6A — BAKER CITY HERALD THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 2020 New gallery open Friday White House Art & Design Company will be open from noon to 8 p.m. for the First BHS ready to start summer workouts By Corey Kirk ckirk@bakercityherald.com Baker High School athletes missed the spring season but they’ll soon be able to start unoffi cial summer practices. Students will be able to run across fi elds, the clanking of barbells will come from the weight room, and cross-country runners can get in their miles. Starting Friday, June 12, BHS will reopen its facilities, with restrictions, for athletes. “You want to get kids out and healthy,” Baker School District Athletic Director Buell Gonzales Jr. said. “That ability to share space with people and interact to compete is very good for us.” On May 20 the Oregon School Ac- tivities Association, which oversees high school athletics, announced a three-phase plan for resuming prep sports. Gonzales noted that the plan isn’t set in stone, so school districts have to be ready to change. “There is just not a lot of solid data yet, I just want to keep people safe, and there are so many unknowns,” he said. OSAA doesn’t allow coaches to orga- nize or participate in summer workouts, but they can communicate with students and be present to ensure safety. In addition to canceling spring sports, the OSAA, in accordance with executive orders from Oregon Gov. Kate Brown and guidelines from the Oregon Health Authority, has not allowed students to practice this spring. “The OSAA has been very accessible, the information was out plenty of ad- vance,” Gonzales said.“They were in the same boat we were, waiting on the infor- mation coming from the government.” But starting June 12 limited practices can resume. “We have to make sure there are six feet between each individual, keep our pod sizes ten or fewer with the max of 25, and outside will be way easier,” Gonzales said. “That ability to share space with people and interact to compete is very good for us.” — Buell Gonzales Jr., Baker School District athletic director The OSAA restrictions include: • All equipment in use by student- athletes needs to be sanitized between each use • Physical contact is absolutely prohib- ited among the student-athletes, and no sharing of equipment (like footballs) will be allowed. The idea is to allow student-athletes to take part in workouts that help them stay in shape as they prepare for poten- tial offi cial practices by late summer — and, ideally, a fall sports season. “So much of what we do right now will dictate whether or not we have some measure of success when it comes to the fall,” Gonzales said. “If we could do this right and we can maintain the integrity of the circumstances then we’re going to be in good shape.” Though restrictions are in place, for the fi rst time since early March, Baker coaches will be able to monitor their ath- letes and their progress while maintain- ing social distancing. Gonzales understands the increased diffi culty that will occur for these coaches as they lead these workouts. “It’s going to be hard, it’s going to be diffi cult and it’s going to be time-consum- ing,” Gonzales said. “It’s going to have to be something the coaches are going to want to do, it’s not their full-time job.” How the future may play out is uncertain, but Gonzales hopes the June 12 reopening can be the fi rst step toward sports returning. To keep up to date on how high school sports will continue to move forward during the COVID-19 pandemic, go to the OSAA’s website and click on the CO- VID-19 tab on the main page. PREPARE FOR SUMMER TRAVEL TIRES, BRAKES, ALIGNMENT & BATTERIES -FX#SPT5JSF4WD #SJEHF4U #BLFS$JUZ Friday art walk on June 5. The new shop, which fea- tures a variety of artwork and MISSING Continued from Page 1A Kitch said her mother’s move was diffi cult for her siblings, who live in Boise, Seattle and Denver. “My brother still comes but not as frequently because she can’t hold her attention very long any more with the window thing,” Kitch said. “If we could go in and sit with her it would be better.” Kitch said her mother often motions for Kitch to go inside, but Kitch tells her there is a sickness and she can’t go in to see her. “We’re all getting through it, we all have to do what we can do,” Kitch said. “And so we just come and talk through the window, sometimes I’ll have a little sign, sometimes I don’t. We just do our very best to communicate and they (staff) help a lot. Everybody I think in the world is doing the best they can. We’re just all trying to get through it.” Nursing homes continue to work to protect their residents by following the state’s guidelines. Staff wear masks and gloves and take residents’ temperatures daily. “We have family that will stand outside the windows and talk to some of the residents,” said Robert Whitnah, owner of Memory Lane Homes. “It has been diffi cult and challenging and my staff has been phenomenal.” Howerton said family members are able to repurposed furniture, is at 1829 Main St. and is owned by Be Tiedemann and Patti Burrows. Facetime with their loved ones, send letters, and some bring signs. “I feel bad for my residents and my residents’ families not being able to see their loved ones,” Howerton said. The staff has added activities, such as making cookies and having pizza days, to try and keep residents’ spirits up. Howerton said they will be having a party for the residents and their families when they are able to open up again to celebrate missed holidays and birthdays during the pandemic. “I don’t want my residents to think that their families don’t care,” said Howerton. Suzanne Miller, the administrator at Meadow- brook Place assisted living community, said their residents have been using Zoom to talk with their families, in addition to phone calls. Relatives have also greeted residents from outside the building. “We do have one area that we can have outdoor seating as long as they’re masked and are social distancing at six feet,” Miller said. Meadowbrook staff encourages residents to go outside on sunny days. “It’s been a very diffi cult situation as we continue to do the best we can to protect our com- munity,” Miller said. Settler’s Park in Baker City is following the guidelines and restrictions set out by the state to keep residents there safe. TESTS father lives in a Washington County nursing home. She Continued from Page 5A shared it with The Oregonian/ Consenting residents and all OregonLive. staff in assisted living facilities Pakseresht said he hoped his that have a dementia care unit department and the Oregon must get tested by June 26, Health Authority, the agency according to the Washington leading the state’s response to Department of Health order. the coronavirus, would have Right now, Oregon’s testing more information to release guidelines prioritize a smaller about the Oregon’s plan this group of workers and residents week at the latest. at long-term care homes— only Neither agency would those exhibiting symptoms answer specifi c questions about — despite federal standards Pakseresht’s email. recommending testing everyone About half of the 157 Or- regardless of symptoms. egonians who have died of the What’s known about the coronavirus are connected to a state’s possible change comes senior care home. from an email that Fariborz According to new federal data Pakseresht, director of Oregon’s based on reports from nursing Department of Human Ser- homes, 55 residents and eight vices, sent to a woman whose workers at Oregon nursing homes have died of the corona- virus. It’s the fi rst confi rmation that a health care worker has died in Oregon, though state of- fi cials said they’re checking the federal numbers and couldn’t immediately explain them. State statistics show fewer deaths associated with nursing homes — 55 deaths — along with 23 deaths associated with assisted living centers and eight deaths associated with retirement homes for 86 deaths overall at senior care homes. State offi cials do not distinguish between resident deaths and employee deaths. The federal government has made clear that nursing homes should be treated with the utmost caution as the country reopens. TREASURE VALLEY STEEL, INC. Manufacturing Zee & Cee Purlins In-HouseCustom Cut Exact Lengths • 24 Colors • Custom Trim • 2 1/2” Corrugated • Delivery Available • Full Soffitt Line • 3 ft. Gulf Coast Panel • 3 ft. PBR Panel • 3 ft. Mesa Panel • 3 ft. Tuff Rib Panel • Standing Seam DELIVERY • 2 ft. Delta Rib AVAILABLE • 3 ft. 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