LOCAL Psilocybin Continued from A1 The Baker City Council has also decided to put a psilocybin-banning measure on the Nov. 8 ballot. Councilors made that decision on July 12, and they’re slated to review the text of a ballot measure during their July 26 meeting. County commissioners had a public hearing prior to their decision on Wednesday. Dan Garrick spoke in favor of the proposed ban in unincorporated parts of the county. “I’m definitely in favor of banning this,” said Garrick, who will run against Shane Alderson in the Nov. 8 election for the county commis- sion chairman position. “I don’t see any good that can come out of this,” Garrick told commissioners. “Marijuana has already proved that it’s a bad deal and all these people that claim that it heals anything and everything is a bunch of baloney.” County Counsel Kim Mosier told com- Bennett Harvey Nichols missioners that although the state’s new psi- locybin rules are similar to medical mari- juana statutes, a significant difference is that retail sale of psilocybin is not allowed. Peo- ple 21 and older, who don’t need a prescrip- tion, can ingest psilocybin only at a state-li- censed center. The state expects to start taking applications for service centers, as well as psilocybin production and process- ing facilities, in 2023. Mosier said the Oregon Health Authority is working on rules to regulate psilocybin. The agency is set to release a new draft of the pro- posed rules in September. BAKER CITY HERALD • SATuRDAY, JuLY 23, 2022 A3 “So, we don’t have rules that tell us even how this would be regulated if we were to not opt out,” Mosier told commissioners. Commissioner Bruce Nichols said he has re- ceived emails from people in support of Mea- sure 109. But he said that doesn’t mean he endorses its use. “They say there’s a lot of medical need for it and it works. Now, whether that’s true or not, I don’t know,” Nichols said. He said he spoke with Shari Selander, chief executive officer at New Directions Northwest, and she told him she needs more time to review the research. “There is an option, from what I understand, that we can put a moratorium on this for up to two years before we refer it to the voters,” Nich- ols said. Mosier said the county could propose a mor- atorium for any period, but that, like an out- right ban, would need to be approved by voters. She said the concept behind a two-year mor- atorium is that it would give cities and counties time to see how the OHA rules are working. Mosier also told commissioners that the new law allows county commissioners to repeal a voter-approved ban. “If you were to go ahead with the ordinance as it’s drafted and send it to the electors and the electors were to approve it and then it be- comes permanent, the statute allows a repeal of the opt out ordinance without an election,” she said. Commission Chairman Bill Harvey said that if the voters overwhelmingly approve a ban on psilocybin in November, he would not be in- clined to later reverse their decision. Commissioner Mark Bennett said that coun- tries that have legalized psilocybin, including the Netherlands, have been “reining back” their laws due to harmful effects of legalization. Commissioners will have another public hearing on the subject at their next regular meeting, Aug. 3 at 9:30 a.m. at the Courthouse, 1995 Third St. Watershed Pass Road, that is not designated as roadless, and commercial logging is proposed in that corridor, Cikanek said. The project also calls for a recon- struction of the Marble Creek Pass Road, which would make it easier for trucks to haul logs, as well as improv- ing access for the public to the pass, which is the southern terminus for the Elkhorn Crest National Recre- ation Trail. The current road is rocky and rough, and better suited to high-clearance vehicles. Crews did make some improvements to the road last fall, however, and it’s in bet- ter shape now than it has been for decades. Continued from A1 Fire risk Discussions among Forest Service and city officials about the potential for a major fire in the watershed date back more than a quarter century. Although lightning has sparked several fires inside the watershed during that period, firefighters have quickly doused all of those blazes. But Cikanek said there hasn’t been a large blaze in the watershed since the 1880s. And based on a study of fire scars on old trees in the area done by researchers from the Univer- sity of Washington in the mid 1990s, such a blaze, based on historical in- tervals, likely is overdue. The city gets most of its water from a dozen springs and streams in the watershed, which spans an area from Elk Creek at the south end to Go- odrich Creek at the north. Major sources of water include Salmon, Mill, Marble and Goodrich creeks, as well as several springs. Those sources produce exception- ally clean water. The city is one of just a few in Oregon that doesn’t have to filter its surface water sources to meet federal clarity standards. But city officials fear that a large fire in the watershed would foul streams with mud and ash washing off denuded slopes during rainstorms following the blaze. Such a blaze could force the city to rely on alternate sources of water — the city has one well now and a sec- ond well is expected to come online this fall — and likely lead to the city needing to build a water filtration plant, which officials estimate would cost more than $10 million. The basic concept behind the wa- tershed project, Cikanek said, is two- fold. First, through a combination of cutting trees and lighting prescribed fires, the project is designed to reduce the fuel loads and make it less likely that a fire starting outside, but near, the watershed would burn into the watershed. The project area covers almost 23,000 acres — more than half of that outside the watershed. Most of the land outside the watershed is to the south or east, areas where, based on past fires and prevailing summer winds, the risk is higher for a fire to Training Continued from A1 The Karolskis object to aspects of the training that their daughter, Shey- lin, who recently turned 16, attended. Bryan Karolski said Sheylin was one of eight students, ages 15 to 18 and in- cluding boys and girls, who attended the class at Baker High School as part of the school district’s Youth Transi- tion Program (YTP), which provides job skill opportunities for students with special educational needs. Students are selling ice cream from an insulated cooler attached to a spe- cial bicycle. The personal hygiene training was one of the courses students took be- fore starting work. The health depart- ment didn’t charge the district for the presentation. Bryan Karolski said he assumed that personal hygiene would focus on such things as proper handwashing and the importance of showering be- fore coming to work. But Karolski, who was not present during the event, said his daughter told him the health department em- ployee gave detailed descriptions of sexual activity. He said his daughter was “really up- set” and “embarrassed and ashamed” about the episode, particularly about being around boys. “As a parent, I just about flipped out,” Karolski said. “This was really traumatic for my child.” He said he and his wife have “reached out to a couple of local at- torneys and are waiting to hear back from them” regarding a potential law- suit. Karolski said he has talked with parents of some of the other students who attended the presentation, and that they are also upset about what happened. Chancey, who also did not attend the presentation, said the former health department employee, who she Lisa Britton/ Baker City Herald, File Baker City’s watershed covers 10,000 acres on the east slopes of the Elkhorn Mountains west of Baker City, ranging from near Elkhorn Peak, the highest point at far right in the photo, south (left) for several miles. limited ladder fuels to create crown burn into the watershed, Cikanek fires, and surface fuel loadings would said. produce fire intensities that would be Second, inside the watershed the generally confined to a surface fire project calls for similar work — cut- where firefighters would have a high ting and piling trees less than 10 likelihood of stopping the fire spread inches in diameter, burning the piles safely.” and lighting prescribed fires. This Arvid Andersen, a former Baker work would be similar to what crews City Council member, said he’s grat- have done over the past few years in ified that the Forest Service has pro- the northern Elkhorns, including gressed from discussing along the Anthony Lakes the watershed to design- Highway, but would be ing a large-scale project. more “aggressive” in re- Open house “Kendall has defi- ducing the number of scheduled nitely addressed the is- trees, Cikanek said. sues very carefully, very The goal, he said, is to A public open professionally,” he said, create fuel breaks, pri- house for the marily along the several referring to Cikanek. Baker City watershed project major ridges that extend Andersen, who is a is set for Aug. 17 from the Elkhorn crest professional forestry from 6 p.m. to 8 east toward Baker Valley, consultant, made pro- p.m. at the Baker where the relative lack tecting the watershed County Events of fuel would in theory from fire a priority Center, 2600 East deprive a fire of momen- during his four-year St. in Baker City. tum. term as a councilor, These fuel breaks which ended Dec. 31, would constitute a series 2020. of “defensible spaces” that fire crews Andersen called the proposed could use as anchor points in their ef- project a “really valid strategy,” and fort to corral a wildfire. Limiting the he credited Cikanek with “finally get- effects of a fire to one or two streams ting some traction” on the effort to could allow the city to continue to protect the watershed. divert enough water, from unburned Andersen said he believes the po- streams and springs, to meet resi- tential cost of building a filtration plant dents’ needs, Cikanek said. would be an excessive burden on city The scoping letter describes fuel residents, and one that can be avoided breaks as a “location that a wildfire by reducing the amount of fuel, in- would not be able to carry through cluding trees weakened or killed by the overstory canopy, would have bark beetles and other insects. “As a parent, I just about flipped out. This was really traumatic for my child.” — Bryan Karolski, whose daughter, Sheylin, 16, attended July 7 presentation didn’t name, was expecting, based on the request from the school district, a group with an age range of 18 to 20. Chancey said there was “a brief mo- ment when family planning services” were discussed, but that the employee ceased presenting that topic when an adult attending the presentation made that request. Karolski said his daughter told him that the instructor talked about va- ginas and penises, and about how to clean the tip of the penis prior to sex- ual intercourse. He said his daughter also told him that the instructor asked the students whether any of them was sexually ac- tive. Karolski said the health department employee brought condoms, and of- fered to bring a wooden model of a penis to demonstrate how to put on a condom, although there were no models or other props at the presen- tation. Chancey said the employee did have condoms, but did not distribute them to the students. She said the employee did hand out hygiene products such as soap, sham- poo and toothbrushes. Lindsey McDowell, public informa- tion and communications coordinator for the Baker School District, said the sexual nature of some of the training was “inappropriate” given that the sole purpose of the presentation was per- sonal hygiene. “The topic that came up should never have been covered,” McDowell said. Dispute about what led to discussion There is a discrepancy between the health department and the school dis- trict about what might have led to the incident. Bennett said his understanding, after talking with Chancey, is that a district employee, in requesting the personal hygiene presentation, said something along the lines of also ex- panding the discussion. But Janie Radinovich-Brose, who is one of the school district’s youth transition specialists and is helping to oversee the Youth Transition Pro- gram, said she was present when a dis- trict employee phoned the health de- partment to request the presentation. Radinovich-Brose said the district employee made no mention of sexual education topics or anything other than basic personal hygiene. Bennett said Chancey sent to the school district a draft version of a let- ter apologizing for the incident, with the intention that the district forward the letter to students who attended the July 7 presentation. But McDowell said district officials disagree with some aspects of the let- ter, related to the question of whether the incident resulted from a misun- derstanding stemming from the dis- trict’s initial request for the presenta- tion. McDowell said “my understanding is there wasn’t a misunderstanding.” She said a discussion of sexual top- ics should not have happened during a personal hygiene course, regardless of the age of the participants. McDowell said district officials didn’t think it was appropriate to send the county’s letter, in its draft form, to students and their parents. Neither the district nor the county would provide a copy of the draft letter. Bennett said he decided to with- He said he has seen, on logging and prescribed burning projects he has designed on private land, how re- ducing fuel loads can help fire crews stop a wildfire. In the late 1990s the Wallowa- Whitman spent more than $2.2 mil- lion to cut trees and light prescribed fires to create fuel breaks on the fringes of the watershed. Most of the work was on the south end and along the road under which is buried the city’s water pipeline, with a goal of giving fire crews a place to head off a blaze moving toward the watershed. The current project will expand on those efforts, Cikanek said. Roadless issues The watershed project also calls for commercial thinning on about 2,668 acres, most of which are outside the watershed itself. Most of the watershed is a des- ignated roadless area, Cikanek said, and no commercial logging is planned in that area. Logging in a roadless area would require the Wal- lowa-Whitman to conduct an envi- ronmental impact statement (EIS) and amend the forest’s management plan, he said. An EIS is a more intensive study than the environmental assessment that’s proposed for the watershed, Cikanek said. An EIS would take lon- ger, and cost more, to prepare. There is a section of the watershed, a corridor along the Marble Creek draw the letter and instead make a formal apology, through an interview with the Herald, to the students and parents. Bennett said the situation is “dif- ficult to sort out” in part because the former health department employee can’t be compelled to talk about the incident. He said Chancey talked to the em- ployee after the July 7 presentation, but because Chancey hadn’t yet heard about the Karolskis’ concerns, she didn’t broach the matter of what the employee had discussed during the presentation. “We’re truly sorry that it happened. 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 respects parental rights.” — Mark Bennett, Baker County commissioner Radinovich-Brose said a district employee who attended the presenta- tion was “caught off guard” when the health department employee started talking about sexual topics. The presenter stopped that discus- sion when the district employee asked her to do so, Radinovich-Brose said. She said she supports the health department and has always been pleased with its presentations, which is why she suggested the district ask the agency to do the personal hygiene Proposed schedule Cikanek said Wallowa-Whit- man employees will be working on the draft environmental assessment through 2022. He expects to make a final decision on the project in the late winter or early spring of 2023, and work could start on the ground in the summer of 2023. Cikanek said that although the Forest Service is leading the water- shed project, its progress is a tribute to cooperation among multiple of- ficials and agencies, including Mi- chelle Owen, director of the Baker City public works department, Doni Bruland of Baker County’s natural resources department, the Oregon Department of Forestry, U.S. Natural Resources Conservation Service and the OSU Extension Service. Earlier this year, Owen, in response to the Forest Service’s announcement that it was working on a watershed project, said: “The Baker City water- shed is a major asset to the City of Baker City and our community. We are partnering with the U.S. Forest Service to make the watershed less susceptible to a catastrophic wildfire. Removing excessive fuels and provid- ing for fire breaks along the pipeline road are really the City’s top priori- ties and in line with the City Council’s goals. This type of a project has been discussed for many years and it’s great that there is finally some real progress being made.” Cikanek also noted that Oregon’s congressional delegation has sup- ported, and continues to support, the effort to reduce the risk of fire in the watershed. training. “It’s very unfortunate that this hap- pened,” Radinovich-Brose said. “We’ve learned from this.” Health department administrator writing new policy To ensure a similar mistake doesn’t happen again, Bennett said Chancey is writing a policy that will include, among other things, the requirement that requests, from the school district or other organizations, for health de- partment training be made in writing. The goal, Bennett said, is to ensure that the requester’s expectations are clear. The written request must also include participants’ ages, so health department employees can ensure the presentation is appropriate, he said. The county’s attorney will review the proposed policy and forward it to commissioners for final approval, Bennett said. Parent pleased with summer work program Bryan Karolski said that although he’s angry about the incident, and be- lieves the health department should be held accountable, he’s very happy with the school district program and that Sheylin is able to participate. “Other than (the training) it’s a positive experience, and she abso- lutely loves it,” he said. “She’s learning a lot. It’s done my daughter a world of good.” Both school district and county of- ficials said they believe the agencies continue to have a good relationship. “We really value our partnership with the health department,” McDow- ell said. Bennett said he hopes the single incident doesn’t diminish the health department’s reputation, particularly after its extensive work during the pandemic, or its connection with the school district and the community. “We value our partnership with the school district,” Bennett said.