NEWS Blue Mountain Eagle A8 Wednesday, July 27, 2022 Fire breaks curbed June blaze lar terrain in Malheur County. That fi re prompted local res- idents and BLM offi cials to talk about wildfi res, and residents cre- ated the Malheur County Commu- nity Wildfi re Protection Plan. That plan included building fi re breaks across public and private land. Johnson said the system of fi re breaks “gives our personnel some- thing to work off of,” but it’s not guaranteed, because of varied weather patterns, that the breaks will stop a blaze dead in its tracks. “It’s all dependent on fi re activ- ity, because you can have fi re whirls that bring embers across the road,” Johnson said. But with the Willowcreek Fire, the breaks fulfi lled their purpose despite the gusty winds. “Being proactive saved us from having a fi re twice as big,” said Toby McBride, a volunteer with the Vale Rangeland Fire Protection District who helps maintain the fi re breaks and was on the ground during the Willowcreek Fire. “The wind was blowing pretty good, but the fi re burned right up to the lines and went out. I don’t think we would’ve held it at the road without them.” Robinson agreed. “Fuel breaks helped fi re- fi ghters contain the Willow- creek Fire without bulldozers or other heavy equipment,” he said. “This project’s success shows us how important collaboration can be to protect local communities from wildfi res.” By CLAYTON FRANKE Baker City Herald VALE — A tractor that plowed swathes through rangeland in north- ern Malheur County more than two decades ago is a major reason why the Willowcreek Fire, the biggest blaze in the area so far this year, stopped when it did in late June, according to offi - cials from the Bureau of Land Man- agement’s Vale District. A series of fi re breaks dug 22 years ago made “all the diff erence with sup- pression eff orts on the Willowcreek Fire,” according to a July 15 press release. The blaze, which started on pri- vate land north of Vale on June 28 and burned 40,274 acres, mostly on that day and the next, was fully con- tained as of July 11, said Larisa Bog- ardus, public aff airs offi cer for the Vale District. The cause of the fi re is still under investigation, Bogardus said on Thurs- day, July 21. The fi re didn’t burn any structures, and no one was hurt. The fi re burned about 24,400 acres of pri- vate land, 15,300 acres of public land managed by the BLM and about 572 acres of state ground. Flames likely would have spread across more of the sagebrush and grass range if not for those fi re breaks, said Marcus Johnson, who was incident commander on the Willowcreek Fire. “As an incident commander, it’s a huge benefi t for us because a lot of us know where these lines are and have a good idea of where we can catch them when the fi res start to go extreme,” said Kristen Munday/Bureau of Land Management An aerial photo shows how the Willowcreek Fire in late June 2022 was stopped when it reached a fi re break that was made about 22 years ago and is maintained annually. Johnson, who’s a wildland fi re techni- cian for the Vale District. “Any fi re that started on your urban interface area, we’re just trying to keep it off federal land and vice versa — if we have a fi re on federal land, we really don’t want to push it onto the urban interface,” Johnson said. The fi re breaks are created using tractors with metal disk attachments that remove vegetation and expose bare dirt, which deprives fl ames of fuel. Workers also mow grass and use herbicides to control grass. Kristen Munday/Bureau of Land Management A fi re break, built along a road, helped stop the Willow- creek Fire in late June 2022 in northern Malheur County. When built near roads, the breaks create a 50-foot buff er — a zone where fi re crews have a better chance to stop advancing fl ames. Each spring or summer, typically in May or June, BLM workers maintains the fi re breaks, Johnson said. They bring in heavy machinery to clear out vegetation in preparation for fi re sea- son. Johnson said they completed this year’s maintenance on the breaks in the Willowcreek Fire area just two weeks before it ignited on a 100-degree day with gusty west winds. “We’ve been maintaining these manmade fuel barriers over the last two decades,” said Justin Robinson, fuels technician for the Vale District. “We’re making it safer for our fi re- fi ghters and our communities.” Fire break history The idea for the fi re breaks that helped stop the Willowcreek Fire dates back almost 22 years. In 2000, the Jackson Fire burned about 80,000 acres — twice as many as the Willowcreek Fire — of simi- OSP delves into Finley Creek case By DICK MASON The Observer UNION COUNTY — A four-decade-old Union County mystery may be on the verge of being solved or taking another unforgettable twist. The Oregon State Police are set, next month, to con- duct an examination and pos- sible excavations at a site near Finley Creek, 18 miles north of La Grande, where the remains of an unidentifi ed woman were found in August 1978. “We are planning on mid-August or late August,” said Sgt. Sean Belding, a mem- ber of OSP’s major crimes division. Belding will be joined by Calvin Davis, director of the OSP’s crime lab in Pendle- ton, and Dr. Nici Vance, from the State Medical Examiner’s Offi ce, plus members of the Fin- ley Creek Jane Doe Task Force. Belding, Davis and Vance recently decided to conduct the examination and possible digs after learning of how a pair of cadaver dogs responded on Thursday, June 23, at the Finley Creek site. Each dog, trained to smell human bones and brought there by the task force, indicated they had found buried human bones at the same two places while operat- ing separately. Belding, who accompa- Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Cadaver dog Brynn and a team of volunteers including Suzanne Timms, seated, in August 2021 investigate the area where the Finley Creek Jane Doe was discovered near Elgin in 1978. With Timms are her relatives Jennifer Harringten, center, and Wenda Parr, left, plus Karin Anderson of Dallas, Texas, who is a mem- ber of a Reporter’s Notebook group that is producing podcasts about the search for the identity of the Finley Creek Jane Doe. A missing person poster for Patricia Otto sits on the cof- fee table of her daughter, Suzanne Timms, on Oct. 26, 2021, at Timms’ home in Walla Walla. Timms believes the Fin- ley Creek Jane Doe, found near Elgin in 1978, is her mother. nied the task force on its June 23 visit, said he was impressed with the interest each dog showed in the two sites. The canines laid down at the same place, an indication they were positive human bones were underneath the location, said Melinda Jederberg of La Grande, a leader of the Finely Creek Jane Doe Task Force, which she founded in 2019. This was the second time the cadaver dogs were brought to the Finley Creek site by the task force. They were also brought there in the summer of she is certain the Finley Creek Jane Doe is her mother, Patri- cia “Patty” Otto, of Lewiston, Idaho, who has been missing since Aug. 31, 1976. “Oregon is giving resources toward the case. It gives me hope,” she said. Timms fi rst suspected that the Finley Creek Jane Doe was her mother in 2021 when she saw an image created by a forensic artist in Massachu- setts, Anthony Redgrave, the operator of Redgrave Research Forensic Services. Red- grave was assisting the Finley Suzanne Timms/Contributed Photo 2021, when they also indicated they detected human bones there. The task force members have never dug at the Finley Creek site because it is a crime scene and thus it would be ille- gal to disrupt it. A daughter who will not give up hope Suzanne Timms of Walla Walla, Washinhton, who is assisting with the search as a volunteer, is elated that the OSP investigators will be examining the site because JOHN ROEHM LICENSED AND BONDED RESIDENTIAL Shawna Clark, DNP, FNP CCB # 217672 541-575-1263 SPECIALIZING IN: SERVING EASTERN OREGON 235 S. Canyon Blvd. John Day, Oregon 97845 PHONE: www.canyoncreekclinic.com Accepting new Patients! Go to: 503-341-1796 EMAIL: ROEHMJOHN66@GMAIL.COM FEEL THE SPEED, EVEN AT PEAK TIMES. Get strong, fast Wi-Fi to work and play throughout your home. ^ Smart security. Professionally installed. No annual contract. Protection starts with prevention Based on wired connection to gateway. Power multiple devices at once— everyone can enjoy their own screen. Peace of Mind Starts Here Number of devices depends on screen size/resolution. Over 99% reliability. AT&T INTERNET 100 †† Excludes DSL. Based on network availability. 45 $ A possible Lewiston, Idaho, murder Timms believes her mother was murdered in Lewiston by her father and then taken to Finley Creek where he buried her in a shallow grave. The OSP’s autopsy records for the Finley Creek Jane Doe, however, do not match those of Patty Otto. Timms believes the dis- crepancy is due to an error made by the OSP’s medi- cal examiner while doing examinations of the skeletal remains of two Jane Does in his offi ce at about the same time in 1978. She suspects he assigned his reports to the wrong remains, because his report for the second Jane Doe matches her mother’s autopsy photos and dental records. Should human bones be found at the Finley Creek site they will likely be tested by the state to determine if their DNA indicates they are those of Timms’ mother. Should such bones turn out not to be those of Patty Otto, another layer of mystery will be added to the Finley Creek case. Timms is striving to keep the memory of her mother alive with a ceremony in Lew- iston, Idaho, set for Aug. 4, which would have been her 70th birthday. Seventy signs with Otto’s name will be car- ried by 70 people for 24 min- utes down main street in Lew- iston. The time will symbolize Otto’s age, for she was 24 in 1976 when she disappeared. Timms is touched by the number of people who are vol- unteering to participate in the memorial. “It shows that my mother is not forgotten,” she said. STRUCTION, LL N O C C AW Featuring: CONSTRUCTION, INC. General Contractor MANUFACTURED HOUSING EXCAVATION WORK SITE CLEANUP & DEMOLITION DRIVEWAYS Creek Jane Doe Task Force, and the image he cre- ated looked very similar Anthony to Timms’ Redgrave of mother. 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