A8 OFF PAGE ONE Wallowa County Chieftain Masks: It’s one more thing they have to discipline students over. “At times, yeah,” it’s been diffi cult, Enterprise Superintendent Tom Crane said. Homan agreed, saying, “At times, for sure.” The OHA statement con- tinued to recommend uni- versal masking in K-12 set- tings where children are required to attend. Those settings bring together vac- cinated and unvaccinated individuals, as well as indi- viduals who are at higher risk for severe COVID-19 illness. However, local school offi cials said that while their students are required to attend school, they can do so remotely and are not required to be in the building. Continued from Page A1 Emergency board meeting Offi cials at Wallowa County schools anticipate and welcome the return to local control of any mask mandate. Mandy Decker, chair- woman of the Enterprise School Board, said the issue was the subject of a spe- cial meeting the board held Feb. 27 rather than waiting for its next regular meeting March 14. At that meeting, the board decided to lift the mask mandate whenever the state decided to do so. “They decided to support the state’s recommendation to end the mask mandate whenever that happens,” Superintendent Tom Crane said. “They support local control and they support choice of whether to wear masks or not.” That means families may decide for their children and employees may decide for themselves. Decker said that Sun- day’s decision falls in line with what the board has stated in the past. “The board has already said we’d like local control. … My opinion is choice is really important,” she said. Lance Homan, super- intendent of Joseph Char- ter School, said the school board will offi cially decide if it will take advantage of the option at its next meet- ing March 14. He declined to speculate on what its Foster: Continued from Page A1 focus on keeping children with families and providing support. If foster care is necessary, Blessing said the fi rst step is to look for relatives or close friends who can foster the child. “We’re trying to maintain Wednesday, March 2, 2022 Wallow County Chieftain, File Hallie Duncan plays with friends on the “hand rock” in front of the Enterprise Elementary School in October 2020. decision will be. However, he said, last summer the board voted to make masks optional. But then the county got hit with a surge in coronavirus cases and the governor and the OHA rescinded local control. Wallowa Superintendent Tammy Jones was in meet- ings with other school offi - cials Thursday morning and had already come to similar conclusions as her counter- parts elsewhere in the county. She, too, said the school board in Wallowa would con- sider an offi cial decision on the matter at its next board meeting, March 14. “Over the next weeks, we’re going to learn more details,” she said, such as about quarantines, isolation, contact tracing and other related issues. Jones recalled that at the July board meeting, the Wal- lowa School Board voted — like Joseph did — to make masks optional, a decision rendered moot by the uptick in cases that followed. “We’ve done our best to live with it,” Jones said, adding that the recent change “is good news for us.” School offi cials will fi nd it a relief to not have to enforce the mask mandate. relational connections with kids — trying to keep kids connected to people they already know,” she said. In the case that a relative can’t be found, the child is cared for by a general appli- cant foster family — but Blessing said work contin- ues to fi nd a relative. The current recruitment eff orts across the state are for general applicant families. “So we have enough families, and they’re diverse enough, that we can match children to a family,” she said. Every Child Those who aren’t ready to provide full-time care can learn more about foster care by volunteering with Every Child NE Oregon, which works to expand the support system around foster care. “There are ways to sup- Case numbers subsiding daily COVID-19 hospitaliza- tions have declined 48% since peaking in late Janu- ary, the release stated. Over the past two weeks, hospi- talizations have fallen by an average of more than 30 a day. On Feb. 28, there were 479 people hospitalized with COVID-19 across the state. In Region 9, which includes Wallowa County, that number is at 10. Reported COVID- 19 infections also have dropped precipitously in recent weeks. Over the past month, new infections have declined by more than 80%. The seven-day mov- ing average for new cases is 84% lower than at the peak of the omicron surge. port fostering without tak- ing a child into your home,” Blessing said. “It’s a way to dip your toe in and learn what it’s about.” She said that a general application family, on aver- age, thinks about becoming a foster family for two to three years. To learn more about Every Child, visit every- childneoregon.org/ or fol- low the page on Facebook. Mandate: Continued from Page A1 mask mandates. Brown had originally said that the mask man- date would end March 31, about when Oregon Health & Science University pro- jected the state would drop below 400 daily patients in hospitals who were pos- itive for COVID-19. The decline in omi- cron-related severe cases accelerated and the date was moved last week to March 19. But on Thurs- day, OHSU issued a fore- cast showing Oregon would dip below the 400- mark by March 12. The next OHSU forecast is due Thursday. OHA said the lifting of the mask mandate did not include changes to federal and state rules on masks in health care settings, airline fl ights, public transit, and other specialized setting. Updates will be provided in coming days and weeks. Brown’s statement on Monday did not change her plan to lift the state of emergency earlier than April 1, the date she announced last week. The emergency rules gave Brown wide pow- ers to set public policy during the crisis, including the closing and reopen- ing of in-person class- room instruction, business hours, mask usage and limits on event sizes. The three West Coast states have sought to coor- VISIT US ON THE WEB Wallowa.com Meet oreo & Diesel! JETT PETERS rm O an N ce Brought to you by, had the strongest perfo Joseph’s Jett Peterson unty wrestler at the 2A/1A state of any Wallowa Co , in Culver. Jett won a pair of nt Saturday, Feb. 26 e highlight being a pin in me na tour , with th matches at 113 pounds Aiden Guest — a wrestler who had r’s 40 seconds over Culve district tournament just a week prior. e th at him ed at at state, but fe de e match shy of placing The junior finished on momentum going into next season. has h) udly (Photo by Ron Osterlo Pro nsore d b y o Sp Contact Mary at 541-398-2428 $110 adoption fee for the pair http://www.wallowacountyhumanesociety.org/ IT’S IN YOUR INBOX before your mailbox Subscribers can receive daily email updates and uninterrupted digital delivery on a computer, tablet and smartphone free with your subscription. Sign up for free digital access Call 800-781-3214 wallowa.com/newsletters OF THE Brother’s Oreo (tuxedo) and Diesel (mini panther) were born approximately July 12, 2021. These neutered boys are up-to-date on vaccines, dewormed and are litter box trained. They’ve had a very hard start to their life and deserve the best fur-ever home together. They’re lovebugs who also enjoy going outdoors on occasion. Available for Adoption dinate on COVID-19 response throughout the pandemic, though they have gone their own way at times, such as the vac- cine priority list in early 2021. Brown said the gov- ernors believed the mask mandate change was best done at the same time for the stretch from the Mexi- can border to the Canadian border. “Our communities and economies are linked,” Brown said. Brown underlined that the move did not mean the pandemic was burning out or nearly over. “We will build resil- iency and prepare for the next variant and the next pandemic,” she said. “As we learn to live with this virus, we must remain vig- ilant to protect each other and prevent disruption to our schools, businesses, and communities — with a focus on protecting our most vulnerable and the people and communities that have been dispro- portionately impacted by COVID-19.” Oregon offi cials say they are confi dent that the move will not replicate the premature lifting of safe- guards in July 2021 that came almost simultane- ously with the arrival of the virulent delta variant that caused a record 918 deaths in September. Crit- ics said at that time that lifting the ban statewide did not take into eff ect the wide diff erences in vac- cination rates and prior COVID-19 exposure.