A6 STATE Wallowa County Chieftain Wednesday, January 23, 2019 Offi cials hope consolidated child abuse call centers fi x fl aws By PARIS ACHEN Oregon Capital Bureau The caller told Hannah Lene about a child disci- plined at school for spraying water who begged school employees not to send a note home because he feared his mother would then punch him. Another caller reported a child whose nose was blood- ied from her mother slap- ping her face. Lene starts the chain that might rescue such chil- dren from abuse. She is a call screener for the state child welfare offi ce. In her fi rst year on the job, she has answered hundreds of phone reports of suspected child abuse. “The hardest thing for being a screener is we don’t know what happens after the call,” said Lene. “We don’t get to know the outcome” after the report is passed on to a state caseworker. Those who call a hotline to report child abuse can fi nd themselves talking to one of 15 call centers around Ore- gon, a fragmentation that leads to uneven results and gaps. Flaws in the hotline sys- tem have been known to state offi cials for a decade. By April, state offi cials fi nally expect to have a sin- gle call center with care- fully trained employees who will see that every abused child gets prompt and useful attention. The dispersed call cen- ters are being consolidated at one location in North Portland, which runs around the clock. Some call centers scattered around the state Portland Tribune/Jaime Valdez/East Oregonian Laura McGinnis, a spokeswoman for the Oregon Child Welfare Division, and Jennifer Sorenson, a hotline manager. function only during busi- ness hours. About half of the call centers have already been consolidated. “There really has been a consensus for some time that this is what is needed,” said state Sen. Sara Gelser, chair- woman of the Senate Human Services Committee. By spring, the statewide 24-hour hotline number — 1-855-503-SAFE — will be emblazoned on buses, popping up in social media feeds and fl ashing on the screen at movie theaters, an effort to publicize the new hotline and generate even more reports. For years, national child welfare organizations, including the Children’s Bureau, have recommended that Oregon adopt a state- wide hotline and screening system to address inconsis- tencies in how the reports are handled at branch offi ces. “The way training was done for all of our hotlines when they were sepa- rate was each location was responsible for making sure that each of their screeners were trained,” said Jenni- fer Sorenson, a hotline man- ager. Now, screeners will go through the same academy with the same training, she said. Centralized training and screening reduces the risk of information falling through the cracks, Sorenson said. Call volumes can reach as high as 350 calls a day at the central hotline with half of the 15 branch offi ces still to shift their operations to Portland, said Laura McGin- nis, a spokeswoman for the state child welfare system. In 2016, the hotlines received nearly 77,000 reports of abuse. About 38,000 were sent to the fi eld, resulting in 8,000 investiga- tions by state Child Protec- tive Services. For the yearlong period ending in September 2017, the state determined 11,077 children were abused or neglected. Nearly half were younger than 6. After receiving a call, screeners and their super- visors decide whether to assign a case to a Child Pro- tective Services worker or to close a case after searching agency history relating to the family, Lene said. Federal shutdown impacts projects locally and statewide By KATY NESBITT EO Media Group ENTERPRISE — As the partial federal government shutdown continues into its fourth week some rural Northwest communities are feeling the pinch. In western Oregon wolves are under federal protec- tion, but federal employ- ees assigned to monitoring them with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and USDA Wildlife Services are on fur- lough. Steve Niemela, Ore- gon Department of Fish and Wildlife district fi sh biolo- gist in Central Point, said his offi ce is feeling the added pressure. “It has an impact on us,” Niemela said. “We can’t coordinate effectively — U.S. Fish and Wildlife Ser- vice is the lead agency in wolf management.” He said state and federal biologists follow a “good set of guidelines,” but the fur- lough makes it challenging. Niemela said much of the habitat restoration planning for Oregon’s fi sh and wild- life is also on hold as many of the projects are on land managed by the U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management. “Just about everything we do, there is some sort of federal nexus,” Niemela said. In northeastern Ore- gon, federal funding to pay employees of the Tri- County Weed Management Area hasn’t been received, according to Susan Roberts, Wallowa County Commis- sion chairwoman, so Baker, Union and Wallowa County leaders are looking for sup- plemental money, possibly in the form of a bridge loan. “We are fi nding a way around the federal reim- bursements to keep our folks paid,” Roberts said. “They still have bills to pay, but we can’t get reimbursed.” Ongoing talks regard- ing the Blue Mountain For- est Plan Revision with Glenn Casamassa, U.S. For- T HE B OOKLOFT est Service Pacifi c North- west Regional forester, are also on hold. Roberts had hoped to talk to him during the Association of Oregon Counties meeting Mon- day in Salem regarding the plan’s progress, but he was unable to attend because of the furlough. While most Forest Ser- vice grazing allotment per- mittees are not running cat- tle on public land in January, Rod Childers, who ranches in northern Wallowa County, said he normally has had his annual operating instruction meeting by now. “I get mine done fi rst part of January so I don’t have to deal with it before calving, but that isn’t going to hap- pen,” Childers said. “Now I’m concerned about getting it done in time for turnout in the spring.” With calving season on his mind, Childers said he also worries about the Wild- life Services fi eld agents who control predators being furloughed at his cattle’s most vulnerable time. As of today afternoon, there appeared to be no end in sight to the shutdown. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., said he agrees with the pres- ident’s case for increased border security, but he didn’t support shutting down natu- ral resource agencies. “I don’t agree that it makes sense to furlough the people working on the bio- logical opinion in the Klam- ath Basin, forest fuels reduc- tions in central Oregon, or grazing permits in east- ern Oregon,” Walden said. “How does a nearly month- AND Skylight Gallery Finding books is our specialty 541.426.3351 • 107 E. Main • Enterprise • www.bookloftoregon.com Church Directory Church of Christ Grace Lutheran Church 502 W. 2nd Street • Wallowa 541-398-2509 409 West Main -Enterprise Worship at 11 a.m. Mid-week Bible Study 7 p.m. St. Katherine’s Catholic Church Fr. Thomas Puduppulliparamban 301 E. Garfield Enterprise Mass Schedule Sundays: St. Pius X, Wallowa - 8:00 am St. Katherine of Siena, Enterprise 10:30am Saturdays: St Katherine of Siena, Enterprise 5:30am Weekday: St. Katherine of Siena, Enterprise – 8:00am (Monday – Thursday and First Friday) long work stoppage benefi t taxpayers who are waiting for decisions and plans and permits?” Walden isn’t the only Oregon representative con- cerned about the shutdown’s effects on natural resource agencies. Oregon senators Ron Wyden and Jeff Merk- ley were two of the signers on a letter sent to the pres- ident Jan. 14 urging him to fund the agencies responsi- ble for wildfi re suppression. The letter, signed by 12 senators said, “The failure to reopen the government puts peoples’ lives at risk by undermining their abil- ity to respond to wildfi res and will only serve to delay critical forest restoration and safety projects. These young men and women put their lives on the line to protect the nation’s natu- ral resources and other pub- lic and private property, and they deserve to have the best training possible in prepara- tion for increasingly diffi cult fi re seasons.” Time for a Computer Tuneup? Spyware Removal • 541-426-0108 103 SW 1st St., Enterprise SUNDAY WORSHIP at 9 AM 12:30 Guest Pastor Colin Brown phone (message): 541-426-4633 web: gracelutheranenterprise.com A Non-Profi t Community Health Center St. Patrick’s Episcopal Church 100 NE 3rd St, Enterprise NE 3rd & Main St 541-426-3439 Worship Service Sunday 9:30am All are welcome CLUES ACROSS 1. Take a sharp breath 5. Spat 8. Farewells 12. Sector 13. Woolly mama 14. Cameo, e.g. 15. Skin 16. Feeling rotten 17. Eye 18. Moved sideways 20. Yellow jacket 21. ____ of luxury 24. Participates in 26. Little green men 28. Further down 32. Shopping places 33. Small orchard 34. Snoozing 36. Talked back 37. Beginner’s book 39. Curvy shape 40. Persian king 43. Social zeros 45. Mama’s fellow 46. Fearful admiration 47. On the crest 51. Roasting chamber 52. Bowling frames 53. Morse ____ 54. “____ Pilot” 55. Grape drink 56. Recognized CLUES DOWN 1. Mountain pass 2. “You ____ Sixteen” 3. Look 4. Lacking color 5. Rules 6. Young bird 7. Fused 8. Scanners 9. Type of exercise 10. Room extensions 11. Trickle 19. Thicker 21. Tibetan priest 22. Cry of dismay 23. Medicinal tablet 25. Esteem 27. Babar, for one 29. Model 30. Nights before 31. Scarlet and crimson 35. Fiesta decor 36. Peaceful 38. Cried like a kitten 40. Dirt stain 41. Possess 42. Mimics 44. Paper bag 48. Unit of weight 49. Lyric verse 50. Chapel bench OHSU Resident Joseph United Methodist Church Summit Church 3rd & Lake St. • Joseph Pastor Cherie Dearth Phone: 541-432-3102 Sunday Worship Service 10:00 am Gospel Centered Community Service time: 10:30 am Cloverleaf Hall in Enterprise 541-426-2150 Interim Pastor: Rich Hagenbaugh JosephUMC.org John Mitchell January 1 – February 7 Hours: Monday-Friday 7:00am to 7:00pm Saturday 9:00am to 1:00pm 603 Medical Parkway Enterprise, OR 97828 www.summitchurchoregon.org Enterprise Christian Church Christ Covenant Church 85035 Joseph Hwy • (541) 426-3449 Pastor Terry Tollefson Worship at 9 a.m. Sunday School at 10:30 a.m. Evening Worship at 6 p.m. (nursery at A.M. services) Family Prayer: 9:30 AM Sunday School: 10 AM Worship Service: 11 AM “Loving God & One Another” David Bruce, Sr. - Minister 723 College Street Lostine Lostine Presbyterian Church Enterprise Community Congregational Church Discussion Group 9:30 AM Worship Service 11:00 AM The Big Brown Church Childrens program during service Blog: dancingforth.blogspot.com 541.398.0597 Hwy 82, Lostine Stephen Kliewer, Minister Wallowa Assembly of God 606 West Hwy 82 Wallowa, Oregon 541-886-8445 Sunday School • 9:am Worship Service • 10:am Pastor Tim Barton wallowaassemblyofgod.com with an open door Pastor Archie Hook Sunday Worship 11am Bible Study 9:30am Ark Angels Children’s Program Ages 4-6th grade, 11am Nursery for children 3 & under MEDICARE? still I’m here! Call Kathleen 301 NE First St. • Enterprise, OR Find us on Facebook! 541.426.3044 Seventh-Day Adventist Church & School 305 Wagner (near the Cemetery) P.O. Box N. Enterprise, OR 97828 541-426-3751 Church 541-426-8339 School Worship Services 616 W. North Street, Enterprise, Oregon Sabbath School 9:30 - 10:45 a.m. Worship Hour 11:00 a.m. - Noon Pastor Jonathan DeWeber 541-426-4208