INSIDE RIBS 101: FOUR METHODS FOR COOKING PORK RIBS | HOME & LIVING, B1 $1.50 TUESDAY EDITION October 19, 2021 EOU student vaccine rate edges past 75% School’s employee vaccination rate climbs past 80% By DAVIS CARBAUGH The Observer LA GRANDE — With the vaccine deadline approaching, Eastern Oregon University’s vac- cination rate among on-campus students stands at just over 75%, while the staff vaccination rate is above 80%. As of the university’s latest update to its COVID-19 dash- board, on Friday, Oct. 15, 75.2% of the on-campus students had received a COVID-19 vaccine, while 23.8% of students fi led exemptions. The statistic mea- sures all students attending classes or engaging with the uni- versity in an on-campus setting. This number refl ects against a 56.3% vaccination rate in Union County as of Oct. 16. Across all employees at Eastern Oregon University, 80.1% have received the COVID-19 vaccine and 17.7% have fi led exemptions. Following the FDA approval of the Pfi zer vaccine, the uni- versity’s vaccine requirement went into eff ect with a 60-day window for getting the vaccine or fi ling an exemption. The require- ment states that all students and employees who plan to work or engage with the university in person and on campus must have proof of vaccination or an exemp- tion on fi le by Oct. 22. Since the university’s dash- board began tracking data in July, there have been 60 positive cases among on-campus and off - campus students and employees. Twenty-four of the cases were off -campus students, while 18 employees and 13 on-campus stu- dents have tested positive with the virus. Throughout the 2020-21 aca- demic year, the university expe- rienced 157 positive cases, 93 of which were reported to be off - campus students. The 55 positive cases so far this year come from a batch of 157 total tests. “Throughout the pandemic, we have tracked our trends and eff ectiveness through data. These See, EOU/Page A5 Alex Wittwer/The Observer Kyler Petersen, 14, cuts samples of reeds from a dried up pond in La Grande on Tuesday, Oct. 14, 2021, while attending the Discover After School program for middle school students. Learning in nature After-school program puts middle school creativity, ingenuity on display By DICK MASON The Observer LA GRANDE — This after- school classroom lacks walls but not inspired students who enjoy discovering the wonders of nature. It is an unadorned pavilion on the south edge of La Grande on land owned by the Blue Mountains Conservancy. The pavilion, about 50 yards south of the currently dry Pete’s Pond, is frequently the base of the new Discover After School program for La Grande Middle School students. It is at this pavilion that stu- dents put their creativity and ingenuity on display while working on projects, many of them artistic, that incorporate elements of the outdoors. The projects students are involved in include painting moun- tain scenes, making nature looms composed of plants and feathers of Rio Grande turkeys that roost in nearby trees, dig- ital photography, and adding plants to the Pete’s Pond landscape. “This is where students can learn a broad range of things through nature,” said Carrie Caselton Lowe, a leader of the Discover After School program Alex Wittwer/The Observer Treyton Miller works on a nature weave as part of an after-school program at Pete’s Pond in La Grande on Tuesday, Oct. 14, 2021. who is contracted with Art Center East, which is helping put on the program with the La Grande Parks Department, Cook Memorial Library the Greater Oregon Science, Tech- nology, Engineering and Math program, also known as GO STEM. The projects students are taking on are all of their own choosing. “We want them to engage in something they want to do,” Caselton Lowe said. Caselton Lowe is joined in running the Discover After School program by Meghan ABOUT THE PROGRAM The Discover After School program is funded by a geography grant from the Gray Family Foundation. Information on signing up for the Discover After School program can be obtained by going to the Art Center East website, artcentereast. org. See, Program/Page A5 National group defends Oregon’s new congressional map By DIRK VANDERHART Oregon Public Broadcasting SALEM — A national Democratic group is pushing back against claims that Oregon’s new congres- sional districts are gerry- mandered in the party’s favor and urging a judi- cial panel to okay the map passed by Oregon Demo- crats last month. In a fi ling Monday, Oct. 18, on behalf of six Orego- nians, the National Demo- cratic Redistricting Com- mittee insists the new maps meet all legal stan- dards and were in fact the product of robust negotia- tion between Republicans and Democrats. “This map represents compromise not only because of how it was enacted — with Republi- cans and Democrats nego- tiating throughout the pro- cess — but also because it is a competitive map that is refl ective of the state,” Kelly Burton, president of the NDRC, said in a INDEX Classified ...............B2 Comics ....................B5 Crossword .............B2 Dear Abby .............B6 statement. With the fi ling, the NDRC is seeking to insert itself Burton into a fi ght that began last week, when former Secre- tary of State Bev Clarno and three other Republi- cans sued to challenge the congressional map Dem- ocrats muscled through in September. That map includes four U.S. House districts that are WEATHER Home & Living .....B1 Horoscope .............B3 Letters ....................A4 Lottery ....................A2 THURSDAY Obituaries ..............A3 Opinion ..................A4 Records ..................A3 Sports .....................A6 either safe for Democrats or lean in the par- ty’s favor, one district that looks to be a Clarno Republican stronghold, and one seat that is theoretically a tossup. Clarno and other Republicans say the map was the product of Demo- crats scheming with special interest groups to secure dominance. They argue the map illogically anchors four districts in liberal Port- Full forecast on the back of B section Tonight Wednesday 52 LOW 60/39 A shower late A few showers OTEC USES VR TO CONVEY SAFETY MESSAGES land, inappropriately splits counties, and grants Oregon Democrats far more power in Congress than their share of the statewide vote. “The result of this highly partisan process is a clear, egregious par- tisan gerrymander, as has been widely acknowledged both in Oregon and across the country,” the Repub- lican lawsuit said. “Demo- crats are projected to win fi ve of the six of Oregon’s See, Maps/Page A5 CONTACT US 541-963-3161 Issue 123 2 sections, 14 pages La Grande, Oregon Email story ideas to news@lagrande observer.com. More contact info on Page A4. Online at lagrandeobserver.com