Monday morning, Dec. 20, showed 34 inches of snow depth and a snow water equivalent of 7.5 inches, which is about 14% above average. The seven-day outlook is for 2-1/2 more inches of snow water, which is the more important mea- surement for predicting spring and summer water supplies. Emigrant Springs, at 3,800 feet, is southeast of Pendleton and northwest of La Grande. With 12 inches of snowpack, including 6 inches of new snow, the site is 52% below average with Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian, File Vehicles traverse Interstate 84 on Friday, Dec. 10, 2021, near Meacham. The National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center reports Northeastern Oregon should expect a 50& to 60% chance for above-average snowfall and a 50-60% chance of lower-than-average temperatures due to the La Nina conditions. in the next fi ve days. The Milk Shakes site DELIVERY Continued from Page A1 The delivery will cap a career during which Varney has walked about 57,000 miles while doing his 10-mile route, the equivalent of circling the Earth more than twice. The “globe trekking” has not taken a toll on Varney — he has called in sick about as often as history buff s dis- cover envelopes with old postmarks from ghost towns in Northeastern Oregon. Varney estimates that he has missed just fi ve days since starting work as a letter car- rier in 1998. “I feel like we are a team and I would be letting the team down if I missed work,” he said. More than postal customers La Grande Postmaster Kelly Carreiro said Varney is remarkably dedicated. “He’s a real workhorse. If his name is on the schedule, he will be at work,” he said. Varney is a workhorse who is as popular with his customers as a Kentucky Derby winner at Churchill Downs. Carrero said Varney is so well liked that many times when people on his route call La Grande’s post offi ce to complain about something, they make a point, without being asked, of emphasizing that Varney is not linked to anything they are complaining about. “They really care about him,” Carreiro said. Varney has 850 homes and businesses on his route. “They are my extended family,” he said. It is a family the letter carrier hands more than mail to — he also off ers a hand of assistance when possible. For example, he has changed light bulbs for people facing physical chal- lenges and provided encour- aging words to those who appear upset or lonely. He also has helped people get access to their food. Varney recalled that once a woman greeted him with a jar of pickles. He mistakenly thought it was a gift. “Then, she said, ‘I’ve been waiting for you all day. Will you open this?’” Varney said. Alex Wittwer/The Observer Dean Varney returns to his truck after delivering a package on Second Street in La Grande on Tuesday, Dec. 21, 2021. The letter carrier was touched when a senior on his route, who was moving to an assisted care center, insisted that he attend his going- away party. Varney said he is keenly aware that mail carriers can be the only people many homebound individuals get to communicate with. “We are the one point of contact some people have during the day,” he said. The mail carrier also enjoys speaking with the younger people on his route. Varney noted that recently an 18-year-old told Varney he is the only postman he remembers having. “I told him, ‘I remember when your mom and dad brought you home from the hospital,’” he said. Military career Varney joined the postal service after a 12-year career in the U.S. Army as a heli- copter pilot. He was fi rst sta- tioned in Fairbanks, Alaska, where he made many fl ights to rescue people climbing 20,000-foot Mount McKinley, the tallest moun- tain in the United States. He later was transferred to the Middle East where he fl ew a helicopter during Operation Desert Storm, when the United States was part of a coalition that pushed Iraqi forces out of Kuwait. Varney never found himself under enemy fi re but he was threatened on fl ights by shrapnel from exploding SCUD missiles that fl ew at his helicopter. Varney, who saw some of his friends killed during Operation Desert Storm, emerged from the military unscathed, but with a strong desire to establish roots in a community, something that attracted him to the postal service. “I had 12 addresses in nine years while in the mil- itary. This job gives me an opportunity to go back to the same home every night,” he said. Varney said serving as an Army helicopter pilot has few similarities to working as a mail carrier. “They both have cerebral challenges but other than that they are worlds apart,” he said. Some told Varney that working as a mail carrier would be stressful, How- ever, he said that the ten- sion he experienced as a military helicopter pilot, where he sometimes fl ew at treetop level in the dark while wearing night vision goggles, was far greater than what he has experienced as a letter carrier. “I’m not feeling the stress,” he said. A rough beginning Varney has delivered mail on his route — named City Route 4 — for 12 years. Prior to taking over the route from Lyle Jensen, who is now retired and still lives in La Grande, Varney was a substitute carrier, fi lling in for all of La Grande’s fi ve city routes. The position was particularly challenging because Varney often found himself doing routes he was unfamiliar with. “That was much more diffi cult than what I’m doing now,” he said. The world is a diff erent place than it was when Varney fi rst started as a letter carrier, and the items delivered by postal workers refl ects this. He said that, when he started, only 20-30 of his deliveries were pack- on the Oregon/Washington border east of Walla Walla ages each day. Those days are gone forever. “Today that number is unheard of,” he said. Varney said on average he delivers four times the number of parcels he fi rst did — and during the Christmas season, he delivers well over 200 parcels a day. He also said the number of packages he delivers has jumped since the COVID-19 pandemic started. “The pandemic put online shopping into a whole new gear,” he said. The huge increase in packages is making the job of mail carriers more chal- lenging because their trucks are not big enough for a large quantity of parcels. Carriers often have to make return trips to the post offi ce to pick up packages while doing their routes. It also means that it takes longer to load trucks because pack- ages must be packed in a precise manner to make effi - cient use of space. Varney said he has enormous respect for the profession- alism and dedication La Grande’s mail carriers have shown in dealing with the issue. “We have an amazing staff ,” he said. A ‘bittersweet’ day Varney said he picked Christmas Eve as his last day for two reasons. “I didn’t want to leave at the peak of the season, and I wanted to give myself a Christmas present,” he said. Varney is looking for- ward to spending more time with his family, including his wife, Michelle, and daughters, Shylinn and Emily. Varney noted that Shylinn and her husband, Michael Baty, are expecting their fi rst child in January. It is Varney’s fi rst grandchild. Varney, who lives in Imbler, is also looking for- ward to operating a small hobby farm and traveling with his wife. Despite what he has to look forward to, he knows that he will feel a wide range of feelings on Christmas Eve. “It will be bittersweet. I am leaving my team, part- ners and an old neighbor- hood,” he said, “but I will be starting a new chapter of my life, which I am excited about.” has 42 inches of snow- pack with 24% snow/ water equivalent. This is 10% above average, and 18 inches are predicted to fall in the next fi ve days. On the Union County side of the Wallowa Moun- tains just up the hill from Cove, Moss Springs, at 5,760 feet, has recorded 25 inches of snowpack with 6.6 inches of snow water equivalent — 93% of normal for this time of year. Eleven inches of new snow is predicted to fall in the next fi ve days. In Wallowa County, Mount Howard, at 7,900 feet, has 20 inches of snow with 4.6 inches of snow water equivalent, putting it at 75% of normal. Just over the ridge at Aneroid Lake, 7,400 feet, conditions are drier. The site has recorded a snow water content of 4.1 inches, which is 58% of average. The next fi ve days should see 22 inches of new snowfall. Across Eastern Oregon, watersheds are still reporting lower-than-av- erage numbers for snow- pack. The Grande Ronde- Burnt Powder-Imnaha Basin is at 96%, the Mal- heur Basin is at 94%, John Day Basin is recording 90%, and Harney Basin is at 91%, while the highest for the region, the Umatil- la-Walla Walla Basin, is at 100%. HOSPITAL Continued from Page A1 Having worked in the medical fi eld since 1987, she stated that hospital employees understand the spectrum of reasons why patients might be in the hospital on Christmas Day — from mothers in labor to emergency situations. “We’re here as a team to help these guys and help relieve some of their stress the best that we can and hopefully get them back home to their fami- lies,” Schatzlein said. In the laundry services department, holiday work schedules are planned ahead of time. However, employees work together to make the best of the sit- uation for each other. Kim Clark, a laundry services employee who has been at Grande Ronde Hospital for 12 years, volunteered this year to take the shift of someone who worked last Christmas. “We try to give the people with small kids time to spend with their children,” Clark said. “Everybody is willing to work with each other in that respect.” Robin Talley, a phle- botomist in the hospital lab, volunteered to work on the holiday for the fi rst time in her four years at the hospital so another employee could enjoy the holidays during her child’s fi rst Christmas. “I thought that since I don’t have kids, I’d pick up the shift and work,” Talley said. According to Talley, employees who work together on holidays bond over the shared experi- ence — she referred to this year’s group as “the dream team.” Every department at the hospital diff ers, as some work on call throughout the holi- days. This is the case for Fritz Flowers, a biomed- ical technician who has worked at Grande Ronde Hospital for fi ve years. “We all take turns and rotate,” Flowers said of the technical services department. “On holidays we usually have a reduced staff , but we still have to be prepared for every- thing, just like any other day.” Biomedical tech- nicians provide pre- ventative maintenance on all hospital equip- ment throughout the building and at the hos- pital’s clinics. The staff rotates who is on call every weekend and hol- iday throughout the year, which Flowers says is part of a bigger, collective cause. “We’re all here for the same reason, it doesn’t matter what department,” he said. Flowers noted that working on holidays and providing the same quality service day in and day out is an essential part of working in a hospital. “Everybody has the same end goal,” Flowers said. “We have some great people here and amazing community support.” For hospital workers across the country, the pandemic has created unprecedented times. After a long year, the tire- less eff orts of those at Grande Ronde Hospital persist into the end of 2021 with bright hopes for 2022. “People get sick and you can’t predict that, so we all have to be here to help them medically and to make sure that they can get the best treat- ment possible,” Schatzlein said. “We all understand that, the ones who have to work. It’s part of our job and it’s part of our focus.” VISIT US ON THE WEB AT: www.LaGrandeObserver.com Get strong, fast Wi-Fi to work and play throughout your home. ^ FEEL THE SPEED, EVEN AT PEAK TIMES. No annual contract. Based on wired connection to gateway. 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