A-W schools promote new superintendent from within | REGION, A3 E O AST 145th Year, No. 64 REGONIAN TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 2021 $1.50 WINNER OF THE 2020 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD Residents rally to bring kids to school More than two dozen attend gathering at Hermiston High School By BRYCE DOLE East Oregonian HERMISTON — Garett Robin- son stood with his brother and friend beside the fi elds bordering Hermis- ton High School, each holding signs calling for an end to a monotonous year with one message in common COVID-19 New data reveals disparity Umatilla County’s Hispanic population three times more likely to test positive for COVID-19 in 2020 — fi ve full days. The three boys were part of a gathering of more than two dozen people who gathered for a rally at the high school on Saturday, March 13, calling for changes in state coro- navirus guidelines that are prevent- ing students from fully returning to in-person classes. “We’re not learning as much. We’re going to be pretty much behind next year,” said Robin- son, who starts school in person at Armand Larive Middle School on Monday, March 22. Robinson enjoys school. He likes science, spending time with teach- ers, having fun with friends and “becoming smarter so you don’t fail when you get older.” But fi nding help during online-school has been chal- lenging, and he misses sports and his friends. “We’ve been doing the same thing over and over,” Grant Olsen, a student at Hermiston High School, said. “Nothing’s diff erent. We wake up, do the same thing over and over. PENDLETON — New data released by the Umatilla County Public Health Department shows what was long understood but had yet to be disclosed — Hispanic resi- dents have been disproportionately infected with COVID-19 in the county. Residents reporting Hispanic ethnicity accounted for 41% of Umatilla County’s total COVID-19 cases in 2020, compared with 34% from non-Hispanic residents and 25% from residents whose ethnicity was unknown, according to a report released by the health department this week. In addition, the county’s Hispanic population tested positive at a rate approximately three times higher than non-Hispanic residents in 2020, the data shows. “We failed them,” said Jose Garcia, chair of the Hispanic Advi- sory Committee in Hermiston. “We failed some communities. Because for every death that happened in Umatilla County, there was a family involved.” Hispanic or Latino people make up nearly 28% of Umatilla County’s population, according to 2019 U.S. Census data. “I did anticipate that, just from everything I’d seen so far,” Halley Maloy, the county’s epidemiologist, said of the new data showing the pandemic’s disproportionate impact on the Hispanic community. The report, which Maloy assem- bled over the last several months, details a variety of trends and data points related to the pandemic, from hospitalizations to reported deaths “If that’s going to carry through to the fall, they’re not going to see a full day of school on a consistent basis,” he said. “You can’t do it. Not with the spacing we have. Unless you’re going to magically rebuild schools overnight, it just isn’t going to happen.” The rally took place a day after a top public health official announced in a press conference on Friday, March 12, that the state was See School, Page A10 Fuzzy math, absent maps The cloudy future of Oregon politics east of the Cascades was unveiled to the public last week Courtney By GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau S ALEM — The fuzzy future of Oregon poli- tics east of the Cascades went public last week — no diagrams, charts, data — really nothing tangi- ble at all to show how new legisla- tive and congressional districts will be drawn. “We don’t have any maps,” said Rep. Andrea Salinas, D-Lake Oswego, chair of the House Redis- tricting Committee. “We don’t have any numbers from the census.” Salinas and her Senate counter- part, Sen. Kathleen Taylor, D-Mil- waukie, said they were making a good faith eff ort to hold the legally required 10 public hearings on new political maps. Maps that don’t exist — at least, not yet. The hearings are collateral damage from the constitutional car crash headed to the Oregon Supreme Court. The once-a-decade process of rebalancing populations in legisla- tive and congressional districts is a smolderingly hot political wreck. Any fi x isn’t expected earlier than autumn. These are not normal times Like so many things over the past year, COVID-19 is the main prob- lem. In normal times, the U.S. Census counts people every decade, in years that end in zero. The Oregon Legislature gets See Redistricting, Page A10 Fagan Kotek 26 YAMHILL 37 31 32 Nash Salinas MULTNOMAH 24 52 HOOD RIVER 57 MORROW 58 GILLIAM SHERMAN 18 CLACKAMAS 39 10 UNION WASCO POLK MARION WHEELER 16 15 17 LINN 23 BENTON 11 14 13 12 9 8 LANE 25 59 LINCOLN 22 CLACKAMAS 21 19 WALLOWA UMATILLA TILLAMOOK YAMHILL 40 Taylor See detail, left WASHINGTON MARION 20 Murdock COLUMBIA CLATSOP o lu mbia Rive r 44 30 29 33 43 45 47 49 34 28 27 36 42 46 50 48 51 35 38 41 BAKER GRANT JEFFERSON CROOK 54 53 7 60 DESCHUTES MALHEUR HARNEY Oregon House districts DOUGLAS COOS LAKE 55 1 Oregon population totals 2 (Millions) KLAMATH JACKSON CURRY 3 56 5 2000 MULT- NOMAH WASHINGTON C UMATILLA WASHINGTON 15 25 26 YAMHILL 19 20 POLK 11 10 11 CLACKAMAS BENTON 5 MARION GILLIAM UNION WASCO MARION WHEELER 9 8 29 MORROW CLACKAMAS WALLOWA SHERMAN 26 13 12 LINCOLN HOOD RIVER MULTNOMAH 13 YAMHILL See detail, left COLUMBIA 16 er TILLAMOOK 23 21 24 17 14 18 12 2019 * 2010 Source: U.S. Census Bureau CLATSOP o lu mbia Riv 22 15 Up 23.3% from 2000 6 4 JOSEPHINE 4.22 3.83 3.42 *Estimate BAKER JEFFERSON GRANT LINN 6 CROOK 7 LANE 27 10 DESCHUTES 4 MALHEUR HARNEY Oregon Senate districts See Data, Page A10 A checkerboard of green and gold fi elds lines the countryside east of Pendleton as a haze hangs over the town on Jan. 15, 2021. Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian, File C MULT- NOMAH WASHINGTON By BRYCE DOLE East Oregonian Very little sports. Very little friends. Nothing really exciting.” State rules require school chil- dren and employees to stay 6 feet apart while in a school. That means a classroom can only have one student for every 36 square feet, or 10 to 12 students at a time, roughly half the size of a normal classroom. Shane Robinson, Garett’s father who helped organize the rally, said he’s concerned those rules will keep students from the classrooms through the coming months. DOUGLAS LAKE COOS 28 1 JOSEPHINE CURRY 30 2 JACKSON 3 KLAMATH Alan Kenaga/For the East Oregonian Source: Oregon State Archives, Secretary of State’s Office