FROM PAGE ONE SATURDAY, JUNE 5, 2021 THE OBSERVER — 5A VACCINE BUDGET: School Board to vote on June 21 Continued from Page 1A Continued from Page 1A To better gauge the campus community’s response toward vaccina- tions, the university con- ducted a COVID-19 vaccina- tion survey in February that produced mixed opinions. Just fewer than 900 indi- viduals participated in the survey. According to Oregon Public Broadcasting, 65% of students voted “no” and 30% voted “yes” to requiring vac- cinations in the fall. How- ever, 75% of faculty were in favor and 22% were against. While faculty mostly favored the requirement and students generally opposed it, that created diffi culty for the school’s board of trustees to balance the communi- ty’s thoughts with statewide trends. “The science is very clear that the vaccine is eff ective and it’s safe,” said Board Trustee Brad Stephens during a board meeting last month. “I don’t know how I feel about them mandating the vaccine,” said EOU student Tori Reynolds. “Why are you basing someone’s ability to get a higher education on whether or not they want to get a vaccine?” The university will not add the COVID-19 vacci- nation to its list of required vaccines, alongside the mea- sles vaccine. “Any information we gather from students will be confi dential,” Seydel said. “That is not information that is posted anywhere, just like the current students’ immu- in part because of the COVID-19 relief money. Panike said that if about 80 of the 140 stu- dents return next year, the school district will be able to operate about two years before its reserves are drawn to the point that reductions in staff and pro- grams would be needed. A number of the stu- dents who left the district are being homeschooled or are now attending online learning academies. George Mendoza, La Grande School District superin- tendent, said it will not be known for some time how many will return to the La Grande School District. “Time is needed to determine what the long- term impact on student enrollment will be due to the COVID-19 pandemic,” he said in his budget message. Panike said on Friday June 4, that if the $9.3 bil- lion 2021-23 education budget the state Legisla- ture’s House passed June 3, FIRE Continued from Page 1A blackening 12 acres. The annual average is 105 light- ning-sparked blazes. In 2019 the Wallowa-Whitman had 67 lightning fi res, which burned 27 acres. It was the second con- secutive tranquil fi re season on the Wallowa-Whitman, even as major blazes were spreading across hundreds of thousands of acres elsewhere in the West. “In really dry years we often don’t get as much light- ning,” McCraw said. The situation is similar on other public land in the state’s northeastern corner, primarily sagebrush steppe for which the Bureau of Land Management is the chief fi refi ghting agency. On private and state land, where the Oregon Depart- ment of Forestry handles much of the fi refi ghting, lightning sparks 70% to 75% of fi res on average in North- eastern Oregon, said Steve Meyer, wildland fi re super- visor at the state agency’s Baker City offi ce. “We’ve had summers when we’re setting records for fi re danger but we don’t have much of a fi re season because we don’t get the lightning,” Meyer said. Although lightning is famously fi ckle in where Alex Wittwer/The Observer, File Monty the Mountaineer, Eastern Oregon University’s mascot, wel- comes students and faculty alike as they enter the gymnasium Tues- day, May 4, 2021, to receive a dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. The school announced Thursday, June 3, that students, faculty and staff will be required to receive the COVID-19 vaccination to be on campus next fall. nizations records.” Last month, Eastern Oregon updated its face covering requirements on campus for the remainder of the semester to allow stu- dents and staff to gather out- doors without masks, void of any social distancing. How- ever, the university said stu- dents in small groups of eight or fewer can gather indoors without masks, so long as they can show proof of vaccination. According to the Oregon Health Authority, 34% of Union County is vaccinated. That number is well below the state average, which eclipsed 50% toward the end of May. “I think it depends on where most of the students come from,” said EOU student Isabella Evans. “Depending on their back- grounds, a lot of people tend to not want to get the vaccine.” Eastern has been holding vaccination clinics on campus periodically throughout the month of May and into June. More than 100 individuals attended the fi rst clinic at Quinn Coliseum May 4, where the Moderna vaccine was administered. When the FDA will approve the numerous COVID-19 vaccinations remains to be seen. No vac- cine is fully approved, but Pfi zer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson were all granted emergency use authorization. All three have applied for full approval, a process that can take several months to a year, according to the FDA. Until full approval, Eastern Oregon University will be moving forward with the mindset that one or more of the vaccines will be fully approved by the fall term, as with many other schools across the state. “We remain committed to providing all students with the greatest educational opportunities possible in preparation for success after graduation,” Insko said. it strikes, Livingston said advances in meteorology have made it much more feasible to forecast thunder- storms, with a fair degree of geographical accuracy, at least a few days, and even up to a week, in advance. Livingston said light- ning detectors can pinpoint strikes, which at least gives fi re crews — and the moun- taintop fi re lookouts, of which more than a dozen still are staff ed each summer in Northeastern Oregon — a likely set of places, after the storm passes, to search for the telltale tendrils of smoke. “It helps us get resources out into an area ahead of time, to focus on areas where we’re most likely to have lightning fi res,” Meyer said. Human-caused fi res, by contrast, are inherently more frightening, offi cials said, because people can go almost anywhere. And unlike with lightning, there are no sensors to show where a person carelessly tossed a cigarette or left a smoldering campfi re or drove through a patch of desiccated grass, where hot muffl ers and cat- alytic converters can ignite the tinder. “With human-caused fi res you never know,” Meyer said. “It can be anywhere.” The inherent unpredict- ability of human-caused fi res — when they might happen, as well as where — is one reason the Forest Service and Oregon Department of Forestry institute restric- tions on campfi res, the use of chain saws and other activi- ties when fi re danger is high or extreme. Livingston said despite the many factors that deter- mine the severity of a fi re season on a specifi c national forest, he’s fairly confi dent that the 2021 season will be another damaging one. “It’s safe to say we’re going to have a long, diffi cult season — it’s just a matter of where,” he said. Wilderness fi res could return after 2020 hiatus Over the past two decades, fi re managers have allowed more than a dozen lightning-sparked fi res to burn naturally in the Eagle Cap Wilderness, Oregon’s largest wilderness at 365,000 acres. The goal is to allow fi re to perform its natural func- tions, including reducing the amount of fuel on the ground and potentially reducing the severity of future blazes. The Wallowa-Whitman suspended this program in 2020 to allow crews, who were trying to avoid spreading COVID-19, to focus on other blazes. Livingston said lightning fi res in the Eagle Cap this summer could potentially be monitored rather than doused as soon as possible. after being approved by the Senate, is signed by Gov. Kate Brown, the La Grande School District will have to draw signifi cantly from its reserves. He explained the proposed Oregon school budget would leave the La Grande School District $1.35 million short of what it expects it will need to cover rising employee costs and failing enrollment. The school district is fi nancially prepared for this, Panike said, because the district’s 2021-22 budget was built on the assumption that the Legis- lature would pass a $9.3 bil- lion education budget for the 2021-23 biennium. A large portion of the COVID-19 relief funding the school district will receive comes from the fed- eral government’s Elemen- tary and Secondary School School Emergency Relief Fund. These ESSER funds must be spent within three years and some must be used for specifi c purposes, Mendoza said. The La Grande School District’s budget calls for about six full-time posi- tions to be added and for 5.5 other nonclass- room teaching positions to be trimmed in part by not hiring people to fi ll some open positions. No employees would be laid off . The positions to be added would include that of a student success coor- dinator, a woods and con- struction teacher, an English language learner position, an English lan- guage learner paraed- ucator, plus a behavior teacher who assists students with behavior issues and a behavior paraeducator. The La Grande School Board will conduct a hearing on the proposed budget at the beginning of its June 21 meeting. The public will be able to com- ment on the budget or ask questions of the board and school staff at the hearing, which will start at 7 p.m. at Central Elementary School. The school board will vote on adoption of the budget following the hearing. Greed is getting in the way of healing. While health insurance executive salaries are going up, our ability to afford healthcare is going down. Help conquer the monstrous costs in healthcare. Get Involved with Union County's chapter of HealthCare for All Oregon. Email unioncounty@hcao.org Annual Union County Crops & Conservation Tour 2021 Tour Cancelled La Grande, OR (May 12, 2021) – The 44th Union Co. Crops and Conservation Tour was cancelled in 2020 and again in 2021. The Planning Committee decided to cancel the tour this year due to continued uncertainty of Covid-19 and concern for public health and safety. Alternative options were considered, but the committee agreed that offering a modified version of the tour would not provide the same experience as the traditional format. It was important to the committee members and supporters of the tour to keep the traditional aspect intact as it has been successful for 43 years straight. Although Covid-19 disrupted the long-tradition, the committee will host the 44th annual tour next year. The planning committee would like to thank the many dedicated tour sponsors (see below for 2019 sponsors), volunteers, 4-H and FFA members, livestock and crops producers, and community members for their continued support over the last 40+ years. The committee fully expects to host a traditional tour in 2022 which will be held during the same traditional week (second week after the Eastern Oregon Livestock Show). Mark your calendars for the “third” 44th annual Union Co. Crops and Conservation Tour! 2019 Sponsors A & B ENTERPRISES BARENBRUG USA BETASEED, INC CB’S PORTABLE RESTROOMS COMMUNITY BANK D & B SUPPLY CO INC EAGLE CARRAGE & MACHINE INC EASTERN OREGON RENTALS GLASSMITH JOHN HOWARD & ASSOCIATES LABBEEMINT NORTHWEST FARM CREDIT SERVICES OLD WEST FEDERAL CREDIT UNION OREGON TRAIL SEEDS OSU EXT AGRONOMIST THE AMALGAMATED SUGAR COMPANY TRI-COUNTY CWMA UNION CO CHAMBER OF COMMERCE UNION CO SEED GROWERS UNION SOIL & WATER CONS DIST WALLOWA CO GRAIN GROWERS BANK OF EASTERN OREGON BARRETO MANUFACTURING INC BLUE MT SEEDS COMMERCIAL TIRE & AUTO CENTER CONNECTED PROFESSIONAL ACCOUNTANTS LLC DIS-DUNNING IRRIGATION SUPPLY EASTERN OREGON NET INC ED STAUB & SONS PROPANE IP CALLISON KUO TESTING LABS INC M J GOSS MOTOR CO NUTRIEN OREGON TRAIL ELECTRIC CO-OP OREGON WHEAT GROWERS LEAGUE RUDD FARMS THE STRATTON AGENCY TRI-COUNTY EQUIPMENT UNION CO FARM BUREAU UNION CO WEED BOARD US BANK – LA GRANDE BRANCH WHEATLAND INSURANCE CENTER INC