LOCAL A2 LOCAL A5 OUTDOORS B1 State gold panning champions named Harney County elk poachers sentenced Biking and angling in the Blues IN THIS EDITION: LOCAL • OUTDOORS & REC Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com SATURDAY, JULY 23, 2022 • $1.50 Plan to protect city watershed from fire proceeds QUICK HITS ————— Good Day Wish To A Subscriber A special good day to Herald subscriber Dennis Thacker of Baker City. BRIEFING ————— Connor Chastain gets $1,300 scholarship Connor Chastain, a 2022 graduate of Baker High School, has received a $1,300 schol- arship from Folds of Honor, which awards scholarships to the children of former service members. Connor’s dad, Wayne Chastain, twice served in Iraq as a member of the National Guard. Connor plans to attend Baker Technical Institute and earn his certifi cation in welding. Open house set for Aug. 17 BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Clayton Franke/Baker City Herald Biologist to talk about beavers, grazing, water supplies Aug. 3 Ron and Ann Rowan have been named the Fair Family of the Year for 2022. The Baker County Fair is set for Aug. 7-13. Fondness Carol Evans, a retired biolo- gist from the Bureau of Land Management, will talk about livestock grazing management, and how it can attract beavers to streams, during a free pre- sentation Aug. 3 at the Baker County Library, 2400 Resort St. The presentation, sponsored by the Powder Basin Watershed Council, will start at 6 p.m. Evans’ presentation, “How to Move Mountains and Make it Rain!,” discusses projects in Ne- vada in which grazing changes spurred the growth of stream side plants, which led beavers to colonize the areas and, by building dams and storing wa- ter, increased water supply. Ron and Ann Rowan chosen as Baker County Fair Family of the Year 88/45 Sunny Sunday 89/47 Sunny Monday 93/51 Sunny Full forecast on the back of the B section. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. FAIR See Watershed / A3 WEATHER ————— Today for the Work could begin about a year from now on the biggest project in more than half a century designed to protect Baker City’s water supply by reducing the risk of wildfire in the city’s densely forested watershed. “This is a very important project for the people of Baker City,” said Kendall Cikanek, ranger for the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest’s Whitman District. The Wallowa-Whitman manages most of the city’s 10,000-acre watershed on the east slopes of the Elkhorn Mountains west of town. The watershed, although public land, is generally closed to public entry to pro- tect water quality. The city allows big game hunting, with a permit, when the fire dan- ger isn’t high, and one road, to Marble Creek Pass, runs through the watershed and is open to the public. On Thursday, July 21 the Wallowa-Whit- man released what’s known as a “scoping letter” for the Baker City Watershed Fuels Management Project. The scoping letter, along with multiple maps, is available online at s.usda.gov/pro- ject/?project=58480. The Wallowa-Whitman has also sched- uled a public open house for Aug. 17 at the Events Center, 2600 East St. in Baker City. BY CLAYTON FRANKE cfranke@bakercityherald.com I n 1978, Ron Rowan had a choice. As a student at the University of Idaho, he went to the Idaho extension service looking for a summer internship. There was no shortage of options — he was told he could spend the summer in any of Idaho’s 44 counties. He just had to choose one. But he couldn’t. His sights were elsewhere. “I want to go to Baker City, Oregon,” he said at the time. He was successful in convincing the extension agent in Baker, Gus Markgraf, to let him spend the summer across the state border, even though out-of-state hires were atypical. Ron spent that summer helping out with the Baker County Fair. He liked it so much he came back the following summer to work on a farm. “I just liked the area, and that first year I met all the people that were involved with the fair, and I just loved the fair here,” Ron said. “There’s just so many great people.” Over four decades later, things have come full circle: Ron, who has served as chairman of the Baker County Fair Board for 20 years, and his wife, Ann, were named the Baker County Fair Family of the Year for 2022. And Markgraf is now the Rowans’ neighbor at their 40- acre property on the east side of Baker Val- ley. After the couple met and married in Boise, they moved to Baker City in 1997. Ron, whose father was a veterinarian, grew up in Weiser, Idaho, while Ann grew up in Boise. Her parents had a small cattle pasture, but she admits she “had no idea what the country was like” be- fore the couple moved — Ann Rowan to Baker. But her love for the fair grew when the couple’s children got in- volved. Katie, now 33, and Brent, 31, both participated in the 4-H program every year they were eligi- ble until they graduated from high school. It was around the time Katie and Brent started the pro- gram that Ron joined the fair board. “They were super enthusiastic,” Ann, a school- teacher of 41 years, 24 of those in Baker City, said of her children. “There are a lot of people who haven’t been recognized yet that do a lot for the fair. It takes a village to put it on and make it successful.” See Rowans / A6 County will take psilocybin ban to voters BY SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com Baker County Commissioners on Wednesday, July 20 unanimously approved the first reading of an ordinance that will ask county voters this November whether they want to ban psilocybin manufacturing and service centers in unincorporated parts of the county. Psilocybin is the substance in “magic mushrooms” that produces hallucinogenic effects. Research has shown that psilocybin can treat psychological trauma, addiction and other ailments. In November 2020, Oregon voters ap- proved Measure 109, which legalizes the use of psilocybin, in designated “service centers” only, for people 21 and over. The measure, which failed in Baker County by a margin of 64% to 36%, also allows the pro- duction and processing of psilocybin-con- taining mushrooms. The measure does not allow the retail sale of the product. The new law allows cities and counties to put on the ballot ordinances that either ban psilocybin businesses or set a two-year moratorium on them. See Psilocybin / A3 Couple angry about sexual content during teen training County officials apologize for July 7 presentation BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com A Baker City couple is consider- ing filing a civil lawsuit against Baker County after their 16-year-old daugh- ter, who has a learning disability, heard what she described as explicit sexual ed- ucation topics during what was listed as TODAY Issue 31 12 pages a personal hygiene training as part of a work program for teenagers. The instructor for the July 7 class was an employee of the Baker County Health Department. That employee no longer works for the department, but her resignation was submitted well before the class and is “totally unrelated” to the incident that angered parents Doreneia and Bryan Karolski, said Mark Bennett, a Baker County commissioner. Classified ....................B2-B4 Comics ..............................B5 Community News.............A2 Crossword ...............B2 & B4 Dear Abby .........................B6 Horoscope ..............B3 & B4 “We’re truly sorry that it happened,” Bennett said on Wednesday, July 20. “We believe strongly that reproductive education is the province of the parent. I want the community to know this is a one-off event. The health department cares about the community and re- spects parental rights.” Bennett, whose duties as a commis- sioner include overseeing the health de- partment, said he is willing to talk with any student who attended the presentation, or Jayson Jacoby ..................A4 Lottery Results .................A2 News of Record ................A2 their parents, to hear their concerns. Bennett said he and Meghan Chancey, administrator for the health department, met on Wednesday after- noon with Bryan Karolski. Karolski said he appreciates that county officials accepted responsibility for the episode, but he’s concerned that no one will be held accountable, since the employee who made the presenta- tion is no longer a county employee. Opinion .............................A4 Outdoors .................B1 & B2 Senior Menus ...................A2 See Training / A3 Sudoku..............................A5 Turning Backs ..................A2 Weather ............................B6