OFF PAGE ONE BIOMASS: Still in research, development phase Page 10A East Oregonian Continued from 1A last remaining coal-fired power plant. Rather than install costly emissions upgrades, the utility is researching whether the station can be converted to run on an alternative source of fuel. If not, the plant will be shut down completely. Earlier this year, PGE partnered with a newly incorporated business called Oregon Torrefaction, made up of the U.S. Endowment for Forestry and Communities, Bonneville Environmental Foundation and Ochoco Lumber Company, based in Prineville. The corporation is providing 8,000 tons of torrefied biomass needed to run the Boardman plant for one day, at full capacity. The process of torrefaction refers to roasting biomass, such as wood waste, at high temperatures in the absence of oxygen, resulting in a brittle, charcoal-like material that can be crushed inside the plant. The hope is that low-value timber, small-di- ameter trees and forest clutter can become a sustainable source of fuel for the plant, while simultaneously improving forest health and creating rural jobs. Not everyone is as optimistic. The Sierra Club recently issued a report flagging several concerns with the project’s impact on air quality and forest health. Among its findings, the Sierra Club reports that PGE would actually need 12,800 tons of dry wood daily at the Boardman plant, since torrefac- tion does burn off some of the mate- rial’s total mass. Assuming the plant runs at peak capacity for five months, that adds up to 1.9 million dry tons of unprocessed wood annually. me,” Shelton said. One reason for the void is a brain drain that happens when students from rural America go to the city for college and don’t return home. Another, they say, is that fewer people are going into psychiatry and behavioral health. “Psychiatrists are aging out,” said Eck, administrator for Lifeways in Pendleton. “There aren’t that many from medical school going into psychiatry.” Those who need mental health care keep coming, though. “We served about 6,000 people in the last year,” Eck said. “That’s just in Umatilla County. That’s a lot of people.” According to the latest population estimates for Umatilla County for 2016, that would mean Lifeways provided services to 7.5 percent of the population in the county. Lifeways delivers care in a myriad ways such as traditional counseling sessions, medication management, respite care and crisis evaluation. Sometimes that means helping someone in crisis at three in the morning or assisting a law enforce- ment officer who is dealing with a mentally ill person on the streets. Care also involves in-school coun- seling, a walk-in clinic in Hermiston, two peer centers and assessments at the Umatilla County Jail. Lifeways budgets just over $9 million for Umatilla County oper- ations. Dollars mostly come from Medicaid, though Lifeways accepts private insurance and Medicare as well. Clients pay on a sliding scale. Community Counseling Solutions in Heppner has a similar model. It also runs the David Romprey Warmline for people in crisis, two residential treatment facilities — the Columbia River Ranch and Lakeview Heights — plus an acute care center called Juniper Ridge in John Day. CCS employs about 150 people. Both Lifeways and CCS contract with Greater Oregon Behavioral Health Inc., which manages mental health care for Oregon Health Plan clients in 15 counties, including Umatilla and Morrow. As executive director of CCS Photo contributed by Portland General Electric A pile of biomass has arrived at the Boardman Coal Plant for a full- day test burn, now scheduled for the first quarter of 2017. Logging residue would provide just 6-8 percent of that feedstock, according to the report’s estimates. As for additional thinning projects, the Sierra Club cautions against tailoring forest management to meet future energy needs. “Forest management practices motivated to meet energy needs sets a dangerous precedent for our public forests, especially when continuous large volumes are needed in the supply chain as is the case with the Boardman proposal,” the report reads. Alexander Harris, conservation organizer with the Sierra Club in Portland, spearheaded the report. He said the organization is not pursuing a campaign against biomass, but is watching closely to see that climate and forest consequences are being closely monitored by PGE. Corson reiterated the project is still in the research and development phase, and many questions still need and mental health director for four counties, Kimberly Lindsay oversees mental health care for a large swath of Eastern Oregon. She said finding enough manpower is a continuing headache. “There are not enough mental health professionals in Oregon, that is accurate,” Lindsay said. “There are not enough and there hasn’t been enough for a number of years.” The problem is magnified in rural areas. “I don’t think we’ve been planful as an industry about looking at ways of recruiting and retaining, especially in Eastern Oregon where we already struggle a little bit to get professionals here,” Lindsay said. “I think we’ve done a poor job of keeping our own talent here and giving them a reason to come back home.” Both CCS and Lifeways are working to grow their own talent. “We started a scholarship program – last year, we did $1,000, renewable for four years — eight scholarships across the four counties,” Lindsay said. “When it’s fully up and running, if all the students renew, in the fourth year, we’ll be paying out $64,000. Sixty-four thousand is a lot of money for an agency our size, but that’s where we feel like we need to be because of the talent shortage.” The shortage might not be quite so critical if Medicare had a broader definition of who is eligible for payment. Kevin Campbell, CEO of GOBHI, finds Medicare’s limited scope frustrating. “Medicare only pays for certain types of providers,” Campbell said. “A licensed community social worker can bill, but a licensed professional counselor cannot bill. We know what works. We’ve spent money to keep people out of hospitals with respite centers and acute care treatment centers like Juniper Ridge in John Day, but Medicare flat out won’t pay for things like respite. They’ll pay for someone going to a hospital for $1,200 a day, yet won’t cover $150- to-$500 a day for lower-level care that could have equal results.” “Medicare is one of the worst for access,” Lindsay said. “It impacts all of rural America. In Morrow, Gilliam and Wheeler counties, we don’t have any licensed clinical social workers. New Year’s Eve DINNER to be answered before the proposal could even be considered feasible. He chided the Sierra Club report for making some faulty assumptions, such as sourcing of the biomass, which Corson said would come from multiple sources. “There seems to be a decent possibility the answer to the ques- tions could point to a sustainable, renewable, environmentally respon- sible solution for the plant that would benefit our customers and the local community,” Corson said. “We’re continuing our research to make sure we have the best information we can collect before we make any decisions.” A successful full-day test burn would mark the next milestone in the process, and could lead to additional multi-day trials in the future. ——— Contact George Plaven at gplaven@eastoregonian.com or 541-966-0825. SLOW COOKED TO PERFECTION, SERVED WITH BAKED POTATO & FRESH VEGETABLE 32.95 MAKE IT A SURF & TURF! ADD THRE E JU FRIED SH MBO RIMP 7.00 H AMLEY S TEAK H OUSE CALL FOR RESERVATIONS Court & Main, Pendleton 5 4 1 . 278 .1 1 0 0 LARGE PARTY RESERVATIONS AVAILABLE! Giving the Gi� of Extra Space For the Holidays! Holiday Special! 20% Off Solar Shades ! Offer Expires: 12/31/16 FREE Estimates! 541-720-0772 102 E Columbia Dr. Kennewick, WA 99336 Patio Rooms Sunrooms · Pergolas Patio Covers · Solar & Drop Shades · Awnings & More! Visit our website for showroom hours www.mybackyardbydesign.com There’s one in Grant County.” If you have Medicare and are depressed and you live in Wheeler or Gilliam County, she said, you won’t be seen at all. “Access is zero.” Prevention is a strategy that could eventually ease demand. GOBHI pays Lifeways and CCS to embed counselors in schools and coordinate care for Oregon Health Plan clients who have severe mental illness. The latter keeps them healthier and out of the emergency room. Shelton feels confident in the direction Oregon is headed, though she worries about increasing numbers of mentally ill and not having the workforce to treat them. “There are good quality services and a genuine intent to deliver those service in the state of Oregon,” Shelton said. “Nationwide there’s a problem with access. Part of that is because our population of people who require services for mental illness as well as substances — the two work together to cause dysfunction — that population is getting bigger every single day.” That’s part of the impetus behind the Mental Health Reform Act, part of the 21st Century Cures Act signed into law by President Barack Obama earlier this month. The bill includes a $1 billion grant to help states combat the opioid epidemic and $4.8 billion to study the brain and find new treat- ments. GOHBI’s in-house recruitment specialists just started offering free recruitment services to the mental health agencies in its 15 counties. Currently, Campbell said, there are 78 masters-level positions open and 22 candidates. Despite the challenges, Campbell, Lindsay, Eck and Shelton remain committed to the mental health industry and their jobs. “This is my passion,” said Eck, who worked in inner-city St. Louis before ending up in rural America. “I love what I do.” Shelton said she finds comfort in the direction mental health care is going — the focus on prevention and the collaboration with law enforce- ment and other community partners. “I have been in the field for 30 years,” she said. “Every day, I find huge hope in what’s happening.” yearlong journey home. Eventually, mild devoted to writing anxiety medication and about mental counseling helped him health has officially ease back into home life. blown my mind. He encourages other The journey started soldiers to put their pride simply enough. aside and say, “I need My editor, Daniel help.” Wattenburger, asked me I ventured inside the Kathy to do a series on mental Umatilla County Jail. Aney health, producing a story More than 90 percent of Comment each month on the topic. inmates at the jail deal I would shine a spotlight with some kind of mental on facets of the subject, writing health issue. Inmates in suicide about everything from mental watch cells made of see-through illness on the streets to PTSD. acrylic walls were in clear view By the end, my readers would of a deputy in the control room. see the challenges and also the I watched as one of the suicidal most promising pathways to inmates, a twenty-something better mental health in Umatilla man with a buzz cut, goatee County and beyond. and tattooed devil horns, stared I was an innocent — a babe blankly ahead. The jail’s mental in arms. Though I had written health coordinator, Ed Taylor, about mental health before, the is a stubbornly optimistic guy subject’s long waving tentacles who gives inmates the tools to soon wrapped me up and deal with “the stuff going on swung me to and fro as the year inside their brains.” With most progressed. The complexities of the inmates, drugs and alcohol boggled. The experiences of interweave with mental illness those I met grabbed hold and and it is difficult to tease them wouldn’t let go. Each person apart. It’s like the chicken-or-egg helped hammer home the reality question, figuring out which that any one of us could be came first. Really, it almost caught in the web of mental doesn’t matter. A person is illness. hurting, Taylor told me — let’s A man named Michael go from there. Haines told me of his first My mind was blown again psychotic break at age 19. one morning inside a little A typical college student, cinderblock building that houses he had suddenly started the Lifeways Day Treatment experiencing hallucinations Program. There, counselors and delusions. The voices he and teachers nurture children heard seemed absolutely real. who have experienced trauma, Now a 26-year-old graduate often from child abuse and student, Haines described neglect. The children lose his struggle to cope. A free control, are easily angered and intervention program called lack social skills. Some have a Early Assessment and Support salty vocabulary and too much Alliance gave him valuable tools understanding of sex for their such as the ability to test reality. age. They often have been Today, he counsels other young ejected from regular classrooms. schizophrenics. At the Day Treatment Center, Then there was Kevin Hines, they learn to cope. For a few who jumped off the Golden Gate hours, I observed counselors Bridge and survived. On that and teachers help the children night 16 years ago, he stood at with a blend of humanity the rail, his thoughts churning. and toughness. The children After a long time, the severely absorb skills and strategies and depressed teenager jumped eventually are eased back into and instantly wished he hadn’t. the school system. Hines adjusted his body so he I spent time with police shot feet-first into the murky officers who deal with mental depths. His back was broken, but illness on the streets. This he was alive. Hines now speaks happens daily, if not hourly. to young people in a quest to Officers come across a keep them from choosing to end person lying on a city street their lives. or hallucinating or urinating A young Heppner mother in a public place or acting told me of her journey from aggressively. The officers use abused child to drug addict words to soothe and de-escalate, to college student. At her low but often must book mentally point, Rita Glover’s life was on ill people into jail for lack of a drug-induced roller coaster anywhere else to go. with periods of semi-clarity and I talked to several mental attempts to get clean. She lived health administrators who in a leaky, cockroach-ridden explained Oregon’s constantly trailer in Hermiston. In her evolving mental health system worst moments, she confided, and expounded on their “I was running around making frustrations and hopes. Each terrible memories. At least once dislikes that the current system a week, I cried myself to sleep. I doesn’t help much until people didn’t want to live, but I was too reach the crisis stage. They chicken to die.” She gave herself expressed excitement, though, over to treatment at Community about the focus on prevention. Counseling Solutions and is now One program embeds counselors clean and fiercely committed to in schools and another helps staying that way. coordinate care for people with I talked to Ryan Lehnert over severe mental illness as a way coffee about post-traumatic to keep them on track and out of stress disorder. Ryan, a corporal the emergency room. with the Pendleton Police There isn’t space to tell you Department, led a platoon of about every fascinating person Oregon Army National Guard or every program I encountered. soldiers in Iraq in 2004. The I ended the year feeling as if I’d men spent their days doing slugged down a cocktail with reconnaissance, looking for equal parts hope and despair. explosives, scanning the terrain I was Pollyanna in a gloomy for irregularities — old tires, dungeon looking out the window a grain sack, new dirt, a dead at a spectacular rainbow. animal, wires or anything else My journey is over for now, out of the ordinary. He worried but it’s far from finished. about his soldiers and felt ■ deep in his soul the promise Kathy Aney is a reporter he made to a soldier’s mother and photographer for the East to bring her son home safe. Oregonian. Contact her at He described “being wrapped kaney@eastoregonian.com or pretty tight” when he returned call 541-966-0810. 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