EASTER ACTIVITIES FOR KIDS AROUND GRANT COUNTY PAGE A7 The Blue Mountain EAGLE Grant County’s newspaper since 1868 W EDNESDAY , A PRIL 12, 2017 • N O . 15 • 20 P AGES • $1.00 www.MyEagleNews.com Prairie City resident remains in critical condition after fi re destroys home Waits hospitalized for complications from smoke inhalation By Rylan Boggs Blue Mountain Eagle A mobile home in Prairie City was destroyed by a fi re early Sunday morning. The Prairie City Fire Department was on scene with two fire engines within minutes of receiving the call just after 8 a.m., but the structure was deemed a total loss by Fire Chief Marvin Rynear- son. Eula Waits, the homeowner, was trans- ported to St. Charles Medical Center in Bend for respiratory complications stemming from smoke inhalation, Rynearson said. She remains in critical condition as of Tuesday afternoon, according to the hospital. After making initial contact, the Prairie City department requested assistance from John Day, and another fi re engine was dis- patched. The scene is currently ribboned off and under guard to keep people off the proper- ty due to fears it may be unsafe, Rynearson said. Disaster responders with the American Red Cross Cascades Re- gion responded to the home Sunday evening. The fi re affected two adults and three children, and the Red Cross provided re- sources to help address the immediate basic needs of those affected, such as temporary housing, food, clothing, comfort kits, infor- mation about recovery services and health and mental health services, according to a press release. Contributed photo/Trever Hamsher Rynearson said the cause of the fi re is A mobile home burns in Prairie City Sunday, April 9. still under investigation. AN INSIDE LOOK STEM students learn about health care, careers By Rylan Boggs Blue Mountain Eagle T hird- and fourth-grad- ers from Humbolt Elementary got the chance to see the in- ner workings of Blue Mountain Hospital and learn about health care last week. Forty kids learned about the different departments and posi- tions in the hospital and how each department works in conjunction with the others as part of the OSU Extension offi ce STEM — sci- ence, technology, engineering and math — program Friday. Some of the students’ favorites were the ambulance, emergency room and information technology departments. Ambulance staff answered questions, told students what qual- ifi cations were needed to work as ambulance staff and gave them a tour of the inside of an ambulance. The staff work two-day shifts and have four days off. During those two days they are constant- ly on call and live at the hospital. See LOOK, Page A10 John Nehl raises his hand to ask ambulance staff a question. Eagle photos Rylan Boggs Hannah Vaughan covers her mouth as Josh Zigler, left, tells students about blood work at Blue Mountain Hospital Friday, April 7. Also pictured are Logan Randleas and Hailey Mecham. Grant County midwife’s license revoked Dress accused of falsifying birth certificates, practicing without a license in Washington By Sean Hart Blue Mountain Eagle Grant County midwife Sherry Dress’ license has been revoked for misconduct, but she claims she has done noth- ing that cannot be explained. Dress, 69, was accused of falsifying birth certifi cates and submitting a fraudulent Medicaid claim. Her Oregon direct-entry midwifery li- cense, which expired in Sep- tember 2015, was revoked. She recently reached a settlement to repay $20,000 to the Department of Human Services for Medicaid over- payments. Dress is also awaiting trial in Wash- ington on new charges of practicing midwifery Sherry without a li- Dress cense — after pleading guilty to the same in May 2016, after being issued a cease-and-desist order by the state in 2013. Dress said she simply could not afford to contin- ue fi ghting the Oregon cases but plans to plead her case in court in Washington. She said she did not break the Washington law because she offered her services for free, accepting only “gratuitous” reimbursements for expenses, as a Christian ministry. “I’m a very passionate, loving person, and this is what I do,” she said. “I love deliv- ering babies, and I love taking care of people. As a loving Christian woman, I believe that God called me to do this.” Oregon license revocation Oregon’s Board of Direct Entry Midwifery accused Dress of falsifying fi ve birth certifi cates between May 2014 and May 2015. For each, Dress certifi ed the chil- dren were born at her Canyon City residence, when they were born in Pasco or Walla Walla, Washington. Dress told the Eagle she did list Oregon as the birthplace for Washing- ton births under “special cir- cumstances.” In one of the fi ve cases, she said, the mother planned to drive to Grant County so Dress could bill an Oregon insurance provider for the ser- vices, which she could only do for births in Oregon. How- ever, the baby came before the mother made it to Oregon, so Dress said she listed Oregon so she could still submit the bill. Dress said, in her profes- sional experience, the exact place of birth is not always listed on a birth certifi cate. When she worked as a reg- istered nurse in California in 1971, she said, the hospital was often listed as the birth- place, even for babies born in ambulances, vehicles, aban- doned buildings or other plac- es without addresses at the Mexican border, because an address was required. She also said, for two of the fi ve cases for babies born in June 2014, the clients contacted her in December 2014, requesting that she help See REVOKED, Page A10