A8 THE ASTORIAN • SATuRdAy, SEpTEmbER 25, 2021 Transit district postpones decision on vaccine mandate Director worries about expanding driver shortage By ETHAN MYERS The Astorian The Sunset Empire Trans- portation District, trying to manage through a bus driver shortage, has postponed a decision on whether to require vaccinations against the coronavirus. The transit district’s board has discussed a vaccine man- date since July. In August, the board decided to push back the decision until this month. At Thursday morn- ing’s meeting, they tabled it again. Jeff Hazen, the transit district’s executive direc- tor, said nine of the district’s 26 bus drivers are unvacci- nated. After surveying them, Hazen said he expects to lose all nine if vaccinations are required. The transit district has made cuts and reductions to several routes due to the lack of drivers and an inability to recruit new ones. If they lose the unvaccinated driv- ers, Hazen said, the district would have to make more cuts. “We haven’t put a pen- cil to it yet, but it would be as much or more than what we already did,” he said. “It would be very significant.” Hazen, who said he would prefer to wait and see if the state mandates vaccinations for transit workers, under- stands the board has a tough Colin Murphey/The Astorian The Sunset Empire Transportation District is weighing a coronavirus vaccine mandate. decision to make. “I am concerned about the drivers that are not getting vaccinated, for their health,” said Debbie Boothe-Schmidt, the board chairwoman. “At this point, it is their decision. I would hate to cut services, too, and I am afraid that’s what would happen if we did make it mandatory.” While Hazen is unsure of the feasibility, the board brought up the possibility of frequent COVID-19 testing for the unvaccinated. Several commissioners also added they should, at the very least, be taking drivers’ tem- peratures before they get on buses. As the board weighs a vaccine mandate, they placed confidence in the protocols on buses. “So far, we have been doing a very good job at con- tinuously cleaning the buses, having that barrier that sep- arates the drivers from our riders also, they are 6 feet apart,” Commissioner Diana Niño said. “There are all of these things that we have already put in place.” Hazen, along with a num- ber of commissioners, noted that while they are vac- cinated, they understand that people have their own choices to make. “Yes, I am vaccinated. I am all for vaccinations but, like the sentiment that has been shared, I don’t want to put anyone in the position of having to quit because of this and us losing service, losing drivers and also dis- rupting this family that Jeff has talked about,” Niño said. “We have had such a rough almost two years and this would just continue to bring down morale. “They have been working six days a week. Our driv- ers have been troupers and people have choice. We also have to respect that.” Infant: Kashton is ‘always happy, always smiling’ Continued from page A1 Colin Murphey/The Astorian A number of firefighters on the North Coast are unvaccinated against the coronavirus. Mandate: Driving much of the crew to refrain Continued from page A1 But at Lewis and Clark, the 31-person fire crew could lose, on the higher end, about half of its people. “I’ve been in the busi- ness for 30 years, and, I mean, this is just incredi- ble, what they’re doing,” Lewis and Clark Fire Chief Jeff Golightly said in an interview. Unvaccinated staff can remain at Lewis and Clark and respond only to fire calls, Golightly said, but the fire department’s ability to respond to medical calls during daytime hours will be limited. He is the only paid staff member in the department. “I think a lot of the folks would actually, probably, get (the vaccine),” he said. But he thinks the state man- date itself is driving much of the crew to refrain. For a moment, the gov- ernor’s rules required health care workers to submit to weekly COVID-19 testing if they couldn’t show proof of vaccination. Golightly’s crew was on board with that, he said, and the depart- ment had planned to do test- ing in house. “To me, it’s a simple solution: Allow the weekly testing, wear the proper (personal protective equip- ment) like we already do,” he said. According to the report Phillips compiled, Olney-Walluski Fire and Rescue also indicated its department will have trou- ble during business hours responding to motor vehicle crashes and medical inci- dents. Elsie’s department, located in a rural area where the wait time for emergency response is relatively long, has discussed the possibil- ity of “only responding to fire calls.” Hamlet Volun- teer Fire Department, which shows up to crashes on U.S Highway 26, said it may lose roughly half of its small department. Warrenton and Gearhart, two better-staffed departments, face an abrupt depletion of firefighters. “We were heroes that worked through all of this and did everything, and now it feels like we’re the enemy,” said Golightly, who got vaccinated early on and said that just over half of his department is vaccinated. At the Board of Com- missioners meeting on Wednesday night, Phillips said, “Personally, if I was suddenly critically ill or seriously injured, I wouldn’t care what someone’s vacci- nation status was if they were coming to save my life or help me.” Emergency declarations County Manager Don Bohn noted that the concern about potential EMS short- falls is felt in rural counties statewide. Some counties, such as Malheur and Baker, have declared emergencies over the vaccine mandate. “What is particularly problematic for many of us is the fact that we rely upon volunteer-centric services,” he said, “and so those vol- unteers — they’re not mak- ing the same choice that folks are if this is a liveli- hood decision. “And it’s not some- thing that they’re making lightly, either,” he contin- ued, “because they know their services are critical for their communities. And so I think that there’s a number of options that the county can be looking at, and cer- tainly declaring an emer- gency is an option.” Mark Kujala, the chair- man of the Board of Com- missioners, who serves as director of the Columbia Memorial Hospital Founda- tion, acknowledged the dif- ficulties the vaccine man- date has created throughout Oregon. But he also said it’s wrong to say the debate about vaccines is balanced. He pointed to a letter the board received from a con- stituent “basically telling us that COVID isn’t kill- ing anybody, and vaccines are responsible for deaths … that we’re feeding every- body lies, it’s a big conspir- acy about health care and government,” he summa- rized at the meeting. “I just think that the facts on one side are wrong,” he said, “and I don’t mind say- ing that. I think that we need to be able to say that.” Kujala said in a text mes- sage after the meeting that it’s unfortunate that it takes mandates to get people vaccinated. “But the pervasive mis- information out there is no longer an excuse,” he wrote. “Unvaccinated people are getting sick and are dying in this community. We need to give public health and health care systems a break and that means doing your part and protecting yourself and those around you by getting vaccinated.” Terrified of a recurrence, they realized they were going to have to advocate and fight for answers. They invested heavily to keep Kashton monitored at all times and alert them if he stopped breathing or his heart rate was abnormal, Childress said. “Doc and I have spent every day together since the first day he stopped breath- ing fearing that it may happen again — and it did, an overall of five times in three months,” she said. They searched for answers, doing research, joining groups, reading forums and seeking second and third opinions. An ultrasound showed abnormalities to Kashton’s spinal cord. “This meant we had to put our not even 8-week-old under anesthesia for an MRI,” Chil- dress said. “Handing our baby over to that doctor was one of the hardest things we’ve done and the MRI was the longest 45 minutes we have experienced.” At Randall Children’s Hos- pital at Legacy Emanuel Med- ical Center in Portland, they found Dr. Monica Wehby, someone “who not only saw what they saw, but knew how to fix it,” Childress said. This month, Wehby rec- ommended surgery — but she was moving to Indianapolis to be closer to family. Shaw and Childress fol- lowed their doctor’s trail. Kashton’s worsening symp- toms, including severe con- stipation, hyperreflexia, hip spasticity and bladder reten- tion issues, made the surgery even more urgent. During surgery, doctors make a small incision in the back and another small inci- sion to the muscle, Shaw said. They make another incision through the spinal canal to clip the tethered cord and relieve the pressure on the back, and hopefully stop any long-term effects. The recuperation time is up to Kashton and how he toler- ates pain, anesthesia and med- ications, Childress said. “It has been a struggle to travel, even being in a motor home,” she said. Kashton was in the car seat about eight to 10 hours a day. “We have had to stop because of meltdowns because we don’t want him to be suffering.” Despite his symptoms, Kashton is “always happy, always smiling,” Shaw said. “Out of nowhere people stop and say our baby looks like an angel from heaven. When he comes to the shop he is just the happiest little guy.” ‘Day-and-night effort’ During all this, Childress and Shaw struggled to main- tain operations at Doc’s Auto Repair, their business in Seaside. “It was just super hard on us because we want to be there for our community, but we haven’t been,” Shaw said. When one of their top auto techs was out sick, “it was a snowball effect for our cus- tomers,” Shaw said. “We love our business and we’ve tried really hard to make it great for the community. And since we’ve been gone it’s been dif- ficult. When they come to Doc’s Auto Repair every- body’s looking for Doc. “We’ve just been kind of out of the loop for things for several months because it was a day-and-night effort by both of us.” A GoFundMe page, “Cure for Kashton,” invites people to help the family with medi- cal costs. Their first estimate for the surgery was $80,000, Shaw said. That was later revised upward to $134,000. Added to that are travel costs from driv- ing across the country. “It’s been devastating on us,” Shaw said. “It’s been dev- astating financially. We don’t know how we’re going to get through this, but we will man- age. We’ll do whatever we’ve got to do. We’ll sell everything we have. “I didn’t expect anybody would even come to our side, to be honest with you. The community has really been stepping up. It’s taken me to my knees more than once on this trip how many people have just reached out. I just have to say ‘thanks.’ It’s been amazing.” Schools: ‘I feel like things are going really well’ Continued from page A1 “In schools, they are doing a great job of social distancing and putting pro- tocols in place. All the prob- lems with kids getting too close are on buses and I can’t control that.” Four virus cases were reported in the Knappa School District. Three were students from Hilda Lahti Elementary School and the fourth was a student from Knappa High School. Knappa Superintendent Bill Fritz said all four came from an event outside of school property. The weekly outbreak report also showed five virus cases from the Seaside School District. Four were students from Pacific Ridge Elementary School and one was a student from Seaside Katherine Lacaze/For The Astorian Schools are taking precautions against the coronavirus. High School. Seaside Superinten- dent Susan Penrod said all recorded virus cases up to this point were tied to events outside of school. Penrod said she is confident in the job schools are doing. “I feel like things are going really well, especially since none of the cases orig- inated in our buildings and that we don’t have any spread in our schools,” Pen- rod said. “With our conver- sations with the local health authority, they have con- firmed to us that our safety protocols are working well.” One virus case was reported at Anchor Chris- tian Academy, a private school in Hammond. School administrators could not immediately be reached for comment. The Oregon Health Authority reported 10 new virus cases for the county on Friday and 18 new virus cases on Thursday. Since the pandemic began, the county had recorded 2,175 virus cases and 26 deaths as of Friday. Ridge: Land will continue to be used for forestry Continued from page A1 The Clatsop-Nehalem, like the Chinook Indian Nation tribes based around the mouth of the Colum- bia River, are not federally recognized. Access to tradi- tional gathering and hunt- ing areas is not guaranteed. The allowance to harvest and gather plants and native foods at Clatsop Ridge may be a small portion of the con- servation easement, but for Dick Basch, the Clatsop-Ne- halem vice chairman, it was an important inclusion. “To have this is recogni- tion that we’re still here,” he said. The Clatsop Ridge prop- erty has been logged routinely over the years and many older tree stands were knocked down during the 2007 wind- storms that raked through the region. But the smells and the sounds Basch’s ancestors would have experienced and that he experienced as a child remain: the sweet, earthy smell of moss and ferns, the salty tang of the ocean below. You can hear the sounds of the forest and the ocean waves crashing, Basch said. “It provides us the oppor- tunity to go where our fami- lies, our ancestors, would go to harvest items,” Basch said. “To breathe the same air.” ‘Seed effort’ Columbia Land Trust’s purchase of the conservation easement was funded through more than $2 million obtained by the North Coast Land Conservancy. The land con- servancy, already involved in a major funding campaign for its Rainforest Reserve project farther south, invited Colum- bia Land Trust to the Clatsop Ridge project. GreenWood has collab- orated frequently with the North Coast Land Conser- vancy on other types of land conservation projects in the past and sees this new conser- vation easement as an invi- tation to other landowners to consider similar partnerships. “I see this almost as a seed effort,” said Mark Morgans, director of North American forest operations for Green- Wood. “Where else can we do this, not only us at Green- Wood, on our footprint of the forest?” The easement also nods to goals finalized earlier this month by the Clatsop Plains Elk Collaborative. That group, with the sup- port of Gov. Kate Brown and state Sen. Betsy John- son, signed off on a unified approach to dealing with growing urban elk herds on the North Coast. Increased development was identified as one of the drivers for an uptick in unde- sirable elk and human inter- actions in the Clatsop Plains area. One of the action items identified by the group was to look at establishing wild- life habitat buffers and transi- tion areas and, through part- nerships, keep some land undeveloped. While it isn’t the same as conserving land for habitat or old growth trees, the ease- ment at Clatsop Ridge does ensure the land will only con- tinue to be used for forestry, not development, said Katie Voelke, the executive direc- tor of the North Coast Land Conservancy. “No highway is going to be built through the middle of it,” Voelke said. “No gated community is going to be built on top of it.” The additional protections that come with the easement — like increased stream buf- fers — are important con- siderations as land stewards consider climate change and a landscape’s resiliency in the face of major climate shifts, Voelke and Roix said.