NORTHWEST East Oregonian A2 Tuesday, November 23, 2021 The show goes on at Enterprise’s OK Theatre By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain INTERESTED IN DONATING? ENTERPRISE — The show must go on. That’s Darrell Brann’s intention and his plan is to reopen Enterprise’s historic OK Theatre next spring. Right now, the building’s façade is covered with scaf- folding in anticipation of its restoration this week. “I’ve had people ask, ‘Are you tearing it down?’ Well, we’re tearing it back to the good stuff and then rebuild- ing from there,” Brann said. Inside, much of the theater has been gutted in prepara- tion for other work, such as retail spaces, a bar, remodel- ing the foyer and a green room — the place where perform- ers prepare before coming on stage. “Ours was yellow,” Brann said of the old green room. He said there also are plans to replace some sagging ceil- ing joists and he hopes to even add a kitchen. Who: Darrell and Christin Brann What: Send check to OK Theatre Where: 306 S.E. Second St., Enterprise, OR 97828 Email: oktheater1@ gmail.com lete,” Brann said. “You could still get it, but it was tough.” He said the estimated $100,000 to convert to digital was beyond the reach of the previous owners — or him. Musical family Bill Bradshaw/Wallowa County Chieftain The façade of the OK Theatre in Enterprise is undergoing a major refurbishment as part of work to restore the theater and prepare it to reopen next spring, said co-owner Darrell Brann on Friday, Nov. 19, 2021. happy to have it, but it doesn’t take you as far as you’d like. A lot of theater owners, they’re spending millions. With all the help we’ve had from the community, as far as labor, it’s been an amazing thing. But we long for the day when we can be open and full and people can have a good time in here like they used to.” Already, through grants and donations, the heating system has been upgraded, as has the electrical wiring. Grants, donations helped Brann said both grants and donations have helped fund the work. “We were awarded a grant from the State Historic Pres- ervation Office of $85,000. I haven’t done any fundrais- ing,” he said. “We were super More decorative items also have been added, such as two opera boxes and the prosce- nium — the arch that creates a “window” around the scenery and performers. Brann said he also received help from Restore Oregon, which has a mission to preserve, reuse and pass forward historic places. The theater was originally built in 1918. In those days, it was where you’d go to see a silent film with Buster Keaton Forecast for Pendleton Area TODAY WEDNESDAY Windy with a couple of showers Considerable cloudiness 46° 31° 46° 35° 51° 32° 47° 33° | Go to AccuWeather.com THURSDAY FRIDAY Cloudy and not as cool SATURDAY Cloudy Sun through high clouds or Charlie Chaplin or maybe Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford. Unlike some in the late 1920s, the theater was equipped to accommodate the new “talkies” and kept show- ing films until 2013, when everything went digital. “One of the main reasons the previous owners were getting out of it was that 2013 was the last year you could get reel film, and all the theater had was 32 mm. That equip- ment was fast becoming obso- State offers help to pharmacies Employee program not open to local pharmacies PENDLETON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 56° 48° By JAYSON JACOBY Baker City Herald 57° 45° 56° 42° HERMISTON TEMPERATURE FORECAST 51° 48° 57° 44° 60° 42° 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 49/41 38/27 51/26 Longview Kennewick Walla Walla 46/34 Lewiston 50/39 52/33 Astoria 50/39 Pullman Yakima 46/27 49/36 44/32 Portland Hermiston 51/40 The Dalles 51/32 Salem Corvallis 51/34 Yesterday Normals Records La Grande 42/28 PRECIPITATION John Day Eugene Bend 51/36 45/26 40/26 Ontario 46/26 Caldwell Burns 35° 33° 48° 31° 73° (1974) 6° (2013) 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 52/34 0.00" 1.08" 0.79" 5.00" 3.90" 7.26" WINDS (in mph) 45/25 42/18 0.00" 1.17" 1.02" 7.20" 12.13" 11.34" through 3 p.m. yest. HIGH LOW TEMP. Pendleton 38/21 52/36 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 46/31 52/34 34° 29° 47° 31° 71° (1933) -5° (1985) PRECIPITATION Moses Lake 49/35 Aberdeen 36/25 46/30 Tacoma Yesterday Normals Records Spokane Wenatchee 48/39 Today Wed. Boardman WSW 12-25 Pendleton WSW 12-25 Medford 50/30 SW 3-6 S 6-12 SUN AND MOON Klamath Falls 44/17 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 Sunrise today Sunset tonight Moonrise today Moonset today 7:06 a.m. 4:17 p.m. 7:31 p.m. 11:09 a.m. Last New First Full Nov 27 Dec 3 Dec 10 Dec 18 NATIONAL EXTREMES Yesterday’s National Extremes: (for the 48 contiguous states) High 90° in Fallbrook, Calif. Low 0° in Bodie State Park, Calif. NATIONAL WEATHER TODAY “For me, it was a perfect step for the theater for us. … We thought what could we do? So in 2011, was the first show I booked at the OK Theatre” before it was for sale, he said. “I was just a local citizen, I have a construction company, I play music and grew up with music, I play a lot of gigs around here locally. … I play guitar — blues, rock and folk. My wife (Christin) and I will do duos, country and folk. She’s a singer and a pianist, but she always sang harmony with me primarily. We do a lot of weddings and things like that and our kids all got into it.” Of their five kids, the oldest, Meredith, who just turned 20, already has recorded two albums. The most recent was recorded at the OK and released just a couple weeks ago. Like today, when the OK first opened, the world was then in the midst of a deadly pandemic — the 1918 influ- enza pandemic — and was not allowed to open until early 1919. The OK was forced to shut down again in March 2020, when the coronavirus struck. But that didn’t stop Brann. “Given our situation here, we’ve always had to sell every seat to make it work,” he said. “We decided to take advan- tage of the forced down time to start remodeling.” In the meantime, he’s gotten back to booking shows for the coming year. “It will be open, but whether or not we get enough funds to really finish the bar” and other elements, he’s still not sure. “People should look forward to potential shows … I don’t want to do it in the thick of construction, but maybe by early spring we’ll have a show. We’ll see what we can pull off,” he said. “In our family, we’re hoping to do something for the community in gratitude for all the help we’ve had on the theater, the work days.” SALEM — The Oregon Health Authority is offer- ing to pay pharmacies $35 for each dose of COVID-19 vaccine they give, a move that could help pharma- cies hire employees to deal with the growing workload that resulted in long lines in Pendleton and across the state. The program, which launched this month, also is intended to boost vaccination rates and ensure vaccines are available to all residents, said Rudy Owens, a public affairs specialist for the Oregon Health Authority. To qualif y for the payments, pharmacies must meet certain standards for “vaccine equity,” including such things as offering multi- lingual signing for COVID- 19 vaccinations, “expanded vaccine-related counseling aimed at boosting vaccine confidence,” and “a plan for ongoing evaluation and continuous improvement to ensure equitable access,” according to a flyer from OHA. T he agency’s other program more directly addresses the staffing short- ages that have plagued phar- macies, as the state will pay temporary pharmacists to bolster workforces. However, Owens said the temporary staffing program is available only to indepen- dent pharmacies. Corpo- rate-owned pharmacies, including the three in Baker City — at the Safeway, Albertsons and Rite Aid stores — are not eligible for the program, Owens said. The larger chain phar- macies are eligible for the vaccine payments, however. Owens said OHA doesn’t have data yet on how many pharmacies have applied for the supplemental payments. He said the pharmacy staffing shortages have been exacerbated by the closure of more than 35 Bi-Mart phar- macies, including the one in Pendleton. The bigger culprit in the pharmacy crisis is the limited reimbursements that pharmacies receive from what are known as pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs, said Brian Mayo, executive director of the Oregon State Pharmacy Association. If those reimbursements were “fair,” pharmacies would be able to hire more employees and lines would be shorter, Mayo said. Pend leton resident s recently reported waiting in pharmacy lines more than an hour-and-half. Some reported having to wait several days to receive crucial medication. Those delays are not acceptable, Mayo said. “Many community phar- macies across Oregon are five to 14 days behind fill- ing prescriptions because they can’t keep up with the demand,” he said. “When somebody needs a medi- cation they can’t wait two weeks. Patient safety is a huge issue at this point.” Mayo said the Oregon State Pharmacy Association has been warning for years that low reimbursements to pharmacies by PBMs are a problem. “The harms we have warned of have now come true,” he said. The Pharmacy Associa- tion is urging elected officials to take immediate action on reforming the PBM system. The organization also is asking Oregon to exempt prescription drugs from the state’s Corporate Activities Tax, which the Legislature approved in 2019 and which took effect Jan. 1, 2020. The Pharmacy Associ- ation has some high-level backing in its effort to reform the PBM system. U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Oregon, recently sent a letter to Chiquita Brooks-La- Sure, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, a federal agency, citing PBM reim- bursements and the fees charged by PBMs and by Medicare Part D prescrip- tion plans as contributing to pharmacy closures. “I am deeply concerned that the rise of these fees has contributed to the perma- nent closure of 2,200 phar- macies nationwide between December 2017 and Decem- ber 2020,” Wyden wrote in his letter to Brooks-LaSure. Wyden is calling on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to review pharmacy closures in the U.S. over the past five years, including the nature and effect of PBM payment prac- tices, and to use the agency’s authority to regulate their fees. Mayo said the current situation, with lines of customers snaking through some stores, is frustrating for pharmacy employees. “The pharmacists, techni- cians and interns are work- ing as fast as they can,” Mayo said. “In many cases, they are being forced to continue working without required breaks and voluntarily work- ing longer unrecorded hours so they can provide care to their customers. They want to help the patients. That’s why they chose this profes- sion, but it feels like things are getting out of control. “We must improve work- ing conditions in pharmacies for the sake of patient safety and pharmacy staff member well-being,” Mayo said. Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. -10s -0s 0s showers t-storms 10s rain 20s flurries 30s snow 40s ice 50s 60s cold front E AST O REGONIAN — Founded Oct. 16, 1875 — 70s East Oregonian (USPS 164-980) is published Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, by the EO Media Group, 211 S.E. 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