A8 STATE Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, October 20, 2021 Baker City man claims defamation By JAYSON JACOBY jjacoby@bakercityherald.com Jason Bland Kerry McQuisten back, none of this would have happened. I really just wanted to talk to her about the party.” Bland means the Baker County Republican Party, for which McQuisten is an elected precinct committee person. Bland has also sought to talk to McQuisten about her decision to not support Randy Daugherty’s application to fi ll a vacancy on the City Council. In an Oct. 5 email to Bland, McQuisten wrote: “I have cer- tainly not defamed you by attempting to follow the proper City process ... I think we are clear now that gathering my pri- vate information online, pub- lishing the source in the paper so others could obtain my pri- vate information, or repeat- edly calling on my personal cell phone at home are not appropri- ate. Thanks in advance for hon- oring that.” In the Oct. 5 email, McQuis- ten explained why she men- tioned Bland’s voice mails to Cannon. “It is my job to bring con- cerns about any of our board or committee members to the Limits lifted at Malheur Reservoir Baker City Herald BAKER CITY — Due to low water levels, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wild- life has canceled all size lim- its and daily limits for anglers at Malheur Reservoir south of Baker City through Dec. 31. The reservoir has very limited water due to low win- ter and spring precipitation and exceptionally warm tem- peratures. ODFW staff have observed fi sh kills during pre- vious winters when such con- ditions exist. Based on the developing La Nina and asso- ciated projections for a cooler winter, ODFW believes there is a high likelihood that con- ditions in the reservoir will become lethal for fi sh this winter. “I’m not one to take lightly the liberalization of limits and gear restrictions but given the current water levels and past experience we expect fi sh will die during the winter due to low oxygen levels,” said media smear campaign” against city councilor Lynette Perry, who resigned in August due to health issues, and that McQuis- ten “believed him (Bland) to be drunk at the launch of that cam- paign as well.” Bland denies that allegation. Cannon’s email continues: “The Mayor expressed con- cerns about Mr. Bland serving on the Budget Board if he does have a drinking problem and is taking action against councilors and calling her personal phone while impaired.” Cannon’s email lists fi ve potential options for councilors “in no particular order.” • Take no action. • Discuss the issue in a Council meeting • Replace Mr. Bland on the Budget Board • Instruct staff to research additional information • Individually meet with Mr. Bland to discuss the situation. Later that day — Sept. 24 — Bland phoned Cannon to explain his medical condi- tion and to refute McQuisten’s claims. Cannon then sent a second email to councilors, about two and a half hours after the fi rst, noting what Bland had said in the phone call. “He informed me that he suff ers from a medical condi- tion that slurs his speech,” Can- non wrote in the second email. “He indicated that he does not drink but sometimes when he speaks his speech slurs. His condition became apparent as we were having a conversation on the phone. “He wanted it to be very clear to City Council that he is interested in serving the city and considers himself an upright and respectable citizen here in Baker City,” Cannon wrote in the second email, referring to Bland. “He intently shared his desire to assist and do what’s right on the budget board and for the city. “He indicated that he is try- ing to reach the mayor to dis- cuss the applicant Randy Daughtry (Daugherty) for City Council. He indicated he found her phone numbers on truepeo- ple.com” McQuisten responded to Cannon’s second Sept. 24 email, following his phone con- versation with Bland, writing: “Thank you for letting us know. The cyberstalking and bizarre calls at my home were creepy at best.” Bland said he hand-de- livered a letter to McQuisten during the Council’s Sept. 28 meeting, in which he accuses the mayor of defaming him. “I demand that you imme- diately cease and desist from making any and all false and defamatory statements against me,” Bland wrote in the letter to McQuisten. “I also demand that you publish a retraction of all these false statements in the form of an email to me, Mr. Cannon and all City Council Members by October 6, 2021. If you do not cease and desist immediately, and if you do not provide a retraction by October 6, 2021, I may be forced to take appropriate legal action against you and seek all available dam- ages and remedies.” Bland said in a phone inter- view Tuesday afternoon that he was upset that McQuisten, after receiving Cannon’s second email, explaining the source of Bland’s slurred speech, failed to concede that she was wrong in assuming Bland was intoxicated. Instead, Bland noted, McQuisten repeated her accusa- tion that Bland had engaged in cyberstalking and described his actions as “bizarre” and “creepy at best.” In his letter to McQuisten, Bland addressed those claims. “I do not know what you mean by ‘cyberstalking,’ but I do not engage in any stalking behaviors,” Bland wrote. “That you fi nd phone calls from con- stituents asking for information ‘bizarre’ and ‘creepy at best’ is unacceptable. As an elected offi cial, a County Republican Precinct Committee Person, and a candidate for governor, please respond to a constituent’s inqui- ries rather than defame them — especially after their disability is revealed.” ‘Food trail’ showcases farms Dave Banks, ODFW’s dis- trict fi sh biologist. “My goal with the removal of limits and gear restrictions is to provide opportunities for anglers to use these fi sh.” ODFW plans to restock the reservoir next spring to begin rebuilding the fi shery. Mal- heur Reservoir is a produc- tive waterbody that will grow fi ngerling rainbow trout, three to four inches long, stocked in the spring into eight- to11- inch fi sh by the fall. Those same fi sh will be 14 to 16 inches by their second fall in the reservoir. Low water levels during the fall and ice in winter creates a low oxygen level situation that could be lethal for fi sh. When the reservoir surface freezes, it will trap any remaining oxy- gen under the ice. “This would give the fi sh a very low oxygen supply to persist throughout the winter and normally results in fi sh dying under the ice,” Banks said. By KYLE SPURR The Bulletin BEND — A new self-guided tour through the farmlands of Central Oregon will allow par- ticipants to enjoy the food pro- duced in the region. The High Desert Food Trail, which launched Friday, takes people on a tour of 45 diff erent stops through Deschutes, Jeff erson and Crook counties. The stops include farms and ranches, craft beverage pro- ducers, cooking schools and vineyards. “We are really excited to collaborate with other farms in Central Oregon to share our rich agricultural lands with our com- munity and visitors,’’ said Sar- ahlee Lawrence, owner of Rain- shadow Organics, a 200-acre farm outside of Sisters. Lawrence, 39, was born at the farm, which her family started in 1970. She and her hus- band, Ashanti Samuels, opened A MAN WAKES UP in the morning after sleeping on... an advertised bed, in advertised pajamas. Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin Melody Luloff organizes produce in the farm store at Rainshad- ow Organics. a farm store on the property in 2015. At the store, Lawrence off ers meats, grains and veg- etables all raised on her farm. Participants on the food trail are encouraged to visit Friday and Saturday each week, when the store is open and meals are served, she said. “We call it farm-driven cui- sine,” Lawrence said. “We really are cooking what we “City Cat” Paint Party grow, and it changes every week, every season.” Lawrence is familiar with other food trails in Oregon, including one in Hood River called the Fruit Loop. She is thrilled her farm is on the new trail. It helps people fi nd her farm, which like many other farms is off the beaten path, she said. The High Desert Food Trail was created by the High Des- ert Food and Farm Alliance and Travel Oregon, which runs the Oregon Food Trails. The new trail joins eight other Oregon Food Trails throughout the state, and is the second east of the Cas- cades Mountains. A map of the trail is available on the food and farm alliance website. Annie Nichols, who orga- nized the trail for the food and farm alliance, said brochures with the map will be available at Travel Oregon visitor cen- ters across the state and the Red- mond Airport. The goal is to promote the agriculture of Central Oregon to visitors and locals who may not be aware how many food pro- ducers are in the region, Nich- ols said. “Central Oregon has this vibrant food scene that I think a lot of people, especially in West- ern Oregon, are not quite aware of,” Nichols said. “We have this really cool scene out here that we are trying to highlight and pack- age in a more exciting manner.” Jeff Fox owns Sun Life Farm outside of Prineville, one of four Crook County farms on the food trail. Fox bought the 160-acre farm two years ago. He grows 7,000 lavender plants on the property. His farm also features 5 miles of hiking trails and an area with 19 beehives where he pro- duces honey. Thursday, October 21, 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM Hair-on-Hide Leather Clutch Blue Mountain Eagle MyEagleNews.com Monday - Thursday 7am- 6pm Monday - Thursday 7am- 6pm Friday 8am - 5pm Friday Sharpe 8am - 5pm Mendy FNP “Christmas Ceramics” Paint Party Thursday, November 04, 6:00 PM - 8:30 PM S265263-1 He will bathe in an ADVERTISED TUB, shave with an ADVERTISED RAZOR, have a breakfast of ADVERTISED JUICE, cereal and toast, toasted in an ADVERTISED TOASTER, put on ADVERTISED CLOTHES and glance at his ADVERTISED WATCH. He’ll ride to work in his ADVERTISED CAR, sit at an ADVERTISED DESK and write with an ADVERTISED PEN. Yet this person hesitates to advertise, saying that advertising doesn’t pay. Finally, when his non-advertised business is going under, HE’LL ADVERTISE IT FOR SALE. Then it’s too late. AND THEY SAY ADVERTISING DOESN’T WORK? DON’T MAKE THIS SAME MISTAKE Advertising is an investment, not an expense. Think about it! Friday, October 22, 5:30 PM Saturday, October 23, 7:30 PM Mendy Sharpe FNP Apppointments available Email us: paintedskycenter@gmail.com Call us: 541-575-1335. Follow us on Facebook Visit us: www.paintedskycenter.com 118 S Washington Street, Canyon City, OR 97820 S263297-1 139101 BAKER CITY — Jason Bland, a member of Baker City’s budget committee who sometimes speaks with slurred speech due to multiple scle- rosis, contends Mayor Kerry McQuisten defamed him by suggesting that he was drunk when he left voice mails on her cellphone recently. Bland has given McQuis- ten a letter demanding that she write an email retracting her statements. Bland also wrote that he would consider tak- ing “appropriate legal action against” McQuisten if she does not retract her statements. Bland also attended the City Council meeting on Tuesday evening, Oct. 12 and repeated his request to McQuisten. McQuisten didn’t respond to Bland during the meeting. In a phone interview Tues- day afternoon, Bland said he wants McQuisten to acknowl- edge that she was wrong in assuming he was intoxicated when he left the voice mails, and to apologize. “She’s defamed me, and she’s done it on purpose,” Bland said. “I don’t want somebody like that being my mayor.” Bland said McQuisten could have avoided the confl ict by returning his phone calls. “I just wanted a call,” he said. “If she had just called me council as a body to handle properly; however, as I men- tioned multiple times (as was the reason for my not once men- tioning your name or the issue specifi cs publicly) my desire was the quickest, most discrete resolution during which you would have been involved.” McQuisten mentioned the voice mails during a Council work session Sept. 23, but she didn’t refer to Bland by name. McQuisten also brought the issue to City Manager Jon Can- non, who listened to Bland’s voice mails. Cannon subse- quently sent an email on Sept. 24 to the fi ve other City Council members in which he outlined what the mayor had told him. In the email, Cannon wrote that McQuisten had told him Bland had called her on her city-issued phone and on her personal cellphone, although she had asked him not to use her personal number. “She expressed concerns because the phone messages sound as though Mr. Bland has slurred speech and may be drunk or impaired,” Cannon wrote in the email to councilors. “I have heard three of the mes- sages and can confi rm in two of them the speech is slurred and certainly sounds as though some sort of impairment is apparent.” Cannon also referred in the email to McQuisten’s allegation that Bland instigated a “social S263289-1 Don’t get left behind, call today! Kim Kell 541-575-0710 BACKED BY A YEAR-ROUND CLOG-FREE GUARANTEE R GU 2 15 % & 10 % RD TH GU TE 1 ’S T EXCLUSIVE LIMITED TIME OFFER! 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