LOCAL/STATE THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 2020 LIBRARY Continued from Page 1A in Oregon history. A petition to change the name of the library has been circulating at www. change.org for fi ve days as of Wednesday morning and had received 2,487 signatures. “The online petition to change the name of Pierce Library gives voice to those who are concerned about the name’s implications, not only for the university but for our community and beyond,” Seydel said. The EOU student gov- ernment, the Faculty Senate and other university organizations will provide the petition and supporting documentation and rec- ommendations to a com- mittee of two students, a history department faculty member and a member of Staff photo by Sabrina Thompson Eastern Oregon University in La Grande named the cam- pus library after Walter Pierce, Oregon’s 17th governor, and his third wife, Cornelia Pierce, the fi rst state librarian. EOU is considering changing the building’s name due to Walter Pierce’s affi liation with the Ku Klux Klan. the library staff. The EOU Faculty Senate in December 2017 passed a resolution for a name change, and EOU President Tom Insko in 2018 told the board a committee would look into the possibility of removing the Pierce name from the library. According to Seydel, the committee was to fi nish its work in the spring, but due to the pan- demic the group was unable THE OBSERVER — 5A to complete research and instead will present fi ndings to the university in the fall. “As a university, we approach decisions equipped with research, analysis and data, and that is what is in pro- cess today,” Seydel said. “Although EOU has a pro- cess in place to ensure this issue is addressed in a timely manner, Presi- dent Insko has initiated a process that seeks to have the EOU Board review the name this summer in order to advance what is right for the EOU community.” During the 1999 pro- cess of changing the name of the library, a report ana- lyzed the appropriateness of the name. Those fi nd- ings included documenta- tion of the Klan support for Pierce and and his inconsis- tency with following Klan ideals, though the report also showed he supported FIREWORKS the anti-immigrant views of the KKK. Changing the name of the library again does not have total support. “We have had some feedback from folks who are concerned about the historical context of the name,” Seydel said. “They would like to not change the name because they would like to honor the contributions that Pierce made to the state and to the region. People are also interested in not sweeping history under the rug and not pretending it never happened. We need to acknowledge that the library once had his name, perhaps with something in the library.” Seydel also said renaming the library would be a whole other issue and the building could become simply the EOU Library or the Library. Continued from Page 1A happening, provided it can be done correctly. “We wish them the best and hope they are able to pull it off suc- cessfully,” Searles said. Mike Lockhart, of the Wallowa Lake Tourism Associa- tion, and Gary Beth- scheider, of the Stub- born Mule in Joseph, have joined forces to raise the money needed and get a pyrotechni- cian contracted. Lockhart said he expects to have the arrangements made by the end of the week. “We’re trying to do something good,” Lockhart said. “We’re not in any way trying to be disrespectful of the situation.” He emphasized that those attending the event must take responsibility for social distancing. “People need to take personal responsi- bility,” he said. “If they feel they don’t want to assume that risk, then they should not go. If they do, they should accept the responsi- bility of social dis- tancing and protect themselves so they don’t contribute to the spread of virus.” Lockhart said it’s uncertain if they’ll use the familiar “Shake the Lake” moniker for the event, since that had been used by the cham- ber-sponsored show. “We don’t want to tread on their territory,” he said. But Searles said “Shake the Lake” is not trademarked and Lockhart’s group is free to use the name. Still, Lockhart said they may come up with something a little more generic. That, however, has yet to be determined. In previous years, it has cost about $14,000 for the pyrotechnics, lodging for the pyro- technicians, advertising and other elements of the approximately 25-minute show held from a fl oating dock in the north end of the lake, Searles said. Lockhart said the association has raised suffi cient funds to put on a similar display. He’s still hoping to increase the quality of the show and raise more money to do so. Anyone who is inter- ested in donating to the cause can send their contributions to the Wallowa Lake Tourism Association, P.O. Box 853 Joseph, Ore., 97846. Searles said the chamber’s board plans to do “Shake the Lake” again next year. “It’s just this COVID pandemic that led us to cancel it for this year, like many other events,” she said. “I hope everything comes off OK and people in the county and visitors are safe.” Judge grants order barring most Portland police tear gas use The Associated Press PORTLAND — A fed- eral judge Tuesday night backed Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler’s restrictions on the city’s police use of a common tear gas with a 14-day court order banning the agent except when a life is at risk. U.S. District Judge Marco A. Hernandez’s ruling came following about an hour of argument and watching video evidence of recent protests, The Orego- State to test residents at all long- term care facilities By Sara Cline Associated Press/Report for America SALEM — Gov. Kate Brown announced Tuesday the state is working to implement a plan to test all staff and residents at long-term care facilities for coronavirus. Testing will start at care centers at the highest risk of having an outbreak. Most of those facilities are in Mult- nomah, Washington, Clack- amas, Yamhill, Marion and Polk counties, according to the governor’s offi ce. “From the beginning of this pandemic, it has been one of my top priori- ties to protect the residents and staff of long-term care facilities,” Brown said in a statement. Care centers in Oregon have been hit with out- breaks throughout the pan- demic. As of Tuesday, out of the state’s 688 large long term-care facilities 16 cur- rently have confi rmed coro- navirus cases, the gover- nor’s offi ce said. Previously it had been 27 facilities. The disease espe- cially impacts older adults and people with existing health problems as it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia and death. At least 169 people across Oregon have died from the coronavirus and more than 4,980 in the state have tested positive for the disease. Long-term care facilities are restricting non-essen- tial visitors and screening essential individuals prior to entering the building. “Expanding testing is an essential fi rst step that will allow us to examine how visitation policies can be safely and incrementally eased,” Gov. Brown said. nian/OregonLive reported. The nonprofi t Don’t Shoot Portland and two pro- testers on Friday sued the city, seeking to bar the Port- land police use of tear gas to disperse large crowds of demonstrators protesting the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after Minneapolis offi cer pinned him to the ground with a knee to his neck for nearly nine minutes. The judge found that protesters who sued “engaged only in peaceful and non-destructive pro- test,” with no record of criminal activity. “To the contrary, there is even evidence that some protesters were confronted with tear gas while trying to follow police orders and leave the demonstrations,’’ the judge wrote in a 10-page ruling. “Given the effects of tear gas, and the poten- tial deadly harm posed by the spread of COVID- 19, Plaintiffs have estab- lished a strong likelihood that Defendant engaged in excessive force contrary to the Fourth Amendment.’’ Hernandez ruled that the protesters who sued demon- strated a threat of imme- diate, irreparable harm in the absence of a tempo- rary court order, showed they were likely to succeed on their claim of excessive force by police and also raised a serious question as to whether their free speech rights were violated. DMV working through new ID issue By Peter Wong Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — Oregon Driver and Motor Vehicle Services has bad news and good news for cus- tomers stemming from the coronavirus pandemic. The bad news was DMV’s initial effort to reopen its fi eld offi ces after a 10-week shutdown hit a roadblock — and not the physical kind. The good news is DMV was able to get around it quickly — and that more than 3.1 million Oregon drivers will have up to 15 months, instead of three, to obtain the kind of licenses enabling them to board commer- cial aircraft. Assistant Director Travis Brouwer of the Oregon Department of Transportation, DMV’s parent agency, spoke about both this week at a virtual meeting of the Legislature’s Joint Com- mittee on Transportation. In the fi rst hour after telephone lines were opened June 1, DMV got 18,000 calls — the normal call volume is 1,000 per day — and DMV shut down the lines soon afterward. “We were faced with a deluge of calls we did not anticipate,” Brouwer said. But with help from its computer systems vendor, DMV put up a substi- tute: An online form for people to request in-person appointments, with specifi c times, at their local fi eld offi ce. Of the 60 fi eld offi ces, 38 were able to reopen June 3 to provide limited services. All but six were closed since March 25, after the fi rst of Gov. Kate Brown’s executive orders during the coronavirus pandemic — and those six were limited to commer- cial driver licenses. In a second phase, 57 fi eld offi ces will reopen by Monday, June 22, for limited services. All 60 offi ces will reopen by Aug. 3 with all services. Many DMV services can be done online or via mail. A new computer system will enable DMV to expand that list. But renewals of reg- ular drivers’ licenses require people to come in for new photos, and for those 60 and older, vision tests. Drive tests for fi rst- time license applicants and others also require in-person appointments. The tests usually are con- ducted by DMV vendors, but Brouwer said vendors are unavailable in some areas of Oregon. Oregon also faced a deadline of Oct. 1 for licenses compliant with the Real ID Act, a 2005 federal law whose goal is to make state drivers’ licenses more secure. But Oregon’s deadline for compliance with the federal law is now Oct. 1, 2021. ODOT’s Brouwer said the delay will give DMV 15 months, instead of three months, and many drivers now can opt to obtain the new licenses when their renewal time comes. Virus outbreak at North Bend prison resolved The Associated Press PORTLAND — State public health offi cials said Tuesday the coronavirus outbreak at a North Bend prison has been resolved. The minimum-security prison at one point had 25 infected inmates and three infected employees, The Oregonian/Oregon- Live reported. It is one of four state prisons with confi rmed cases of the virus. A spokesperson for the Oregon Health Authority said in an email that an outbreak is considered over 28 days after the date of the last onset of symptoms for people with the virus. At the Oregon State Penitentiary, the state’s maximum-security prison in Salem, cases have slowed, said Chris- topher DiGiulio, the chief of medicine for the Oregon Department of Corrections. The prison has reported one new case of coronavirus in the past several days, he said. Previously, the state was reporting as many as 20 new cases a day there, he said. As of Tuesday, the total number of con- fi rmed cases among Oregon inmates stood at 167. Another 47 employees also have tested positive. The outbreak at the Oregon State Peniten- tiary remains the largest in the state with a total of 168 cases among inmates and workers combined. Among inmates, 93 are considered recovered, DiGiulio said. Santiam Correctional Institution in Salem and Two Rivers Correctional Institution in Umatilla La GRANDE AUTO REPAIR also have reported cases of the disease. Santiam has eight cases and Two Rivers has one. For most, the corona- virus causes mild or mod- erate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some people, espe- cially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia and death. 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