OREGON A6 — THE OBSERVER SATURDAY, JULY 31, 2021 BOOTLEG FIRE | FIREFIGHTING PRACTICES Brown: Oregon must modernize Governor’s remarks occur during tour of the Bootleg Fire By JOE SIESS Klamath Falls Herald and News BLY — Gov. Kate Brown visited the nation’s largest wildfi re on Wednesday, July 28, fl ying past 413,000 acres of burned forest in a heli- copter, then speaking with fi re offi cials in Bly. After seeing the devas- tation, Brown said the state has to rethink how it fi ghts wildfi res in an era of hotter, larger blazes — and mit- igate dangers before they spark. “There is absolutely no question that we need to modernize our fi refi ghting practices,” she said. Brown acknowledged the diffi culty that Klamath County communities, and the broader region, are facing in a summer com- pounded by COVID-19, drought and now wildfi re. “My heart goes out to the people of the Klamath Basin,” the governor said. “This is a really challenging summer. We know this is going to be an incredibly challenging fi re season, and obviously we’ve got the challenges around drought.” Brown said the state is Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife/Contributed Photo Arden Barnes/Klamath Falls Herald and News Oregon Gov. Kate Brown visits the Bly Fire Camp at the Bootleg Fire in Klamath County, Wednesday, June 28, 2021. Brown’s visit included a fl yover of the wildfi re and a discussion with fi re offi cials. committed to assisting dis- placed families as quickly as possible, and said federal assistance is on the way. “This is an all-hands- on-deck moment,” she said, promising to call Rep. DeFazio, D-Springfi eld, chairman of the House Committee on Transporta- tion and Infrastructure, who is leading alongside Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Oregon, a delegation pushing for Fed- eral Emergency Manage- ment Agency readiness. Brown said there are other ways for the state to prove its readiness. “We must do more of the preventative mitiga- tion work (such as) the thin- ning and the prescriptive burning,” she said from fi re camp in Bly. “The goal is to eliminate biomass fuel off the forest fl oors so that you either prevent fi res or, if there are fi res, it is not as damaging.” Brown said stopping wildfi res before they start is smarter policy, but crews also need the manpower and funds necessary to fi ght them when they get out of hand. Brown said mega- fi res are threatening Oregon communities, damaging to the environment, dangerous for fi refi ghters and expen- sive for taxpayers. “The challenge is these fi res are substantially hotter. They are faster; they are simply much more ferocious than in decades past,” she said. “So we have to make sure that we have both the people power and the equipment to tackle them.” Survey: Conservatives far more likely to decline COVID-19 vaccine By SUZANNE ROIG The Bulletin SALEM — Vaccination rates drop signifi cantly out- side of the Portland metro area, according to results of a Oregon Values and Beliefs Center survey. The online survey of Oregon residents showed the three counties making up the Portland area had a 77% vaccination rate. In the survey, 42% of those surveyed said they had not received a COVID-19 vaccine. The survey results mirror those from December 2020 that gauged how likely someone would be to get the vaccine when it became available. The results were published at the same time Oregon Gov. Kate Brown announced the state would follow Cen- ters for Disease Control and Prevention indoor-mask guidelines. People who identifi ed as socially conservative were four times as likely to say they would not receive the vaccine than those who said they were liberal. Nearly all those surveyed who said they were college educated reported having received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. “In Oregon, as in most other states, vaccination has become a politically polar- Mary Altaff er/The Associated Press A health care worker fi lls a syringe with the Pfi zer COVID-19 vaccine, Thursday, July 22, 2021, at a clinic in New York. The number of Amer- icans getting a COVID-19 vaccine has been rising in recent days as vi- rus cases once again surge and offi cials raise dire warnings about the consequences of remaining unvaccinated. ized issue,” said Amaury Vogel, Oregon Values and Beliefs Center associate executive director. “Polit- ical ideology, when it comes to social issues, is a strong predictor of whether or not a person has received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.” As of Thursday, July 29, the Oregon Health Authority reported that 14,067 adult residents have been fully or partially vac- cinated in Union County and Wallowa County, or about 53%, according to the OHA data. “Oregonians who remain unvaccinated share the same reasons as being the most infl uential in their decision not to get vacci- nated: long- and short-term side eff ects and the con- cerns that the vaccine was developed too quickly,” Vogel said. The survey conducted July 9-14 of 1,464 residents has a margin of error for the full sample ranging from plus or minus 1.5% to plus or minus 2.6%, depending on the response category for any given question. The Oregon Values and Voices project, a nonpar- tisan charitable organiza- tion, has partnered with Pamplin Media Group, EO Media Group and the Oregon Values and Beliefs Center. EO Media Group owns newspapers in Oregon and Washington state, including The Observer. A trail camera in January 2016 caught this image of two adult wolves from the Walla Walla Pack in northern Umatilla County. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife has issued permits allowing a Baker County resident to kill up to four wolves from the Lookout Mountain Pack. State authorizes wolf kill Baker County rancher allowed to kill up to four wolves Baker City Herald BAKER CITY — The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife issued a permit Thursday, July 29, allowing a Baker County ranching couple, or their designated agents, to kill up to four wolves from the Lookout Mountain Pack. The pack, which con- sists of an estimated nine wolves, has attacked cattle four times in the past two weeks, killing two and injuring two others. The pack has been determined to be chronically depre- dating and presents a sig- nifi cant risk to livestock in the area, according to an ODFW press release. The permit allows the livestock producers or their agents to kill up to four uncollared wolves in a des- ignated area, a mix of pri- vate land and public land where they have a grazing permit, where wolves are determined to be a sig- nifi cant risk to livestock. The permit expires Aug. 21 or when livestock are removed from the area, whichever comes fi rst. ODFW staff may kill wolves included in the permit to assist the pro- ducer. The permit does not allow killing of the pack’s breeding pair, both of which have tracking collars. Under the Wolf Plan rules, livestock producers must be using and docu- ment nonlethal methods appropriate to the situa- tion before lethal control can be considered. Also, there can be no identifi ed circumstances on the prop- erty, such as bone piles or carcasses, that could be attracting wolves. ODFW found no attrac- tants during its investi- gations of depredations. The producers have been implementing nonle- thal measures for years. Since January 2021 these measures included night checking of calving cows, use of rag box, placing calving cows near house and barns in small 30-acre pastures, hazing wolves out of the calving areas, burying dead calves and cows and frequent commu- nication with ODFW on the wolves’ location. Since cattle were placed in the large rangeland pas- tures, the livestock pro- ducers have checked them frequently, placed cows in specifi c pastures based on wolf activity, and recorded and communicated wolf presence to ODFW and neighboring producers. Since the depredations started on July 14, pro- ducers have increased their human presence, hazed wolves using fi rearms, removed injured livestock from pastures, and shifted cattle to pastures with less forage available to try to prevent further confl ict. The Lookout Moun- tain wolves were fi rst doc- umented in 2019 and were documented as a breeding pair for the fi rst time in 2020, meaning they had two pups that survived through the end of the year. Four wolves including two pups were documented at the end of 2020 and seven 2021 pups were observed in May. Currently both adult breeders have func- tioning radio collars. Lethal action is autho- rized with the goal of put- ting an end to the chronic depredation, but livestock producers also are required to continue to use nonle- thal measures. Earn extra cash doing the things you do every day when you bring your checking account to Horizon. earn EARN $300 Make 15 debit card transactions in the first 90 days Direct deposit at least $200 each month Use online bill pay to pay at least 2 bills Sign up for online statements