Hamley Giving Tree harvests holiday spirit | RECORDS/COMMUNITY, A6 E O AST 145th year, No. 27 REGONIAN Thursday, december 17, 2020 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2020 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD County, Tribes provide updates on key issues Officials from the Tribes, county discuss cOVId-19, floods, Thorn hollow bridge By BRYCE DOLE East Oregonian Kathy Aney/East Oregonian PeNdLeTON — Leaders from the confederated Tribes of the umatilla Indian reservation met with umatilla county com- missioners and other county offi- cials on Wednesday, dec. 16, to discuss the current state of the cOVId-19 pandemic, the Thorn hollow bridge and how local communities are jointly planning for the upcoming flood season. The meeting began with updates from tribal officials who confirmed that Yellowhawk Tribal health center will be receiving the first 300 doses of the COVID- 19 vaccine on Thursday, dec. 17. Inoculations of health care staff, frontline first responders and Yel- lowhawk patients over the age of 75 will begin on saturday, dec. 19, and sunday, dec. 20, accord- ing to tribal officials. The vaccines, which are being distributed by the Indian health service and shipped from the Lummi Nation, must be kept in a deep freeze, and because of the transportation, the vaccines will begin to defrost Friday, dec. 18, Chuck Sams, the deputy director of the cTuIr, said in the meeting. That means all vaccinations must be completed by monday, dec. 21, or they will expire, sams said. “Yellowhawk staff are working hard to protect the cTuIr com- munity and now they are start- ing to get health care employ- ees and elders vaccinated. We greatly appreciate their concerted efforts,” cTuIr board of Trust- ees chair Kat brigham said in a press release on Tuesday, dec. 15. “but let me be clear. Just because the first vaccine shipment is coming in, the war with this invisible enemy is not over. There is no silver bullet. We must con- tinue social distancing so we can knock down the numbers before they get worse.” Joe Fiumara, umatilla coun- ty’s public health director, said the county has yet to receive any vaccines. he added that “things are still fluid,” and the department is hoping to see local hospitals receive their first shipments on either dec. 21 or Tuesday, dec. 22. The first Oregon health care workers were vaccinated Dec. 16 Julie Aichele, a game and puzzle buyer at the Walla Walla Book & Game in Washington, said customers’ demand for games has spiked. See Updates, Page A7 Kathy Aney/East Oregonian A customer at Walla Walla Book & Game in Washington browses in the puzzle section on Tuesday, Dec. 8, 2020. The popularity of board games has shot up during the pandemic. Sales of both classic and contemporary tabletop games are soaring. Board games are back Board games and puzzles fly off shelves during COVID-19 pandemic By KATHY ANEY East Oregonian P eNdLeTON — monopoly anyone? The popularity of board games has shot up during the pan- demic. sales of both classic and contempo- rary tabletop games are soaring. Turns out people are hunkering down at home and playing games as a way to fend off boredom and avoid the depressing news cycle. It’s harder to dwell on a deadly virus if you are engaged in a lively game of yahtzee, scat- tergories or Taboo. Julie aichele, game and puz- zle buyer at the Walla Walla Book & Game in Washing- ton, said customers’ demand for See Games, Page A7 Levy and Barreto sign letter supporting Texas lawsuit “WE BELIEVE THAT FAIR ELECTIONS ARE VITAL TO OUR DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC AND THAT THE SUBMISSION OF ELECTORS BY THESE FOUR STATES SHOULD BE AT LEAST POSTPONED.” By ANTONIO SIERRA East Oregonian saLem — bobby Levy will replace Greg Barreto as District 58’s state representative in 2021, but they got a chance to collaborate before the end of barreto’s tenure on a let- ter supporting the effort to halt the Electoral College vote in several key swing states in the 2020 presidential election. barreto and Levy signed a dec. 11 letter from a group of GOP leg- islators to Oregon Attorney Gen- eral ellen rosenblum requesting she join a Texas lawsuit that sought to block electors in Georgia, Mich- igan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin from voting for President-elect Joe biden. The letter didn’t sway rosen- Barreto Levy blum, a democrat, who joined 22 attorneys general in filing a brief opposing the lawsuit. On the same day the Oregon legislators sent the letter, the u.s. supreme court declined to hear the case, asserting that Texas didn’t have standing to sue other states over their election systems. In the lawsuit, Texas attorney General Ken Paxton argued that the changes these states made to their voting processes in light of the — Letter from a group of GOP legislators to Oregon Attorney General cOVId-19 pandemic led to a dra- matic increase in mail-in ballots that weakened election security and led to “significant and unconstitutional irregularities in those four states.” The letter from the republican legislators quoted a few sections from the lawsuit and urged rosen- blum to join the lawsuit. “We believe that fair elections are vital to our democratic repub- lic and that the submission of elec- tors by these four states should be at least postponed,” the lawmakers wrote. Levy said she signed the letter not because she wanted to overturn the election, but because she wanted to support election integrity after seeing a video of vote counting in Georgia. a clip from the security video of a ballot counting site in Ful- ton County, Georgia, shows elec- See Letter, Page A7