NORTHWEST East Oregonian A2 Saturday, August 7, 2021 Vaccines required for employees at Providence health system By SHEILA HAGAR Walla Walla Union-Bulletin WALLA WALLA — Provi- dence St. Mary Medical Center and Providence Medical Group offi- cials announced Thursday, Aug. 5, that caregivers employed by the organizations must be vaccinated against COVID-19 by Sept. 30. The announcement follows the statement earlier this week from the Washington State Hospital Association supporting COVID- 19 vaccination requirements for health care workers. St. Mary spokesperson Kath- leen Obenland said the mandate is for all Providence caregivers in Washington, including Walla Walla. Patient care employees will be required to show proof of vaccina- tion. Those who cannot be vacci- nated must sign a declaration of that and follow additional protocols, including enhanced COVID-19 testing, mandatory vaccine-re- lated education and discussions, as well as other infection-prevention requirements in accordance with facility policy, federal, state and local public health mandates. Indoor masking also remains in effect in Providence hospitals and clinics. Providence is one of the largest health systems in the nation. The move comes as the organization is seeing the delta variant driv- ing patient volumes up once again and unvaccinated people account- ing for the vast majority of Provi- Walla Walla Union Bulletin, File Pharmacists, from left, Amanda Johnson, Belinda Grimm and Dalari Allington of Providence St. Mary Medical Center, Walla Walla, prepare the COVID-19 vaccine for injection in January 2021. dence’s COVID-19 patients. In Walla Walla, the renewed surge in the virus is making it more likely patients with illnesses and injuries will be transferred to other hospitals, “if there are any with capacity,” Obenland said. “Partic- ularly if the patient needs an inten- sive care bed.” That can make a medical situa- tion extraordinarily expensive for patients, but sometimes there is no other available option than to trans- fer elsewhere, she said. While the hospital’s Southgate Medical Park is set up as an over- flow space for COVID-19 patients, it only will be used as a last resort. For example, if St. Mary could not contain any more patients, it couldn’t transfer patients out because other hospitals also were at capacity and if it appeared the situation would continue for a Forecast for Pendleton Area | Go to AccuWeather.com TODAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY Mostly sunny and nice Periods of sun; breezy, nice Sunny, pleasant and warmer Breezy in the a.m.; mostly sunny Very hot with clouds and sun 88° 58° 75° 53° 91° 62° 78° 54° PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 83° 58° 98° 72° 92° 64° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 87° 56° 101° 70° 95° 62° OREGON FORECAST ALMANAC Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. PENDLETON through 3 p.m. yest. HIGH LOW TEMP. Seattle Olympia 67/55 81/56 87/57 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 89/61 Lewiston 71/57 91/66 Astoria 65/55 Pullman Yakima 86/59 68/51 91/66 Portland Hermiston 79/58 The Dalles 91/62 Salem Corvallis 79/53 Yesterday Normals Records La Grande 88/57 PRECIPITATION John Day Eugene Bend 86/56 85/54 90/59 Ontario 93/67 Caldwell Burns 90° 69° 94° 59° 103° (2019) 46° (1969) 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date Albany 81/53 Boardman Pendleton Medford 94/65 0.00" 0.00" 0.03" 1.93" 1.66" 5.17" WINDS (in mph) 89/61 90/55 Trace 0.01" 0.06" 4.37" 8.68" 8.37" through 3 p.m. yest. HIGH LOW TEMP. Pendleton 85/54 82/55 24 hours ending 3 p.m. Month to date Normal month to date Year to date Last year to date Normal year to date HERMISTON Enterprise 88/58 85/62 87° 67° 91° 60° 108° (1905) 36° (1909) PRECIPITATION Moses Lake 68/53 Aberdeen 82/57 83/59 Tacoma Yesterday Normals Records Spokane Wenatchee 69/54 Today Sun. WSW 8-16 W 7-14 W 8-16 WSW 10-20 prolonged period of time, she said. Obenland said there are multi- ple reasons for the policy, espe- cially staffing issues. “The challenge is not just about available beds. It’s about the team of health care professionals needed to staff those beds. Staffing at St. Mary is very tight, and, like most other businesses, we are facing recruitment challenges.” With nearly every other hospital in the nation experiencing the same shortages, it would not be possible to rapidly hire a whole new team, and putting employees at Southgate would require St. Mary to pause numerous medical services to free up staff, pull in clinic employees and undertake other measures to create a care team for the Southgate beds, Obenland explained. Dr. Rod Hochman, president and CEO of Providence, said that until vaccinations reach crit- ical mass in the United States, “we will continue to see ongoing outbreaks that put the most vulner- able members of our communities at greater risk. Having been on the front lines since the beginning, we know this is not sustainable for our communities or our caregivers. “We also know the COVID-19 vaccines remain one of the safest, most effective tools for preventing severe illness from the virus.” As one of the largest health systems in the country, Provi- dence has the opportunity to lead by example, Hochman said. “That is why it’s imperative that every caregiver get vacci- nated against COVID-19. Not only will it help us keep each other and our patients safe, it will also help ensure we are doing our part to put the pandemic behind us,” Hoch- man said. Providence is placing a mora- torium on large, indoor gatherings and non-essential business travel until the organization has a better understanding of the latest wave of COVID-19, officials also said. County commissioners reopen Mount Emily Recreation Area By DICK MASON The Observer LA GRANDE — All-ter- rain vehicles are again roll- ing at the Mount Emily Recreation Area. ATVs are reappearing at MERA after the Union County Board of Commis- sioners voted Wednesday, Aug. 4, to open its improved roads and its motocross track immediately to motor vehicles. MERA had been closed since July 21 because of high fire danger due to drought and hot weather. The roads opened are Road 201, known as Main- line; Road 202-Mount Emily Road; Road 203-Highline Road and Road 208-Easy Out Road. These are all rough dirt and gravel roads with no f lammable vege- tation. Everyone taking a vehicle on these roads must have an ATV permit. Only people with four-wheel drive closed it. MER A was vehicles with high road reopened for nonmotorized clearance should use activities on July 28. these roads because Significant fire they are so rough, restrictions still are said Sean Chambers, in place at MERA Un ion Cou nt y’s where no camping or parks coordinator. smoking is allowed. Anyone driving The continu- on these roads must ing reopening of carry water and a Beverage MERA reflects the increasing moisture shovel because of the Grande Ronde O regon D e pa r t- ment of Forestry fire Valley has received rules. in recent weeks and The motocross coole r t e mpe r a- trail now open again tures. It also reflects is near Fox Hill Road a recent increase in and is for motorcy- available wildfire cles. All motorcy- Scarfo fighting equipment, cles using this trail according to Union also must carry a shovel and Cou nt y Com m issioner have water close by, Cham- Donna Beverage. bers said. Beverage said a number of The Aug. 4 action by firefighting vehicles belong- the commissioners was the ing to Union County fire second move toward fully departments had been out of reopening MERA after the the county fighting fires but July vote that completely have since returned. SUN AND MOON Klamath Falls 89/49 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today 5:46 a.m. 8:15 p.m. 4:25 a.m. 8:21 p.m. New First Full Last Aug 8 Aug 15 Aug 22 Aug 29 NATIONAL EXTREMES Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) High 112° in Needles, Calif. Low 34° in Mammoth Lakes, Calif. NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY IN BRIEF Local Oregon Trail Segment honored LA GRANDE — The National Park Service recently inducted the La Grande to Hilgard segment of the Oregon Trail into the National Register of Historic Places. The trail segment was one of two local nominations submitted in late June by the Oregon State Advisory Committee on Historic Preservation. The other nomina- tion was a document detailing the history of the Oregon trail and instructions for future national historic nominations along the Oregon Trail. The committee had been working on the nomination for the trail segment since 2018, according to Robert Olguin, National Regis- ter program coordinator for the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department. However, the segment nomination could not be submitted until the document also was completed, which had been in the works since 2012. “There’s a few reasons it took so long,” Olguin said. “There has been staffing issues, with turnover, and there’s no specific timeline for submitting these. And also, several times, the National Park Service would get a draft and send it back for revisions.” The La Grande to Hilgard trail segment, which extends for 3.6 miles, is one section of the Oregon Trail that still has physical evidence of the original trail. The trail follows a stream before reaching a steep incline, one of the steepest sections of the trail in Oregon, according to a statement from the Oregon Parks and Rec department. The trail originally was used by passenger stagecoaches and freighters carrying mining equipment, food and agricultural materials and other commodities, the statement said. The National Register of Historic Places recognizes sites that “identify, evaluate, and protect America’s historic and archeological resources,” according to its website. There are more than 95,000 individual listings on the register’s database. — EO Media Group Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. 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