The lost season, part 3 Inside Chief takes on deputy role, 2A The Thrill of the Hunt, 1B in Sports Weekend Edition SATURDAY-MONDAY • May 23, 2020 COVID-19 by the numbers* Worldwide cases: 4,995,996 Worldwide deaths: 327,821 U.S. cases: 1,571,617 U.S. deaths: 94,150 Total U.S. tests: 12,917,827 Oregon cases: 3,864 Good day to our valued subscriber Robert Rea of La Grande • $1.50 Oregon active cases: 1,922 Oregon deaths: 147 Total Oregon tests: 107,745 Union County cases: 6 Union County active cases: 3 Union County deaths: 0 Total Union County tests: 325 Wallowa County cases: 1 Wallowa County active cases: 0 Wallowa County deaths: 0 Total Wallowa County tests: 98 *As of 2 p.m. Friday, May 22. Sources: World Health Organization, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Oregon Health Authority and Oregon Military Department. Virtual health care fl ourishes during pandemic Cycling challenge may help fi ll void Studies show 1 in 4 people in rural areas unable to access health care La Grande cyclers set up mountain bike race course   By Ronald Bond The Observer By Sierra Dawn McClain EO Media Group SALEM — COVID-19 has forced health care into cyberspace, and some rural providers say the shift could be a post-pandemic “silver lining.” When Gov. Kate Brown ordered health care pro- viders to stop non-emer- gency services March 30, it created what some medical providers call a “telemed- icine revolution,” in which providers have “seen” their patients through calls or videos using computers, tablets or smartphones. Pro- viders say they expect tele- medicine will become a permanent feature of rural health care. “I do believe telemed- icine is here to stay,” said Gail Nelson, CEO of Rine- hart Clinic, a community health center in Wheeler. In Enterprise, seat of Wallowa County, family doctor Elisabeth Powers at Winding Waters Clinic has been examining patients the past few months via com- puter screen. Powers is a long-time advocate of telemedicine that can result in faster diagnoses and treatments, reduce patient stress and reach rural people who oth- erwise may not have health care access — for example, those limited by mountain passes and transportation options. Even as a telehealth pioneer, her use of virtual medicine catapulted during COVID-19. In early March, according to Winding Waters’ CEO Nic Powers — Dr. Powers’ husband — about 2% of the clin- ic’s patients had telehealth appointments. Now, he said, it’s 45%. See, Virtual/Page 5A Staff photo by Dick Mason Thomas Houck, a food distribution and warehouse assistant with the Community Connection of Northeast Ore- gon Regional Food Bank, moves pallets of food Thursday in the dining hall of the Union County Senior Center. The food bank serving Northeast Oregon is receiving an additional 60,000 pounds of food each month and running out of space to store it all. Food boost pushes bank’s limits  Regional Food Bank distributing 60,000 more pounds of food per month By Dick Mason The Observer LA GRANDE — The Northeast Oregon Regional Food Bank in La Grande is not running short of peanut butter, rice and canned vegeta- bles, but it is experiencing a space shortage. The bank, based at the Union County Senior Center, is now receiving an additional 60,000 pounds of food a month to address a growing need in Northeast Oregon due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The extra food is more than the bank’s ware- house can handle, and the staff has been forced to move much of it into the dining hall of the senior center, where activities Staff photo by Dick Mason Steve Konopacky of the Community Connection of Northeast Oregon Regional Food Bank marks food items Thursday in the dinning hall of the Union County Se- nior Center, La Grande. See, Food/Page 5A LA GRANDE — When the coronavirus pandemic led to the cancellation of race after race that cyclists Elijah Romer and Sean Lerner had planned to enter, the La Grande duo decided to improvise. What resulted is a moun- tain biking challenge in the Mount Emily Recreation Area near La Grande that is gaining popularity and allowing anyone interested to participate in socially distanced racing. “We and a couple other people in the (Blue Moun- tain Singletrack Club) had been planning to go to some of Oregon’s mountain bike races,” Lerner said, noting the plan was to do about a race a month. “We had been training all winter. We were bummed when that got can- celed. This is the time of year when we would nor- mally start doing social group rides. We can’t do that either.” The two devised a course out of three con- joined trails at the recre- ation area people could ride on and — using the phone app Strava, which uses GPS to track outdoor activity — time the results. “We could do a virtual race,” Romer said. “Get people excited about riding and riding fast. We came up with the route — we set it up and I set up a club link on Strava.” Romer said the Strava group — which had three people in it at the beginning of the month when they set See, Cycling/Page 5A COVID-19: Oregon not hit as hard as the rest of the nation 12 states with populations akin to Oregon have higher incidence, test rates  By Ronald Bond The Observer LA GRANDE — Oregon has seen a much lower breakout of corona- virus cases when compared to most of the nation. As of Thursday, the state had recorded 3,817 cases of COVID-19 according to the Oregon Health Authority. Less than one-tenth of 1% of Oregon’s more than 4 million residents have tested positive. The number itself is lower than some less populous states — South Dakota, New Mexico and Mississippi are just three examples with a lower population that have more confi rmed cases of the coronavirus. Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Hawaii and Alaska are all states with fewer overall cases. Some of those states, however, have a higher incidence rate than the Beaver State, according to data on the Johns Hop- kins University website. In fact, Oregon is in the bottom fi ve of states with the lowest incidence rates in the nation. Just 90.50 per 100,000 Oregonians have tested positive for the virus. Only Montana, Alaska, Hawaii and West Virginia have lower percentages of the population to contract the virus. The state, though, also ranks near the bottom of the nation in terms of testing at 46th. Just four states — Arizona, Colo- rado, Kansas and Idaho — have a testing rate lower than Oregon’s 2,494.80 per 100,000 residents. Oregon as of Thursday had con- ducted 105,132 tests for the coronavirus, and more than 96% of them have come INDEX Classified ..... 3B Comics ......... 7B Community . 3A Crossword ... 5B back negative. So why does Oregon have a lower number of cases than most of the nation? The low number of tests would seem to be the obvious answer, until you compare the state to others with similar testing rates. Virginia, for example, has a similar testing rate at 2,561.05 per 100,000, but an incidence rate of 399.94 per 100,000. Virginia does have more than double the popula- tion of Oregon at about 8.5 million, which can partly account for the higher number, but the num- bers still show the virus infecting four times as high, and still double if you fi gure in population. The 12 states with pop- ulation most similar to Oregon (six above and six below) all have a higher incidence rate than Oregon, but all of them also (with the exception of Colorado) have a higher test rate. But each state in the list has a worse testing rate-to-incidence rate ratio than Oregon, many several times worse. This means even if Oregon conducted the same number of tests as every state immediately around it — by population See, Oregon/Page 5A CONTACT US Dear Abby ... 8B Health .......... 2B Horoscope ... 5B Lottery.......... 2A TUESDAY Obituaries .... 3A Opinion ........ 4A Outdoors ..... 1B Sports .......... 6A BANNERS FOR HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS 541-963-3161 Issue 62 2 sections, 14 pages La Grande, Oregon Email story ideas to news@lagrande observer.com. More contact info on Page 4A. Online at lagrandeobserver.com