A6 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 2022 Mobile clinic: ‘It’s just a huge relief for us’ ‘THIS IS QUITE HISTORIC FOR P UBLIC H EALTH IN CLATSOP COUNTY’ Continued from Page A1 “We have new and emerg- ing diseases, for as long as nature and humans have commingled ,” McClean said, “and so as Pub- lic Health continues to build stable infrastructure, we have this van.” The van arrives as coronavirus cases spike and the county begins dismantling its COVID-19 vaccina- tion and drive-thru testing services at Camp Rilea Armed Forces Training Center in Warrenton. The county had been giving weekly boosters at Camp Rilea. As that operation winds down, the vaccination supplies will be used to stock the van. Beginning on Fri- day, the county’s drive-thru testing will take place at the household hazardous waste facility on Wil- liamsport Road in Astoria. At fi rst, the department will use the van primarily to off er COVID- 19 vaccinations and boosters. “That’s kind of our priority right Margo Lalich | Clatsop County’s interim public health director Lydia Ely/The Astorian Lucas Marshall, left, the environmental health manager for the county Public Health Department, shared COVID-19 statistics during a meeting on Tuesday. now,” McClean said. In December, the county’s over- all COVID-19 vaccination rate reached 70% — among the high- est in Oregon — but as of earlier this month had yet to breach 75%. Come fall, the mobile clinic may be used in schools’ student immunizations eff orts. “Our hope is, we will be able to off er other vaccines with the van,” McClean said. As for workplaces, McClean imagined a scenario where a large employer — a mill or cannery, say — has an employee who tests posi- tive for tuberculosis. To investigate how many others contracted the disease, the P ublic H ealth D epart- ment would normally send out a team and convert that employer’s lunchroom or other workspace into a clinic. With the van, the county could bring its own. Recently, a company contacted the P ublic H ealth D epartment to Johnson creates stir by calling Portland the ‘City of Roaches’ Comment featured in New York Times morning newsletter By COURTNEY VAUGHN Oregon Capital Bureau Former state Sen. Betsy Johnson has a new mon- iker for the state’s most populous city: “the City of Roaches.” The independent candi- date for governor made the comment to a New York Times editor, referring to Portland’s battle with home- lessness and crime. Her statements appeared in a Tuesday newsletter that explored Oregon’s political landscape as a barometer of potential Democratic losses nationwide. The newsletter included an interview with Johnson. “You can see the dete- rioration of the beautiful City of Roses, now the City of Roaches,” Johnson was quoted as saying, riffi ng on Portland’s moniker. Johnson is one of many candidates who has zeroed in on Portland as an exam- ple of failed policies or action. “Betsy made a quip about the city of Portland which resonates with a lot of people,” Jennifer Sit- ton, Johnson’s communica- tions director, told Pamplin Media Group . “What Betsy has been saying for months is that Oregon cannot suc- ceed if Portland fails and, as detailed in the NYT piece, only 8% of residents think that Portland is on the right track.” In a campaign speech on her website, John- son accuses Gov. Kate Brown, Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler and Johnson’s Democratic opponent, for- mer state House Speaker Tina Kotek, of bridging the urban-rural divide by unify- ing Oregonians in “mutual frustration with their lead- ers and their government.” “Right now, Portland is failing,” Johnson said. “I don’t think any prob- lem demonstrates the need better to change Oregon’s politics than the failure to solve homelessness on our streets.” She stressed getting unhoused people into shel- ters utilizing police, addic- tion treatment services and mental health services. “Democrats are right that we need compassion, ser- vices and housing,” John- son said in a campaign video. “But Republicans are also right that we need more personal responsibil- ity, accountability, and no more tent cities.” But critics say Johnson’s latest remark about Port- land was callous, equating unhoused people with ver- min that need to be cleaned up, rather than humans in crisis. “Unfortunately her com- ments are very reminiscent and in some cases identical to comments we’ve heard that dehumanize whole sets of people,” Marisa Zapata, director of Portland State University’s Homelessness Research and Action Col- laborative. “It goes beyond an oversimplifi cation, but it completely erases their humanity. It’s deeply upset- ting to have somebody using that language to describe people who are living their lives the best they can. It’s especially upsetting to have someone who’s been in a position of leadership in our state talk about future con- stituents this way.” Zapata noted that the term “cockroaches” has been used historically to demonize marginalized groups in society. The city of Portland, along with economic and tourism groups, has been actively involved in cam- paigns to bring shoppers and tourists back to down- town and help businesses crippled by the pandemic and repeated vandalism. They say Johnson’s com- ments aren’t helping. “It’s easy to articulate the challenges Portland is facing,” Wheeler said. “We need a governor who will partner with us to help fi nd solutions and fi ght for Port- land — not disparage and write us off .” The Oregon Capital Bureau is a collaboration between EO Media Group and Pamplin Media Group. facebook.com/DailyAstorian Consult a PROFESSIONAL Q: Which diet is the best diet? ASTORIA A: Adding in whole CHIROPRACTIC foods (unrefined and unprocessed), in addition to maximizing time between 503-325-3311 meals (i.e., avoiding snacking) 2935 Marine Drive, can go a long way toward Astoria, OR helping you feel at your best! Alicia M. Smith, DC Owner Astoria’s Best Fast Friendly and Affordable Save $100 and high-density residential areas instead of conditional. Duplexes will be allowed everywhere single-family homes are allowed. Cottage clusters, which usually have shared open space, would be permitted outright in residential and commercial zones. Parking for homes would be calculated by the number of bedrooms, which would reduce parking require- ments, but not signifi cantly. Other changes include removing the permit requirement for accessory dwelling units, reducing lot sizes and removing lot cov- erage requirements to make adding accessory dwell- ing units more feasible. To prevent larger than typical homes from being built as a result of removing lot cov- erage requirements, a max- imum lot size was added to the draft. Setbacks would guide the buildable land. Planning c ommission- ers were supportive of pro- hibiting homestay lodging in low-density residential areas and making it condi- tional in medium residen- tial areas instead of per- mitted outright. Currently, homeowners in those areas can apply for licenses to rent bedrooms in their homes to tourists. In commercial zones along the Columbia River and Port of Astoria, hotels would be allowed under conditional use instead of permitted outright. The change would allow the pub- lic to have the opportunity to weigh in prior to a building permit being issued. Commissioner Cindy Price said she was happy to see the restrictions on homestay lodging. She expressed concerns about narrow streets that already lack parking. Commissioner Sean Fitz- patrick echoed the impor- tance of parking. “As a housing provider, I have noticed there are diverging trends,” Fitzpat- rick said. “Twenty years ago, my tenants averaged a car and we had a few ten- ants that didn’t have a car. Today, I have a large num- ber of tenants that don’t have a car and a large num- ber of tenants that have mul- tiple cars. So the need for ... off -street assigned parking is important.” Commissioner Brook- ley Henri said she felt torn on the issue of parking, but leaned toward the recom- mendation of reducing the requirement. Henri, who works for a civil engineering fi rm and landscape architect, noted that there is a belief that single-use vehicles will decline or get smaller. “Although I realize that parking is important, I wish it wasn’t,” she said. Continued from Page A1 cans and wandered into people’s backyards and on porches, was viewed as a human safety risk and euth- anized, Michelle Dennehy, a communications coordina- tor at the Department of Fish and Wildlife, said. Jason Badger, wildlife biologist at the department’s Gold Beach offi ce, has recorded 56 complaints so far this year. The South Coast, Bad- ger said, has had two live- stock depredations this year . In one incident, a bear killed sheep. In another case, a bear destroyed a chicken coop and killed chickens. Paul Atwood, wildlife biologist for the department’s Tillamook offi ce, said the North Coast Wildlife District has logged 12 complaints so far this year , all related to gar- bage or public safety. “We haven’t had any live- stock depredations reported so far this year, but we have talked to a number of folks concerned about chicken coops when they hear there’s a bear in the area,” he said . Jason Kirchner, the department’s mid-coast dis- trict wildlife biologist in Newport, said his offi ce has received 27 complaints so far this year, 15 of those in June. He said bears have broken into about fi ve chicken coops in his district. “This year, it seems like chicken coops are a hot com- modity, so they’re break- ing into chicken coops, kill- ing chickens and a couple ducks,” he said . Love, in Charleston, esti- mated Coos County is see- ing bears cause problems in four to six diff erent residen- tial areas each week. State biologists say bears have also damaged young timber stands. According to the U.S. Forest Service, bears use their claws to strip bark from a tree, then feed on the sap- wood, the newly formed outer wood, by scraping it from the heartwood, the older central wood, with their teeth. In the Pacifi c Northwest, the Forest Service reports that bears frequently peel the bark from Douglas fi rs, primar- ily immature smooth-barked trees ages 15 to 30. A single bear can strip as many as 70 trees per day. Love said it’s not com- pletely clear why bears strip trees, but the activity appears to be “pretty prevalent this year,” so it may be tied to hunger. Although bear activity is high right now, state biolo- gists say they are optimistic that when wild huckleberry and blackberry crops ripen in the coming weeks, it will draw bears inland and away from communities. Ethan Myers of The Asto- rian contributed to this report. 1. 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The company was looking to schedule appointments for more than a dozen people at the county’s clinic on Exchange Street in Astoria. Getting everyone vacci- nated at the clinic could take about two days. “This time we can just take the van out there and probably be done within an hour or two,” McClean said. A mobile clinic has long been on the department’s wish list, Margo Lalich, the county’s interim public health director, said at a recent Board of Commission- ers work session. Mobile clinics are used widely by public health departments, including in Tilla- mook County. “This is quite historic for P ub- lic H ealth in Clatsop County, and I think it’s just a huge relief for us,” Lalich said. “And it will be, I think, a relief for the community once they get more familiar with seeing us out on the streets.” 503/325-0310 1414 MARINE DRIVE, ASTORIA www.smileastoria.com care can lead to cavities, did you know that other, more serious health problems can also result from poor oral care? 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