OREGON A6 — THE OBSERVER SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 2022 Wastewater data fi nds more people have COVID than reported Rise in home testing, decrease in disease severity have masked large increase in infections in Oregon By AMELIA TEMPLETON Oregon Public Broadcasting SALEM — Last month, a new COVID-19 variant from the omicron family spread across Oregon, causing a seventh wave of infections. On paper, this seventh wave hasn’t looked particularly impres- sive, peaking in late May at about 1,500 new cases reported per day. But data from sewage samples col- lected at wastewater treatment plants across the state suggests that the BA2 omicron variant is silently causing far more infections than are showing up in state testing tallies. “Wastewater across the state is more or less at record highs or near record highs,” said Tyler Radniecki, an associate professor of environ- mental engineering who is leading the wastewater sampling research eff ort at Oregon State University. The OSU project is part of a nationwide COVID-19 wastewater surveillance eff ort. The viral con- centrations in Oregon during the current surge look similar to what the team saw during the peaks of the delta surge last August and the fi rst omicron surge in January. By the end of May, the concen- tration of virus in wastewater sam- ples registered as “strong,” indi- cating a signifi cant outbreak, in much of the state. In a handful of communities, including Forest Grove and Bend, concentrations of the virus were even higher, sig- naling particularly intense BA2 outbreaks. What the wastewater shows, Radniecki says, is that the state’s tally of COVID-19 cases is a very signifi cant underestimate of the actual spread of BA2. The Observer, File A danger sign hangs near the entrance to the La Grande Wastewater Lagoon Headworks on Thursday, Jan. 13, 2022. The treatment center stopped testing for COVID-19 in January of 2021 after experiencing diffi culties related to a short staff and skewed testing results. Wastewater monitoring does not, however, give any indication of how much severe illness a particular variant is causing. Hospitalization data shows BA2, like other omicron variants, is mostly causing milder cases, though the number of people with COVID-19 in intensive care rose above 50 this week. Ballot title certifi ed for revived animal cruelty initiative By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press SALEM — A contro- versial voter initiative in Oregon that would remove exemptions for farming and ranching under the state’s animal cruelty laws is being revived for another run. Proponents of Initia- tive Petition 3 — named the Abuse, Neglect and Assault Exemption Modifi cation and Improvement Act — took another step toward qualifying for the 2024 gen- eral election after being issued a certifi ed ballot title on Monday, June 13. IP3 is essentially a reboot on Initiative Peti- tion 13, which was fi led last year for the 2022 election. It calls for amending Oregon’s animal abuse and neglect statutes, abolishing long- standing exemptions for agriculture. The result would make it a crime to slaughter live- stock for food, while also banning common animal husbandry practices such as branding and dehorning cattle. Artifi cial insemina- tion would furthermore be considered sexual assault of an animal, a Class C felony. Exemptions for hunting, fi shing, rodeos, pest con- trol, scientifi c research and wildlife management would likewise be stripped away under the the proposal. According to the “Yes on IP3” campaign website, the laws would retain exemp- tions for killing or injuring animals in cases of self-de- fense and providing veteri- nary care. David Michelson, a Port- land-based animal rights activist and lead organizer for the campaign, said IP13 failed to garner enough sig- natures for the 2022 ballot because, “unlike the claims some have made that we receive funding from the George Plaven/Capital Press, File Holstein cows eat feed inside the dairy barn at Tilla-Bay Farms in Tillamook on Oregon’s North Coast in this undated fi le photo. likes of (George) Soros or (Bill) Gates, this is a very grassroots initiative that had started with very few team members.” “Since we started this process in November 2020, we have steadily grown in support and are hopeful of our chances for quali- fying in 2024,” Michelson said in response to ques- tions emailed by the Capital Press. Petitioners fi led IP3 on March 16. It is largely the same as IP13, but with two additions, Michelson said. First, he said IP3 would remove additional exemp- tions for livestock and farmed animals under animal neglect statutes requiring they have access to “adequate bedding, ade- quate shelter and other min- imum care provisions.” Second, the initia- tive would make it so that anyone convicted of animal cruelty could not own any animal for 5-15 years, depending on the severity State to start sending $600 stimulus payments to low-income workers By JAMIE GOLDBERG The Oregonian SALEM — More than 200,000 Oregon workers will receive $600 checks from the state as soon as this week. Oregon lawmakers in March approved the one- time stimulus payments for certain low-income workers. The payments will go to Oregonians who claimed the Earned Income Tax Credit in 2020, a tax break for low-income working house- holds, and lived within the state in the last six months of that year. The Oregon Department of Revenue said Wednesday it would distribute nearly $141.8 million to 236,000 qualifying households. Pay- ments are limited to one per household. About $82 million will be deposited directly into the bank accounts of quali- fying individuals, while the remaining nearly $60 million will be sent via mail. The state said qualifying individ- uals will receive the money no later than Friday, July 1. The state is paying for the stimulus payments with federal pandemic aid approved by Congress last year. Rich Hoover, a spokes- person for The Oregon Department of Revenue, said the payments are not subject to state or federal income tax. House Bill 4157 passed by wide margins in both chambers of the Oregon Legislature this spring, with a handful of Republi- cans joining majority Dem- ocrats in supporting the bill. The payments evolved from a 2021 plan for larger stimulus payments — up to $2,000 — to essential workers who stayed on the job during the pandemic and those who rejoined the workforce last fall. of the crime. While the attorney gen- eral did certify the ballot title for IP3, supporters are not yet approved to start cir- culating the petition. Those who commented on the draft ballot title for IP3 may appeal the certifi ed title to the Oregon Supreme Court. Appeals are due June 28. If approved, the cam- paign would need to collect 112,020 signatures to place IP3 on the 2024 ballot. Tami Kerr, executive director of the Oregon Dairy Farmers Association, said IP3 would put dairies and cattle producers out of business, hurting rural communities statewide. “I know how hard our producers work, my family included. It’s personally off ensive,” Kerr said. “As crazy as this is, and as neg- ative as it would be to our rural communities, I would hope that a lot of our elected offi cials would speak out in opposition to it, our state senators included.” Case counts have always been a very imperfect measure of actual infections because they are highly dependent on the number of people getting clinically tested for COVID- 19. And as more people use rapid at-home tests, the amount of clinical testing is dropping, making case counts an even less reliable proxy for COVID-19 spread. To better understand how prev- alent the virus is, some local public health offi cials are increasingly relying on the wastewater data instead. The surveillance method takes advantage of the fact that many people infected with COVID-19 shed the virus in their poop. The OSU team collects data from around 40 wastewater treatment plants statewide, from Ontario to Warm Springs to Florence. Every week, the treatment plants use a small fi lter to collect a rep- resentative sample of the sewage fl owing in over a 24-hour period. The fi lters get rolled up, stuck in little tubes, and shipped to Cor- vallis. OSU’s scientists identify viral RNA on the droplets in the fi lters and quantify it. After two years of honing the process, it now takes about four to fi ve days from when a sample is collected to when OSU has an estimate of how much COVID-19 virus is in it.