CORONAVIRUS UPDATES See hoodrivernews.com HOOD RIVER, OREGON • Wednesday, March 25, 2020 Official Newspaper, City of Hood River and Hood River County County decides to keep levy on ballot By EMILY FITZGERALD News staff writer Exactly 25 people gathered in a conference room — with a small crowd gathered in the hallway outside the door — for a special meeting at 3:30 p.m. on March 19, where the commissioners would decide whether they were going to pull the Public Safety Local Option Levy from the May 2020 ballot. The deadline to pull the measure, if they were going to do so, was 5 p.m. that ‘... Everybody in our county has been impacted directly or indirectly by COVID-19. The overwhelming majority of those impacts have been negative ...’ Bob Benton Hood River County Commissioner same day. “I’ll try very much to make this go very quickly because I know we shouldn’t all be here, I know there’s more people who want to be here,” said Commission Chair Mike Oates at the start of the meeting, “We’ll see how this goes.” The meeting was adjourned after approximately 9 minutes, with the commission unanimously deciding to keep the measure on the ballot. “I understand how things have changed economically and fi- nancially for so many people in our county,” said Oates, “I also understand what has changed for the need of these services that we provide in those same weeks. It’s as dramatic as it can get. I think the only fair thing to do is to continue to put this on the ballot. I think people understand the situation and will make their decision.” Oates called for the special meeting after receiving a request from Commissioner Bob Benton to discuss the measure with the rest of the commissioners in light of economic changes related to the COVID-19 pandemic. “I wasn’t aware that we could pull the measure but after I discov- ered that we could, I thought that having a discussion about it would be absolutely vital to its success or failure,” said Benton during the March 19 meeting. “Since we made the decision to put this on the ballot, everybody in our county has been impacted directly or indirectly by COVID- 19. The overwhelming majority of those impacts have been nega- tive…,” said Benton. “To me, there are two questions that need to be See LEVY, page A16 MIDWEEK EDITION Vol. 114, No. 25 1 Section, 16 Pages $1.00 www.hoodrivernews.com UNIFIED ROBOTICS Students, staff bring robotics to students of all abilities Photo by Kirby Neumann-Rea UNIFIED ROBOTICS program participants, at the Feb. 8 SuperQualifier, from left: Payton Bunch, Aliyah Klapprich, David George, Becky Franks, Jaime Rodriquez, Mose Banks, Ben Garafalo, Jesse Bigelow, Taylor Meckoll, and Haley Stuben. By TRISHA WALKER News staff writer Last fall, as Hood River Valley High School robotics FTC (First Tech Chal- lenge) and FRC (First Robotics Chal- lenge) students were preparing for the challenges of upcoming qualifying meets, some began an additional proj- ect: Bringing the joys of competition and camaraderie to differently abled students. It began with Hood River Val- ley High School Math/Engineering Teacher Jeff Blackman reaching out to Learning Specialist Becky Franks. He had learned of the Unified Robotics pro- gram from a colleague in Washington, and he pitched the idea to his robotics students. And those students ran with the idea. “This group of students created Uni- fied Robotics,” Franks said. “It’s really been their work. They caught the vision for it, put the effort into it, created it and maintained it. They do the instruction for it. “Jeff and I just sit back and watch the magic, and facilitate a few things,” she said. Franks had four students involved in Unified Robotics. Each of those students were paired with two of Black- man’s. One of those students, A05 Annex FTC team member Payton Bunch, said that, after learning about the Unified Robotics program, she thought the pro- gram sounded like “an amazing oppor- tunity.” Her role has been that of team manager, acting as a liaison between teachers and her peers. She also is in charge of scheduling and organization, with help from teammates, Franks and Blackman. “Unified Robotics meets once a See UNIFIED, page A2 Stay-home order goes into effect News staff writer Hood River County has its first confirmed COVID-19 case, the Hood River County Health De- partment announced Sunday af- ternoon. “As we have seen in other com- munities throughout the world, more cases will likely be identified in the coming weeks,” said the County residents are reminded to stay home and to practice social distancing of six feet while in pub- lic, wash their hands regularly with soap and water, and cover their cough. As of 8 a.m. on March 23 (most recent Oregon Health Authority update at the time of publication), 161 cases of COVID-19 had been confirmed in Oregon. A stay-home order for Oregon went into effect around noon on Monday, March 23, and remains in effect until terminated by Gov. Kate Brown. The order, which Brown titled “Stay Home, Save Lives,” is similar to shelter-in-place orders issued by other states, such as Cal- Business Card Billboard Classifieds Death Notices Entertainment EOC Activated Legal Notices Opinion See ORDER, page A6 COVID-19 Emergency responses organized The Joint Information Center of Hood River (EOC), supporting Hood River County Public Health, is coordinating public outreach for Hood River residents — repre- senting a network of local partner agencies. Last week, the Hood River Board of County Commissioners adopted an emergency declaration for the Coronavirus emergency response. Hood River City Council also ad- opted an emergency declaration for the COVID-19 emergency re- sponse, on March 19. Hood River County activated the EOC (Emergency Operations Cen- ter) last week to support all of our local partner agencies, and com- munity, amidst the current public Photo by Jaquie Barone WILLOW PONDS residents use the proper “social distancing” gaps as they walk and work out together. health emergency. COVID public information call- Hood River County Emergency in lines (updated daily or as condi- Management director Barb Ayers tions change): said agencies have created a web English — 541-399-8022 site for shared public information Spanish — 541-399-8023 about COVID response in Hood Turn to page A5 for details. River County at www.GetReady- Gorge.com. See COPING, page A9 BRIEFS A15 A10 A6 A3 A5 A9 A4 Police Log Sports Yesteryears A6 A7 A14 “This project was all volunteer work, and I was very excited to take this on.” — Artist Kristine Pollard, A8 CAT suspends route CAT will be temporarily sus- pending all fixed-route services as of March 24. “Due to Gov. Brown’s Executive Order (20- 12) to stay at home except for essential needs, we will be tem- 3 INSIDE at highest risk, and to help avoid overwhelming local and regional healthcare capacity, I find that immediate implementation of ad- ditional measures is necessary.” Under “Stay Home, Save Lives,” all “non-essential social and recre- ational gatherings” are prohibited, regardless of size, if a minimum 6-foot social distance can’t be maintained, and approximately 30 types of businesses are ordered to shut down (see sidebar, A1, for complete list), in addition to camp- grounds, pools, skate parks, out- door sports courts, and playground equipment areas. All other busi- COPING WITH CLOSED The following types of businesses are closed under “Stay Home, Save Lives.” ■ Amusement parks ■ Aquariums ■ Arcades ■ Art galleries (allowed to offer appointment-only visits) ■ Barber shops/hair salons ■ Bowling alleys ■ Cosmetic stores ■ Dance studios ■ Esthetician practices ■ Fraternal organization facilities ■ Furniture stores ■ Gyms and fitness studios, including climbing gyms ■ Hookah bars ■ Retail sections of indoor and outdoor malls ■ Indoor party places, including jumping gyms and laser tag ■ Jewelry shops and boutiques (allowed to offer pick-up and delivery services) ■ Medical, facial and day spas ■ Non-medical massage therapy services ■ Museums ■ Nail and tanning salons ■ Non-tribal card rooms ■ Skating rinks ■ Senior activity centers ■ Ski resorts ■ Social and private clubs ■ Tattoo/piercing parlors ■ Tennis clubs ■ Theaters ■ Yoga studios ■ Youth clubs ifornia and New York, and estab- lishes restrictions on public activity that, if broken, qualify as a Class C misdemeanor. “In a short time, COVID-19 has spread rapidly,” said Brown in the introductory statement to the ex- ecutive order. “Additionally, some Oregonians are not adhering to social distancing guidance pro- vided by the Oregon Health Au- thority, as represented by crowds this last weekend at the Oregon Coast, Smith Rock State Park, the Columbia River Gorge, and other places around the state. To slow the spread of COVID-19 in Oregon, to protect the health and lives of Oregonians, particularly those porarily suspending all fixed- route services and only be operating Dial-A-Ride services within Hood River County as of March 24,” said press release. Call 541-386-4202 to book a ride or ask any questions. Superhero run May 16 Sign ups are underway for the Superhero Fun Run 5K-10K run/walk in support of Kyle McCarthy, 13. Preregistration and more information at tinyurl. com/superherokyle. 05105 97630 By EMILY FITZGERALD health department in an official release. “Hood River County Health Department is taking these results very seriously and will release any information we can to keep the community informed. However, the privacy of the patient is also a high priority.” The patient is an adult, county officials confirmed, but no further identifying information has been released due to concerns for the patient’s privacy. “The Hood River County Health Department is working diligently on all fronts to combat COVID-19,” said Public Health Officer Chris- topher Van Tilburg in a written statement on Monday. “We will not disclose Protected Health Informa- tion for our current or future cases unless necessary for public safety.” 7 COVID-19 cases in Oregon now 161; first Hood River County case confirmed