REGION Tuesday, November 9, 2021 East Oregonian A3 Pendleton woman dies, daughter found alive after getting stranded in Idaho By ALAYNA SHULMAN Spokane Spokesman-Review COEUR D’ALENE — A Pendleton woman died venturing into the Panhandle National Forest in Idaho for help after getting confused by her vehicle’s navigation system and wind- ing up stuck there, according to the Kootenai County Sheriff ’s Offi ce. The elderly woman’s adult daughter was found alive Friday, Nov. 5. Pendleton Police Chief Chuck Byram called the situation tragic. “Obviously they got way off the road and way up into the national forest,” he said. “Not an outcome we were looking for.” Dorothy “Kae” Turner and her daughter Heidi Turner left Pendleton on Nov. 3 heading for Utah. Byram said his department received the call they were missing that day. “So we were working hard to try and locate them,” he said, including working with banks, cellphone providers and law enforcement throughout Oregon. Pendleton police then received notice that a license plate reader on Intestate 90 in northern Idaho pinged with the plate of the vehicle the Turners were in. Fire blazes in abandonded home By PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian PENDLETON — Fire erupted early Saturday, Nov. 6, in an abandoned house in Pendleton. Capt. Dan Hergert of the Pendleton Fire Depart- ment said the callout for the blaze came at approx- imately 5:30 a.m. Crews arrived to fi nd the second story at 241 S.E. Third St. totally engulfed in flames and smoke, he said. Firefi ghters took a defen- sive approach to contain the fi re, Hergert said, and protected su r rou nding homes and other buildings. There were no injuries or fatalities, and fi refi ght- ers found no one in the house, he said, but there was evidence of people staying there. The cause of the fi re is under investigation. Phil Wright/East Oregonian A Pendleton fi refi ghter scales a ladder Saturday morn- ing, Nov. 6, 2021, where a fi re a couple hours before ripped through the second story of the abandoned house at 241 S.E. Third St., Pendleton. Pendleton sent at least two fire engines and an ambulance to the emer- gency, and the Pilot Rock Ru ral Fi re Protection District also responded with an engine and crew. Pend- leton’s streets were all but empty when the fi re depart- ment rushed to the scene, Hergert said, so crews only ran emergency lights but no sirens. Firefighters were pack- ing up and taking off at about 8:30 a.m. The house has been vacant and rundown for some time. Hergert also said this house has had previous fi res. WALLA WALLA — Two Hermiston residents were injured Saturday morning, Nov. 6, in a crash in Walla Walla County. The Washington State Patrol in a press release reported the crash occurred at about 10:23 a.m. on High- way 12 about 26 miles west of Walla Walla. Julian V. Gutierrez, 47, driver, and Francis J. Kontur, 85, passenger, both of Herm- iston, were in a 1998 Dodge Ram 3500 pickup behind a 2004 Honda Pilot heading west on Highway 12 when the Honda then stopped in the road and started to back up, colliding with the Dodge. Gutierrez and Kontur were injured in the crash, according to Washington State Patrol. An ambulance took Kontur to Providence St. Mary Medical Center, Walla Walla, and Gutierrez went to the hospital as well but in a private vehicle. Kaziputalimba E. Joshua, 62, of Walla Walla, was driv- ing the Honda Pilot. He and his passenger, Stephen E. Hammond, 65, of Sterling, Virginia, also was injured in the crash. Ambulances took both men to Providence St. Mary. The crash also totaled both vehicles. Washington State Patrol reported neither drugs nor alcohol were involved in the crash, and all four men were wearing seat belts. WSP also reported Joshua faces a charge of improper backing. —EO Media Group to have gotten confused when following their vehicle’s navigation device and wound up in the Northern Idaho forest by accident. Then their vehicle broke down. The mother ventured out for help but appears to have died from exposure to the elements, deputies said. The daughter, whom deputies said is mentally disabled, stayed with the vehicle. While the incident doesn’t appear to be suspicious, deputies said it is under investi- gation. ——— East Oregonian news editor Phil Wright contributed to this article. Hermiston High hosts vaccination clinic last week Shots off ered Nov. 3 include COVID-19 vaccines By ERICK PETERSON East Oregonian LOCAL BRIEFING Two Hermiston men injured in Washington crash Law enforcement concentrated its eff orts to fi nd them in that area, but there was no cell- phone service and just a single hit on the use of a bank card at a mini mart in Idaho, Bryam said, Around 11:45 a.m. Nov. 5, a hunter reported fi nding a woman’s body in the Solitaire Saddle area of the forest, according to a news release from the Kootenai County Sheriff ’s Offi ce. When deputies responded, the hunter led them to the woman’s body, and they also found a broken-down vehicle with another woman alive, deputies said. The sheriff ’s offi ce said the women appeared HERMISTON — Umatilla County Public Health held an immunization clinic at Hermiston High School, Wednesday, Nov. 3. The clinic, which included COVID- 19 vaccinations, was during the school’s Student-Led Conferences. Though immunization clinics had been held at the school in the past, Nov. 3 was the fi rst time COVID-19 shots were available at one of the HHS school clinics, Principal Tom Spoo said. He added that he approved the clinic after Hermiston School District nurses approached him on the subject. “As a principal, my focus is on doing everything I can to keep kids in school,” Spoo said. He said he had not heard much from the kids themselves about their feel- ings about the COVID-19 vaccinations, which has become politicized. The shots, which have been approved for ages 5 and up, were available for kids 12 and up at the school on Nov. 3. Spoo said he has been seeing “fewer and fewer” COVID-19 cases among his students, as of late, with maybe four or fi ve cases in the previous two weeks. COVID-19 has aff ected his students, Spoo said, though he had not heard of any COVID-19 deaths among is students. He said he had, however, known people who have gotten sick or died of the disease, and he is worried for his students. He expressed concerned both for their physical health and their development. Being in school is better than not being in school, he said, and he expressed gratitude for having Umatilla County Public Health workers such as Alisha Lundgren. As she was processing children for shots, Lundgren, the deputy director of the county health department, explained the vaccina- tions being off ered Wednesday. These shots, available to kids 12 to 17, included the Pfi zer and Moderna COVID-19 shots, Lundgren said. She added also she had Johnson & Johnson shots, “if they were needed.” Lundgren said she was at the school primarily to help with school exclusion shots, not COVID-19 shots, though. Those shots include tetanus, polio and hepatitis, according to the deputy director. Working from behind a curtain at the clinic, other nurses put shots, including the COVID-19 vaccinations, into arms. Those nurses included Kelsi Reyes of Umatilla County Public Health. Reyes said this was a well-attended clinic, and there was a possibility of doing more clinics at the school in the future. When she and other nurses start vaccinat- ing very young children, however, she said they most likely will deliver those in a regu- lar clinic. “We think with that population, as you can tell with the tears, those are easier to do in a clinic setting,” she said. While she was talking, young children were crying from the vaccinations they received. Fresh from getting a COVID-19 shot, 16-year-old junior Kade Thomas said it was his second Pfi zer shot. “I’m religious, and my prophet said to get it,” Thomas said. “That’s why I got it.” Thomas, a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, said he was not very worried about getting the disease. If he had come down with it, he did not notice, he said. Also, he was unaware if any of his friends became sick with COVID- 19. Patricia and Celso Koetz were at the clinic. They stood in line with their 8-year- old son, Carlos Koetz, for his vaccinations. Once completed with other immuniza- tions, they walked away and commented on whether they would have their son get a COVID-19 shots once they have an oppor- tunity. “Probably,” they said. PLEASE DONATE YOUR OLD, TIRED AND DEAD CELL PHONES HERE Greatness in action You show up, every day, for the people who count on you. That’s your greatness in action. We’re here to help, with Wattsmart ® tools that can help you save money, resources and insights to help you manage your budget, rebates on energy-efficient upgrades—and efficiency offerings that meet you where you are and power the greatness in all that you do. 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