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Serving Baker County since 1870 • bakercityherald.com
October 14, 2015
>N >H>s aDmoN: Local • Business @AgLife • Go! magazine s< QUICIC HITS
BaKerCity ConncilFills Vacancy
A special good day to Herald subscriber Carol Tone of Baker City.
Local, 3A Baker County's noxious weed supervisor is reminding property owners that fall is the ideal time to deal with these vegetative invaders. Spraying weeds with herbicide during fall can be eff ective because when temperatures cool, weeds begin storing energy, in the form of carbohydrates, in their roots, said Arnie Grammon, Baker County Weed Supervisor.
By Joshua Dillen
residents who
]dill an©bakercityherald.com
applied, will
The Baker City Council needed less than 10 minutes Tuesday night to appoint a councilor to fill the vacancy left when Ben Merrill resigned last month. The Council appointed Margaret D."Sandy" Lewis to replace Merrill. Lewis, 56, one of four
serve a term that ends Dec. 31, 2016. Three of the six councilLewis ors voted to appoint Lewis: Rosemary Abell, Michael Downing and Mayor Kim Mosier. Randy Daugherty, who
nurse who has lived in Baker City since 2006, was sworn in by City Recorder Luke Yeaton and participated ascouncilorfortherestof the meeting. In aletter thataccompanied her application, Lewis wrote that she would bring to the City Council "a positive and participatory attitude. "
served a four-year term as a councilo rfrom 2003-06, receivedtwo votes,from Councilors Richard Langrell and Jim Thomas. Michael Meyer received one vote, from Councilor Mack Augenfeld. The fourth applicant, Dawn Alicia Buckelew, did not receive any votes. Lewis, aretired registered
Tamaracks Turning: Sure Sign Of The Season '
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Phillips trail The Oregon Parks and Recreation Department has scheduled an open house for Oct. 26 in Baker City to collect public comments about the state's proposal to designate the trail along the south shore of Phillips Reservoir as a Oregon Scenic Trail. The open house will run from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at the Baker County Library, 2400 Resort St. Oregon Scenic Trails are non-motorized trails that are longer than one mile, open to the public, and that access significant scenery. The southshore trail runs for 6.6 miles between Mason Dam and Hudspeth Lane. It is open to hikers, mountain bikes and horses. People can also submit written comments about the proposal online at http://www. oregon.gov/oprd/Trail Programs Services/ Pages/PhillipsLakeTrail. aspx. Comments will be accepted through Nov. 13.
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The Baker City Council approved a new contract with City Manager Mike Kee on Tuesday. Kee,57, who has been city manager since September 2010, will officiaily retire Nov. 1. But the new Kee contract will allow him to continue as manager another six months, through April 29. The six-month contract, which Kee proposed, saves the ctty nearly $2,000 per month in contributions to his PERS retirement account. Kee also will help the city recruit hisreplacement. Councilor Richard Langrell was not in favor of the new terms. "Normally, the interim city m anager's contractsarejust until we find a new city manager," Langrell said.'Would you have a problem changing this so it's just until we find a replacement...and that replacementisready?" See Kee/Page 6A
Hunter
hurtin fall on Dooley
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S. John Collins /Baker City Herald
Tamarack trees glow with evening light Saturday as autumn continues to play colorfully along the Elkhorn Scenic Byway. The popular 106-mile paved route winds from Baker Valley to high-mountain lakes, like Anthony Lake, on past bright, shiny aspens to Granite and Sumpter before returning travelers to Baker City. The lndian summer weather that has predominated this fall will continue through Friday. Clouds will return for the weekend with a chance of showers and high temperatures dropping into the 60s.
An 83-year-old Summerville man was listed in stable condition today at Providence St. Mary Medical Center in Walla Walla, Washington, where he isbeing treated for injuries sustained in a fall while hunting in the Dooley Mountain area Tuesday. Jack Krieger rolled down a steep mountainside after falling Tuesday morning, Sheriff Travis Ash said in a press release. See Hunter/Page 8A
enie ecs unconro i sin aem For the Baker City Herald
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By Pat Caldwell
WEATHER
Kee's
By Joshua Dillen
BRIEFING
proposed for scenic status
Your guide to events happening around the region
]dill an©bakercityherald.com
Oregon, 5A ROSEBURG (ApjHundreds of people lined the road leading to the Oregon community college where a gunman killed nine people, holding signs reading "UCC Strong" as students returned M onday to the scene of the deadliest shooting in state history. The Umpqua Community College campus in Roseburg re-opened last week, but students are heading backto class for the first time since the Oct. 1 shooting.
RQ GO! Magazine
Counci OKs
Good Day Wish To A Subscriber
Today
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Oregon state Rep. Cliff Bentz is no stranger to controversial issuesthatcan impact his constituents. The longtime Oregon legislator has tackled such highprofil e topicsaswaterrights
and sage grouse protection. Yet Bentz, an Ontario Republican whose district includes Baker County, Bentz said there is one issue so polarizing — gun
control — that he's not sure how to approach it. Bentz, who describes himselfasa dedicated supporter of the Second Amendment, said the mass shooting earlier this month at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg resonated across
the state and nation. "Itwas perfectly horrid," Bentz said. The mass murder reignited a vigorous national debate regarding gun rights and what can be or should be done to try to prevent such events.
President Barack Obama pointedly vowed to politicize the issue, while Democrats in the U.S. Senate touted bills expanding background checks for prospective gun buyers. See Bentz/Page 8A
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Issue 68, 32 pages
Business... ........1B & 2B Comics.......................3B DearAbby..... ............SB News of Record... .....3A Senior Menus...........2A Calendar....................2A C o m m u nity News....3A Hor o scope........5B & 6B Ob i t uaries........2A & 3A Spo r t s ........................SA Classified............. 4B-7B C r o ssword........5B & 6B L e t t ers........................ 4A O p i n ion......................4A We a t her ..................... SB
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