FROM PAGE ONE TUESDAY, JANUARY 11, 2022 ACTIVITIES Continued from Page A1 critical to continue off ering extra- curricular activities because they play a vital role in maintaining students’ social, emotional and mental health. Staying vigilant Imbler School District Super- intendent Doug Hislop is using the guidance to inspire him- self and his district to continue being vigilant when dealing with COVID-19. He appreciates the focus the state’s guidance is placing on extracurricular activ- ities and is taking it to heart. Hislop, who is also Imbler High School’s wrestling coach, noted that he was considering taking his team to one of two tournaments in Idaho during the upcoming weekend but ultimately decided Hislop Mendoza Wells against traveling to the Gem State because there would likely be schools at either of the tour- naments he would know nothing about in terms of the COVID-19 safety protocol they follow. At the Oregon wrestling tour- naments Hislop’s team travels to, as a precaution he has his squad stay together rather than spending a lot of time meeting with opposing wrestlers. The Union School District, like Imbler, will not be making fundamental changes to extra- curricuar activities, according to Carter Wells, the school district’s superintendent. Wells said the plan the school district is using for operating activities safely is working well and has not sparked any outbreaks. He also said his school district’s infection rate, which is low, has not been infl u- enced by the omicron variant. “We have not had complica- tions because of the variant,” he said. North Powder School District Superintendent Lance Dixon said he also has no plans to cut back extracurricular activities because of COVID-19. He said it would not be fair to students after so many of their sporting events and other activities were canceled ear- lier because of the pandemic. “We are not going to take sports away from kids again,” he said. The North Powder superinten- dent said he wants a semblance of normalcy to return to the lives of students. “They have already missed so THE OBSERVER — A5 many chances to participate in playoff s and state tournaments,” he said. Dixon noted that athletics and club activities give a number of students academic motivation. “Some students come to school because of sports and extracurric- ular activities,” he said. Keeping schools open The message from the Oregon Department of Education and Oregon Health Authority comes as schools around the state begin their new terms and the omicron variant of the coronavirus con- tinues to spread. “It’s all about trying to con- tinue to ensure that our students can attend school in person every day,” ODE Director Colt Gill said on Jan. 3 following the release of the guidance. Gill said that includes schools continuing to enforce the miti- TRUCKERS Continued from Page A1 stuck for more than 24 hours at Flying J Travel Center, La Grande, as repeated acci- dents, heavy snow and main- tenance closed down Inter- state 84. It had been closed off and on several times during the past week. Snowdrifts one day, wrecks and traffi c block- ages by unchained semi- trailers the next. Dozens of other truck drivers had been stranded there, as well. “It’s been a long time since I’ve been shut down with this many trucks parked,” Holman said. Rows of trucks were parked, placed and maneu- vered into the lot, blocking each other in and forming a logistical slide puzzle, one made trickier when the roads were clear. She was anxious to leave Flying J — the roads had just opened eastbound, albeit briefl y — and solicited other truck drivers to move their rigs so she could maneuver out of the lot. As one driver left — a day-route driver without a sleeping rig in the cabin who wanted to fi nd a hotel for the night — space was cleared for her exit. But it was just a hair too late, as I-84 was closed yet again due to unchained semis blocking the route. A few dogs perked their POWERS Continued from Page A1 jurisdictions should be under a state of emergency. According to the pro- posed legislation, the decla- rations cannot exceed incre- ments of 30 days. After 30 days, the decision to extend a state of emergency would go to a local governing body for a vote. County and city governing bodies could then create a hybrid of emer- gency restrictions if they choose to do so regarding such measures as masking, school closures and vac- cine requirements, Owens explained in an interview. Additionally, the legis- lative concept states that a governor may not retal- iate against a county whose governing body has deter- mined not to fully continue a declaration of emergency beyond the initial 30 days of the order. Owens said this includes threats to pull state funding, fi nes against local businesses and other types of state sanctions. Under current Oregon law, the governor must review and reevaluate emer- gency orders every 60 days to determine whether those orders should be continued, modifi ed or rescinded. Local control emerged as a signifi cant issue for Grant County residents in August after Gov. Kate Brown reversed course on her June Alex Wittwer/The Observer Brenda Holman, center, speaks with fellow truckers at the Flying J Travel Center, La Grande, as she waits for Interstate 84 to reopen on Wednesday, Jan. 5, 2022. Holman noted that the truck stop atmosphere is not like what she remembers when she started her driving career more than 30 years ago. heads up over the dashboards in the trucks in the parking lot. Some drivers, Holman said, will bring dogs or family along on the routes. Part- nering up, she said. It is a lonely profession. The truck drivers don’t know each other, despite some driving along the same route for years. Holman said she hasn’t seen some of her co-workers back in Nebraska for several years. For brief moments, she and a couple of truck drivers she hadn’t met before spoke outside as snow fell, and joked about the closure. “I think we’re stuck here till spring,” one of the drivers said. Past time Ken Spriggs, 78, is a day-route truck driver. That means he goes home every night — at least when he’s not stuck in a road closure span- ning several days. He said he has a daughter in Elgin he was thinking of staying with for the night if the roads didn’t soon open up. Working for a company based in Vale, he has been a truck driver for 12 years. Before that, he was a police offi cer with Prairie City for 20 years. Fur- ther back, a veteran stationed in South Korea just after the creation of the Korean Demil- itarized Zone. He said he’d been shot at in both jobs. He collects two pensions, but con- tinues to work because he enjoys keeping busy. “I just hate sitting around,” Spriggs said, walking toward the Flying J, reminiscing of past days. “I used to come here and eat all the time, years ago. Those were the good days. Awesome restaurant — my daughter always met me 30 executive order handing Constitutional framework izations due to an antici- Jim Moore, a professor over public health decisions pated surge of the rapidly of political science at to counties amid a resur- spreading omicron variant. Pacifi c University in Forest gence of COVID-19. Oregon Health and Sci- Grove, said Oregon’s con- While the swiftly ence University lead data stitution defi nes the gov- spreading delta variant sent scientist Dr. Peter Graven ernor’s emergency powers COVID case counts predicted that the and what types of “cat- soaring, Brown issued omicron variant astrophic disasters” can a barrage of new could surpass the allow them to be used. executive orders man- delta variant in the The state constitution dating masks in K-12 number of cases puts acts of terrorism at the schools, inside state due to its extreme top of the list, along with buildings and, fi nally, transmissibility. Owens in all public indoor Brown’s offi ce said earthquakes, fl oods and public health emergencies. spaces in the state. Those in the press release that the Moore said that the actions drew the ire of emergency declaration pro- catastrophes spelled out Grant County leaders. vides the necessary frame- within the constitution are Parents asked for the work to access resources in assumed to be relatively county court’s support in response to the pandemic, short-lived. getting decision-making which includes the deploy- “The problem we have back to the districts and out ment of medical providers right now is that it’s going of the hands of the state. to hospitals, fl exibility on long term,” Moore said. County Judge Scott around professional health Myers told parents that the licensing, and access to fed- “And so Republicans have decided that is an abuse of county does not have the eral disaster relief funds. emergency power.” power to take back local “As Oregon prepares for Indeed, Moore said, control of its school districts what could be our worst everyone has a partisan from the state. However, the surge in hospitalizations take on the debate. county signed a letter from during this pandemic, I “Republicans say, ‘We the Eastern Oregon Coun- know that this is not the need to change it.’ Why? ties Association asking beginning of the new year Because they don’t like for local control of school any of us had hoped for,” what Kate Brown is doing. districts. Brown said. “Some people might be mistaken in thinking Blazing Fast that the county has power Internet! ADD TO YOUR PACKAGE FOR ONLY beyond a voice,” Myers $ 99 19 . /mo. said. “We don’t have the power to make those things happen.” 2-YEAR America’s Top 120 Package In a Dec. 21, 2021, press PRICE TV CHANNELS 190 release, Brown extended the MO. Local Channels! Including for 12 Mos. GUARANTEE COVID-19 state of emer- gency through June, saying CALL TODAY - For $100 Gift Card Promo Code: DISH100 scientists believed the state 1-866-373-9175 Offer ends 4/13/22. was just weeks away from a new wave of hospital- — Oregon Public Broadcasting reporter Meerah Powell contributed to this report. Michael Cruz had been at the Flying J for two days due to closures. He was sitting sideways on a lounge chair in the back watching television. Next to him, Randy Payne, a truck driver of 10 years, was watching the televi- sion as well. Payne had been there for two hours. A string of commercials played over the TV. Payne wore a Pitts- burgh Steelers beanie, a well- worn and stained refl ective vest, and a Bluetooth headset. He was checking his phone, passing the time. “Other than your CB receiver, you have nobody around you,” Payne said. “That’s it. It’s a mindset. Trucking is a lifestyle, it’s not a job, it’s a lifestyle. You are living in a walk-in closet. You live there for two to six weeks at a time. You’re away from your family — I don’t live here, I live in Albuquerque. It can be a dream job for somebody, but the wife has to sign on for it, the husband has to sign on for it, the kids sign on for it.” Truck drivers are paid per mile. Typically, it’s less than 50 cents per mile, lower for newer drivers, according to U.S. Bureau of Labor and Statistics numbers. When the trucks aren’t moving, the drivers aren’t getting paid, and the companies aren’t turning profi ts. It’s a pressure that incentivizes long hours and driving in poor conditions. “There are some compa- nies that will be ‘Go, go, go!’ no matter what,” Payne said of the pressure to keep the wheels turning. “With my company, I don’t really feel that way.” Time is the enemy. If you keep still, you make no money. Boredom creeps in. Some pass time with video games, or movies, or books — or hitting refresh on Trip- Check or other news stations to know right away when the roads open back up. “I was supposed to be in Seattle today,” Payne said, “and that’s not happening.” Democrats are saying, ‘No, we don’t need to change it’ because they do like what Kate Brown’s doing.” Since the pandemic’s beginning, it’s become evi- dent that the federal gov- ernment has minimal power in this situation and that the ability to deal with the pan- demic rests with the states, Moore said. That limitation on fed- eral power, he said, is by design as part of the U.S. Constitution. For instance, he said, Oregon was able to pass an assisted suicide law because states have the right and the frontline duty to deal with public health issues. Almost from the pan- demic’s beginning, the question of how to respond to the coronavirus has been a hot-button political issue. That said, Owens’ pro- posed legislation is some- thing of a departure from recently passed legislation in GOP strongholds. For instance, conservative leg- islators in more than half of U.S. states, spurred on by voters angry about lock- downs and mask mandates, have stripped local offi cials of the power to protect the public against infectious diseases. Moore said the conser- vative ethos has long been that more governing power should be local. However, legislation passed in red states like Florida runs counter to what has tra- ditionally been the GOP ideology. Thus, he said, this means one’s political ideology shapes one’s views on emer- gency powers. For his part, Owens said his motives are not politi- cally driven. “Honestly, it’s not about partisanship,” Owens said. “I by no means think the governor should not have the ability to declare an emergency declara- tion for 30 days, maybe even longer,” Owens said. “That’s reasonable.” here, and we’d eat like crazy.” His truck was parked along Highway 30, several hundred feet away from the truck stop. He said he thinks this might be his last season driving. “I thought about quit- ting these guys, but they said no,” Spriggs said, fi lling up a coff ee cup. He charmed his way into a cheaper cup of coff ee from the counter clerk, said it was a refi ll. He wasn’t interested in watching TV. He sat down at a Subway counter and looked out the window. Rock ballads from the ’80s played over the Flying J’s sound system. The trucks outside are packed in like sardines. “I spent a lot of years here,” Spriggs said, remi- niscing. “I think I might just make this my last run.” Extended stay La GRANDE AUTO REPAIR 975-2000 where available 69 99 $ All offers require credit qualification, 24-month commitment with early termination fee and eAutoPay. Prices include Hopper Duo for qualifying customers. Hopper, Hopper w/Sling or Hopper 3 $5/mo. more. Upfront fees may apply based on credit qualification. gation eff orts they have already been using — including wearing appropriate face coverings, fol- lowing physical distancing guide- lines, frequent hand washing and use of ventilation systems. The new ODE and OHA advi- sory also encouraged schools to implement free COVID-19 testing programs and to retrain school staff on safety protocols, as well as educate employees, students and families about COVID-19 symptoms. 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