WEEKEND EDITION THE WEEK IN PHOTOS EASTERN OREGON ADs CONTENT GOVERNOR TRYING TO WITH OSAA’S DECISION TO PUSH RESURRECT PROJECTS BACK START DATES KILLED BY COVID-19 SPORTS, B1 THE BACK PAGE, A12 NORTHWEST, A2 DECEMBER 12-13, 2020 145th Year, No. 25 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2020 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD List grows longer for Legislature’s special session By PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — The to-do list is growing for the Oregon Legisla- ture as lawmakers consider a third special session this year, barely a month before the 2021 regular session gets underway on Jan. 11, 2021. While most attention has focused on another extension of the moratorium on residential evic- tions set to expire on Dec. 31 (for Multnomah County, Jan. 8, 2021), lawmakers are looking at drafts of other proposed legislation. Legislative leaders and Gov. Kate Brown have said they are open to a session. But they have not yet agreed on what should be considered, when the session would take place and whether they should invoke the “catastrophic disaster” provision to do so. That provision has never been used since voters approved it in 2012. It would allow lawmakers to con- vene without having to come to the Oregon Capitol in Salem — but it also imposes other requirements. Also, December special ses- sions are rare, although then-Gov. John Kitzhaber convened a one- day session in 2012 for a tax break to enable sportswear giant Nike to keep its world headquarters out- side Beaverton. (A 1963 special session ran from Nov. 11 through Dec. 2, although lawmakers took a nine-day break after the death of President John F. Kennedy.) The list was made available by the offi ce of House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Portland, whose spokes- man said that drafts also were being made available to senators. The Stable Homes for Oregon Families coalition has pressed for a special session to extend the moratorium, which would be part of a broader proposal to couple it with a new state fund to compen- sate landlords for part of their lost income. Tenants would still have to pay rent owed by the new date of July 1, 2021, and certify they are unable to pay as a result of the coronavirus pandemic and the economic downturn. House and Senate Democrats disagree about the proposal put forth by the House Committee See Special session, Page A10 UMATILLA COUNTY Breaking tradition Chambers warn of Annual Christmas corn dog stand in Pendleton canceled due to COVID-19 possible protest Protest aims to overwhelm OSHA with complaints against businesses By BRYCE DOLE East Oregonian P ENDLETON — Every holiday season, they came to Pendleton in droves from near and far, seeking one thing — corn dogs. Every holiday season since he was 10 years old, Bernard Lind was there, serving the people and pre- serving a longstanding, deep-fried tradition his father started 49 years prior. This season would have been the 50th anniversary of the Christ- mas corn dog stand run by Lind and his wife, Julieanne. But due to the coronavirus pandemic, that streak has come to an end. “I’m having a hard time looking at the calendar this year and think- ing about what would have been,” Bernard Lind said. “I know what it means to people. I know that they have missed a lot of things this year, just like we have. And it’s hard. It really is.” The recent spike in COVID- 19 cases and deaths, and the large crowds that the stand typically attracts around the holidays, make it too risky to keep the tradition going this year, Bernard Lind said. “My husband and I are in such a state of shock,” Julieanne Lind said. “We’ve gone 27 years together in this business, and we hit a brick wall. It all stopped. We still tell our customers, ‘It’s going to be all right. It’s not forever.’ And if we die, you’ll never see us again. We have to protect you, and we have to protect ourselves. We have to be By JADE MCDOWELL East Oregonian “I’m so sad right now that I can’t be there for (the customers),” Julieanne Lind said. “But I can’t let that sadness ruin their future of seeing me again. It will be bet- ter. I want them to remember the memories.” Memories are what the Linds cling to for a sense of hope in these hard times. There are countless sto- ries, but they come from a humble beginning. Nearly 50 years ago, Bernard Lind’s father, Francis Lind, started UMATILLA COUNTY — Eastern Oregon chambers of com- merce are warning local businesses of a protest effort that could target them. In a joint letter, the Hermis- ton, Pendleton, Umatilla, Board- man, Irrigon and Heppner chambers shared a message they had received from the Oregon State Chamber of Commerce, citing a post on the Open Oregon Facebook page asking people to fl ood the Oregon Occupa- tional Health and Safety Adminis- tration with complaints against busi- nesses in order to overwhelm the agency. “We realize that local busi- nesses are at their breaking point and wanted to make you aware of this effort,” the message from the state chamber said. “OR-OSHA anticipates hundreds/thousands of new anonymous complaints against businesses across Oregon, and these complaints could result in compli- ance letters being sent to your mem- bers by OR-OSHA.” In their own joint message on Wednesday, Dec. 9, the local cham- bers of commerce asked their mem- bers to reach out if they appeared See Tradition, Page A10 See Protest, Page A10 Antonio Sierra/East Oregonian, File Julieanne, left, and Bernard Lind opened their fried food concession stand in the parking lot of Aaron’s in Pendleton in 2017. smart in this.” The pandemic has taken its toll on the Linds. They own the family concessions business together, and when events were postponed indef- initely in February, they lost their sole source of income, Bernard Lind said. They have relied on unemploy- ment relief and funds from grant programs like the CARES Act to get by. But it hasn’t been nearly enough. For the couple, who have served hungry locals for decades, “the refrigerator wasn’t really full,” Ber- nard Lind said of their hardest days. In late July, help fi nally came in the form of insurance and unem- ployment relief. But the pandemic had already worn them down, fi nancially and emotionally. Days once spent traveling to fairs and events across the North- west and chatting and smiling with customers are now spent in a lonely isolation, the Linds said. The anx- iety and stress is relentless, and because of it, Bernard Lind is now experiencing heart problems and chest pain, for which he recently received X-rays and tests. Chatbot offers answers without judgment BMCC goes to artifi cial intelligence to enhance communication By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian PENDLETON — Pendleton, meet Timboto. Blue Mountain Community Col- lege recently launched an artifi - cial intelligence-powered chatbot to improve communication with stu- dents and the community. Conver- sations happen online or via text message. “Timboto is a robot version of our beloved mascot,” said Daniel Ander- son, BMCC’s dean of instruction for arts and sciences. The chatbot is the cerebral side of the school’s mascot, a wolf named Timber who was known pre-COVID for his high fi ves and hugs. His brainy alter ego, Timboto, helpfully responds prises both a university and a commu- nity college, uses a chatbot to improve communications and credits the tech- nology for increasing enrollment and the graduation rate at the community college. Anderson fl oated the idea on his own campus in Pendleton. The bot, he said, would be avail- able to students outside of normal business hours whenever they felt to computer queries at any time of the night or day. Such bots are emerging in aca- demia and in many other venues. They are powered by a knowledge base of questions and answers, and an algorithm that detects nuances in the written dialogue. The chatbots learn as they go. Anderson said he learned about the technology in an academic con- text during a presentation by Georgia State University. GSU, which com- COVID-19 NUMBERS See Bot, Page A10 2 WEEK TOTALS FOR WEEK ENDING 12/12/20 IN UMATILLA COUNTY RISK LEVEL HIGH TOTAL 2 WEEK CASE COUNT 533 TOTAL CASE GOAL 40 OR LESS OVER 2 WEEKS POSITIVE TEST RATE % 12.5 POSITIVE 21.3 TEST GOAL % % 5