INDEX Classifieds History KidScoop MedicalDirectory Obituaries Opinion Police,SheriffLogs PublicNotices Sports WorshipDirectory Gorge Local: Cascadia Creamery in Trout Lake — A13 B8-9 B4 B1 B12 A7 A4-6 B5 B6-7 A13 A10 The Next Door Inc: 'Thanks to You' — A4 Weather Snowfallexpectedthrough theweekend,lowsdownto 13degrees Art and Music Exhibits, concert in The Dalles — B1 Columbia Gorge News HOOD RIVER | THE DALLES | WHITE SALMON Wednesday,February10,2021 Volume1,Issue45 No trolls under this bridge Crews start demolishing section of I-84 in Hood River Kirby Neumann-Rea ■ By Columbia Gorge News $1.00 COVID-19 “Keepfollowingthesafety precautions—wearegoingto keepgoing,wearegoing togetthere.” Mimi McDonell Wasco County Health Officer HOOD RIVER — Gnarled rebar and piles of gray rubble line the deck of the Interstate 84 bridge over the Hood River, where traffic serpentines past an unusual public works demolition project. Carter and Company crews are working with Oregon Department of Transportation to knock into small pieces — down to dust, in fact — the 380-foot east-bound span of the freeway as it crosses the river. Part of the mostly-asphalt freeway, the concrete portion is technically a bridge and dates to the freeway construction in the 1950s. SeeI-84,page6 New COVID infections dropping Mark Gibson ■ By Columbia Gorge News Supervisor Jim Califf with the largest of the holes on the Interstate 84 bridge deck, about 100 yards east of exit 63. Kirby Neumann-Rea photos Skier endures 'minor frostbite' following his rescue by Trout Lake locals Jacob Bertram ■ By Columbia Gorge News of five mountaineers who braved the winter weather to make the climb through the night, find the skier, and bring him home. All told, the ordeal lasted from Saturday afternoon to around 4 a.m. on Sunday, when the group found the skier and brought him back down the mountain. Jacob Stock, the skier’s A 17-year-old skier from Trout Lake survived after getting stranded in whiteout conditions on Mount Adams last week- end, thanks to emergency communications and nav- igations systems as well as the expediency of a group father, said his son had suf- fered a minor hit of frostbite to his wrist, a fortunate turn of events from what he most deeply feared on Saturday. “To have my son back, it was very relieving,” Stock said. “I know I could never thank those five guys enough. Their bravery, knowledge, and experience are unmatched.” The young skier had made his way up the moun- tain early the morning of Jan. 30 to do some solo skiing, Stock recalled. “It was nice weather when he was up there. He turned around and from what he describes, the weather started to go in at one time and it felt like he had vertigo,” Stock said. The skier then posted up on the Lunch Counter approach. Stock and his wife were snowmobiling in the Gifford Pinchot National Forest at the time the first beacon signal went out, around 1:30 in the afternoon. They were out of range to talk to him through their Garmin SeeRESCUE,page2 HOOD RIVER — For Hood River County School District and the approximately 4,000 students it serves, the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent switch to Comprehensive Distance Learning (CDL) that began last spring has meant a heavy reliance on technology — both access to devices and internet services — to maintain a new model of public education. But for the district’s Director of Technology Tod Hilstad and staff, this story begins much earlier than March 13, 2020, the last day HRCSD schools were open for in-person instruction. “A few years ago, the community of Hood River voted to approve a bond and invest in its schools,” said Hilstad. “Part of this bond includ- ed $3 million to upgrade classroom instruc- tional technology and computing devices for teachers and students.” The district decided to apply that money SeeCOVID,page8 Chaos coming Senior vaccine eligibility begins next week Tech team connects students, teachers with distance learning tools Trisha Walker ■ By Columbia Gorge News Wasco and Hood River counties are both on track to meet state in-person school metrics, and closer to moving from Extreme Risk to the High Risk category of pandemic restrictions. If current coronavirus trends continue, Wasco County may meet the metrics for on site hybrid education as early as next week, with new positive cases dropping to 88 and a test positivity rate of 3.7 percent Jan. 17 through Jan. 30, the first or “warning” week of a two- week cycle, Health Officer Mimi McDonell told the Wasco County board of commissioners Feb. 3. “The trend is going in the right direction, the trend is going down,” she said. By Gary A. Warner ■ Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — The gap between COVID-19 vaccine eligibility and availability will make for a chaotic start to age-based inoculations this week. Beginning Monday, Oregon residents 80 and older became eligible to receive their first dose of the two-shot Moderna or Pfizer vaccines. People over 80 have account- ed for just over half of the 2,002 deaths from COVID-19 in Oregon. But Gov. Kate Brown and Oregon Health Authority Director Pat Allen said demand vastly outstrips current supply. Allen told a House panel earlier this week that there are an estimated 168,000 people 80 and older in Oregon, which is currently receiving about 40,000 first-shot doses of the vac- cine per week. This includes doses for those in earlier priority groups who haven’t been inoculated yet. The required second doses are in a separate count. It all translates to a build- ing wave of frustration and towards student iPads, so when the pandemic hit, all students in grades 6-12 already had access to the devices; high schoolers were already allowed to take their iPads home before the pandemic, while K-8 students used them in classrooms. For CDL purposes, all iPads were checked out (and checked back in) for the remainder of the 2019-2020 school year, and again distributed at the start of SeeTECH,page11 Daniel, a third grader at Parkdale Elementary and participant in Comprehensive Distance Learning (CDL) through Hood River County School District, with headphones pur- chased with funds donated by Hood River County Education Foundation. Photo courtesy of HRCSD SeeSENIORS,page8 COVID-19 VACCINE INFO: How to get vaccinated Oregon WHO Older Adults WHEN 80+ FEB. 8 WHERE Public vaccination clinics 75+ FEB. 15 Local public health & tribes 70+ FEB. 22 65+ MAR. 1 Long term care facilities Participating retail pharmacies Wa s h i n g t o n HOW ONLINE covidvaccine.oregon.gov • Local events/links • Get Vaccinated Oregon registration/notification tool • Chat box 211 • text ORCOVID to 898211 • email: ORCOVID@211info.org • Call 211 WHO/WHEN Winter • All people 65 yearsor older • All people 50 years or older in multigenerational households (home where individuals from 2 or more generations reside such as an elder and a grandchild) Spring/Summer • High-risk critical workers 50 years or older who work in certain congregate settings: Agriculture; food processing; grocery stores; K-12 (educators & staff); childcare; corrections; prisons, jails or detention centers; public transit; fire; law enforcement WHERE Public vaccination clinics Local public health & tribes Long term care facilities Participating retail pharmacies HOW WASHINGTON 1-800-525-0127 1-888-856-5816 https://www.doh.wa.gov/ Emergencies/COVID19/vaccine covid.vaccine@doh.wa.gov text the word “Coronavirus” to 211211 Find out if it’s your turn at FindYourPhaseWA.org