A6 OREGON East Oregonian Tuesday, December 15, 2020 First COVID-19 vaccines have landed By AIMEE GREEN AND ANDREW THEEN The Oregonian The Oregonian Photo, File Oregon Gov. Kate Brown will not be among the first to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. Brown will continue to stay mostly at home, wear a mask and keep her distance from other people. Brown won’t be among first to get vaccinated By HILLARY BORRUD The Oregonian SALEM — Gov. Kate Brown will not be among the first Oregonians to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. Rather than jump the line due to her role as the state’s top elected leader, the gov- ernor will likely be vacci- nated sometime after health care workers and vulnerable residents in long-term care facilities, a spokesperson for Brown told The Orego- nian/OregonLive on Thurs- day, Dec. 10. She’ll continue to stay mostly at home, wear a mask and keep her distance from other people until then, he said. “The first vaccines will be distributed for frontline health care workers and long- term care facility residents, followed by others who are most vulnerable and at high- est risk for COVID-19 infec- tion,” Deputy Communica- tions Director Charles Boyle wrote in an email. “Vaccines will be distributed using a phased approach while avail- able doses are limited. Gov. Brown is likely not to be vac- cinated until later in the dis- tribution process when the vaccine is more widely avail- able to most Oregonians.” Brown has been taking precautions to minimize her potential exposure to COVID- 19 since the spring, including wearing a mask and limiting the number of staff and other people with whom she meets. Boyle said the governor will continue those measures until it’s her turn to be vaccinated. “In the meantime, she will continue to practice physical distancing, wear a mask, and avoid large gatherings — as we are asking all Oregonians to continue doing — to stay safe and help stop the spread of COVID-19 until vaccines become more widely avail- able,” Boyle wrote. The governor was tested for coronavirus early in the pandemic when the state was still tightly controlling who could get the test, although she got the test only after a reporter asked if Brown had been checked because she exhibited symptoms of ill- ness, such as coughing during a press conference. Brown tested negative for coronavi- rus, which at the time was far less prevalent than it is now. Contributed Photo Highly popular Midwest polka band Mollie B & Squeezebox will entertain at Oregon’s Alpenfest in 2021. From right are Joe Poper, guitar and mandolin player; Mollie Busta, instru- mentalist and vocalist; Ted Lange, accordion and vocalist; and drummer Dana Linblad. SALEM — The first shipments of the long- awaited coronavirus vac- cine have arrived in Ore- gon, although officials don’t expect to begin inoculating any residents on Monday, Dec. 14. The shipments of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine were expected to arrive at 10:30 a.m. Dec. 14, but instead arrived by about 7 a.m., according to the Oregon Health Author- ity. A Legacy Health facil- ity in Northeast Portland and Legacy Meridian Park Medical Center in Tualatin received the first two, 975- dose shipments. It’s not immediately clear when the first vaccinations will begin, although an agency spokesperson sug- gested it may be Wednes- day, Dec. 16. Frontline health care workers will be the first to start receiving the vaccine, followed by residents of nursing homes beginning next week. They will need a second dose three weeks later in order for the vaccine to offer its full protection. The vaccine is estimated to be about 95% effective. “In recent weeks, as COVID-19 vaccines reached the final stages of approval, I have said time and again that hope is on the way. Today, I can tell you that help is here,” said Gov. Kate Brown, in a news release. “The first ship- ments of the Pfizer-BioN- Tech COVID-19 vaccine have arrived in Oregon, the first of many that will be distributed across the state.” “We are in the middle of some of the hardest days of this pandemic,” Brown con- tinued. “Our hospitals are stretched to capacity, and too many families are los- ing loved ones just as we enter the holiday season. So many Oregonians have suf- fered and sacrificed in the last 10 months. But start- ing this week, and each week following — as vac- cines become more widely available — we will begin gaining ground again in our fight against this disease.” Legacy, the first health care group to receive the Jessica Hill/Associated Press A vial of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for COVID-19 sits on a table at Hartford Hospital on Monday, Dec. 14, 2020, in Hartford, Conn. The first shipments of the long-awaited corona- virus vaccine have arrived in Oregon, although officials don’t expect to begin inoculating any residents until at least Wednesday, Dec. 16. vaccine, said it had not yet determined when it would start vaccinating people against COVID-19. Legacy has two freezers on hand and expects two additional storage units to arrive Tues- day, Dec. 15. Among other hospi- tals that will soon receive shipments: Kaiser Perma- nente, which has two hos- pitals in the Portland area, will receive 975 doses Dec. 15 and plans to begin vac- cinations Friday, Dec. 18, at its Sunnyside and West- side Medical Center. The health care organization has a freezer in Washing- ton and Oregon to store the vaccines. Oregon Health & Sci- ence University in Portland and Saint Alphonsus Medi- cal Center in Ontario, along the Oregon-Idaho border, also will receive 975 dose shipments on Dec. 15. In all, Oregon is expected to receive 35,100 doses this week. More than 24,375 of those doses are going to hospitals and health care systems. The other 10,725 doses will go to nursing homes. The Centers for Dis- ease Control and Preven- tion asked Oregon to choose the first sites to receive the vaccine, and the system of distribution is being moni- tored, according to the Ore- gon Health Authority. Across the country on Dec. 14, health care work- ers began receiving immu- nizations. Among them, a critical care nurse in New York and workers at a med- ical center in Ohio. On Dec. 13, a scientific review panel for Oregon, California, Washington and Nevada reviewed the data on the Pfizer vaccine and determined it was “safe and efficacious.” Last week, a U.S. panel of scientists reviewed trial data and gave the vaccine its stamp of approval. The federal Food and Drug Administration on Dec. 11 granted the vaccine an emergency use authoriza- tion for people ages 16 and older. The director of the Centers for Disease Con- trol and Prevention, Rob- ert Redfield, said Dec. 13 he recommends the vaccine. By the end of Decem- ber, Oregon could receive between a total of 197,500 and 228,400 doses of both Pfizer-BioNTech and Mod- erna vaccines, according to the Oregon Health Author- ity and the governor’s office. Brown said the state will “work to ensure” groups disproportionately effected by COVID-19 — includ- ing Black, Latino and tribal communities — will have “equitable access to vaccination.” There are more than 4.2 million residents state- wide — and estimates of when everyone who wants a vaccine gets one range END OF YEAR ! LS SPECIA from summer to fall. It’s unknown precisely when children younger than 16 will get the OK to be inoc- ulated. Scientists say more study is needed before giv- ing the vaccine to younger children. After health care work- ers and residents of long- term care facility, essential workers will be next in line to get inoculated. But the state has yet to decide who will be defined as an essen- tial worker and what order those workers will be vacci- nated in within that group. After that, people with underlying conditions that put them at high risk of severe complications from COVID-19 and people older than 65 will be given vaccinations. It will likely be some- time in the spring before the general population’s turn in line comes up. Patrick Allen, director of the Oregon Health Author- ity, urged Oregonians to continue to wear masks, avoid gatherings and take other public health safety precautions because vac- cinations are still months away for most Oregonians. “The vaccine is the light at the end of the tunnel, but we will be in this tunnel for several months,” he said in a news release. “We need to keep doing what we’ve been doing to help our friends, neighbors and ourselves stay safe.” MESSA TO YOU GE CUSTO R MERS Alpenfest to head to Joseph in 2021 Wallowa County Chieftain JOSEPH — After more than four decades at Wal- lowa Lake, Oregon’s Alpen- fest will have a new home in 2021. Directors of the Alpen- fest decided in November to move the annual event from its prior location to Joseph, and the festival in September 2021 will be at the Harley Tucker Memorial Grounds. According to a press release, “a cascade of inci- dents” prevented the contin- uation of the festival at Wal- lowa Lake, where it has been since 1975. The festival had taken place at Edelweiss Inn for 43 years, according to the press release, but the building’s owners deemed it to be too dangerous for future public events after the 2018 festival. The 2019 festival took place in two large tents set up at the Wallowa Lake Marina, a move made in an effort to keep the event at the lake. But weather, timing, elec- trical issues, heating and lighting all made the idea of holding the event in a tent unattainable, according to Chuck Anderson, festival president and alpenmeister. The 2020 event was can- celed altogether because of COVID-19 restrictions. Anderson called the move away from the lake a “very reluctant decision.” “We know that our loyal attendees look forward to the lake environment and some will be disappointed,” he said in the release. “But recent circumstances forced us to make a hard decision, and we trust that Alpenfest will continue to provide a rousing good time.” The return of the festi- val in 2021 will bring with it internationally popular polka band Mollie B & Squeeze- Box, and Alpenfest regulars Tirolean Dancers, Shelby Imholt, a Swiss yodeler, and virtuoso accordionist Alicia Straka. Additionally, Randy and Ashley Thull will pro- vide free polka lessons. The 2021 event, which will run from Sept. 23-26, features a procession down Enterprise’s Main Street on Thursday, Sept. 23, and “Accordions at Alpenfest” at Terminal Gravity. TG will also be the location of a tra- dition tapping of the first keg of Alpenfest beer, and the brewery also will provide the bulk of the festival’s brews, according to the release. Performances will take place Friday, Sept. 24, and Saturday evening, Sept. 25, and Saturday afternoon, and the Alpine Fair will be Fri- day through Sunday, Sept. 26. LAST MINUTE S! EA GIFT ID For the month of December only - take advantage of one of these great deals! FULL PAGE EO only - $500, add HH for $250! (10.5”x21.25”) HALF PAGE EO only - $300, add HH for $100! (Horizontal - 10.5”x10.5 “ or vertical - 5.167”x21.25”) QUARTER PAGE EO only - $175, add HH for $75! (5.167”x10.5”) *Must be a new ad, publish IN December 2020, all ad prices include full color! Contact one of these great sales reps to get your ad in! Pendleton & Surrounding areas: Hermiston & Surrounding areas: Angela Treadwell 541-966-0827 Kelly Schwirse 541-564-4531 atreadwell@eastoregonian.com kschwirse@hermistonherald.com