Local A2 Tuesday, November 1, 2022 TURNING BACK THE PAGES 50 YEARS AGO from the Democrat-Herald November 3, 1972 Baker’s Gary Hammond may have recorded a fi rst in the history of the University of Oregon’s basketball clinic last Saturday. The highly successful retired Bulldog coach may have become the fi rst prep mentor to lecture at the annual clinic. He was in the select company of Dick Harter, head Duck basketball coach, and Bobby Boyd, University of Southern California coach. 25 YEARS AGO from the Baker City Herald October 31, 1997 An unfortunate combination of wind, rain and fog faced hunters who were lucky enough to draw a tag for the fi rst bull elk rifl e season that began Wednesday. A hunter who was lost Thursday night was found safe this morning southwest of Unity. Hunting success was low, accordiing to reports from the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife and Oregon State Police. Baker City Herald • bakercityherald.com Wolves kill one, possibly two, calves on the right hind leg above the hock. “The severity, size and location of these wounds are consistent with injuries to cattle attacked by wolves,” the ODFW investiga- tion report states. The biologist estimated that the calf was killed three days earlier. The other carcass was missing — the report doesn’t explain why — and that case was listed as “possible/unknown” for a wolf attack. Oregon State Police announced recently that the breeding female wolf from what had been the Lookout Mountain pack was illegally shot and killed, probably on Oct. 2. Baker City Herald Wolves in the Lookout Mountain area east of Baker City killed one calf, and possi- bly killed a second, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) announced Friday, Oct. 27. A biologist investigated on Thursday, Oct. 27. The previous day, the carcasses of two 500-pound calves were found in a 5,000-acre privately owned pasture near Big Lookout Mountain. At the time of the investigation, only one of the carcasses was present. The biologist found more than 25 pre-morten bite scrapes The pack’s breeding male wolf was found dead in July. There was no evidence of poaching in the male wolf’s death. Brian Ratliff, district wildlife biologist at ODFW’s Baker City office, said the deaths of the two breeding wolves mean there is no longer a functioning pack in the Lookout Mountain area. The group of wolves in that area consists of a yearling wolf born in the spring of 2021 (the gender is not known) and an unknown number of pups born in the spring of 2022, Ratliff said. None of those wolves has a tracking collar. Arrest NOXIOUS WEED OF THE WEEK: GOLDENROD Continued from A1 Police ordered both the driver and passenger to get out of the car, but instead the driver continued south on Highway 245, nearly colliding with an OSP vehicle. Police followed the SUV for another quarter mile. When the vehicle veered onto the shoul- der, police vehicles surrounded it. Neither the driver nor the passenger got out. About 10:25 p.m., the pas- senger left the vehicle. Police “physically removed” the driver, Heughins. The passenger was not charged with any crimes. 10 YEARS AGO from the Baker City Herald November 2, 2012 Work began in Central Park on an amphitheater and should continue through the month, according to the city. Money for the project, $100,000, comes from the Ford Family Foundation. The grant is specifi cally for creating public convening space. The stage will be a semi-circle shape and would have a 35-foot diameter if it were circular, said Michelle Owen, the city’s public works director. People would sit on stones embedded in the hillside to watch activities on the stage. ONE YEAR AGO from the Baker City Herald November 2, 2021 Baker County offi cials have talked with the state about potential options if local pharmacies need help with a tem- porary staffi ng shortage. Jason Yencopal, the county’s emergency management director, said he has talked with the Oregon Health Authority (OHA) about the possibility of providing pharmacy workers if necessary. As of Monday, Nov. 1, no Baker City pharmacies had con- tacted the county seeking help with staffi ng, Yencopal said. The pharmacy at the Baker City Bi-Mart store is slated to close Nov. 9; the store itself will remain open. That would leave the county with three pharmacies, in the Safeway, Albertsons and Rite Aid stores. Helen Loennig, pharmacist and pharmacy manager at Bi-Mart, said she’s “really worried about what’s going to hap- pen” when the Bi-Mart pharmacy closes and many prescrip- tions are transferred to one of the remaining pharmacies. Loennig also sent an email to Nancy Staten, director of the Baker County Health Department, regarding the situation. “We are about to have a Pharmacy Health Crisis,” Loennig wrote in the Oct. 27 email to Staten. Loennig said in a previous interview with the Herald that the Bi-Mart pharmacy has been processing about 1,500 prescriptions per week. In addition to the transferring of prescriptions from the Bi-Mart pharmacy, Oregon Gov. Kate Brown’s vaccination mandate, which took effect Oct. 18, could also have an effect on staffi ng, Loennig said. The mandate applies to pharmacists and pharmacy technicians. Loennig said two of the seven employees at the Bi-Mart pharmacy in Baker City had left their jobs due to the mandate. According to the OHA, as of Oct. 4, 87% of pharmacists in Oregon were vaccinated, and 82% of pharmacy technicians. OREGON LOTTERY MEGABUCKS, OCT. 29 WIN FOR LIFE, OCT. 29 19 — 22 — 25 — 28 — 32 — 33 Next jackpot: $1 million 6 — 14 — 15 — 45 POWERBALL, OCT. 29 • 1 p.m.: 6 — 1 — 2 — 4 • 4 p.m.: 6 — 6 — 0 — 7 • 7 p.m.: 0 — 3 — 6 — 8 • 10 p.m.: 0 — 5 — 9 — 2 19 — 31 — 40 — 46 — 57 PB 23 Next jackpot: $1 billion MEGA MILLIONS, OCT. 28 4 — 18 — 31 — 53 — 69 Mega 7 Next jackpot: $87 million PICK 4, OCT. 30 LUCKY LINES, OCT. 30 4-5-9-14-20-21-25-32 Next jackpot: $16,000 SENIOR MENUS WEDNESDAY (Nov. 2): Chicken broccoli fettuccini, garlic bread, carrots, fruit cup THURSDAY (Nov. 3): Spaghetti, garlic bread sticks, green beans, green salad, bread pudding FRIDAY (Nov. 4): Chicken-fried chicken, mashed potatoes with gravy, rolls, mixed vegetables, Jell-O with fruit MONDAY (Nov. 7): Chicken with homestyle noodles in gravy, rolls, broccoli, 3-bean salad, cheesecake TUESDAY (Nov. 8): Ground beef steak with onions, mashed potatoes with gravy, peas and carrots, rolls, fruit cup Public luncheon at the Senior Center, 2810 Cedar St., from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.; $5 donation (60 and older), $7.50 for those under 60. CONTACT THE HERALD 2005 Washington Ave., Suite 101 Open Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Telephone: 541-523-3673 ISSN-8756-6419 Serving Baker County since 1870 Publisher Karrine Brogoitti kbrogoitti@lagrandeobserver.com Jayson Jacoby, editor jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Advertising email ads@bakercityherald.com Classifi ed email classifi ed@bakercityherald.com Circulation email circ@bakercityherald.com Published Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays except Christmas Day by the Baker Publishing Co., a part of EO Media Group, at 2005 Washington Ave., Suite 101 (P.O. Box 807), Baker City, OR 97814. Subscription rates per month are $10.75 for print only. Digital-only rates are $8.25. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Baker City Herald, P.O. Box 807, Baker City, OR 97814. Periodicals Postage Paid at Pendleton, Oregon 97801 Copyright © 2022 Rich Olds/Contributed Photo Goldenrod flowers can each produce hundreds of seeds. Continued from A1 Perennial spreads through its roots BY JEFFREY PETTINGILL The enemy: Missouri goldenrod (Solidago missouriensis) This native perennial plant grows to a height of 4 feet and produces hundreds of seeds from each bright yellow columnar flower that grow at the end of the plants. Although the plant pro- duces thousands of seeds it generally spreads by creeping roots. The alternate narrow leaves follow single stems that contain web-like veins and are some- times toothed. We typically find this plant on ditch banks and in marshy areas. Due to flower color many people will mistake this plant for leafy spurge. There are over 100 species of Solidago species in North America. As this plant spread mainly by roots, it can outcompete other desireable plants, and fur- thermore increases the chance of fires getting out of hand when burning the ditch banks. This plant is also undesireable as a food source for livestock, therefore the plants increase in numbers as the livestock eat away the other plants and this helps it creep from ditch/creek bank into the pastures. The defense This is another plant in the sunflower family (like thistles), which makes the choice of herbi- cides easy — the Pyridine family of herbicides such as Milestone, Opensight, or Curtail are all effective. Be ex- tremely careful as to make sure your product is Rain Continued from A1 Those areas, which include the slopes along the Snake River between Richland and Huntington, and in the hills on the north side of the Keating Valley, could still green up be- fore heavy snow arrives. “We did get enough rain to potentially see a response with the grass,” Ratliff said. “We’ll just have to see if it happens.” Prior to the rain, it was ex- tremely dry at all elevations. Although there was plenty of grass thanks to the damp spring, that grass had cured Rich Olds/Contributed Photo Missouri goldenrod commonly grows on ditch banks and in marshy areas. labeled and if so not to get it on the inside of the ditch. As this plant is native to the area there are no bio-controls available outside of runaway grass- hoppers or the like. You can get goats to eat it as with most species that appear to have a woody stem in the fall. Call your local weed professional such as your County Weed Supervisor for proper identifica- tion and more information. █ Dog Jeffrey Pettingill, supervisor of the Baker County Weed District, can be reached at 541-523-0618 or 541-519-0204. and wasn’t as nutritious as green foliage, Ratliff said. With dry grass so am- ple, deer are generally able to maintain their body weight, he said. But they need protein-rich green grass to pack on the fat layer that can sustain them through the winter, when they need to burn more calories to maintain their body tempera- ture and, potentially, to dig through snow to reach forage. Ratliff said that even if the recent rain doesn’t yield a late flush of green grass, he’s opti- mistic about the prospects for deer to fare well this winter. “Animals are in great body condition right now,” he said. “I’m not incredibly worried about deer. We’re not going into winter with deer starving.” Ratliff said fawns and buck deer tend to be most suscep- tible to the deprivations of winter. Fawns are vulnerable be- cause they’re small and less able to stay warm. The issue with bucks is en- ergy — they expend a lot of calories chasing does during the fall breeding season, and as a result enter winter with scantier fat reserves than fe- male deer. Winners of the week-long competition will be announced Nov. 3. Sheriff Travis Ash said he’s been working for more than a year and a half on a plan to start an Aftermath K9 unit. “I’m wanting to bring a search dog into the sheriff’s office that searches for live people or evi- dence,” Ash said. The focus of the new K9 is to find lost people, suspects and ev- idence, Ash said. The sheriff’s office currently has a privately owned dog who belongs to one of the members. “He’s trained to go out and will locate people in front of him,” Ash said. “So, when he finds them, he will sit or bark or make a noise or he’ll run back to his handler and take the handler to the missing person.” Ash said he wants to add to the department’s resources a dog that’s “more of a search and res- cue based dog, where we’re go- ing out and when they locate the missing person or suspect they will either come back or sound off or they sit with the person.” “I’m looking for a dog that’s going to seek out suspects, seek out lost people, and evidence. That’s the route I want to go with one,” Ash said. K9 units vary in price. Ash said he’s anticipating a cost of $15,000 to $20,000, with the on- going cost of caring for the dog. “We’re applying for grants and seeing if we can get that alternate source of funding out there to purchase the animal,” Ash said. The sheriff’s office has also applied for other grants, includ- ing one from the Farm Credit Service Bureau. Ash said the county’s search and rescue department is mov- ing toward nonprofit status, which would make the agency eligible for more grants. “I’m hoping by this time next year we’ll have this up and run- ning,” Ash said of the K9 unit. “But it just depends too; it de- pends what dogs we locate and what’s available out there for us and that’ll fit our needs that we’re looking for.” News of Record DEATHS Jane Ann Wiegand: 86, of Baker City, died Oct. 26, 2022, at her residence. Arrangements are under the direction of Gray’s West & Co. Pioneer Chapel. To leave an online condolence for Jane’s family, go to www.grayswestco.com. Gerald Floyd Grover: 83, of Baker city, died Oct. 28, 2022, at his home. Arrangements are under the direction of Gray’s West & Co. Pioneer Chapel. To leave an online condolence for Gerald’s family, go to www.grayswestco.com. Bruce Clark: 75, of Baker City, died Oct. 30, 2022, at Saint Alphonsus Medical Center-Baker City. A celebration of Bruce’s life will be announced later. Arrangements are under the direction of Tami’s Pine Valley Funeral Home & Cremation Services. Condolences and memories can be shared online at www. tamispinevalleyfuneralhome.com. Justin James Smith: 21, of Baker City, died Oct. 30, 2022, in Baker City. Arrangements are under the direction of Gray’s West & Co. Pioneer Chapel. To leave an online condolence for Justin’s family, go to www.grayswestco.com. POLICE LOG Baker City Police Arrests, citations FIRST-DEGREE THEFT, FIRST-DEGREE CRIMINAL MISCHIEF: Tyson James Balius, 25, Baker City, 8:49 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 30 in the 3500 block of Place Street; cited and released. PROBATION VIOLATION: K-Leigh Rhuhanna Pogue, 27, Baker City, 4:05 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 30 at Resort and Campbell streets; jailed. SECOND-DEGREE DISORDERLY CONDUCT: Sean Dean Taylor, 31, Baker City, 8:31 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 29 at Cedar and H streets; cited and released. THIRD-DEGREE THEFT, CONTEMPT OF COURT (3 Baker County Justice Court warrants): Chloe Taylor-Virginia Stoffelsen, 26, Baker City, 1:59 p.m. Friday, Oct. 28 at 1205 Campbell St.; cited and released. Baker County Sheriff’s Office Arrests, citations PROBATION VIOLATION (Baker County Circuit Court warrant): Andrew Jay Culley, 33, Baker City, 11:20 a.m. Friday, Oct. 28 in the 3400 block of 13th Street; jailed. • Lumber • Plywood • Building Materials • Hardware • Paint • Plumbing • Electrical • And much more! 3205 10th Street Baker City 541-523-4422 Mon-Fri 7:30 am - 5:30 pm Saturday 8 am - 5 pm Closed Sun “You’ll love the work we do. I guarantee it.” - JR 225 H Street • East of I-84 • 541-523-3200 • grumpysrepair.com