Written by LISA BRITTON, Baker City Herald
September 02, 2008 02:46 pm
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 Belgian draft horses are used to cultivate and harvest crops on the Mader farm north of Halfway. David Mader guides a 3-year-old Belgian, Red, while an apprentice on the farm handles the single-horse cultivator. (Baker City Herald/S. John Collins) Horsepower Organics, Baker County’s first, and so far only, Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) program
Deborah Mader hollers a hearty “hello” from the strawberry patch, then
directs her visitors to the garden gate back down the lane.
“Garden gate,” in this instance, is a bit misleading.
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Written by ED MERRIMAN, Baker City Herald
September 01, 2008 01:00 am
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When it comes to borrowing money for a business venture, don’t give up just because the first banker you talked to said no.
Speakers delivered that message to entrepreneurs and others attending a
Thursday evening PubTalk economic development gathering at Mad
Matilda’s coffee shop and restaurant in downtown Baker City.
When an entrepreneur is short of cash or other capital to qualify for a
conventional business loan to launch a new business venture, help might
be available to turn the initial no to a yes, by tapping into a variety
of government loan guarantees, direct loans and grants targeting rural
areas, said LaDonn McElligott of the USDA Rural
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Written by LISA BRITTON, Baker City Herald
August 29, 2008 01:55 pm
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 Gelato is served in two sizes — small at 120 grams and large at 190 grams — with a small, flat plastic spoon that encourages you totake small bites. (Lisa Britton/Baker City Herald) Gelato, which means “freeze” or “frozen,” is a creamy confection that is more dense than ice cream, and has less fat.
“It’s more flavor, less fat, less air,” Caisse said.
Ann and Andrew Bryan, owners of Mad Matilda’s, first tasted gelato on their honeymoon in Italy.
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Written by ED MERRIMAN, Baker City Herald
August 28, 2008 12:43 pm
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As the nation celebrates Labor Day this weekend, Sen. Hilary Clinton, Robert Kennedy Jr., and other speakers at the United Farm Workers national convention in California are supporting passage of the Employee Free Choice Act, which would make it easier for workers in Baker County and across the nation to unionize.
Baker County ranchers who raise cattle for Country Natural Beef wound up in the middle of the political battle over a key provision of the Employee Free Choice Act when Sen. Barack Obama weighed in on a labor dispute between the UFW and the Beef Northwest feedlot in Boardman that finishes cattle for Country Natural Beef.
In an Aug. 4 letter to John Wilson, an owner of Beef Northwest, Obama wrote of his “concerns about the breakdown in communication between Beef Northwest Feeders and the United Farm Workers.”
The UFW has demanded that Beef Northwest recognize card checks circulated among feedlot employees by union organizers. UFW officials claim they have collected signed cards from a majority of Beef Northwest workers who want to join the union.
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Written by Mike Ferguson, Baker City Herald
August 27, 2008 03:39 pm
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By a 4-2 vote, the Baker City Council gave final approval Tuesday night to a sidewalk utility fee designed to, over the next five years, pay to repair or build sections of as many as 300 sidewalks.
The fee — $1 per month for residents, $2 for businesses — is expected to raise up to $60,000 annually, with no less than 25 percent going toward grants of up to $1,000 to help residents repair or construct sidewalks.
Mayor Jeff Petry and councilor Andrew Bryan voted no, while councilors Dennis Dorrah, Beverly Calder, Sam Bass and Terry Schumacher voted yes. Councilor Gail Duman was absent.
The city will begin assessing the sidewalk fee about Oct. 1.
The ordinance is not without its detractors.
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