SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 2021 VIRUS Continued from Page 1A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. According to the CDC, as of Feb. 17, 140 reported COVID-19 deaths have come from children and teenagers younger than 14. Only 1.3% of the state’s confi rmed and presump- tive COVID-19 cases among children 9 years old or younger required hos- pitalization, according to the CDC. The state has reported just under 7,000 cases of the virus among children. Cases in Union, Wallowa counties Union County’s offi - cial number of COVID-19 cases creeped up this week to 1,259, an increase of just 10 cases since Monday, Feb. 15. The Oregon Health Authority also reported no new deaths in the county from the virus. But the La Grande School District on Thursday, Feb. 18, in an email reported in the fi rst two weeks of February, 11 staff and 83 students tested positive for COVID-19, dis- played a primary COVID-19 symptom or were identifi ed as a close contact. “Staff members and students being identifi ed as close contacts cause a largely preventable insta- bility to our operations,” according to the message from Superintendent George Mendoza. He urged parents and guardians to take the fol- lowing steps to help La Grande schools: • Keep children home if they show any COVID-19 primary symptoms. • Contact school nursing staff or a building adminis- trator if you or someone in your household is showing primary symptoms or is a close contact. • Work to avoid members of your household being within 6 feet of people out- side your household for longer than 15 minutes. Following these steps “to the greatest extent pos- sible,” the message stated, would help “limit staff and students being iso- lated/quarantined and will help keep our schools in operation.” Mendoza also pleaded with families in the district to heed precautions to pre- vent the spread of COVID- 19, including “guiding all members of your family to wear face coverings, wash their hands frequently, cover their coughs and sneezes and avoid contact with people who have signs of illness.” He also said mem- bers of households need to get plenty of rest, exercise and eat a healthy diet. Wallowa County had two BILLS Continued from Page 1A know what districts will look like earlier than late fall at best. Legislative logjam Lawmakers have sub- mitted thousands of new bills and resolutions for the session — with the over- whelming majority headed for the trash bin. Concern over pos- sible right-wing violence last month and winter storms this month have put the 2021 session behind schedule from the begin- ning. The Legislature is constitutionally required to adjourn July 1. Deadlines are starting to loom. Friday, Feb. 19, was the deadline for drafted bills to be sent from staff to law- makers. The fi nal day that bills can be introduced is Feb. 23. With the exception of bills that go to Rules or Ways and Means commit- tees, bills that don’t hit key deadlines automatically die. Bills must have a work session — when a bill is brought up for a vote by committee — scheduled by March 19. The work session must occur by April 13. At THE OBSERVER — 5A new cases of COVID-19 in the Oregon Health Authori- ty’s report Wednesday, Feb. 17, which brings the overall total in the county to 139 since the start of the pan- demic. There have been 37 cases in the month of Feb- ruary. The rate of infection in the county is now just less than 2%. The statewide scene Oregon added 492 new cases of COVID-19 on Friday, Feb. 19, bringing the state’s total to 152,190. The Oregon Health Authority also reported the death toll is 2,149. There have been more than 755,000 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine administered, and more than 232,000 people have received both doses for full inoculation. And most Oregon coun- ties would maintain or improve their COVID-19 risk rating next week, according to preliminary data from the Oregon Health Authority. Counties won’t offi cially fi nd out where they place on the four tiers of risk level until Tuesday, Feb. 23. The Oregon Health Authority measures COVID-19 cases and positive test percent- ages each week. Every other week, it uses the num- bers to adjust the position of counties on the four-tier risk chart of extreme, high, medium and lower risk. Each category has dif- ferent restrictions on busi- nesses and activities. Malheur County is on track to move from extreme to medium risk and Baker County is maintaining its high risk rating. But Umatilla, Wallowa, Union, Morrow and Harney counties appear to be main- taining extreme level caseloads. Wasco County could move from extreme to high risk. There are a few excep- tions to the trend. Douglas County is showing a rise to 271.7 cases per 100,000, a pace that would push it back into extreme risk restrictions. Lake County continues to be a center of COVID-19 infections, with 1,002.4 cases per 100,000 and a rising infection rate of 19.4% Statewide, Oregon has 181.3 cases per 100,000 and a test positive rate of 3.8% A full report of the most recent data can be found at www.oregon.gov/ oha/covid19/Documents/ DataReports/Weekly-Coun- ty-Metrics.pdf. An interactive map of Oregon showing data and risk levels is at corona- virus.oregon.gov/Pages/ living-with-covid-19. aspx#countystatus. — Other members of the EO Media Group contributed to this report. each point, the number of dead bills grows. Additional deadlines for fl oor votes, hearings and work sessions in the second chamber and fl oor votes in the second chamber are all trip-wires for bills to die. House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Portland, said last week there will be little time left to debate beyond a short list of pandemic-related bills, economic recovery, housing, police reform and the sprawling state budget. 2022 election early birds It’s been just a little over three months since the 2020 election, but candidates are starting to pop up for 2022 races. Sixteen candidate cam- paign fi nance committees have been created. Senate Majority Leader Rob Wagner, D-Lake Oswego, is the biggest name to have a 2022 committee so far. Others include Bud Pierce, who has declared his candi- dacy for the GOP nomina- tion for the open governor’s seat in 2022. Pierce was the 2016 GOP nominee for gov- ernor, losing to Brown, who is barred by term limits from seeking another term. In a separate move, MISSION emergencies, including fi res, crime and natural disasters. Lou Gerber, an EMT, made his presentation with the aid of an interpreter who translated his words into Kinyarwanda, Rwan- da’s national language. Early in his three-hour presentation, the inter- preter tapped Gerber on the shoulder. “She asked me to slow down so that she could catch up to me. When I’m talking about some- thing I’m excited about I start talking too quickly,” Gerber said”t Matt Gerber said his father’s talk was given in a hot, uncomfortable out- door setting. Despite this, he said the fi rst responders listened intently throughout. “These people were so excited,” he said. “They were on the edge of their seats.” Sadly, Rwanda is best known to many throughout the world for its horrifi c civil war of 1994, which was triggered by long-run- ning disputes between the Hutu and Tutsi tribes. The four-month war claimed the lives of hundreds of thousands of Rwandans. Rwanda is moving past the war but it still healing, said Matt Gerber, who has made a number of service trips to the nation in recent years. “It has been rebuilding for the last 26 years,” he said. At the heart of its recovery effort has been the elimination of the tribal affi liations in Rwanda. He said today ref- erences to tribes are rarely heard in Rwanda. Gerber and his father refl ected on the 1994 civil war during a visit to the Nyamata Genocide Memo- rial in Rwanda. The memo- rial is a former church where 10,000 people locked themselves inside for safety but were killed by attackers. The remains of about 40,000 people killed in the area attack are buried at the site and the interior of the old church has skulls and clothing of the many who died. “It is a very solemn place,” said Matt Gerber. Ariella Lorenzen, a fi lmmaker from Sweden, accompanied the Gerbers on their journey. Lorenzen captured images of some of the work of the father and son team. The party’s stops included a two-day, one-night visit to Akagera National Park. The park is a former cattle ranch now home to African wildlife, including hippopotamuses, zebras and elephants. The party traveled in a vehicle during an unfor- gettable two days. “It was the intensity of being in the wild, the thrill of the unexpected. You might see 50 baboon around one corner and a herd of elephants the next,” Matt Gerber said. The presence of hippo- potamuses had the trio on alert. “Hippopotamuses kill more people than lions do,” Matt Gerber said. “Even when they are not violent they can crush you by walking over your tent.” To protect themselves from such threats, they spent their night at the park in a solar-powered treehouse that had over- night accommodations. Matt Gerber, a corpo- rate social responsibility strategist, also spent a por- tion of his time in Rwanda helping to develop a voca- tional development pro- gram for individuals who want to become seam- stresses. He donated two sewing machines and a large amount of sewing items to help get this pro- gram started. The trip to Rwanda was the fi rst for Lou Gerber and the sixth for Matt in the past seven years. Matt Gerber said he hopes he and his father can make similar trips in the future. “I hope we can start making service trips somewhere in the world every year,” he said. Redacted and unre- dacted versions of the report — The Observer obtained both through public records requests — stated the statutes of lim- itations had run out on any criminal charges Ras- mussen may have faced. Rasmussen in the stipu- lation also stated, “DPSST was in the process of con- ducting a fair and objective review of the facts which I believe would benefi t me in retaining certifi cation. They appear to be inter- ested in seeking informa- tion from full-time cur- rent county employees to offset DOJ’s lack of inter- views with that group of witnesses. However, given what my family and I have been through with an almost-a-year-and-a-half investigation during a cam- paign, and also that I have started a new career path, I have elected to surrender my certifi cation.” He also remained fi rm in his stance that he had done nothing wrong. “I do not believe I have done anything to warrant desertifi cation,” he stated in the document. “I am dis- appointed I can’t fully vet out the facts for the policy committee to review.” Rasmussen also stated he was blessed to have worked with tremendous people at the sheriff’s offi ce, partner agencies and “the good citizens of Union County.” He said he was proud “of the profes- sional offi ce that has been structured the past four terms and the employees we have hired. I know they will continue to serve the citizens well.” In signing the stipula- tion to hand over his certi- fi cations he waved his right to a hearing or appeal. Les Hallman, the interim director of the department of public safety standards in training in Oregon, signed the stipu- lation Jan. 12, and DPSST then revoked the former sheriff’s certifi cations. Cody Bowen suc- ceeded Rasmussen as sheriff and has been in the offi ce since early January. Bowen had no comment about his former boss and said he is focused on the future of the sheriff’s offi ce and improving it and reestablishing trust, if need be, with the com- munity. He also said he remains committed to greater transparency. Continued from Page 1A once saw people in a car stopped at a red light having their temperatures checked. People entering Rwanda also face intense screening. “We had to be tested in the United States fi ve days before we left (for Rwanda) and after we arrived we were quarantined for 24 hours,” Matt Gerber said. This diligence is likely why Rwanda has been ranked fi rst in Africa and sixth globally in man- aging the COVID-19 pan- demic, according to a 2021 story in Africannews.com, which cites rankings made by the Lowy Institute of Australia. Rwanda is lauded for its COVID-19 prevention efforts but not the state of its economy. “The whole country is impoverished,” Matt Gerber said. The nation has a dearth of fundamental medical supplies as a result. Often, Matt Gerber said, Rwan- dans lack basics, such as bandages. He said his father was inspired to teach Rwan- dans how, in the absence of bandages, to cut sheets that can be used to stop bleeding. To help address this shortage, the Gerbers brought a large assort- ment of fi rst aid supplies, many donated by people in Union County. The sup- plies were collected and organized with major help from Lou Gerber’s wife, Robin. “She rallied the com- munity to give donations, which made this a suc- cessful venture,” said her son Matt. The CPR and fi rst aid class Lou Gerber taught was in an open air class- room with fi rst responders who handle all types of SHERIFF Continued from Page 1A later during my reelection campaign.” Rasmussen blamed the justice department for releasing their “fi nd- ings” to the public the week before ballots went to Union County voters. “DOJ did not release the report to me nor did they inform me of their accusa- tions prior to releasing the information to the public. I simply was not able to refute the allegations before the citizens voted,” according to Rasmussen. The justice department released the report on April 28, 2020, ahead of the May primary election. Ras- mussen at the time claimed “the DOJ cleared me.” Ralph Huber, a Springfi eld private security offi cer, has fi led with the Federal Elec- tion Commission to create a fundraising committee to run in the Republican primary in Congressional District 2, a seat held by freshman Rep. Cliff Bentz, R-Ontario. Exoneration expenses People who are incarcer- ated for crimes they did not commit would be eligible for state payments under Senate Bill 499, introduced by Sen. Kim Thatcher, R-Keizer. Oregon is one of 15 states that does not automatically allocate money to someone who is exonerated of a crime they didn’t commit. The average allocation in states that do offer aid is $50,000 per year behind bars, according to the Oregon Innocence Project, which works to clear wrongly con- victed people. The group reported 21 people in Oregon who served nearly 90 years cumulatively in prison have been exonerated in recent years. The bill is in the Senate Judiciary and Ballot Measure 110 Imple- mentation committee. Matt Gerber/Contributed photo Lou Gerber of La Grande, left, and his son Matt Gerber during their visit to Rwanda in December 2020.