A8 OREGON East Oregonian Thursday, May 5, 2022 Fighting health inequities to get $31 million boost By LYNNE TERRY Oregon Capital Chronicle SALEM — The Oregon Health Authority will give $31 million to nonprofi ts, churches and other community organi- zations to reduce health care inequities in the state. The grants aim to help the hundreds of thousands of Oregonians who identify as people of color or those with disabilities, have no perma- nent home, belong to a tribe, are elderly or part of the LGBTQ community. During the pandemic, racial and ethnic minorities and seniors suff ered the worst outcomes from COVID, according to health authority data, accen- tuating health disparities. “OHA acknowledges that racism, settler colonialism and historic and contemporary injustices have created poli- cies and programs that led to unfair and unjust health ineq- uities over time,” the agency said in a release. “In center- ing community strengths and wisdom for health, this grant opportunity supports commu- nity-based organizations as partners in Oregon’s public health system.” The agency has a goal of eliminating health inequities by 2030. The health author- ity hopes grants will spur community organizations to focus on eight key areas where the state has fallen short, including adolescent health, tobacco prevention, overdose prevention and environmental public health. The agency approved applications from 147 orga- nizations that span the state. Adelante Mujeres, for exam- ple, which advocates for Lati- nas in Washington County, will work on bolstering heath resources in schools and improving adolescent health. Other community groups serve several counties. Medicine Wheel Recovery Services, which off ers outpa- tient treatment for addiction and mental health issues, covers Benton, Colum- bia, Coos, Curry, Douglas, Harney, Jeff erson, Klamath, Lane, Lincoln, Linn, Marion, Multnomah, Polk, Tillamook, Umatilla, Wallowa, Wasco, Washington and Yamhill counties. The organizations “have the power to reach commu- nities the state may not be able to reach,” according to an email from Jonathan Modie, lead spokesman for the health authority. Public health experts with state and county health departments will work with them. “We expect to see commu- nities thrive, and we expect to reach our goal,” Modie wrote. As part of its strategic plan to end health inequi- ties, the health authority is trying to strengthen its rela- tionships with groups that are connected to marginalized communities to let them lead the process. The projects will be funded through June 2023 but the agency has not yet determined how much each organization will get. It will determine the amounts after working with recipients on their budgets and plans, Modie said. Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin Kelly Cannon-Miller, Deschutes County Historical Society Museum executive director, discusses the Maxville Heritage Interpretive Timber Culture Traveling Exhibit. Exhibit in Bend captures history of Black loggers By JOE SIESS The Bulletin BEND — Ever since Gwen Trice was a young girl growing up in La Grande, she wanted to move to nearby Wallowa County. When- ever she visited, often as a teenager, she felt something powerful was drawing her there, but she didn’t know what. Later in life, she learned her father, Lafayette “Lucky” Trice, moved to the area from the Jim Crow South in 1923 to work in the logging indus- try. Trice’s father was one of the fi rst Black people to live and work in Wallowa County, in a state that at the time of his arrival, excluded Black people in its Constitution. Trice was fortunate to stumble upon her family history, learning of her father’s past as a logger. The revelation prompted her to make Wallowa County her home. “It felt like I was a salmon going up to the orig- inal stream where I was spawned,” Trice said. “I was going up to that origi- nal stream, and nothing else mattered. I had to go home. And that became my overar- ching energy.” That energy turned into a desire to explore and preserve the history of Oregon’s Black loggers who came to a logging town called Maxville. The Bowman-Hicks Lumber Co. established the town in 1923 and it lasted until 1933. After the town closed, some Black loggers stuck around while others moved to Portland or to logging towns in the region. Today, Trice is the founder and executive director of the Maxville Heritage Inter- pretive Center, a nonprofit located in Joseph which is dedicated to telling the inclu- sive American narrative. Part of her work involves provid- ing a traveling exhibit across the state showcasing the multicultural timber history of Oregon, and the Maxville Timber Culture exhibit is now open to the public at the Deschutes Historical Museum in Bend. Trice’s journey back to her family’s roots in Oregon began when she was a student at Bellevue College in Wash- ington where she studied fi lm, graphic design and vide- ography. In 2004, she traveled to Wallowa County for an annual cultural event in the town of Promise, where she was introduced to the crowd of around 300 mostly older individuals as the daughter of Lafayette “Lucky” Trice. She would spend the next three days listening to stories about her father from those who knew him. At the age of 19, “Lucky” traveled to Oregon with his father in a box car from a logging camp in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, and later sent for his family. Experi- enced loggers like “Lucky” were in demand and the Missouri-based Bowman Hicks Lumber Co. recruited loggers, both Black and white, in the South and the Midwest to work out West. At the time, it was techni- cally illegal for a Black person to come to Oregon, a law that wasn’t struck from the state Constitution until 1926. “Essentially, they set up a southern town. They set up a segregated town in East- ern Oregon,” Trice said of Maxville. “They were from the South. There was no way white people were going to live side by side with Blacks.” Despite the founding of Maxville in the image of the Jim Crow South, the town was relatively far removed from mainstream society, and so relationships between Blacks and whites did exist, Trice said. In the end, while Jim Crow was alive and well across the country, Oregon was a good bet for the skilled Black loggers who chose to leave the South to make the state their new home. MORE WAYS TO CELEBRATE MOM Join us on Sunday, May 8 GAMING $3,000 Swipe & WINfalls VIPs are automatically activated Win up to $400 in FreePlay! Swipe at an between 9am-12pm to activate. Watch your slot screen for Winfalls between 1-3pm. See Club Wild for details. $10,000 Mother’s Day Bingo Paper & Machine Session Pizza served at 1:30pm Warm-ups 2pm Main Session 2:30pm Buy-in at the door. For more information visit wildhorseresort.com GOLF FUNPLEX Moms Golf for FREE! 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