A6 OFF PAGE ONE/RECORDS East Oregonian Cases: Brown said she was “very, very concerned” with what this means for hospitals, adding that rural communi- ties generally have less access to health care than counties in Western Oregon. “Honestly, I’m very concerned about the capacity of health care workers them- selves,” she said. “They have been working day in and day out for the last several weeks providing incredibly valuable patient care, life-saving care. And to have an additional surge on top of it is incredi- bly frustrating, I’m sure, for them after they have worked so hard.” Brow n i n Aug u st announced a COVID-19 vaccine mandate for teachers and health care workers with an Oct. 18 deadline, citing the alarming rise in cases driven by the delta variant. Besides Wheeler County, more than a quarter of health care workers in every county in Eastern Oregon county are unvaccinated, according to state data. All would be fi red or forced to resign under Brown’s current mandate. Last week, Dr. Jon Hitz- man, Umatilla County’s public health officer, said if a COVID-19 surge were to follow the Pendleton Round-Up, its peak would occur right around the mandate’s deadline, placing a greater strain on hospitals that already are short-staff ed. In the press conference, Brown said she was “push- ing forward on our vaccine requirement for health care workers because we have a really stark choice right now: a vaccinated workforce that can continue to work through our COVID surges like the one we’re likely to see again from the Pendle- ton Round-Up, or an unvac- cinated workforce that’s depleted by quarantines and illness.” Much of the briefi ng was taken up with mostly upbeat news of overall drop of state- wide cases, approval of booster shots for some Pfi zer vaccine recipients, and the usual requests for continued voluntary masking and social distancing. The rising numbers in Umatilla County led the inde- pendent pandemic monitor- ing group COVID Act Now to raise the county’s risk rating to its highest level: Extreme. Since first appearing in Wuhan, China, at the very end of 2019, COVID-19 has infected 232.6 million people worldwide and killed 4.76 million, according to the Johns Hopkins Coronavi- rus Resource Center. In the United States, 43.2 million cases have been reported and 692,058 have died. for currency in the Capi- tol, so you shake hands and you make a deal. (When you break a deal), especially when it’s public like that, it’s irrep- arable.” Fallout from the scuttled agreement also prompted one Democrat to make an announcement many had expected. State Rep. Janelle Bynum, D-Happy Valley, will once again pursue the House speakership. “If the session proved anything, it’s that we need a reset,” Bynum wrote in a Facebook post Sept“I’m not saying it has to be puppies and lollipops, but I think there’s lots of room for us to do better in terms of how we interact with one another.” Bynum, who was prepar- ing to challenge Kotek for the speakership earlier this year before reaching her own handshake deal with the speaker, said she’ll once again run once nominations are open. Under normal timelines that would not be until late 2022, but that could change if Kotek decides to step down from the role as she runs for governor. A spokesman said Monday she planned to remain speaker during next year’s one-month legislative session. “We’re defi nitely going to have to do some repair work between now and then,” Bynum said Sept. 28 when asked about how the redis- tricting fight could impact the 2022 session. “Otherwise I think people will decide not to run (for offi ce). It’s terribly frustrating to be caught in the middle of that and to feel powerless.” For her part, Kotek declined to speculate Sept. 27 about whether the frustra- tions from the redistricting fi ght were likely to bleed into future sessions. “I try not to project that far ahead,” she said. “I take one challenge at a time.” But the speaker did not hesitate to place blame for the heightened tension that has marked the House in recent years, noting she’d led the chamber through nine regu- lar and six special sessions. “I’ve had my challenges with Republican leaders, but not to the level that I’ve had with Leader Drazan,” Kotek said. “I think you should ask her why she has such a diffi - cult time succeeding for her caucus... I have a track record working across the aisle with everybody. My problem lies with her.” How the interpersonal fracture plays out in the future is not clear. Asked about it Sept. 28, a spokes- man for Drazan pointed to her statement advocating for Kotek’s censure. If Republicans do seek to infl uence next year’s session with parliamentary delays or walkouts, it might be their last opportunity. A coalition of Democratic allies have begun pursuing measures on the 2022 ballot that would penal- ize lawmakers for blocking legislative action by walking away, and eff ectively elimi- nate their ability to require bills to be read in full. The coalition, No More Costly Walkouts, has four potential measures in play, and has said it will decide which to put before voters based on official ballot language and polling. “The coalition will move forward one or more of those but they aren’t ready to make an announcement,” said Patty Wentz, a consultant working for the group. She added the group is “holding fi rm on the fact there need to be consequences for walk- ing off the job.” Continued from Page A1 When pressed for her level of alarm amid the outbreak, Brown said in the news conference fi rst and foremost that she did not attend the Round-Up because she was concerned about community spread. Brown said she was well aware of the regional case spike “as a result of the Pend- leton Round-Up,” but she still said “it’s a little early,” noting the Round-Up only ended a few weeks ago. Deadly month Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian, File Fans cheer during the grand entry Sept. 18, 2021, of the 111th Pendleton Round-Up at the Round-Up Grounds. Gov. Kate Brown on Tuesday, Sept. 28, said she was “gravely con- cerned” about the spike in COVID-19 cases connected to the Round-Up. But the state’s own numbers, along with those from federal and non-govern- ment groups, painted a darker picture. There were 424 COVID- 19 deaths in Oregon in September as of Sept. 27, making September the third deadliest month of the pandemic. September surpassed August’s death toll and could exceed the January total of 476 by the end of the month. Oregon’s Hospital Capac- ity Web System, which tracks availability of hospital beds in the state, reported Sept. 27 that only six of 89 staff ed adult intensive care unit beds east of the Cascades were available. The Pendleton Round-Up was canceled in 2020 amid COVID-19 concerns, but plans moved forward in early summer as Brown dropped many restrictions on activi- ties when COVID-19 cases appeared to bottom out at the end of June. The event went off as scheduled despite a steep wave of cases linked to the the highly contagious delta vari- ant that swept across Oregon and fi lled state hospitals to capacity. It’s still too early to say if cases foreshadow a new spike statewide and health offi cials are watching closely for that possibility, Jeanne said. Brown did not voice any regret in not overrid- ing local offi cials’ decision to go ahead with the event. The Round-Up brought tens of thousands of people into an area with high infection rates and where just 51% of eligible adults were vacci- nated. Many of the visitors came from areas in neigh- boring states where vacci- nation rates were also low. Brown said the state had pressed offi cials across Oregon to encourage safety protocols, including mask mandates. She pointed to other states where people are gathering en masse without a mandate. “If you watch an Ohio (State) football game in Ohio, those stadiums fi lled with 100,000 people, there is hardly a mask there,” Brown said. “That is very diff erent here in Oregon.” Prior to the mid-Sep- tember event in Pendleton, Brown said it was up to local offi cials to ensure the safety of the crowd. As for those who attended, she said they should mask up, follow social distancing guidelines, but otherwise “Let ‘er Buck,” per the Round-Up’s slogan. But masks were few and far between throughout the Round-Up, even though orga- nizers were offering thou- sands of them and had posted signs encouraging masking and distancing. Fallout: leadership in this state.” Many Democrats appeared to back Kotek’s decision, and the House speaker was praised on social media for playing a brand of political hardball more common in Republican-led states. “I supported the speak- er’s decision,” said state Rep. Andrea Salinas, D-Lake Oswego, who led the redis- tricting effort for House Democrats. “The House Republicans were not play- ing ball.” But that feeling was not universal, particularly among more moderate members of a House Democratic caucus that has grown increasingly liberal in recent elections. During the House debate, state Rep. Brian Clem, D-Sa- lem, rose to announce he would not run for reelection for personal reasons. With that decision revealed, he chided Kotek for breaking faith with Republicans. “You cannot go back on your word,” said Clem, one of two Democrats who voted against proposed legislative district maps that should maintain their party’s edge in the House. “It was supposed to be bipartisan or nothing. The change in the process is more than I can stomach. ... This is not OK and I just can’t dignify it with my vote.” Clem said on Sept. 28 that he’d grown tired of increasingly bellicose poli- tics in Salem, where he said members in both parties are willing to go to increasing lengths to achieve their ideo- logical goals. He said Kotek breaking her deal was one example of that, but he also criticized Republicans for attempting to censure the speaker. “All of us are guilty of doing things,” he said. “You don’t have anything Continued from Page A1 When they returned two days later, Minority Leader Christine Drazan, R-Canby, put forward a motion to have Kotek formally censured. “When she chooses to break an agreement made in good faith, she is harming the institution, creating greater division and impacting our ability to work together in service to Oregonians,” Drazan said. “She must be censured for this conduct.” The motion, f loated immediately after Demo- crats passed new political maps largely along party lines, was little more than an opportunity for Drazan to air grievances. Supermajority Democrats dutifully voted against disciplining their leader, who has her sights set on the governor’s offi ce. Two Republicans opted to leave the chamber rather than participating. The motion failed on a 33-14 vote. Drazan herself suggested that she would face reprisals for urging censure. “I recog- nize that there’s probably nobody who believes that I personally won’t face some- thing for my decision to bring this forward,” she said. The GOP leader was not alone in decrying Kotek’s decision. Time and again, Republicans rose Sept. 27 to oppose new maps for the state’s legislative and congressional districts, and to complain about the broken agreement. “Now we can’t trust that deals are being brokered fairly,” said state Rep. Suzanne Weber, R-Tilla- mook. “And I don’t know how we come back from that when we’ve lost so much of the trust and the ‘It is inevitable’ Fiumara, Umatilla County Public Heath boss, has said the number of COVID-19 cases tied to the Round-Up is an undercount, as many people who have tested posi- tive are aware of others who have and are not cooperat- ing with health offi cials. The reported cases include people who had COVID-19 symp- toms prior to the event and yet still chose to come, offi - cials have said. “When so many people come together in one loca- tion, it is inevitable,” Umatilla County Commissioner George Murdock said in an email. “The same thing has happened each time restric- tions in Oregon have been lifted.” No county or state offi cials voiced any interest publicly in stopping the Pendleton Round-Up from happening. Until this past week, COVID-19 cases had declined statewide for three consecutive weeks. But state offi cials acknowl- edged in the press conference that cases had fl at-lined over the previous week. They cited the Pendleton Round-Up outbreak specifi cally as one of several factors contributing to this trend. Last week, Umatilla County reported 505 new COVID-19 cases, the coun- ty’s second-highest total since the pandemic started. On Sept. 28, the county’s average daily cases reached a new pandemic high, topping its previous record set in August, a month when more county residents died with COVID-19 than any other month — 22. But public health directors for Umatilla County and the Umatilla Indian Reservation voiced alarm in recent days about the speed with which the outbreak has unfolded. County offi cials have said they are preparing for the surge to continue for several weeks. In response, tribal offi cials reinstated pandemic restrictions that hearken back to those from the pandemic’s early stages, including limited social gatherings. Hospital strain Thursday, September 30, 2021 OBITUARY Margaret Jane Franklin-Martin March 19, 1948 — Sept. 12, 2021 Oregon City Margaret Jane Frank- as a middle school teacher at lin-Martin, MA, educa- St. John the Apostle in Oregon tor, devoted wife, loving City and then Christ the mother, sister and daugh- King in Milwaukie. Marga- ret completed her ter, succumbed career back at St. to complications John the Apos- associated with tle with a focus pancreatic and on middle school ovarian cancer and science and math passed away Sept. 12, 2021, at Prov- curriculum. She idence Portland was an avid propo- Medical Center in nent of STEM Portland. Margaret education and asso- was born on March ciated programs 19, 1948, in Walla and advocated for Franklin-Martin Walla to John and them in her vari- Gloria Franklin ous positions later (Powell), and is survived by in her career. her husband, Terry Martin; Margaret was a multi- daughter, Dr. Drew Martin; media artist at heart and an mother, Gloria Franklin; and avid crafter in her later years two younger sisters, Chris with a particular penchant for (Tim) Pacheco and Jeanne making lovely handcrafted, Irving (Franklin). themed wreaths, handmade With a keen inter- gifts and holiday decora- est in pursuing a career in tions. There was not a square education like her mother, foot of her home without a following graduation from seasonal pop of color and McLoughlin High School Michaels craft store was like (Mac-Hi) in Milton Free- a second home. She enjoyed water, Margaret headed to using natural objects, espe- Moscow, Idaho, and the cially rocks, wheat and pine University of Idaho to begin cones, to create beautiful art her undergraduate studies. and decorations for her home She joined the Kappa Alpha and the homes of her family Theta sorority and was very members. Her creative spirit active in campus life. Marga- and unique perspective will ret went on to complete her be missed. bachelor’s degree at Portland Growing up, Margaret State University and begin always loved animals and her career as an educator in her family had a variety of Oregon. Later in life, Marga- dogs and other pets. Later ret completed her Master of in life she and Terry had Reading Literacy degree at three toy poodles, Sparky, Lewis & Clark College with Peppy and Boom Boom, as her daughter, Drew, in tow for well as her horses, Blitz and many classes. Roladon (Donny); in addi- On March 18, 1979, tion to a myriad of feline Margaret married her high companions. After the fi nal school sweetheart, Terry move back to Oregon City Martin, who had graduated on their 5-acre farm, the from the United States Naval Martin household continued Academy and was in the to be a beacon for “dumped” process of pursuing a career cats and dogs in need of as a Marine Corps fighter forever homes, including pilot. They moved around Mary Ann, Stormy and Rex extensively during the early and many, many more. After years of their marriage to the passing of her horses, accommodate Terry’s various Margaret started a herd postings, making homes in of wool-breed sheep and Arizona, California, Oregon angora goats and enjoyed the and Virginia. On Sept. 21, shearing, cleaning, process- 1982, they welcomed their ing and spinning of their daughter, Lauren Drew wool and mohair. In her later Martin, while Terry was life, through natural attri- stationed in Monterey, Cali- tion, the animal menagerie fornia. The family eventu- was reduced to a handful of ally settled back in Oregon well-loved cats, including City long term, when Drew Leo, Spicy and Jack, then reached school age, while those that survived her, Terry completed his commit- Nikki, Bart and Toby. All of ment to the military. her animals were incredibly While Margaret started lucky to have such a dedi- her career as a teacher shortly cated, loving caretaker that after finishing undergrad always put their needs fi rst. as a middle school teacher Her surviving fuzzy felines in Milwaukie, she took a will miss her constant care, prolonged hiatus to raise her aff ection and love. daughter and take care of the In lieu of fl owers, dona- homestead during Terry’s tions can be made to the years of service. After Drew Oregon Humane Society & entered high school, Margaret Cat Adoption Team (CAT) in eagerly returned to teaching her name. Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian Students in Bailey Watson’s fi rst grade class settle in Aug. 30, 2021, for the fi rst day of school at Highland Hills Elemen- tary School in Hermiston. The Oregon Health Authority re- ported the Hermiston School District as of Sept. 22 had 36 students with COVID-19 and seven staff cases. Schools: Continued from Page A1 “I’m going to do every- thing in our power to keep schools open,” she said. While the number of students and staff directly affected by COVID-19 is relatively small in districts the size of Hermiston and Pendleton, a few cases can go much further in a district such as Helix, which has one of the smallest student bodies in the state. Helix has had nine students and eight staff test positive for the virus since the year began. For staff members, that represented about one-third of their ranks. Helix Superintendent Brad Bixler said staff didn’t test positive for the virus all at once, which gave the district the fl exibility to bring in substitutes as needed and avoid shutting down classes or the school. With its most recent case coming on Sept. 8, Bixler said Helix is back at full strength. Bixler said parents have done a good job of commu- nicating with the district and keeping their students home if they think they’ve been exposed or sick. Like its neighboring district to the south, Helix is keeping an eye out to see if Round-Up will have an effect on students or staff . While the Helix School District’s coverage area doesn’t intersect with Pendleton, a significant amount of Helix’s students and staff commute from Pendleton. Bixler said he’s “crossing my fingers” that Helix won’t see new cases arise from the rodeo.