multiple roads in the area since the fire, po- tentially blocking access for firefighting crews, ac- cording to the Whitman District. Woodcutters will need a personal use cutting permit. Those are free this year, to a household limit of 10 cords. Permits are available at Forest Service offices and at some local businesses. Details about the O’Brien firewood cutting area: • All roads connected to roads 7700-390 and 7700-400 that are not closed by a barrier are in- cluded in the area. • Cutting limited to trees within two tree lengths of a road. • Ponderosa pine is not included. • No off-road skidding with mechanical equipment allows. Log decks also available for firewood The Oregon Department of Forestry and the Forest Service are also making leftover log decks available for firewood cutting at the Sparta GNA timber sale. The decks are along open roads north of Sparta Butte, including roads 7000-075 and 7000-079. There is an active timber sale in the area, as well, and firewood cutting is not allowed within that sale. U.S. Forest Service map The O’Brien special firewood cutting area is near Eagle Creek, northeast of Baker City. Fire Continued from A1 Crews will continue to travel along firelines to check for flare ups or hot spots. Firefighters worked through the night Thursday, June 30 into the first morning of July to mop up and monitor. The fire started on private land about 3:15 p.m. on June 28, and burned later that day onto public land on BLM’s Vale District. The cause is under investi- gation. On Wednesday, June 29 flames spread to the edge of Interstate 84 between Fare- well Bend and Ontario. The fire did not cross the free- way. The fire didn’t damage any structures, and no residents were evacuated, as the blaze burned in uninhabited grass and sagebrush range. Two public cattle grazing Published Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays except Christmas Day by the Baker Publishing Co., a part of EO Media Group, at 2005 Washington Ave., Suite 101 (P.O. Box 807), Baker City, OR 97814. Subscription rates per month are $10.75 for print only. Digital-only rates are $8.25. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Baker City Herald, P.O. Box 807, Baker City, OR 97814. Periodicals Postage Paid at Pendleton, Oregon 97801 Copyright © 2022 Vale District Bureau of Land Management/Contributed Photo Crews work on the Willowcreek fire beside Interstate 84 between Farewell Bend and Ontario on Wednesday, June 29, 2022. allotments were burned, and BLM staff are assessing the damage to those areas. Fire danger increases, fireworks banned on public land The Vale District has in- creased the fire danger from moderate to high due to re- cent dry, warm weather. “This is especially the case around high recreation use areas and wildland urban in- terface zones,” said Al Crouch, fire mitigation specialist for the Vale District. “Conditions are very different in the higher elevations where the live fuel moistures are still higher.” With thousands of visitors expected to enjoy the holiday weekend outside, the risk of human-caused wildfire in- creases. BLM officials remind rec- reationists that fireworks are prohibited on public land. Other restrictions include: • Discharging or using combustible or explosive composition or chemical de- vices, including exploding targets. • Discharging or using tracer, explosive, or incendi- ary ammunition. • Discharging steel compo- nent (core or jacket) ammu- nition. • Releasing or causing to be released any sky lanterns, air- borne paper lanterns, aerial luminaries and/or fire bal- loons. • Shooting at any metallic object, including but not lim- ited to using metal targets for target shooting. News of Record DEATHS Telephone: 541-523-3673 kbrogoitti@lagrandeobserver.com EAST OREGONIAN LUCKY LINES, JUNE 30 SENIOR MENUS Publisher Karrine Brogoitti Wyden welcomes end to proposal to reduce care for Eastern Oregon veterans Leigh Ann Hammond: 41, of Baker City, died June 21, 2022, at her home. No services are planned at this time. To light a candle in memory of Leigh Ann, or to offer online condolences to her family, go to www.grayswestco.com. Ida Marie Haefner: 74, of Pleasant Valley, died June 28, 2022, at her home. No services are planned at this time. To light a candle in memory of Ida, or to offer online condolences to her family, go to www.grayswestco.com. Marlene Jacobson: 88, of Baker City, died June 27, 2022, at Settler’s Park, surrounded in love. A celebration of her life will take place at a later date, details to be announced. Arrangements are under the direction of Tami’s Pine Valley Funeral Home & Cremation Services. Online condolences can be shared at www. tamispinevalleyfuneralhome. com. POLICE LOG Baker City Police Arrests, citations FAILURE TO APPEAR (Baker County Circuit Court warrant): Tami Deann Dudley, 41, Baker City, 11:15 p.m. Thursday, June 30 at Main Street and Washington Avenue; cited and released. Baker County Sheriff’s Office Arrests, citations DRIVING WHILE SUSPENDED (Baker County Justice Court warrant): Joshua Cain Collins, 41, Baker City, 3:41 p.m. Thursday, June 30 at the sheriff’s office; cited and released. “You’ll love the work we do. I guarantee it.” - JR 225 H Street • East of I-84 • 541-523-3200 • grumpysrepair.com