LOCAL A2 SPORTS A6 OUTDOORS B1 Swinyers to celebrate 70th anniversary Badgers advance in volleyball playoff s Good day’s gunning for grouse Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com IN THIS EDITION: LOCAL • OUTDOORS & REC • SPORTS QUICK HITS ————— Good Day Wish To A Subscriber SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2022 • $1.50 Geometry in Construction class at Powder Valley lets students turn their knowledge into buildings ELECTION 2022 | BAKER COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS Chairman campaign committees raise $20,000 combined A special good day to Herald subscriber Mary Boyer of Baker City. BRIEFING ————— Inside Shane Alderson has raised $13,640, while Dan Garrick has brought in $6,678 BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Baker County Living guide included with today’s issue Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald CTE instructor Seth Bingham, center, explains how to use a smart square to mark angles to students Cade Thompson, left, Jodi Bingham and Tucker Martin. Trick-or-treating on Halloween Baker City’s downtown trick-or-treat event is happening on Halloween, Monday, Oct. 31. The annual Baker City Kiwanis event is set for 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Main Street will be closed to traffi c from Church Street to Auburn Avenue so that costumed children can safely gather their treats. Businesses and organizations, both on and off Main Street, are invited to participate. Baker City Christian Church, 675 Highway 7, will have a trunk-or-treat on Monday, Oct. 31, from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. The event includes games, s’mores, hot dog and chili dinner and more. WEATHER ————— Today 56/26 Partly sunny Sunday 57/33 Cloudy Monday 56/35 Partly cloudy Full forecast on the back of the B section. The space below is for a postage label for issues that are mailed. Building MATH SKILLS BY LISA BRITTON lbritton@bakercityherald.com NORTH POWDER —From math class to wood shop, students at Pow- der Valley High School are putting angles to work through a course called Geometry in Construction. For the 12 students, their day starts with Matt Richardson and geometry. On a recent morning, the teacher issued a challenge: “Construct a right triangle.” With a few snaps of rubber bands against plastic pegs, each student made a right triangle. “Now construct a congruent right triangle,” Richardson said. Some more snaps, and the geo boards all displayed two right trian- gles of the same size and shape. Then came reflections and rota- tions before the bell sounded and the students traded rubber bands for wood and nails in the second half of this class in shop with Seth Bingham. This is the third year Geometry in Construction has been offered at Powder. It started with Blake Jones, who has since retired. Now Richard- son teaches the math portion, and Bingham continues the lessons with construction work. Geometry in Construction was de- signed, Richardson said, to be prob- lem-based and focus on experiential learning. GIS was developed by a teacher in Loveland, Colorado, to provide a dif- ferent a different approach to math while still covering the full curricu- lum. “One of our goals is to keep two See Campaign / A3 Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald Lizandro Rodriguez, a junior at Powder Valley High School, works on his scaled- down house model during his Geometry in Construction class. different paths in math,” Richardson struction,” he said. “I can actually said, “with plenty of opportunity to work on building stuff, and have ex- jump back and forth.” perience in construc- “One of our goals tion.” Students have two choices: a traditional It is a two-hour is to keep two geometry class, or Ge- course, and the stu- different paths in dents earn a math ometry in Construc- tion. and a CTE credit math with plenty of credit Sophomore Jaycee (career technical edu- opportunity to jump cation). Gray chose the latter. “There’s a lab, and In the shop, students back and forth.” you get to do the build- spend the first quar- ing part of it — con- ter of the school year — Matt Richardson, verting it to scale and building a scale model math teacher using the right angles,” of a house using balsa she said. wood. Jace Arvidson, a junior, said the “I broke one of the walls twice, but dual nature of the course appealed I’m getting there,” Lizandro Rodriguez, to him. a junior, said as he consulted the house “I mainly did it for the math credit, plans covered in math equations. See Building / A3 but I’m not that familiar with con- Cascade Natural Gas rates are rising starting Nov. 1 Baker City Herald The Baker City Council has approved the second of three readings of an ordinance rezon- ing a south Baker City property to make build- ings converted into a single-family dwelling compliant with the city’s development code. The council approved the second reading by a 4-1 vote on Tuesday, Oct. 25. Councilor Kenyon Damschen voted no, say- ing that using the building on Gayle and Leon- ard Gazley’s property at 569 Elm St. as a dwell- ing does not comply with the city code. Councilor Dean Guyer, who said he has worked with the Gazleys in the past, recused himself from the discussion and vote. Councilor Jason Spriet was absent Tuesday. Councilors will consider the final reading, and passage, of the ordinance following an- other public hearing scheduled for the Nov. 8 meeting. See Rezone / A2 BY JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.co Rate Classified ....................B2-B4 Comics ..............................B5 Community News.............A2 BY SAMANTHA O’CONNER soconner@bakercityherald.com Fire remains under investigation State investigators are still work- ing to determine the cause of the wildfire that burned about 130 acres just southwest of Baker City on Oct. 6. “The fire is still under active in- vestigation,” Jessica Prakke, public affairs officer for the Oregon De- partment of Forestry, wrote in an email to the Baker City Herald on Wednesday, Oct. 26. (Prakke said ODF is officially calling the fire the West Campbell fire, rather than Spring Grove Gulch, which it was called initially.) The human-caused fire started on private property south of West Campbell Loop. See Rate / A3 Issue 73 12 pages Council weighs request to rezone industrial parcel BAKER CITY Residential custom- increases ers of Cascade Natural Gas will pay 25% more for the fuel starting 25.1% Nov. 1. residential The Oregon Public 30.1% Utility Commission commercial (PUC) recently ap- proved a 25.1% resi- 33.8% dential rate increase industrial requested by Cascade Natural Gas, which serves customers in Baker City. Rates will rise even more for commercial customers (30.1%) and industrial customers (33.8%). The reason, according to PUC, is rising wholesale prices for natural gas. TODAY The two candidates vying to become the next chairman of the Baker County Board of Commis- sioners have raised a com- bined $20,318 in campaign contributions, according to campaign finance reports filed with the Oregon Sec- retary of State’s office. Alderson Shane Alderson has re- ceived slightly more than twice the contributions of Dan Garrick. Contributions to Al- derson’s campaign finance committee, which was registered with the state on Feb. 25, have totaled Garrick $13,640. Garrick’s committee, which was formed Feb. 8, has brought in $6,678. Crossword ...............B2 & B4 Dear Abby .........................B6 Horoscope ..............B2 & B4 See Fire / A2 Ian Crawford/Baker City Herald A fire burned about 130 acres on the foothill just southwest of Baker City on Oct. 6, 2022. The human-caused fire is still under investigation. Jayson Jacoby ..................A4 Lottery Results .................A2 News of Record ................A2 Opinion .............................A4 Outdoors ...........................B1 Senior Menus ...................A2 Sports ...............................A6 Turning Backs ..................A2 Weather ............................B6