OFF PAGE ONE Tuesday, December 15, 2020 East Oregonian A7 Testing: ‘As with everybody, there is an ebb and flow’ Continued from Page A1 to meager resources, fund- ing and systematic issues in health care systems. “By no means do we want COVID to affect us in the way it has greatly devastated other tribes in this country,” she said. Since April 23, when Yel- lowhawk began in-house testing for COVID-19, offi- cials have reported 176 pos- itive cases out of 2,114 com- pleted tests, according to data from the health center. One tribal member has died carrying the virus. “As with everybody, there is an ebb and flow,” Sampson-Samuels said. “But we’re still expecting things to come up based on Thanksgiving gatherings that may have occurred.” The testing event came in response to a slight surge in coronavirus cases seen on the reservation in mid-No- vember, which raised con- cerns among officials as to whether to close Wildhorse. Yellowhawk reported an all- time high of 10 new cases of COVID-19 in a day in mid-November, according to Sampson-Samuels. The testing event was ini- tially intended to solely tar- get Wildhorse staff, but offi- cials broadened their efforts to the public when they real- ized they had enough staff Yellowhawk Tribal Health Center/Contributed photo Cars pass through a drive-thru COVID-19 testing event organized by Yellowhawk Tribal Health Center at Wildhorse Resort & Casino on Dec. 3, 2020. and resources to do so. Word about the event spread, and residents from as far as Baker City and Boardman arrived to see whether they had contracted the virus, Sampson-Samuels said. “As people heard about it, they wanted to come over and get tested,” she said. “And I think that’s a really good indication that people are wanting to know whether they’re positive or negative.” Despite efforts like the testing event at Wildhorse, Sampson-Samuels said the health center is experiencing challenges similar to Uma- tilla County’s health depart- ment where residents are refusing to cooperate with contact tracers, making it likely COVID-19 cases are going unreported. Sampson-Samuels said it is “extremely discouraging” when community members neglect the advice of public health officials. “We’ve got people we try to contact who choose to not answer the phone, choose not to receive the informa- tion we’re trying to give them and want to continue their lives normally, but are blatantly putting the greater population, their family, friends at risk and continu- ing the spread,” she said. “And then we’re that much further away from going back to normal.” Yellowhawk currently employs about 15 contact tracers who are monitoring about 100 people who either are COVID positive or have been in contact with some who tested positive. Yellow- hawk was monitoring 22 active cases of COVID-19 as of Friday, Dec. 11, according to Sampson-Samuels. The high amount of direct contacts on tribal land is what makes efforts like this testing event so import- ant, Sampson-Samuels said. The event was so efficient that health officials are plan- ning to hold a second one on Thursday, Dec. 17, focusing specifically on tribal resi- dents. The Oregon Health Authority is also planning to hold a mass testing event for county residents in Pendle- ton on Dec. 30. Andrew Harnik/Associated Press, File Vice President-elect Kamala Harris holds hands with Pres- ident-elect Joe Biden and her husband Doug Emhoff as they celebrate Saturday, Nov. 7, 2020, in Wilmington, Del. Votes: Biden/Harris win the expected 306 electoral votes Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Christmas lights adorn the house and yard of Craig Dircksen and Lori Smith on West Johns Avenue in Hermiston on Thursday, Dec. 10, 2020. Lights: $250 gift card for the best lights in county Continued from Page A1 Smith, Dircksen’s girl- friend, said even though it’s a lot of work, the pay- off is the happiness it brings to people who come by and watch the show. In past years, they just let it spread by word of mouth, but this year they created a “Mira- cle on Johns Avenue” Face- book page, where they pro- mote not only the light show, but also encourage people to pick up some movie theater popcorn or takeout from a local restaurant to eat in the car while watching. “It does require a lot of work, but it’s definitely something people need this year, and so we wanted to do a little extra to get the word out,” Smith said. She said her parents used to set up a Christmas light display in Stanfield that required an electrician to install an extra electri- cal box and ran up the elec- tricity bill significantly. The new LED pixels that Smith and Dircksen are using are far more energy efficient, however, and Smith said people are always surprised to hear that their electricity bill only went up by “maybe $30” last December. Dircksen said he appreci- ated how patient the neigh- bors have been with the extra traffic each night. He said his favorite part is when a vehicle rolls up with the windows open and he can hear laughs and squeals from excited children inside. Their home isn’t the only Christmas lights display in Umatilla County worth see- ing. Hermiston’s Parks and Recreation department has been collecting submissions of impressive Christmas light displays in the county, adding them to a public map online at bit.ly/lightupthe- town-umatillacounty that now includes more than 40 displays. The department plans to host a vote on the best display, with a $250 gift card for the winner. Beyond homemade light displays, area residents can also visit the Eastern Oregon Trade and Event Center’s Festival of Lights at 1730 E. Airport Road in Herm- iston. Guests can currently walk through the display on Fridays and Saturdays from 5-11 p.m. or drive through on Thursdays and Sundays from 5-10 p.m. Entrance is by donation, to benefit the Hermiston Rotary Club. In Boardman, the SAGE Center at 101 Olson Road is hosting its annual musi- cal light display every night in December from 5-10 p.m. Visitors can enjoy the dis- play, set to music, in their vehicles while tuned in to 106.1 FM. Snow: Floods less likely with smooth transition to spring Continued from Page A1 Canada, bringing arctic air with it, Callihan said the region could see more snowstorms. “It’s bound to happen at some point,” he said, add- ing that it will also depend on whether an arctic sys- tem would be able to pene- trate the Oregon-Washing- ton border. The other factor in snow- fall counts is what it will look like once temperatures rise in the spring. The Pendleton area has been battered for two con- secutive years with consis- tent flooding. In 2019, the McKay Dam was overwhelmed with rain and snowmelt to the point that runoff flooded McKay Creek and some of the Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Snow blankets the Blue Mountains on Monday, Dec. 14, 2020. neighborhoods around it. Flooding was even worse in February when the Umatilla River was inundated with water, causing residential displacement and significant property damage in Pend- leton, the Umatilla Indian Reservation and the Echo and Milton-Freewater areas. Callihan said it’s difficult to project potential flood- ing conditions this far in advance, but one thing that portends well for the region has been the relative stabil- ity of weather conditions so far this season. Callihan said it’s a good sign the region has eased into winter conditions rather than a sudden plummet. If the area gradually transi- tions to spring the same way it is transitioning into win- ter, Callihan said it could make the cycles of snow and rain that led to the flooding less likely. The area has a ways to go before it exceeds historical norms. According to the U.S. Department of Agricul- ture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service, the Umatilla, Walla Walla and Willow basins’ snow water equivalent levels are 87% of their normal levels. Continued from Page A1 The Biden-Harris ticket won 56.5%, and the Repub- lican ticket of President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence, 40.4%. Three minor-party candidates won most of the rest of the votes. Oregon has voted for Democrats for president since 1988. Also taking part Dec. 14 were Michelle Teed, the acting director of the state Elections Division, and Chief Justice Martha Walters, who swore in the seven electors. The electors are: Carla “KC” Hanson of Port- land, Democratic Party of Oregon chair; Pete Lee of Portland, state party vice chair; Larry Tay- lor of Astoria, 1st District committee chair; Nathan Soltz of Medford, 2nd Dis- trict chair; Leigha LaFleur of Portland, 3rd District chair; Laura Gillpatrick of Eugene, 4th District chair, and Sean Nikas of Salem, 5th District chair. Before the official vote, Hanson released this statement: “The 306 Electoral College votes won by the Biden/Harris ticket across the country is a culmi- nation of years of work done by Democratic vol- unteers, activists, orga- nizers, staff, and regular Oregonians and Ameri- cans who responded to the outcome of the 2016 elec- tion with a determination to end Trump’s dark vision for our nation. “Joe Biden received a record 81 million votes — winning decisive states by tens of thousands of votes, and the popular vote by a historic 7 million votes. Trump’s incessant whin- ing and Republicans’ friv- olous lawsuits cannot and will not overturn the will of voters. “While I’m honored to take part in today’s cere- monies, the Electoral Col- lege is a relic of a bygone era, a reminder of our nation’s racist beginnings, and over 230 years later remains a shameful ves- tige of slavery within our democracy. And as we’ve been reminded multi- ple times over the last 20 years, the Electoral Col- lege can lead to undem- ocratic results where the candidate who receives the most votes is not the candi- date who ultimately wins. “We look forward to the day when the necessary number of states join Ore- gon in the National Popu- lar Vote Interstate Com- pact, allowing us to live up to our democratic ide- als and elect our president and vice president by pop- ular vote. “Today, we’ve begun the final chapter of the 2020 election. And while it’s important to celebrate our victories, we’re already looking toward what we must do to address the challenges we face in the days, months, and years ahead. From COVID relief and economic recovery, to tackling the climate cri- sis, to mending many of the rifts that have emerged in our democracy and our communities, we are stronger because we face these challenges together.” VISIT US ON THE WEB AT: www.EastOregonian.com