BAKER CITY HERALD • TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2022 A3 LOCAL Ian Crawford/Baker City Herald Volunteers carry the American flag during the Shrine parade on Saturday, Aug. 6, 2022, in downtown Baker City. Scenes from the Shrine Parade Ian Crawford/Baker City Herald A classic car from the Hillah Shriners in Douglas County rolls down Baker City’s Main Street during the Shrine Parade on Saturday, Aug. 6, 2022. Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Both Shrine queens are from the Baker City area. Poppy Ann Jones, left, was the West queen, and Hannah Cartwright was the East queen for the 2022 game. Baldwin, a steer raised by Harley Coburn of Durkee, was auctioned at halftime of the East-West Shrine All-Star football game on Saturday, Aug. 6, 2022, raising about $21,000 for the Shriners Hospital for Chil- dren in Portland. House Continued from A1 The lot, which covers almost 5,000 square feet, has a market value of $31,330, according to the Assessor’s Office. The police department, not the building department, deals with property maintenance vi- olations. But earlier this year, Police Chief Ty Duby applied for and received an administrative search warrant that allowed Kitzmiller and other city offi- cials to inspect the interior of the home. Kitzmiller said that inspec- tion happened on April 7. She said the home is in “ter- rible” condition. Walls have been removed, and the ceiling is failing, with insulation and electrical wiring falling through the ceiling. “At some point that struc- ture would have failed,” Kitz- miller said. “It was in terrible shape.” Kitzmiller said she met with Gwin soon after and told him she would be sending an offi- cial letter declaring the home unsafe to occupy. She gave him until mid May to submit a plan for either re- pairing the house — which Kitzmiller said she didn’t think was feasible given the likely cost — or dismantling it. That didn’t happen, and as a result the city hired Lost Soul Contracting, a Baker City business, to tear down the home and haul away the rem- nants. The business’ owner, Eric Swanlund, is charging the city $125 per hour, Kitzmiller said. She said Swanlund expected the work would take one or two days. Water Continued from A1 straight days and topped 100 on the last three days of July, the city was using about 5.7 million gallons per day. The city was still diverting about 5 million gallons per day from streams and springs in its watershed on the east slopes of the Elkhorn Moun- tains west of town. But Owen said the city has also started to use a very small amount of water from Go- odrich Reservoir, the alpine reservoir at the base of Elk- horn Peak that holds about 200 million gallons of water. Goodrich filled this spring. “We haven’t had to tap into Goodrich, which is really in- credible, again because of the wet spring we had, it kept the Samantha O’Conner/Baker City Herald Work began on Monday, Aug. 8, 2022, to dismantle a home in east Baker City that the city’s building offi- cial declared unsafe to occupy. Kitzmiller said the city will seek to attach a lien to the property so that even if it’s sold, the city will be reim- bursed for the cost of disman- tling the home. Kitzmiller said on Monday that she wasn’t celebrating that it became necessary to tear down the home. “I’m sorry for Mr. Gwin, but he’s been given so many chances,” she said. Gwin could not be reached for comment by press time on Monday. He declined to comment on the situation earlier this year after Kerns designated the home as a chronic neighbor- hood nuisance. Kitzmiller said she would have preferred that Gwin ar- creeks flowing,” Owen said. Last summer, by contrast, the springs and streams pro- duced less water, forcing the city to use more water from Goodrich. The city has been using water recently from Marble Springs, Salmon Creek, and Mill and Little Mill creeks, Owen said. “We’re trying to spread the wealth, if you will. We’re not drawing everything from Elk Creek, we’re not drawing ev- erything from Salmon Creek. We’re kind of taking bits and pieces across the mountain,” Owen said. The city’s second supple- mentary water source, in addi- tion to Goodrich, is a well. (A second well, which was drilled in the fall of 2020, should be available later this year.) Samantha O’Conner/Baker City Herald A worker loads debris into a dumpster at 1975 Birch St. on Monday, Aug. 8, 2022. Neighbors react to removal of home Over the years, several people who live near Gwin’s home have expressed their disgust with the condition of the home. Some have lobbied the Baker City Council to do something about the situa- tion, telling councilors that their own homes had been in- fested with mice they believed spread from Gwin’s property. Carmen Ott who lives on Washington Avenue near Birch, said she has lived with the situation since 2013. “We are thrilled to death with this,” Ott said on Mon- day morning as workers filled multiple dumpsters with de- bris and began tearing down the house. “We’ve had to live with this garbage.” “We’ve seen it all,” Ott said. Ralph Grimmer, who lives on Washington across from the Gwin home, was also happy about the work. Angie Stewart, who headed the neighborhood watch pro- gram in the area, said she is ambivalent after six years of having to deal with the prop- erty. “You don’t want to celebrate the fact they’re doing this but six years is a lot,” Stewart said. Stewart, who with her hus- band, John, lives at the corner of Plum Street and Wash- ington Avenue, just west of Gwin’s house, said earlier this year that the recurrent accumulations of trash, and associated problems, have left them and some of their neighbors as “basically hos- tages to the inside of our homes.” Angie Stewart said un- pleasant odors emanate from Gwin’s property, and she has seen people urinating in the yard. “We can’t go out and use our decks and backyards in the summer,” Stewart said. “It’s just awful.” She said the local neighbor- hood watch, which includes 42 homes in the area, was started due to conditions at the Gwin property. She said homeless people have stayed on the property at times. “He’s had every opportunity to become a good neighbor,” Stewart said of Gwin. Like Ott, Stewart said she’s relieved that the house will be gone, but sad that dismantling it was necessary. Owen said the city has used small amounts of well water during the recent hot weather. The city’s existing well, which was drilled in the late 1970s, is augmented by water from the watershed. During the winter and early spring, the city diverts tens of mil- lions of gallons of water from the watershed into the well, a process known as Aquifer Storage and Recovery. In 2009 Baker City was the first Ore- gon city to receive a state per- mit to use that tactic. “The mountain is pro- ducing well for us. That’s great, we like the gravity wa- ter whenever we can get it,” Owen said. She was referring to the wa- tershed, which, because it’s at a higher elevation than the city, supplies water through gravity, with no pumping needed. Although the city has not enacted stage 2 of the water curtailment ordinance, Owen urges residents to be careful with their water use — water- ing gardens and lawns during the evening and early morn- ing, for instance, and making sure sprinklers aren’t wasting water on streets or sidewalks. Owen said the city might be able to get through the sum- mer without moving to stage 2 of the water curtailment or- dinance, depending on the weather. “Our supply is doing as well or better than I had antici- pated,” she said. The high use levels that led to the city enacting phase 2 of the water curtailment ordi- nance in early July 2021 also prompted Owen to talk about the possibility of the city mov- ing to phase 3 for the first time ever. Under that stage, all out- door watering with city water is banned. But the city’s water use dropped by 23% in August 2021 compared with July, and the city never advanced to stage 3. range to have his home torn down, but she said that didn’t seem likely to happen. She said she decided to have the city hire a contrac- tor in part because an asbes- tos assessment was negative, meaning the city didn’t have to remove asbestos, which can be expensive, before tearing down the home. Kitzmiller said siding and flooring that often contain asbestos were mostly gone, so there weren’t the usual sources of asbestos in older homes. May we take this method of thanking our neighbors for their many kind expressions of sympathy in our bereavement. Words cannot express our gratitude, and these expressions have been deeply appreciated. Thank you, The family of Gerald Goodwin