FROM PAGE ONE Thursday, april 8, 2021 ThE OBsErVEr — 5A BAILEY: ‘I SPENT MY LIFE STAYING AWAY FROM OLD MEN THAT I DIDN’T KNOW’ Continued from Page 1A family members. He spent a night in the Umatilla County Jail and will serve five years probation. He wasn’t required to register as a sex offender. If DeYoe had been a coach, he might have been convicted of a Class C felony, a crime that car- ries sentences up to five years in prison and a $125,000 fine. But DeYoe wasn’t technically a coach. Pushing for change During the hearing, Munck urged the senators to amend existing law to include teachers. “What is the significant dif- ference between a teacher and a coach? Do coaches somehow carry more authority than a teacher might?” she asked the senators. “Coaches and teachers should be prosecuted equally as they both have responsibility for students’ safety and they both have positions of authority and power over their students and players.” Others speaking in favor of the bill included Taylor and Hansell, Umatilla County District Attorney Dan Primus and retired Weston Middle School teacher, coach and athletic director John Bartron, who originally urged Hansell to consider sponsoring a bill that would fix the discrepancy. Primus testified that sexual abuse in the third degree is a mis- demeanor that involves “touching of an intimate part for sexual grat- ification.” If the defendant is a coach, the charge is elevated to sexual abuse in the second degree, which is a felony. He said the addition came during the 2009 legislative session. Legislators discussed including teachers, but ultimately didn’t. Primus, whose office handled the prosecution, expressed frus- tration at not being able to charge DeYoe with a felony the same as a coach. “The relationship between a teacher and a student is really no different than a coach and an ath- lete,” Primus said. “It should not Ben lonergan/East Oregonian, File Weston-McEwen’s Bailey Munck (14) goes up for a shot against the heppner Mustangs during a game in athena on Jan. 3, 2020. be treated any differently.” In preparing to testify, Primus said he reviewed reports in DeYoe’s file. One comment from a law enforcement officer’s inter- view with Munck struck him. “He asked Bailey why she could tell a boy her age ‘no,’ but she was unable to tell the defen- dant ‘no,’” Primus said. “Bailey’s answer was simple and profound — because he had power and authority over her.” During Hansell’s testimony, he pushed the committee to send the bill, which adds teachers to the existing Oregon statute, to the Senate floor for a vote. “We as a state need to be con- sistent in protecting our vulner- able high school girls and boys with consistent sanctions, be the perpetrator a coach or a teacher,” Hansell said. “It’s a simple fix.” Abuse brought shock Bartron sat in the East Ore- gonian conference room next to Munck, testifying after Hansell. He said he has known Bailey since she was small, both as a family friend and student. When he learned of the abuse, Hansell he felt gut shot. “I was absolutely stunned, saddened and angered on so many levels,” Bartron said. “My greatest concern of course was Bailey.” Taylor Bartron said he started researching Oregon’s sexual abuse statutes after learning more about how the case against DeYoe was Primus proceeding. “I was absolutely shocked to learn that within those stat- utes there appeared to be that loophole that held coaches to a DeYoe higher consequence than a teacher,” he said. “I was beside myself.” With the blessing of Bailey and her parents, he approached Hansell about creating a bill to fix the loophole. Hansell promised to look into it. “One way I am apprised of needs is when people come to me and say this doesn’t make sense,” Hansell said after the hearing. “To be in a position where you can attempt to correct something is very rewarding and fulfilling for me.” Munck has spent a lot of time thinking about what transpired with DeYoe. If she could have warned her younger self, she might have identified classic signs of grooming behavior in DeYoe. “He just wanted to be the fun teacher,” she said several weeks ago during an East Oregonian interview. “DeYoe’s classroom was the hangout spot.” She knows now she should have been more alarmed when DeYoe often texted her about non- school things, simply to say good morning or good night or ask ROADS VACCINES Continued from Page 1A Continued from Page 1A and in declining condition, Carpenter said. It will be replaced with a new water main made of ductile iron. Carpenter said it will be much more efficient to replace the water main this year while the street is torn up. “This is the preventive maintenance,” he said. The Second Street work, which is scheduled to be completed by July, will be done in two phases — first from Spring to Wash- ington avenues, and then from Washington to Adams avenues. Preliminary work involving the replace- ment of the water main is underway. The project will not hit full stride until Monday, April 12, when the city closes Second Street from Spring to Wash- ington avenues. The clo- sure also will include the intersections at Spring and Main avenues. Crews will begin the excavation of the existing roadway and the removal of curbs, Car- penter said. The 3.5 miles of road restoration on Interstate 84 this spring and summer will be part of a two-year, 10-mile project during which the Oregon Depart- ment of Transportation will replace the roadway’s surface up to the Spring Creek exit, 18 miles north- west of La Grande. Tom Strandberg, an ODOT spokesperson, said the work is neces- sary because severe winter weather and heavy use of tire chains when winter conditions are present have rutted the roadway’s asphalt surface. level ratings for Oregon’s 36 counties, issued later Tuesday. After a steady trend of counties moving lower in the four-tiered risk rat- ings, the report this week showed a number of coun- ties with infections on the rise, requiring a return to tighter controls on activi- ties, gatherings and dining. Statewide, the Oregon Health Authority as of Wednesday, April 7, reported 168,128 cases of COVID-19 and 40 new fatalities from the disease, pushing Oregon’s death toll to 2,434. Union County cases continue to increase as well, with five new cases as Tuesday and Wednesday for a total of 1,395 since the start of the pandemic. The county’s 23rd death — and Oregon’s 2,434th — is a 48-year-old man who tested positive Nov. 11 and died March 23 at Legacy Emanuel Hospital, Portland. While COVID-19 deaths have continued to stay lower than pre- vious peaks, health offi- cials remain concerned about possibly more viru- lent variants of COVID-19 spreading across the country and into Oregon. Health officials are wor- ried about highly con- tagious and potentially more lethal variants of the original virus that has killed 2.86 million people around the globe, including 556,000 in the United States. Oregon has maintained some of the lowest infec- tion rates and death totals in the nation, but has still “Real Food for the People” Open Fri-Sun Take-out Menu 5pm-8pm Updated Weekly www.tendepotstreet.com 541-963-8766 tendepotstreet@gmail.com dick Mason/The Observer a la Grande public Works department crew on Tuesday, april 6, 2021, prepares second street for a project to replace a water main and upgrade the road. The project will tear up 1,100 feet of the street. “This creates hazardous driving conditions when water, snow and ice collect in the ruts, cracks and pot- holes,” he said. The westbound and east- bound lanes for slow traffic, now made of asphalt, will be rebuilt with concrete and the fast lanes will receive new asphalt. Strandberg said con- crete, which is longer lasting than asphalt, is the best fit for the slow lanes because they have such heavy truck traffic. “The slow lanes receive the most punishment,” he said. Work is beginning now on the project, which will have a major impact on traffic. Strandberg said the work will be done on entire portions of east- bound and westbound lanes at one time. This means when a section with two westbound lanes is being restored the two par- allel eastbound lanes will have traffic traveling in opposite directions. Strandberg said cones will be installed to divide the two lanes of traffic. The speed limit is being reduced from 70 to 50 La GRANDE AUTO REPAIR 975-2000 www.lagrandeautorepair.com Joe Horst mph in the work zone of the project to protect trav- elers and those working at the site. There also will be increased Oregon State Police presence at times to help remind everyone to slow down, according to Mike Remily of ODOT, the resident engineer for the project, in a press release. Remily is encouraging travelers to be careful and avoid hurrying while trav- eling through the work zone. “On behalf of our con- tractor’s staff and ODOT staff, I ask that you be patient and cautious through the work zone and remember the end result of the inconvenience will be a brand-new, durable, smooth pavement,” he said in the release. The I-84 project will cost $54 million. The funding will be provided by the state and federal governments. A portion of the funding also will cover upgrading traffic signals in Umatilla County in areas along state routes in or near the com- munities of Hermiston, Pendleton, Umatilla, Stan- field and Milton-Freewater. 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She’s stronger now. “I sort of don’t associate myself with myself a year ago,” Munck said. “I feel like I’m a completely different person.” Predators aren’t always strangers Munck said she realized that she once assumed she could easily identify and avoid predators. “I spent my life staying away from old men that I didn’t know,” she said. “Looking around and under my car before getting in. That protected me during my 16 years, but what didn’t was the knowledge of grooming by some- body that I know already.” Munck said she doesn’t blame the justice system for not securing a harsher sentence for DeYoe and going for a plea deal that would keep the case from dragging on for months. “Ultimately I think the assis- tant district attorney involved (Jaclyn Jenkins), she helped us settle the best situation,” Munck said. “There were just a lot of fac- tors that I feel like people outside looking in just don’t see all that. They’re quick to judge the sen- tence, but that was really all we could do with it. It was a misde- meanor. You can’t do a lot with a misdemeanor. It was the best that could have happened.” During the court hearings, the teen observed Jenkins with fasci- nation. So taken was Munck that she has decided to study criminal justice in college and become a prosecutor like Jenkins. Sen. Hansell said he is hopeful Bailey’s Bill will reach the Senate floor for a vote this session. “Senate Bill 649 will close a loophole in Oregon statutes so that other daughters and their families will not have to endure what Bailey Munck and her family have had to go through.” reported just under 2,400 deaths. “Impending doom” is how Dr. Rochelle Wal- ensky, director of the Cen- ters for Disease Control and Prevention, last week described the combination of spreading viruses and relaxed safety habits by a pandemic-weary public. The CDC has sin- gled out one variant orig- inally found in the United Kingdom — B.1.1.7 — as the main version of the virus hitting about two- thirds of the country. The Oregon Health Authority has reported 19 cases of the U.K. variant in Oregon, but believes there are many more. Biden’s announcement on Tuesday is the second time a White House direc- tive has changed Oregon’s phased vaccine eligibility timeline. Brown and the OHA had originally set July 1 as the earliest date that a long series of priority groups would be finished and the vaccine could be offered to anyone who wanted a shot. On March 11, Biden issued a directive that states drop all barriers to eligibility no later than May 1 as a way to speed up vaccination rates. Oregon condensed the timeline for its eligibility groups to meet the deadline. Brown said it might even be pos- sible for some counties to open eligibility as early as April 26. The new April 19 dead- line will impact only Oregon and a few other states. A majority of states already allow all residents age 16 and older to be vac- cinated, and only two — Oregon and Hawaii — had announced plans to lift the final barriers on May 1. BEST OF HAWAII FOUR-ISLAND TOUR The Biden adminis- tration has pushed for ramping up vaccinations, saying at least a third of adults in the nation have received at least one dose of vaccine and three mil- lion shots were going into arms every day. Brown and Oregon Health Authority Director Pat Allen have said the greatest impediment to widespread inoculation is supply of vaccine. Over the past week, Oregon has questioned the federal allocation process state officials believe could be shortchanging the state on vaccine allocations. “My office will work closely with the White House to ensure Oregon receives our fair share of federal vaccine supplies, so we can continue with a fast, fair and equitable vac- cine distribution process,” Brown said. The White House announced Tuesday that 150 million shots have been administered since Biden took office on Jan. 20. He had promised to get 100 million shots into Amer- icans’ arms by his 100th day in office, April 30. Oregon health officials said the state has injected more than 2 million doses of vaccine. Most of the shots are for the two- dose Pfizer and Moderna vaccines. The one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine has accounted for just over 50,000 shots in Oregon. It remains in limited supply nationwide due to a botched processing system at a subcon- tractor in Baltimore that ruined 15 million batches that had to be destroyed. Doses currently offered are the correct mixture. FROM $ $ 2,599 2,349 * 12 days, departs year-round Reclaim Your Freedom And Independence NOW! MOST ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY AVAILABLE Call Inogen Today To Request Your FREE Info Kit ACDelcoTSS 1-855-839-0752 TM 1-888-817-0676 promo code N7017 © 2020 Inogen, Inc. All rights reserved. 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