BUSINESS WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 2020 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A7 First phase of Wheatridge now online Oregon Health Authority releases weekly workplace outbreak report By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR The Oregon Health Authority’s weekly report of outbreaks of COVID-19 for Dec. 9 shows half of Uma- tilla and Morrow counties’ current workplace outbreaks began within two weeks after Halloween. Umatilla County Public Health Director Joe Fiumara previously stated the area’s spike in cases in November was largely spurred by large Halloween parties with no social distancing. In OHA’s weekly report, outbreaks are reported at workplaces with at least 30 employees that have had at least fi ve cases, and includes employees who tested pos- itive and close contacts of those employees, such as family members. An outbreak is con- sidered active until the site has gone at least 30 days with no new cases, at which time the work- place is taken off the list, and new cases in the future are considered the start of a new outbreak. The outbreaks in Uma- tilla and Morrow counties for the Dec. 9 report are as follows: • Eastern Oregon Cor- rectional Institution, Pendleton, 554 cases since June 24 • Lamb Weston East, Boardman, 96 cases since July 13 • Walmart Distribution Center, Hermiston, 93 cases since June 30 • Good Shepherd Medi- cal Center, Hermiston, 74 cases since July 16 • Lamb Weston Board- man Pac Center, Board- man, 59 cases since July 1 • Shearer’s Foods, Hermiston, 16 cases since Nov. 16 • Smith Frozen Food, Weston, 16 cases since Nov. 17 • Marlette Homes, Hermiston, 13 cases since Nov. 16 • Keystone RV, Pendle- ton, 12 cases since Nov. 16 • Lamb Weston West, Boardman, 10 cases since Nov. 9 • Earl Brown and Sons, Milton-Freewater, nine cases since Oct. 28 • Walmart, Hermiston, six cases since Nov. 4 • Pilot Travel Center, Stanfi eld, fi ve cases since Nov. 16 OHA also reports out- breaks linked to nursing homes and other congregate care facilities. Outbreaks listed in its Dec. 9 report include: • Avamere at Hermis- ton, 47 cases and four deaths since Oct. 26 • Regency Hermiston Nursing and Rehabili- tation Center, fi ve cases since Nov. 7 • Guardian Angel Homes, Hermiston, fi ve cases since Nov. 10 • Cascade Valley Assisted Living, Mil- ton-Freewater, eight cases since Nov. 30 For the full outbreaks report and other statis- tics from Oregon Health Authority’s weekly report, released each Wednesday, visit govstatus.egov.com/ OR-OHA-COVID-19. Portland General Electric/Contributed Photo The wind portion of the Wheatridge Renewable Energy Facility is now operational. and adds to our growing wind generation portfolio. We deeply appreciate the partnerships that make the Wheatridge project pos- sible, with NextEra and with the transmission ser- vices teams at the Bonne- ville Power Administra- tion and Umatilla Electric Cooperative.” Sen. Ron Wyden praised the project in a statement, saying he was happy to have helped the project get over hurdles. He said it will have a “huge benefi t” in both handling the cli- mate crisis and generating jobs in rural Oregon. Port of Morrow General Manager Ryan Neal said in a statement the port’s long- term partnership with PGE has created family-wage jobs for the county, and Morrow County Commis- sioner Don Russell said in a statement the county was pleased to be playing a role in providing clean energy for Oregonians. “Projects like Wheat- ridge Energy Facil- ity provide family-wage jobs, tax revenue for our schools and services and strengthen Morrow Coun- ty’s position in the region’s clean energy economy,” Russell said. According to the news release, the wind farm brings PGE’s wind gen- eration portfolio up to more than 1,000 mega- watts nameplate capac- ity, “typically generat- ing enough power to serve the equivalent of 340,000 homes.” The release said “up to” 300 jobs were cre- ated at Wheatridge during the construction of the wind phase, and about 174 workers will build the solar and battery storage phases. 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The commercial power generation project, a joint venture between Portland General Electric Com- pany and a subsidiary of NextEra Energy Resources, LLC, came online Dec. 8. Accord- ing to a news release from PGE, the facility is “one of the fi rst large-scale energy facilities in the United States to combine wind, solar and battery stor- age resources at a single location.” A 300-megawatt wind farm with 120 turbines was the fi rst phase of the proj- ect and is now generating power. The 50-megawatt solar farm and 30-megawatt battery storage are expected to be operational in 2021. The project — just northeast of Lexington — is part of PGE’s compa- nywide goal of net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2040. “Customers want and expect cleaner, greener energy sources,” Maria Pope, PGE president and CEO, said in a news release. “This is an excit- ing step toward completion of this important resource Tacos Garcia 541-701-0219 Tacos Nayarit 541-571-7209 Tacos Xavi 541-571-6880 Tacos y Mas 541-289-0228 Taste of Thai 541-567-5700 The Pheasant Bar/Grill 541-567-3022 Trina’s Mexican Food 541-289-8888 USA Subs & Grill 541-567-2260 Veg Out 541-561-9231 Ye Olde Pizza Shoppe 541-567-9066 TEMPORARILY CLOSED Cozy Corner Tavern Last Chance Tavern Nookie’s Restaurant Rio Express Shari’s Restaurant Covid-19 regulations are evolving. Please check with restaurants for updated information. 12/14/20