BAKER CITY HERALD • THuRsDAY, AugusT 25, 2022 A5 LOCAL Housing Continued from A1 Jayson Jacoby/Baker City Herald Maverik Inc. wants to build its second Baker City gas station and convenience store on this property just southeast of the freeway overpass at exit 302 in north Baker City. Maverik Continued from A1 The proposed new site is more convenient for travelers on I-84. Younger said she ex- pects the new location to open in 2024. The Campbell Street store is Maverik’s only one in Ore- gon. The company, based in Salt Lake City, operates more than 320 stores in 12 west- ern states and has more than Archery Continued from A1 Agency officials cited mul- tiple reasons for the proposal, including a growing num- ber of archery hunters over the past few decades, and a higher success rate among hunters due to better bows and arrows that make it pos- sible for archers to make lethal shots from longer distances. ODFW said the num- ber of archers hunting elk in Eastern Oregon rose from about 12,300 in 1995 to about 18,500 in 2019. Because the archery sea- sons remained general hunts, with no limits on how many tags were sold, ODFW’s lone tool to limit hunting and maintain deer and elk herds with sustainable numbers has been to cut tags for rifle hunts, which are controlled hunts with limited tags awarded through the lottery system. In choosing which units to change from a general to a controlled archery season, ODFW officials considered the current elk populations in those units, as well as hunter density and hunter displace- ment, which are based on a public survey of hunters done in 2020. In some units the ratio of bulls to cows is below the state’s goals, and in other units the bull elk harvest is near what biologists consider the unit’s capacity. In some units, archery hunters have been taking as many or more branch-antlered bulls than ri- fle hunters have, according to ODFW. Although the agency ini- tially planned to change both elk and deer hunts to con- trolled seasons in 2021, the commission ended up mak- ing the shift for deer hunting 4,800 employees. The proposed new Baker City location would employ 15 to 18 people, according to Maverik’s application. The Baker County Plan- ning Commission has sched- uled a public hearing for Sept. 6 at 5 p.m. at the Courthouse, 1995 Third St., to review Maverik’s site plan review re- quest for its new station. The proposed business would be open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. It would be somewhat bigger than the Campbell Street sta- tion, with a convenience store of almost 6,000 square feet, compared with the current store’s 4,200 square feet. The new location would have 12 fueling pumps, com- pared with eight on Campbell Street. The new store would have an outdoor seating patio on the east side of the building. Fire, other restrictions in effect The U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management, the two federal agencies that manage most of the public land in Northeastern Oregon, have each issued press releases urging hunters and others to be responsible during the late summer and fall. The Vale District of the BLM emphasized fire safety, as well as the potential hazards left by past blazes. “Recreating responsibly ensures that all visitors to the forest have a good experience,” said Brian Anderson, Wallowa Mountains district ranger on the Wallowa-Whitman National Forest. “Picking up your trash, adhering to stay limits, and not storing or caching items on public lands are keystones of responsible recreation.” Anderson said that when visitors build structures, cache items, leave trash or occupy campsites longer than 14 consecutive days, which is the limit, they can affect other users. Forest Service em- ployees and law enforcement are extracting and impounding caches and camps that are known to be in violation of the caching and stay limits. Illegally built structures will also be being removed. Visitors are reminded that the following are prohibited: • Caching personal property for a duration more than 72 hours within designated wilderness. • Camping/leaving camp equipment for a duration that ex- ceeds the 14-day stay limit. Building structures such as shelters, tables, toilets, etc. • Cutting or damaging standing live trees. • Leaving campsites in an unsanitary condition by leaving trash or human waste. Fire danger is high or extreme across Northeastern Oregon, and on national forests, campfires are allowed only in designated campgrounds and in parts of the Eagle Cap Wilderness. Campfires are prohibited on all public land managed by the BLM. A list of restrictions on BLM, national forest and private lands protected by the Oregon Department of Forestry is available at http://bmidc.org/restrictions.shtml. only starting with the 2021 season. The switch to mostly con- trolled archery hunts for elk was delayed until 2022. The change to controlled archery hunts, for deer and elk, has been controversial. Bob Reedy, a Baker City bowhunter who also owns an archery shop, said he thinks the changes will re- sult in confusion among hunters, and potentially discourage some longtime hunters from continuing their hobby. Reedy argues that if ODFW wants to bolster bull Cannon Continued from A1 The motion to give Cannon a pay raise was done in open public session, as the law requires. Cannon’s contract states that if city councilors rate his performance as satis- factory or better, he is eligible for a mini- mum 2% merit increase in annual salary. But Cannon suggested a smaller raise, of 1.7%, to match the average of the pay raises for employees in the city’s three la- bor unions. Councilors voted 6-0 to ap- prove the salary increase. Councilor Ken- yon Damschen abstained, since he missed a majority of the executive session. Residents disappointed about lack of paving Chuck Peterson, treasurer of the Sal- ly’s Addition Homeowners Association, in the southwest corner of the city above the intersection of Indiana Avenue and Reservoir Road, told councilors he was disappointed that they had removed $50,000 from this year’s budget to pave a 480-foot gravel section of Indiana Ave- nue that accesses the subdivision. Peterson and Gary McManus, pres- ident of the homeowners association, both talked with the council. Peterson said that when the city ex- cavated a section of Indiana Avenue to install a new water pipe, residents had asked the city to return the street to its former condition. During its June 14 meeting, the city council voted 3-2 to add to the bud- elk numbers, then the agency should either temporarily ban hunters from killing bulls, or change the bag limit to branch-antlered bulls only. The bag limit for many units in Northeastern Ore- gon for this year’s elk archery hunt is one bull elk. The tra- ditional bag limit for archery hunting — any elk — re- mains in some units. Reedy said he’s also con- cerned that the changes will contribute to animosity be- tween archery and rifle hunt- ers. “We’re all hunters,” Reedy said. get $50,000, which had previously been withdrawn, to pave that section of street. But on June 28, in the motion adopt- ing the city’s budget for the fiscal year that started July 1, Councilor Jason Spriet proposed to divert the $50,000 to a chip sealing project elsewhere. That motion passed 5-0. Mayor Kerry McQuisten was absent, and Damschen, who owns property in the subdivision accessed by that section of Indiana Ave- nue, abstained. Peterson told councilors Tuesday that he was puzzled that councilors made that change without notifying him and other residents in the area. “What bothers me is neither Gary nor I were invited to come to those discus- sions,” Peterson said. “If you’re going to vote to do something that drastic, you should hear both sides.” McQuisten said she fully supports paving that section of Indiana, and she asked city staff to add the matter to the agenda for the Sept. 13 meeting. Resident criticizes mayor Debbie Henshaw, who is a member of Baker County United, denounced what she termed “untruths” that McQuisten has made about the nonprofit organization formed in 2021. “Baker County United picked up where the mayor left off in protecting our com- munity against the mandates of Kate Brown, and our mayor, who is supposed to represent the people, went on attack,” Hen- shaw said. “I find that rather odd.” The mission statement of BCU is “to ed- The property is in the com- mercial-general zone. Al- though the parcel is within the Baker City urban growth boundary, under an agreement between the city and Baker County, the county planning commission makes land-use decisions for portions of the urban growth boundary out- side the city limits. Those decisions are based on the city’s development code. Elks Lodge cancels hide collection this year The Baker Elks Lodge will not be collecting deer and elk hides this fall due to the high cost of fuel. The lodge in past years has set out barrels where hunters can place hides. The Elks sell the hides and donate the proceeds to a variety of aid programs for veterans. More tags than applicants in many units Although the shift from general to controlled hunts means some hunters who are accustomed to being able to hunt every year might not draw a tag through the lot- tery, ODFW has set tag allo- cations for most units at lev- els similar to the number of people who actually hunted during recent general sea- sons. However, in some popu- lar units the number of con- trolled hunt tags is well below the number of hunters in re- cent years. For this year’s archery deer season — the bag limit is one buck with a visible ant- ler — the number of tags in most units is well above the number of first-choice ap- plications for 2021, the first year with controlled archery hunts. Examples include: • Imnaha unit — 308 tags in 2022, 77 first-choice appli- cants in 2021 • Sled Springs unit — 193 and 87 • Keating unit — 275 and 99 • Starkey unit — 770 and 107 • Catherine Creek unit — 495 and 101 ucate and build a Baker County network of citizens who actively pursue self-gov- ernance by championing our inalienable God given rights, AND to regain and maintain a local representative govern- ment that protects the same, guided by our Constitution and the Bill of Rights, with emphasis on our county’s culture, history, heritage, AND restore a self-sustaining economy,” Henshaw said. She said BCU is not responsible for a campaign to potentially recall city council- ors, an effort started by former Baker City firefighter Casey Husk. “Baker County United will certainly support him and get signatures because some of you gotta go,” Henshaw told coun- cilors. “Baker County United is not what the mayor paints us as, yet she has never hon- ored any of our invitations to meet,” Hen- shaw said. “Once again, I reach out to in- vite you to our community barbecue that we are having this Saturday at 5 o’clock at the park.” In other business Tuesday, councilors: • voted unanimously to authorize the city to sell ambulances and other related equipment. The city will cease operating ambulances on Sept. 30. Baker County has hired Metro West, a private ambulance company, to replace the fire department as ambulance provider for the city and much of Baker County. • voted unanimously to support efforts to restore passenger train service to North- eastern Oregon. • voted unanimously to appoint Grat- ton Miller to the planning commission. The report indicates Baker County not only needs more affordable housing, but a more comprehensive system to help people with behavioral health conditions move into this housing, she said. Walsh met with members of the housing task force on Aug. 18 to finalize the report, which OHA had awarded New Di- rections $44,000 last year to complete. Farallon Consulting also as- sisted with the survey. The task force received roughly 250 survey responses that provided information about specific needs. Two types of housing — transi- tional, or shelters that bridge the gap between homelessness and stable housing, and sup- portive, living situations that provide financial and health services — were identified as gaps for people with behav- ioral health conditions. “From the very beginning we said, ‘We want this to be data-driven,’ ” Walsh said. “We want our community to have the actual numbers of what the needs are.” These initial survey re- sults led Walsh to apply for an OHA grant in June, which the agency awarded at an amount of $1.4 million. Walsh said New Directions plans to use the money to buy a modular home, two homes in the community for peo- ple in need, and to set up a drop-in service center — ac- tions that directly address a lack of transitional and sup- portive housing. “For folks that need help navigating the housing system, we will have a place where they can go and meet with staff to help them with the process of getting into transi- tional housing and then stable housing,” Walsh said. She said the housing appli- cation process can be a bar- rier to those with behavioral health issues. “It can be a very hard time navigating the system,” Walsh said. “People don’t have the re- sources to complete five differ- ent applications.” About 72% of people with a behavioral health condi- tion who answered the Baker County survey this spring said they had experienced home- lessness in the past five years or were currently homeless. Additionally, 27% of people said they didn’t feel safe in their current living situation. According to the report, in response to the survey, one in- dividual commented: “There is no affordable me- dium income housing avail- able. ... same as the previous five years of this question are being asked and still noth- Recall Continued from A1 Baker City has continued to staff an ambulance, but it is called out only when Metro West’s ambulance is already on a call. The city will cease ambu- lance service Sept. 30. The city is also reducing its fire department staffing from 16.25 full-time equiva- lents during the fiscal year that ended June 30, to 10.5 for the current fiscal year. Husk contends that Can- non deserves to be fired for what he has described as the “destruction of the fire depart- ment.” Husk disputes Cannon’s contention that the city couldn’t afford to continue op- erating ambulances. “Fundamentally, the reason why I’m here is because I be- lieve a wrong was done to our community,” Husk said during the July 14 meeting. Although Husk contends Cannon “misled and manip- ulated” city councilors, voters don’t have any direct say in who serves as city manager. Only the seven city council- ors, per the city charter, have the authority to hire, or fire, a city manager. According to Oregon law, elected officials can be recalled only after they’ve served at least six months. One of the seven councilors, Kenyon Damschen, was appointed in March 2022 and won’t reach the six-month threshold until Sept. 22. Based on the timelines un- der Oregon election law re- garding recalls, however, and on Husk’s progress, it’s almost certain that a recall election, if it happened, wouldn’t be scheduled before Sept. 22. The six other councilors have been in office for at least ing being done. ... vouchers only work if there are houses, apartments, duplexes, studios available and built. “The housing crisis is in all of Oregon, not just Western Oregon.” The survey found that only 20% of housing vouchers is- sued to Baker County resi- dents for Section 8 housing from July 2021 to June 2022 were actually used. Data from Oregon Housing Alliance shows that for every 100 families with “extremely low income,” just 37 units of housing are available, and over 60% of that group spends more than half of their income on rent. The report estimates that Baker County needs 256 more units of affordable housing to meet the need. The survey states that: “Consumer groups and survey respondents have indicated rental properties are not read- ily available, yet are in high demand, property owners have converted rental homes to temporary vacation rent- als, and homes are selling for twice the value of 2 years ago. Comments from individuals who completed the survey in- dicate this is an ongoing issue in Baker County.” In 2021, the Oregon Legis- lature appropriated $130 mil- lion to support community in- vestments that ensure people with behavioral health condi- tions have access to adequate housing and service. Walsh said other counties in Oregon submitted simi- lar reports to OHA, and that she communicated with other communities during the pro- cess at OHA “office hours” meetings. Walsh said OHA recently invited members from the task force to present the re- port’s findings to state officials in Salem. “I’m still a little shocked, to us, it’s huge,” she said. “I just feel it’s an honor that Baker County gets to have a voice and we get to share what our needs are.” The task force that helped complete the survey and the final report, consisted of peo- ple with lived experiences of behavior health conditions and representatives from groups that provide behav- ioral health services, including Baker County commission- ers, city council members, the Baker County Sheriff’s office and city police department personnel, Baker County Vet- erans Services, Baker School District 5J, Baker County Health Services, Safe Families Baker County, Baker County Safe Families Coalition, Com- munity Connection, the Northeast Oregon Housing Authority, and multiple land- lords. six months. Three of the six — Joanna Dixon, Johnny Waggoner Sr. and Dean Guyer — are serv- ing terms that end Dec. 31, 2022. Waggoner and Guyer plan to seek reelection in the Nov. 8 election, as does Dam- schen. The three other councilors — Kerry McQuisten, Shane Alderson and Jason Spriet — are serving terms that con- tinue through the end of 2024. All three were elected to four- year terms in November 2020. Husk said on Friday, Aug. 19 that he hopes to have recall petitions ready soon so he and others can try to gather the signatures required. He would need 680 verified signatures from city residents who are registered voters for each councilor. A separate pe- tition with at least that many signatures would be required for each councilor, although voters could sign multiple pe- titions. Husk said that in addition to his work obligations in Hermiston, he has to set up a finance committee and bank account for the recall, as Ore- gon law requires. If Husk can gather sufficient signatures, within five days of the petition being approved, the affected councilors could either choose to resign or file a written statement, of 200 words or less, explaining why they choose not to resign. For councilors who don’t re- sign, a recall election must be scheduled within 35 days. Recall ballots would include both Husk’s written state- ment for why he believes the councilor should be recalled, and the councilor’s written re- sponse. Husk encourages people interested in helping with the recall effort to call him at 541- 350-0325.