A4 THE ASTORIAN • SATuRdAy, MAy 29, 2021 OPINION editor@dailyastorian.com KARI BORGEN Publisher DERRICK DePLEDGE Editor Founded in 1873 SHANNON ARLINT Circulation Manager JOHN D. BRUIJN Production Manager CARL EARL Systems Manager BEHIND THE NEWS ‘When asked to do so, we step up’ O ver the winter, as coronavirus cases surged, Clatsop County turned to the private sector for help with the vaccine rollout. Chris Laman, the director of pharmacy and cancer center services at Columbia Memorial Hospital, was assigned to lead a vaccine task force in collaboration with the county, the Astoria hospital and Provi- dence Seaside Hospital. The target? Vaccinate 27,533 people — 70% of the county’s popula- tion — to try to achieve herd immunity against the virus. “I think what we heard DERRICK from Mike (McNickle) DePLEDGE and Don (Bohn) was that our Public Health Depart- ment had been incredibly taxed since the beginning of the pandemic, and didn’t necessarily have the capacity at that time to really put on huge mass vaccination events,” Laman said of the county public health director and county manager. “And they could use some help — not taking over, certainly — just help, to really have a combined effort.” Laman will step back from his role as the mass vaccination events wind down. Margo Lalich, the county’s interim pub- lic health director, will take the lead on the vaccine task force in June and try to inch closer to the goal. As of Friday, 16,411 people had been fully vaccinated. In an interview, Laman discussed the importance of getting vaccinated, the resistance to the vaccines and what the federal and state governments could have done differently to improve the vaccine rollout. Q: We’re at the point now where everyone who wants a vaccine against the coronavirus can get one. What’s your message to people who don’t want a vaccine? A: The science out there really sup- ports getting vaccinated. I think consistent research that’s being published shows that people who are vac- cinated are much, much less likely to get the coronavirus. The few breakthrough cases that there have been, those patients aren’t being hospitalized, those patients are not dying from the coronavirus. So I would say that even though there are — or can be — side effects from the vaccine, the side effects from COVID are much worse than the side effects from the vaccine. In order to get us back to sort of the America that we all know and love, that we had before this pandemic happened, we’ve got to get at least — at least — 70% of our population vaccinated. So I would highly encourage them to get the vaccine. Q: There has long been a vocal anti-vaccine community in the United States. But the resistance to the coro- navirus vaccines appears woven into political identity. Many of the same people who downplayed the risk from the virus and objected to masks and other precautions are against vaccina- Hailey Hoffman/The Astorian Chris Laman, the director of pharmacy and cancer center services at Columbia Memorial Hospital in Astoria, leads Clatsop County’s vaccine task force. CLATSOP COuNTy IS AN AMAZING PLACE. I MEAN, 350 NOW VOLuNTEERS HAVE STEPPEd uP TO MAKE THESE EVENTS POSSIBLE. WE’VE AdMINISTEREd MORE THAN 30,000 dOSES OF VACCINE. tion. Are you concerned this could do longer-term damage to trust in public health? A: I’m not a political figure. I feel like I’m a public health figure. But I think the polarization that we have in the United States has definitely played a role in our ability to get people vaccinated. I do have some concerns over things like the governor giving a million-dollar — a lottery (for vaccination) — and the way that is going to be perceived, and the sort of long-term effects that that’s going to have on public health just in general. So I do have some concerns about that. I guess I hadn’t thought about this par- ticular question. But, certainly, it’s a big worry. And I think it’s playing a role in many different parts of our lives, sort of the polarization that is in the country right now. Q: Looking back, what could the federal and state governments have done differently to improve the vaccine rollout? A: I think just consistent messaging — is something that I think has really lacked since the beginning. It seems at times like different groups are saying different things. I understand that things are changing really, really quickly all the time, and have been for the last year. But I think sort of taking a moment or two to make sure that the states are all aware of information before the federal government puts it out and can get on the same page. So that, in this day of technology and information getting shared so quickly, it felt at times like the state didn’t know what the federal government was doing. And then us, at the county level — especially at the task force level — we hadn’t heard from the state or the federal government. We were kind of learning about these things at the same time that the rest of the country was learning about them. So we would get questions — commonly — like, ‘What do you guys think about this?’ And I was hearing about it for the first time from the person in the general public who was asking me the question. So just not having a sort of consis- tent message that was sort of shared with the key players — or key stakeholders — before it became public knowledge. I get that we want transparency and we want it to be open communication. But I think having a bit more — even if it’s just a day or a few hours — notice before the gov- ernor was saying something would have been really nice. Q: Our sense was the county wanted the hospital to take the lead on the vaccine task force. A more tradi- tional model would have had the Pub- lic Health Department or Emergency Management take the lead, at least for accountability reasons. How did you navigate the public and private aspects of the outreach? A: While the hospitals have played a major role — and I think a very import- ant role in this vaccination program — it was very collaborative from the early, ear- liest stages. In December, when we were first starting to have these discussions, Mike McNickle, who was the public health director then, and Don Bohn, who is the county manager, and Erik Thorsen (the CEO of Columbia Memorial Hospital) and Don Lemmon at Providence (Sea- side Hospital) and myself were having sort of regular calls just to check in and talk about the way the vaccination program was going. I think what we heard from Mike and Don was that our Public Health Depart- ment had been incredibly taxed since the beginning of the pandemic, and didn’t necessarily have the capacity at that time to really put on huge mass vaccination events. And they could use some help — not taking over, certainly — just help, to really have a combined effort. So that was when we started the task force calls. And, at that point, there wasn’t an incident commander or anything like that. It was more of us all getting together on a regular basis to be ready for when the vaccines did start to become more widely available. How we were going to get — the goal at that point was 27,000 people in the county that we wanted to get vaccinated to get us to that 70% number. How we would be able to do that. And then it kind of progressed and became what is the vaccine task force today. But it has been very collaborative the whole time and, I think, a great testament to what a community can do when you come together with a shared purpose. Q: What lessons have you learned from the experience? A: That piece that I said about taking a beat as all of this information is coming in, and really trying to be as thoughtful as possible before you’re putting things out, especially around guidelines or standards and things like that. That has been, I think, something that we have learned, because there have been so many changes and so many things that we’ve struggled with. That I think is really important. Another thing, I don’t know if it’s a les- son, but it’s something that I’ve learned, is that Clatsop County is an amazing place. I mean, 350 now volunteers have stepped up to make these events possible. We’ve administered more than 30,000 doses of vaccine. That would not be possible without the incredible retired nurses, retired phy- sicians, retired pharmacists and current nurses and physicians and veterinarians and dentists — there’s so many different people. And not only health care profession- als, we’ve got data analysts and other peo- ple who have stepped up and volunteered to help us in so many different ways. It’s been incredible — all of the community support that we’ve got. ... That’s a lesson for all of us as a com- munity, really. That even in these polar- ized, crazy times where you don’t know what people are thinking, we’re all still Americans, and when asked to do so, we step up, man, and do amazing things. It gives me goosebumps just thinking about the fact that we came together as a community to accomplish that. derrick dePledge is editor of The Astorian. GUEST COLUMN Stop the Pebble Mine forever very summer, thousands of com- and commercial fishermen, Alaska Native mercial and sport fishermen, sea- tribes, conservation groups, grocers, food processors and sport fishing restaurateurs and jewelers rallied to the guides — many of them Oregonians — defense of Bristol Bay’s salmon and have migrate to western Alaska for the remark- long stood united against the Pebble Mine. able annual return of tens of millions of In 2014, after years of scientific review, wild sockeye salmon to Bristol Bay. the Obama administration began Bristol Bay’s salmon have sus- establishing protections for Bris- tained the Indigenous people of tol Bay under the Clean Water Act Bristol Bay for millennia, and today to ensure a sustainable future for salmon and the people who make they remain the backbone of the their livings from them. However, bay’s local communities. These those protections were subsequently salmon also support a thriving, rolled back during the Trump renewable industry that feeds Alas- JON ka’s economy and provides income administration, creating a path for- BRODERICK ward for the Pebble Mine. for families like ours in the Pacific Until recently, ultimate approval Northwest. In recent years, Bristol Bay’s for the mine has sometimes seemed salmon generated 15,000 Ameri- inevitable, its opponents’ objections can jobs and created $2.2 billion ignored. Yet, thanks, in part, to con- gressional oversight from cham- in renewable annual revenue. Half pions such as Oregon’s U.S. Rep. of all the sockeye salmon sold in Peter DeFazio, the Trump admin- global markets comes from Bris- istration agreed last November to tol Bay. KATE And yet, since the late 1980s, deny the Pebble Mine permit. How- CRUMP ever, it also left the door open for a Bristol Bay’s rare and sustainable fishery has been threatened by plans for a future proposal to be submitted. colossal open-pit gold and copper mine — The forces behind the Pebble Mine are the Pebble Mine — that a Canadian min- wealthy and influential. The Pebble Mine’s ing company would blast out of the bay’s current permit denial is not a durable fix. pristine headwaters, irreparably disrupt- By resuming the pursuit of protections ing the watershed and leaving behind sig- authorized by Section 404(c) of the Clean nificant toxic mining waste that must be Water Act and completing the work the stored in perpetuity. Obama administration started in 2014, the Biden administration can secure the long- In response, a diverse coalition of sport E Corey Arnold Fishermen have fought to protect Bristol Bay from the proposed Pebble Mine. term health of the Bristol Bay watershed, its salmon runs and its remarkable sustain- able fishery. Many thousands would benefit for decades to come, among them Oregon fishing and salmon-dependent families like our own. This summer, as we migrate north to Bristol Bay, we urge our Oregon congres- sional delegation and the Biden adminis- tration to stop the Pebble Mine, forever. Jon Broderick, of Cannon Beach, is a founder of the FisherPoets Gathering in Astoria. He and his family have fished salmon commercially in Bristol Bay for more than 30 years. Kate Crump and her husband own Frigate Adventure Travel in Rockaway Beach. They spend half the year in Bristol Bay and the other half in Oregon guiding guests.