149TH YEAR, NO. 23 WEEKEND EDITION // SATuRdAY, AuguST 21, 2021 $1.50 Vaccine mandate issued at schools AT ISSUE/CHILD CARE Brown requires teachers and staff to get vaccinated By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian Photos by Hailey Hoffman/The Astorian Children eat their snacks at the Sunset Empire Park and Recreation District summer camp program in Seaside on Wednesday. Child care remains a barrier for many families on North Coast By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian D espite a national conversation about the importance of child care, an infusion of federal dol- lars, checks to families and a resur- gence of local discussions about how to better support and enhance care options, Clatsop County’s child care desert is as desolate as ever. Eva Manderson, the director of Northwest Regional Child Care Resource and Referral, can point to a few positives that emerged from the chaos of the coronavirus pandemic: Some facilities that closed last sum- mer or operated at limited capac- ity have reopened or expanded. New providers have entered the market, with many beginning operations with key foundational business practices already in place. The number of child care slots is near pre-pandemic levels. But the county still has more chil- dren in need of care than there are slots available. Child care providers struggle to keep prices affordable for families, attract quality staff and turn a profit. There are still few choices for low- er-income families. There are few places that offer evening or weekend care for parents who work nontradi- tional hours — for example, people in tourism-related jobs that increasingly power the region’s economy. Most facilities have a waitlist — very long waitlists in some cases. “The problem hasn’t gone away and child care hasn’t become sustain- able all of a sudden,” Manderson said. In 2020, the county had more than 5,000 children under 13 but only 780 slots in child care centers and home care situations, an imbalance that has varied little in recent years, according to data gathered by Oregon State Uni- All teachers, support staff and vol- unteers in Oregon’s K-12 schools will be required to get vaccinated against the coronavirus under a new mandate announced by Gov. Kate Brown. School workers will have until Oct. 18 to get vaccinated, or six weeks after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approves the vaccines, whichever is later. The FDA has authorized the vaccines for emergency use to combat the virus. Health care workers will also be required to get a vaccine. Previously, Brown said health care workers could forgo vaccination by submitting to weekly testing for the virus. Brown acknowledged that the vaccine mandate for educators and school staff will be controversial, but she said she is willing to take the heat for the decision. Her announcement comes as virus cases and hospitalizations surge across Oregon because of the more contagious delta variant. Most new cases and hospitalizations have occurred in unvaccinated people, but vaccinated people and children are also getting sick. See Mandate, Page A2 A child puts his mask on at summer camp through the Sunset Empire Park and Recreation District. AT ISSUE/CHILD CARE Two years after Clatsop County was declared a child care desert, there is little urgency at the local govern- ment level to solve the problem. The Astorian asked policymakers, providers and parents about the challenge. Let us know what you think in a letter to the editor: bit.ly/2kuT0PZ versity researchers. The researchers also found that the median annual price of child care was around $9,840 — slightly higher than the price of tuition at Oregon public universities. Lil’ Sprouts On Monday, Astoria leaders started to discuss what to do about the city- run day care program at Lil’ Sprouts Academy. The center, opened nearly a decade ago because of the need for child care in the community, serves around 30 children. It is one of the few centers of its size on the North Coast to also provide care for infants. On Tuesday, the city announced Lil’ Sprouts would close until Sept. 1 after an employee tested positive for the coronavirus. The center relies heavily on low- er-paid, part-time labor and operates at an unsustainable loss — to the tune of around $25,000 a month. Lil’ Sprouts maintains a waitlist of around 150 children. City staff field new inquiries about child care — and the waitlist — every week. The center could accommodate up to 70 children, possibly more if the city were to build out more classrooms. Jonah Dart-McLean, the city’s parks director, would need to hire 10 State discloses outbreaks at memory care, hospital By GRIFFIN REILLY The Astorian The Oregon Health Authority has dis- closed coronavirus outbreaks at Clatsop Care Memory Community and Columbia Memorial Hospital. The memory com- munity in Warren- MORE ton had 20 virus cases INSIDE with the first reported on Aug. 8, according Biden to the health authori- orders ty’s weekly outbreak nursing report, which covers home staff virus cases through to get Sunday night. vaccinated An administrator at • A3 the memory commu- nity put the number of virus cases signifi- cantly higher than the state’s report. Channon Larson, the director of oper- ations at Aidan Health Services, which oversees the facility for the Clatsop Care See Child care, Page A8 See Outbreaks, Page A8 Shipwrecked canceled over virus concerns Event was set for Saturday at county fairgrounds By NIKKI DAVIDSON The Astorian Days before the launch of their new summer fundraiser, the Shipwrecked Music Festi- val, the United Way of Clatsop County’s board was called to an emergency meeting. A health care administrator was pleading with organizers to cancel the event. The admin- istrator shared concerns that large-scale outdoor gatherings like the Clatsop County Fair had contributed to the surge of new coronavirus cases. “They shared insights with what’s happening at the hospi- tal, patients overflowing into the hallway and ER patients need- ing to be screened outdoors,” said Kassia Nye, the United Way’s executive director. “When this information came to light, the United Way board started discussing what it would feel like if we contributed to that issue.” Katrina Morrell Gasser, the board president, said the uncertainly left the board con- flicted. The fundraising organi- zation wanted to prioritize the health and safety of the commu- nity, but had also already paid $15,000 out of pocket to host the event. The Clatsop County Pub- lic Health Department reported more than a dozen local out- breaks last week, but had not released details tracing infec- tions back to specific places or events. The Astorian first asked the county about potential virus cases at the county fair in the days after the fair wrapped up on July 31. The newspaper did not get a response until Thursday afternoon. “Public Health has linked some local COVID-19 cases to the 2021 county See Shipwrecked, Page A2