EOU volleyball signs eight In Sports Paid for by committee to Re-elect Boyd Rasmussen. John C Cuthbert, David R Orcutt, Linda & Sheldon Strand Weekend Edition SATURDAY-MONDAY • May 16, 2020 • $1.50 Good day to our valued subscriber Mike Jordan of La Grande LG School Board OKs furloughs for staff ers School district looking at cut of $2.55 million  By Dick Mason The Observer Photos by Observer staff Clockwise from top left: Steve Thompson, a cook at the Longbranch Bar & Eats, La Grande, cleans Thursday. Elsie Andre dishes out clam chowder Thursday in the kitchen of the Skippers restaurant at Short Stop Xtreme, La Grande. Grant Meyer, co-owner of Community Kindness of Eastern Oregon, sets up a plastic barrier in preparation for the store’s May 28 reopening. Blue Mountain Barbers owner Kate Schaffner cuts Dalton Sheets’ hair Friday morning, the fi rst day many Union County businesses were able to be open in Phase 1 of the state’s reopening plan. These and many other businesses in Union County and Oregon are reopening for business as the state eases COVID-19 restrictions. Union County reopens for business Partial reopening in effect for 21 days, county must avoid certain thresholds in order to stay open  By Ronald Bond, Dick Mason and Sabrina Thompson The Observer LA GRANDE — Kate Schaff- ner’s excitement of being back in business could probably speak for all business owners in northeast Oregon who are reopening their doors. The owner of Blue Mountain Barbers, along with four additional barbers who work as independent contractors in her La Grande shop, was able to resume seeing cus- tomers Friday after nearly eight weeks of not operating due to stay- home orders and the closure of businesses deemed nonessential in the wake of the coronavirus. “(It’s) a necessity,” she said of going back to work, “and I think by nature, people who work in the business need people. We built ongoing relationships, and we worry about them a lot.” Oregon Gov. Kate Brown announced Thursday morning that most Oregon counties will be able to enter into a phased approach for reopening, leaving behind the limits on activities she put in place in March with an executive order to fi ght the spread of COVID-19. By the end of Thursday, 31 of 36 counties received approval for partial reopening. All coun- ties east of the Cascade Moun- tains can enter Phase 1, as can southern Oregon counties. In the Willamette Valley, the popu- lous counties of Lane, Linn and Benton also received permission to reopen. Businesses will have to follow the reopening require- ments the Oregon Health Authority established. Authority confi rmed a second case in Wallowa County. The Union County case was a contact to a confi rmed case, according to the center’s press release, and the center is working to fi nd out who else may have been in close contact with the person and isolate them. Close contact, according to the center, is anyone within 6 feet of an individual with the virus for more than 15 minutes. Elizabeth Sieders, communi- cable disease nurse at the center, said in the press release with reopening comes the anticipation of “a growing number of people identifi ed as contacts to a con- fi rmed case.” STATE STORY INSIDE To read more about reopening plans in Oregon, see the article on Page 7A. For Schaffner and Blue Moun- tain Barbers, this means keeping their work stations at least 6 feet apart, using new capes for each customer and cleaning the stations in between clients, which she said will take about 10 minutes each. “We’re going to take turns cleaning as we get through people,” she said. “One person will be assigned to do extra cleaning. With all of us there, it’ll be more effi cient.” The reopening began the same morning as the Center for Human Development Inc., Union County’s public health authority, announced the county’s fi fth case of COVID- 19. Later Friday, Oregon Health Shop owners, employees endure tough times Schaffner said it has been a challenge since her shop closed in late March. See, Open/Page 5A “It will be a very different world going forward. Anything in the direction of normal is good.” “It will likely be a different experience because we are asking businesses to put mitigation in place.” — Matt Scarfo, Union County commissioner and pub owner — Carrie Brogoitti, Union County public health administrator “One of our main objectives is to keep everyone safe.” — Liz Meyer, co-owner, Community Kindness of Eastern Oregon LA GRANDE — The La Grande School Board voted Wednesday to approve a plan that will furlough all teachers and staff one day a week for much of the remainder of 2019-20. The purpose of the fur- loughs is to save money during the COVID-19 pan- demic, money the dis- trict will use to buffer the impact of looming budget cuts in 2020-21. The board endorsed the furlough plan after the La Grande School District’s teacher and clas- sifi ed staff unions voted in support of the furlough days. Each union over- whelmingly supported the furlough days, with each voting at least 90% in favor, said La Grande School District Superin- tendent George Mendoza. Mendoza said the school district has applied to the Oregon Work Share Program to compensate employees for the pay they will lose due to the lost workdays. The state already has agreed to pro- vide Work Share Oregon funding to help other school districts where employees are taking fur- lough days, said La Grande School Board Chair Merle Comfort. Administration, confi - dential and teaching staff will furlough four work- days from May 11 to June 30, and classifi ed staff, which includes cooks, sec- retaries and physical plant staff, will furlough four workdays from May 14 to June 5. The furlough program will allow the school dis- trict to save $300,000 on employee pay for the remainder of the school year. “We are looking at many, many ways to reduce costs in the dis- trict. This is one way right now we can save money without dramati- cally impacting employees fi nancially,” Mendoza said in a news release. Oregon Gov. Kate Brown’s shutdown order to prevent the spread of the virus has had a ter- rible effect on the state’s economy because it See, Furloughs/Page 3A INDEX Classified ..... 2B Comics ......... 5B Community . 3A Crossword ... 2B CONTACT US Dear Abby ... 6B Horoscope ... 2B Lottery.......... 2A Obituaries .... 3A TUESDAY 541-963-3161 Opinion ........ 4A Outdoors ..... 1B Sports .......... 6A State ............. 7A Issue 59 2 sections, 14 pages La Grande, Oregon THE DALGONA COFFEE SENSATION Email story ideas to news@lagrande observer.com. More contact info on Page 4A. Online at lagrandeobserver.com “Better Relationships for Safer Communities” 3 Please remember to check your registration VOTE status and vote Paid for by committee to elect Cody Bowen.