E O How players are coping without sports AST 144th Year, No. 203 ut sports INSIDE: SIDELINED How players are coping witho Solar array makes Hermiston RV park fi rst of its kind | REGION, A3 REGONIAN REGONIA A PRODUCTION OF EO MEDIA GROUP TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2020 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2019 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Changes to COVID-19 metrics bring no relief Umatilla County case counts still too high for in-person schooling despite recent changes By ALEX CASTLE East Oregonian Staff photo by Ben Lonergan Taillights streak past Great Pacifi c on Main Street in Pendleton on Saturday, Sept. 26, 2020. Dining on Main Downtown Pendleton businesses explore new ways to dine using expanded outdoor seating areas By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian P ENDLETON — They’re not quite parklets, but the Pendle- ton business community has taken its fi rst steps toward expanding their seating spaces on South Main Street. A joint effort between the Pendleton Chamber of Commerce and the Pendleton Downtown Association, the two nonprofi ts secured a 60-day permit from the city to set up expanded outdoor seating areas in the on-street parking spaces in front of seven downtown businesses. The two organiza- tions pooled grant funds to cover the costs of the new downtown infrastructure. Angela Thompson, the president of the downtown association, said work crews began installing equipment on Tuesday, Sept. 22, to give drivers a chance to get used to the new contours of Main Street. After a walk-through with public safety staff to ensure they were safe to use, the new seating areas, which included fencing, tables, seating and umbrellas, welcomed in guests on Friday, Sept. 25. “The chamber of commerce staff, along with help from the city public works department, worked last week not only setting up what the community can see, but worked tirelessly behind the scenes to ensure businesses had the correct licensing and insurance,” Cheri Rosenberg, the pres- ident of the chamber, said. “We were very Staff photo by Ben Lonergan Brian Mandella performs for diners in front of Great Pacifi c in downtown Pendleton on Sat- urday, Sept. 26, 2020. “PARKLETS ARE LIKE A JIGSAW PUZZLE, A 5,000 PIECE JIGSAW PUZZLE.” See Dining, Page A8 — Angela Thompson, president of the Pendleton Downtown Association UMATILLA COUNTY — In a move that loosened barriers for some schools in the state to begin in-person education, the Oregon Department of Education suspended use of the state’s COVID-19 test positivity rate metric for the month of September on Thurs- day, Sept. 24. The decision, fi rst reported by Ore- gon Public Broadcasting, has no impact on schools in Umatilla County, which reported 61 new COVID-19 cases the week of Sept. 20-26, according to the Oregon Health Authority. That’s still well above the requirement of report- ing less than 10 cases per 100,000 res- idents (fewer than eight new cases per week for Umatilla County) for three straight weeks before returning all students to classrooms. However, a longer suspension of the metric, if not complete removal of it, could signifi cantly impact the coun- ty’s longer-term prospects of return- ing to in-person education. “I don’t really know where they’re going with this, or if this is just the start of this metric just not being used anymore,” said Umatilla County Pub- lic Health Director Joe Fiumara. Test positivity rate refers to the percentage of COVID-19 tests con- ducted that yield a positive result, and is determined by dividing the number of positive tests confi rmed in a single week by the number of total tests con- ducted for the virus that same week. A majority of Umatilla County schools won’t be permitted to reopen for in-person instruction until the county records a test positivity rate of less than 5% for three consecutive weeks. According to the Oregon Health Authority, Umatilla County recorded a test positivity rate of 12.4% the week of Sept. 13-19, its lowest recorded rate since the state started publish- ing weekly reports for the week of July 5. However, Umatilla County is one of two counties in the state — the other being Morrow County — to not record a test positivity rate below 10% since the metric was introduced. Fiumara has consistently ques- tioned the adequacy of test positivity rate for determining whether certain activities can take place, particularly due to the limited testing resources available in rural Eastern Oregon. See COVID-19, Page A8 Band teacher turns ‘crazy idea’ into reality Weston-McEwen High School band director Rob McIntyre built 80 unique percussion instruments By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian ATHENA — Band instructor Rob McIntyre had a problem. Even if the pandemic waned enough so that students could return to Athena schools in the fall, social distancing wouldn’t allow his musi- cians to sit in the band room together. “The thing that’s different about music is that if you’re blowing into an instrument, distancing is not 6 feet, it’s more like 12 feet,” McIntyre said. “It might as well be 50 feet — you’re not going to have a room big enough to put the kids in.” So last spring, McIntyre’s notori- ously inventive brain went into prob- lem-solving mode. He created his own instrument — one that doesn’t require breath — and temporarily renamed his high school and middle school bands the “Pandemic Players.” Over the summer, he and others built 80 of the unique tuned percussion instruments and distributed them to students willing to play them. The instrument consists mainly of PVC pipes, particleboard and glue. McIntyre, known as “Mr. Mac,” took inspiration from a performance company known as the Blue Man Group. The Blue Man performers, a See Band, Page A8 Weston-McEwen High School band director Rob McIntyre poses with an instrument he created and mass produced for his high school and middle school bands. McIn- tyre refers to both instruments and mu- sicians as Pandemic Players. Staff photo by Kathy Aney