WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2021 | SILVERTONAPPEAL.COM PART OF THE USA TODAY NETWORK Back in the spotlight Wildfires bring more ‘unhealthy air’ days in recent years Tracy Loew Salem Statesman Journal USA TODAY NETWORK Members of the Valley Shakespeare Company perform “Twelfth Night” last week at Western Oregon University. CONNOR RADNOVICH/STATESMAN JOURNAL Artists savor each moment in return to the stage Twelfth Night (or What You Will) Salem had its first “unhealthy air” day on record in 2014, when smoke from multiple wildfires settled over the city. That increased to two days in 2015, two in 2017, and four in 2018. In 2020, Salem recorded 11 un- healthy air days, including seven that were consid- ered “hazardous.” From 1985 to 2014, Eugene had just two days with air quality rated as unhealthy. It’s had between one and 22 unhealthy air quality days for seven of the past eight years. Across the state, the number of unhealthy air quality days caused by wildfires are increasing, the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality’s an- nual wildfire smoke trends report shows. The report tracks wildfire-related air quality trends in 24 Oregon communities, using data from DEQ’s Air Quality Index. The index measures levels of fine particulate mat- ter, or PM 2.5, the primary pollutant in wildfire smoke. It categorizes air quality, from best to worst, as good, moderate, unhealthy for sensitive groups, unhealthy, very unhealthy and hazardous. The report calls the number of days in the four See AIR, Page 2 Bill Poehler and Natalie Pate 7:30 p.m., July 29, 30, 31 at the Leinwand outdoor stage, Western Oregon University. For more information, go to wou.edu/valley-shakespeare-company. Salem Statesman Journal USA TODAY NETWORK The Severin Sisters Law forbids requiring vaccine for health care workers H annah Kellebrew’s life changed a lot in the past year. She graduat- ed from Western Oregon Univer- sity, got married, got COVID-19, recovered and started a new job at Dallas Re- tirement Village. Still, there was something missing. With coronavirus-related restric- tions in Oregon making live performances in arts like music, comedy and theater nearly im- possible over the past year, Kellebrew couldn’t get on stage in front of an audience. For a time, she felt like she lost her purpose in life. Thursday night, July 22, when she delivered the line, “I am the man,” as Viola in “Twelfth Night” (or “What You Will”), a few hundred people sitting in the cool grass of the outdoor stage at Western Oregon University roared with laughter. The reaction Kellebrew elicited the opening night of the Valley Shakespeare Company’s production of Shakespeare’s excited her so much that she flubbed a couple of lines later in the play. That moment, though, made everything she went through over the past year worth it. “It’s been two years since I’ve had this feeling, and I was extremely nervous, but nothing bad can happen 6:30 p.m. Aug. 4, Monmouth Main Street Park; 5:15 p.m. Aug. 7, Homer Davenport Music Festival, Coolidge & McClaine Park, Silverton; 5 p.m. Sept. 4, Trinity Vineyards, Salem. For more information www.severinsisters.com. Live Comedy Friday open mic coming up on Aug. 6 at Keizer Homegrown Theatre on the second floor of 980 Chemawa Rd NE. The show starts at 8 p.m., with seating beginning at 7:30. Buy tickets and learn about other PNW Comedy shows across the region at pnwcomedy.com. to me right now,” Kellebrew said. “I’m golden.” Performers like Kellebrew had a large part of their identity taken away over the past year. Some tried performing virtually or in small, socially distanced shows. Playing to a camera or in front of a distant, masked audience was a poor substitute for what it’s like in front of a full, live one. And audiences are hungrier for live performances than ever. They show up early, mingle with friends they haven’t seen in years and experience something they didn’t know if they would be able to do again. “People are just so joyful to be out and about and having an experience again, a real-live experience,” said Amy Severin, one-third of The Severin Sisters, a roots music group from Salem. “Having had that tak- en away, having that back, we’re forever going to be See ARTISTS, Page 2 Some state employees eligible for ‘hazard pay’ Connor Radnovich USA TODAY NETWORK Miniature State of Oregon flags are displayed in the Senate floor in the Capitol in Salem, Ore. on Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2021. BRIAN HAYES / STATESMAN JOURNAL State employees who worked mandatory, in-per- son hours during the pandemic will be eligible for one-time “COVID hazard payments” after new tenta- tive labor agreements were struck early Tuesday morning. Workers who logged between 480 and 1,039 hours between March 8, 2020 and June 30, 2021 are expect- ed to receive $1,050, while those who worked more than 1,040 hours are in line for $1,550. This applies to all workers, whether they are union members or not. “State workers masked up and did their jobs through a pandemic,” said Melissa Unger, executive director of SEIU Local 503. “Hazard pay is a recogni- tion of the risks they took to keep essential services like food assistance, healthcare and infrastructure running.” In addition, AFSCME members who logged more than 200 hours of in-person overtime during the same timeframe are slated to receive $575. SEIU also expects to have the same benefit for its members, but is still in negotiations with the state on this detail. It’s unclear if this benefit is also extended to non- union-represented state workers. The tentative agreements still need to be ratified by a vote of all members. See PAY, Page 3 Vol. 140, No. 33 Online at SilvertonAppeal.com News updates: h Breaking news h Get updates from the Silverton area Photos: h Photo galleries Register-Guard USA TODAY NETWORK A 32-year-old law sets Oregon apart as the only state in the country where vaccines can’t be mandat- ed for health care workers, firefighters, law enforce- ment and probation officers. The 1989 bill was introduced during the HIV epi- demic to ensure health care workers are alerted when they might be exposed to infectious diseases and have access to preventative immunizations. But a one-sentence item in the bill that says immunization shall not be required as a condition of work has set a unique challenge for health care and emergency ser- vices employers. When Dr. Patrick Luedtke, Lane County’s senior public health officer, moved to Oregon a decade ago, he was unaware of the law. “I quickly bumped into it,” Luedtke said. “I was working with a hospital and they wanted to mandate the influenza vaccine for their health care workers and I helped them write up a policy and a procedure, and I decided to run it by the (state’s) medical direc- tor for immunizations.” He was surprised to learn about ORS 433.416, a huge barrier to his policy or anything like it. “It was a rude awakening, and that is the law of the land here in Oregon,” Luedtke said. “It’s a challenge, as you might imagine, in regular times and even more so during pandemics.” Some can require vaccination One-time payments between $1,050, $1,550 Salem Statesman Journal Tatiana Parafiniuk-Talesnick Serving the Silverton Area Since 1880 A Unique Edition of the Statesman Journal QEAJAB-07403y As the delta variant of the coronavirus continues to spread throughout the country, many health care workers in Oregon remain unvaccinated. According to data released from the Oregon Health Authority earlier this month, 70% of health care workers are vaccinated — 5% more than the gen- eral population. However, numbers vary depending on vocation. While 94% of dentists and 87% of med- ical doctors got their shots, only 57% of certified nursing assistants and 56% of EMTs are vaccinated. Long-term care facilities that voluntarily reported weekly COVID-19 vaccination data to the state had 84% of residents and 62% of staff completely vacci- nated as of May 9, the most recent data available. The state on June 1 mandated long-term care facil- ities provide data, but that data isn’t yet public. OHA officials said the new data might be released in mid- August. In the meantime, people with loved ones in these facilities have to depend on vaccination information that’s voluntarily shared or learn more when there’s an outbreak. There are currently two active care facility out- breaks in Marion County and one in Polk County, ac- cording to Oregon Health Authority. There are 11 CO- VID-19 cases at Salem Transitional Care, seven at Dallas Retirement Village Health Center and three at Providence Benedictine Nursing Center. A large outbreak hit a Florence memory care and assisted living facility west of Eugene earlier this month and so far infected nine staff members and 20 residents at Spruce Point Assisted Living and Memo- ry Care. As of Thursday, 25 have been infected, ac- See VACCINE, Page 3