A2 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, MAY 31, 2022 IN BRIEF Seaside band teacher killed in crash on Highway 26 A Seaside band teacher was one of two men killed on Saturday after a crash on U.S. Highway 26 near the Saddle Mountain State Park Road intersection. Police said Fredrick Scheffl er II, a 49-year-old Portland resident, was driving westbound in a black 2020 Tesla Model Y just before noon, veered into the oncoming lane and struck a gray Hyundai Tucson driven by Kyle Rieger, 26, who lived in Warrenton. Scheffl er sustained fatal injuries and was pro- nounced dead at the scene. Rieger, who taught at Seaside High School and Seaside Middle School, was taken to Providence Sea- side Hospital after the crash and later fl own to Ore- gon Health & Science University Hospital, according to Seaside High School principal Jeff Roberts. “Despite heroic eff orts from the medical team at OHSU, the injuries sustained by Mr. Rieger were too much to overcome and I am sorry to have to share that he passed away,” Roberts said in a letter to students and families. Rieger held a bachelor’s degree in music composi- tion and a master’s degree in instrumental conducting from Truman State University in Kirksville, Missouri. He joined the Seaside School District in September. “Although Kyle was here for a short time, he had already had a great impact on students and colleagues alike and had a bright future ahead of him,” Roberts said. The crash partially closed the highway for more than three hours. F-15 fl yover marked Memorial Day in Astoria F-15 Eagle fi ghter jets conducted a fl yover over Astoria on Monday to help mark Memorial Day. The jets passed by just after 11 a.m. “F-15 fl yovers from the 142nd Wing and your hometown Air Force are a way for us to pay tribute to American patriots who paid the ultimate sacrifi ce and their families,” Col. Todd Hoff ord, commander of the 142nd Wing of the Portland Air National Guard, said in a statement. “The fl ights are also a public salute to our local communities whom we appreciate and respect, for their support of our airmen and all those serving throughout our nation. “It is an honor to protect and defend the Pacifi c Northwest and the freedoms which allow us to spend time with our loved ones on this national holiday.” CEDR recognizes businesses with awards Clatsop Economic BUSINESS LEADER OF THE YEAR Development Resources • New Business/ recognized standout Gaetano’s Market & Deli • North County/ North Coast businesses Holly McHone Jewelers — large and small — for • South County/Brian Olson, Beachcomber Vacation Homes their community contri- • Business Achievement/ butions in the past year Montealban Mexican Restaurant during an awards cer- SMALL BUSINESSES • Economic Impact/ emony on Thursday at Kiosco Mexicano Clatsop Community Col- • Customer Service/Lucy’s Books • Innovation/Encore Dance Studio lege’s Patriot Hall. Kevin Leahy, the exec- LARGE BUSINESSES • Community Impact/ utive director of CEDR Mo’s Restaurant and the Clatsop Commu- • Economic Impact/Columbia Bank • Innovation/J.M. Browning Logging Inc. nity College Small Busi- • Customer Service/The Ocean Lodge ness Development Cen- This year, CEDR added the Skip ter, said he was happy Hauke Spirit of Business Commu- to see this year’s event nity Supporter award, to honor the late CEDR co-founder. Margo Lalich bring together a variety of received the award for her work businesses. as Clatsop County’s interim public health director during the pandemic. “I would say that’s kind of our secret sauce. We’re not just relying on one thing, like tourism,” he said. “We have so much going on here with natural resources, and hospitality, and retail and health care, that’s what really makes things special here.” — The Astorian DEATH May 28, 2022 In WALKER, Brief James Leigh, 83, of Astoria, died in Astoria. Caldwell’s Luce-Layton Mortuary of Astoria is in charge of the arrangements. Death MEMORIALS Saturday, June 4 Memorials ABRAHAMSON, Craig Fager — Celebra- tion of life at 1 p.m., Asto- ria Elks Lodge, 453 11th St. BERRY, Diane A. — Celebration of life at 1 p.m., Warrenton Com- munity Center. 170 S.W. Third St. in Warrenton. TUESDAY Cannon Beach City Council, 6 p.m., special meeting, City Hall, 163 E. Gower Ave. WEDNESDAY Clatsop County Board of Commissioners, 10 a.m., work session, (electronic meeting). Seaside Improvement Commission, 6 p.m., City Hall, 989 Broadway. Gearhart City Council, 7 p.m., City Hall, 698 Pacifi c Way. PUBLIC MEETINGS (USPS 035-000) Published Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday by EO Media Group, 949 Exchange St., PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103 Telephone 503-325-3211, 800-781-3211 or Fax 503-325-6573. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Astorian, PO Box 210, Astoria, OR 97103-0210 DailyAstorian.com By APRIL EHRLICH Oregon Public Broadcasting Oregon health offi cials announced Friday how they will spend more than half-a- billion dollars set aside for behavioral health services in the state. The $517 million spend- ing package is divided into three main areas. About $132 million will pay for grants to help behavioral health pro- viders with staffi ng shortages. Another $155 million will pay for rate increases for ser- vice providers. The remaining $230 million will go toward supportive housing and resi- dential treatment programs. The ambitious spending package is the result of leg- islative initiatives to help the state improve its behavioral health services. Oregon has the fi fth-highest unmet need for mental health services, according to federal data, with more than 10% of adults saying they can’t get the help Clatsop Behavioral Healthcare, Clatsop County’s mental health and substance abuse treatment provider, has sought to help with housing. they need. One of the biggest chal- lenges Oregon faces is a shortage of mental health workers, according to a Feb- ruary report by the Oregon Health Authority — a prob- lem that was exacerbated by the pandemic. That’s why lawmakers this year allocated $132 mil- lion toward grants for pro- viders to bolster staffi ng. The program, slated to begin this week, will provide grants to 159 organizations to hire and retain employees. Most of the money will go toward wages, benefi ts and bonuses. Meanwhile, the $155 million for provider rate increases will put an extra $109 per Medicaid member into the behavioral health sys- tem. That program is slated to begin July 1, although it awaits fi nal legislative and federal approval. The money for support- ive housing services includes $100 million in direct awards to counties, then $112 million toward a competitive grant program for residential men- tal health and substance use services. The grant program will support long-term projects, including new construction and renovation for support- ive housing programs. The remaining funds will go to federally recognized tribes to fund housing and residential treatment projects. “This will ensure that peo- ple are supported in settings that best meet their needs and will create more equitable and eff ective housing alterna- tives for people with serious and persistent mental illness, requiring a higher standard of care,” the Oregon Health Authority said in a statement . Many Oregon hospitals owe federal government for early pandemic loans By AMELIA TEMPLETON Oregon Public Broadcasting This spring, hospitals and health systems in the North- west are reporting some of their biggest fi nancial losses since the COVID-19 pandemic started. In some cases, the need to pay back loans granted by the federal government early in the pan- demic is contributing to their fi scal woes. Providence Health & Services, based in Renton, Washington, lost $510 mil- lion in the fi rst quarter of 2022. Oregon Health & Sci- ence University Hospital, based in Portland, has lost $64 million in the current fi scal year, including a $20 million loss in the month of February alone. And the St. Charles Health System, in Bend, lost $21.8 million and announced layoff s. All three health systems have cited the impact of the omicron wave, infl ation and the health care labor crisis as reasons for losing money on their operations. Most hospitals have drawn on pandemic aid dol- lars, from the CARES Act and other sources, to par- tially off set those losses. But a lesser known aid program, the Medicare Accelerated and Advance Payments program, off ered short-term interest-free loans, not grants. And now, the bills are coming due at a time when hospitals’ costs are rising quickly and reve- nue from patient stays and surgeries is growing more slowly. Bruce Forster Oregon Health & Science University Hospital is one of several Oregon hospitals facing fi nancial losses as COVID-19 care has strained resources the past two years. At the outset of the pan- demic two years ago, Ore- gon hospitals and primary care providers received more than $1.1 billion in advance payments from Medicare, according to records shared by the Oregon Association of Hospitals and Health Sys- tems. The idea was to keep the cash fl owing in the early crisis months of the pan- demic, when elective sur- geries were canceled, by paying hospitals in advance for services they would pro- vide to Medicare patients in the future. The program has been used in the past to support hospitals impacted by wild- fi res and hurricanes. The idea is that hospitals are able to pay back the advances once the crisis has passed and operations have returned to normal. But the pandemic has dragged on — and hos- pitals and health systems are still dealing with the eff ects. At the same time, the federal government wants to get its money back so it can keep Medicare funded. Based on the number of Medicare patients they treat, PeaceHealth, headquartered in Vancouver, Washington , OHSU and the St. Charles Health System got the big- gest advances of the systems in Oregon that took loans: $214 million, $137 million, and $94 million . Congress set the repay- ment timeline and has extended it once already. Hospitals have lobbied, unsuccessfully, for the loans to be forgiven. In March 2021, a year after the fi rst payments went out, the U.S. Depart- ment of Health and Human Services, which oversees Medicare, began recovering those cash advances by pay- ing health systems 25% less for Medicare reimbursement claims. Earlier this year, fol- lowing the schedule set by Congress, they began pay- ing just 50% of the bill for any service the hospital pro- vided to a patient covered by Medicare. Hospitals can also opt to repay Medicare for the loans directly to avoid having their reimbursements reduced. The Lake Health Dis- trict, in remote Lake County, received about $5.2 million in grants from the Provider Relief Fund, and a $7 mil- lion loan from the Acceler- ated and Advance Payments program, which it is now paying back. CEO Charlie Tveit said Lake Health District is repaying Medicare even as he is considering layoff s or cuts to services, including a long-term care facility and small hospice program. “We’re looking at that. We can’t continue to lose money like we have been,” he said. Tveit said the high cost of hiring temporary employees through an agency for crit- ical positions Lake Health has been unable to fi ll is the primary driver of the losses. Most hospital systems are short on nurses and have been paying high wages for certifi ed nurses to travel to their hospitals for short stints. But, as Lake Health and others have found, that can get expensive quickly. Lake Health District didn’t spend the advanced payments it received from Medicare, since it seemed likely the loan would need to be repaid. Still, Tveit said it’s frustrating to be return- ing federal aid — partic- ularly when he can’t pre- dict how COVID-19 might impact his future operations. “We have no idea what’s going to happen this fall,” Tveit said. “It might come back with a vengeance.” Entomologists mull offi cial name for ‘murder hornets’ PUBLIC MEETINGS Established July 1, 1873 Mental health services to get over $500M spending boost this year Circulation phone number: 800-781-3214 Periodicals postage paid at Astoria, OR ADVERTISING OWNERSHIP All advertising copy and illustrations prepared by The Astorian become the property of The Astorian and may not be reproduced for any use without explicit prior approval. COPYRIGHT © Entire contents © Copyright, 2022 by The Astorian. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS MEMBER CERTIFIED AUDIT OF CIRCULATIONS, INC. Printed on recycled paper By DON JENKINS Capital Press Asian giant hornets, popularly called “murder hornets,” should be com- monly known as “northern giant hornets,” according to the Entomological Soci- ety of America’s commit- tee on naming insects. Washington State Department of Agriculture entomologist Chris Loo- ney proposed the name. The recommendation by the names committee must still be approved by the society’s governing board. The society’s “Better Common Names Project” has been targeting what the society calls “problem- atic names (that) perpet- Asian giant hornets have been found in Washington state and British Columbia. uate harm against people of various ethnicities and races.” Last year, the society renamed the “gypsy moth” to “spongy moth,” the fi rst name change approved by the governing board. Looney said last week that he wanted to keep the public from confusing Asian giant hornets with a diff erent species com- monly known in Europe as “Asian hornets,” another large and destructive pest. “That was my main motivation,” he said. Asian giant hornets, sci- entifi cally known as Vespa mandarinia, have been found in Washington state and British Columbia. Asian hornets, Vespa veluntina, are spread- ing in Europe, but have never been documented in North America. The simi- OPEN HOUSE: 32227 S eaScape L ane , c annon B each J une 4 th and 5 th • 1-3 pm Distant Ocean View but minutes from the center of town. 3 Bedroom, 3 bath custom home on 2.04 acres. Solar panels, generator, elevator, radiant floor heat throughout. Custom Design by Coaster Construction LLC. 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A Washington state res- ident in 2020 reported an Asian giant hornet sighting to a United Kingdom agen- cy’s website. The misdi- rected report delayed fi nd- ing an Asian giant nest in Whatcom County, the agri- culture department said. The confusion spans the Atlantic. Residents of Switzerland, Spain and the UK have contacted Looney to report sightings of Asian hornets. Cindy Hawkins 503-440-0130 HERON REALTY