UMATILLA HOUSE FIRE DISPLACES TWO WOMEN 31/27 REGION/3A TRUMP SAYS BANNON ‘LOST HIS MIND’ NATION/7A THURSDAY, JANUARY 4, 2018 142nd Year, No. 56 One dollar WINNER OF THE 2017 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Beware the f lu Flu season takes off; not too late to vaccinate By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian Infl uenza activity spiked this week in Oregon, but procrastinators still have time to get their fl u shots. Dr. Ann Thomas, a public health physician for the Oregon Health Authority, said fl u season took off dramatically in the last couple weeks. “Last season, we doubled our hospitalizations (from 800 to 1,500),” she said. “This year is looking like another record year — and not in a good way.” The state is experiencing intense and widespread fl u activity. More than 120 people were hospitalized with fl u-like symptoms in Portland during the week ending Dec. 23 — the most recent week reported. The state doesn’t track hospital- izations outside the metro area, but Umatilla County hospitals are also seeing an uptick. “We’ve been seeing more positive cases,” said Nick Bejarano, spokesman for Good Shepherd Medical Center. “We’re seeing cases earlier in the season and more frequently.” Since Dec. 1, 88 patients tested positive for fl u in Good Shepherd’s emergency department, Bejarano said, 77 for infl uenza A and 11 for infl uenza B. St. Anthony Hospital in Pendleton is also seeing an upswing. “The fl u is here,” said St. Anthony Hospital spokesman Larry Blanc. He knew of four people currently admitted with infl uenza-like illness and said ER doctors are testing more patients with fl u-like symptoms. So far, 16 patients tested positive (11 for A and fi ve for B). Of those 16 patients, four said they had been vaccinated. A station with masks and hand sanitizer now sits near St. Anthony’s entryway for visitors who haven’t been vaccinated or suspect they might be ill. It’s a similar scenario at Good Shepherd. Unvaccinated employees at both hospitals must don masks. Dr. Jon Hitzman, a family physician and the county Staff photo by E.J. Harris A sledder races down a hill in the sno-park at Andies Prairie on Monday east of Tollgate. Sno-parks galore in Eastern Ore The best spots to snowshoe, ski, sled and more By TIM TRAINOR East Oregonian Staff photo by E.J. Harris A pair of snowshoers stop to talk to a man with his snow bike on a mixed-use trail at Andies Prairie sno-park Monday east of Tollgate. See FLU/8A Staff photo by E.J. Harris The Horseshoe Prairie nordic ski area offers cross country skiers and snowshoers nearly 10 miles of marked trails. Staff photo by E.J. Harris A pair of snowmobilers ride down a mixed-use trail in Andies Prairie sno-park Monday east of Tollgate. As winter reaches its peak in Eastern Oregon, many residents are looking for opportunities to bust through the inversion into playgrounds of deep snow beneath blue skies. Luckily, the region has numerous options for affordable recreation on public lands — no matter what kind of recreating you like to do. In many cases, an Oregon sno-park is nothing more than a plowed parking lot that abuts prime public recreation land. Snowmobilers, snowshoers, skiers and sledders may look to different parks in the area for one that best fi ts their favorite form of recreation. But according to Mark Penninger, acting public affairs offi cer for the Wallowa- Whitman National Forest, there is little information available about how many people use sno-parks in the region, as well as their preferred mode of travel once they get there. “We don’t have quantitative information about use,” he said. “It’s not something we’ve collected before.” Partly that’s because no two winters look the same. According to Penninger, crews could not plow all of last year’s snow in some parks, whereas this year a four-wheel drive car with proper tires can get many places in Eastern Oregon forests. See SNOW/8A Delays in air quality inspections, permits could pose health risks 5.8 percent of all permits behind as of July 2017 By CLAIRE WITHYCOMBE Capital Bureau SALEM — State auditors say that a backlog in permits and inspec- tions at the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality “endanger the state’s air quality and the health of Oregonians.” DEQ is responsible for moni- toring and regulating emissions from industrial sources and enforcing violations. The depart- ment also oversees land and water quality. But nearly a quarter of air quality permit renewals were behind schedule in the past decade, according to the audit. Overall, about 5.8 percent of all permits were behind as of July 2017. But some types of permits have more severe backlogs than others, with 43.1 percent of the agency’s larger and more complex permits in “backlog status.” And there’s also a delay in inspections of industrial sources of pollution. This could mean that those businesses are out of compliance and potentially emitting harmful levels of pollutants. But auditors weren’t able to identify the size of the total inspec- tion backlog because DEQ, which is divided into three regions, doesn’t track inspections agency-wide. Those delays could pose serious risks to environmental and human health in Oregon, auditors said. Air quality permits specify how much and what types of emissions a business is allowed to emit in accordance with state and federal laws and rules. Certain air pollutants can have See DEQ/8A