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About Baker City herald. (Baker City, Or.) 1990-current | View Entire Issue (July 21, 2020)
TUESDAY, JULY 21, 2020 LOCAL & STATE BAKER CITY HERALD — 5A ‘We really need help’: Coronavirus in rural Oregon maternal-child section turned fi eld teams to serve at-risk To confront the surge in into contact tracing and residents and distribute cases, rural governments are SALEM — Heather Griggs investigating. She spends her federal aid to poor families, rearranging and shuffl ing presses a phone to her ear in days asking people with posi- he said. responsibilities for workers a makeshift offi ce in the small tive test results about those The fact that many rural already juggling multiple brick courthouse that once they interacted with and then jobs cannot be done from roles. served as a jail in rural Pend- calling to warn those people. home has exacerbated the Lt. Melissa Ross updates leton, a place best known for “We are a small county, so virus’s impact, Murdock said. journalists about drug busts its annual rodeo. I don’t think there is a single Offi cials have noted cases and fatal crashes as the Her assured tone masks person here at public health where people continued to public information offi cer for her exhaustion when she tells who hasn’t been involved work despite having minor the Morrow County sheriff the person on the other end in some way,” said Griggs, coronavirus symptoms, in eastern Oregon. She also that they may have been ex- who works with eight other which led to outbreaks. oversees the records and posed to COVID-19. It’s a call contact tracers. “They are forced to go to civil department. Adding she has made thousands of Offi cials recognize that work in order to survive. to her duties, she’s now times since March, but lately rural case numbers are low They don’t have benefi ts. the spokeswoman for the Ben Lonergan / East Oregonian compared with city totals, there has been a heightened You can’t telecommute on a county’s Emergency Man- Heather Griggs, a registered nurse, helps run the Uma- sense of urgency. but even a slight increase can production line,” he said. agement Team, which gives tilla County Public Health Department contact tracing The coronavirus has torn push a small community over Of Oregon’s 23 rural coun- updates on case numbers center out of a converted jail in Pendleton. through the small Oregon the edge. ties, 12 have reported work- and other virus-related community where farmers “We’ve discovered we are place outbreaks at farms or information. grow crops such as potatoes, through major U.S. cities is quarters, have proven to be getting really overwhelmed meat and seafood processing “That’s what happens onions and grains. In Uma- now wreaking havoc on rural hot spots. by the rapid numbers in the plants. Umatilla County when you live in small rural tilla County, where Pendleton communities, with some re- Umatilla County has rise we are seeing now,” Uma- has reported six workplace America I guess,” Ross said. is located, the rate of people cording the nation’s most new Oregon’s highest number tilla County Commissioner outbreaks since mid-June. Lake County, where testing positive for COVID-19 confi rmed cases per capita in of confi rmed infections per George Murdock said. “We For most people, the new southern Oregon meets is about 16%. That’s a mea- the past two weeks. The virus capita, sometimes reporting really need help.” coronavirus causes mild or California and Nevada, has sure of how widespread the is infecting thousands of often a fi gure this month above The county has received moderate symptoms, such as just one hospital. The next disease is in the community, impoverished rural residents that of Multnomah County, guidance, contact tracers, case fever and cough that clear one is 90 miles away. and the World Health Organi- every day, swamping strug- which is 10 times larger investigators and equipment up in two to three weeks. To serve its 7,000 resi- zation recommends it stay gling health care systems and includes Portland. The from the state, but Murdock For some — especially older dents, the county took the below 5%. and piling responsibility on surge in Umatilla and most says more help might be nec- adults and people with ex- unusual step of asking the In the county with a popu- government workers who of Oregon’s rural counties essary. Offi cials need housing isting health problems — it Lake Health District to not lation of 77,000, the virus has often perform multiple jobs is driving the state’s rise in alternatives for people who can cause more severe ill- only run the hospital but also infected more than a thou- they never signed up for. confi rmed cases. have COVID-19 or are living ness, including pneumonia, oversee its health department sand people and killed nine, Offi cials attribute much of In response to the pandem- with multiple families and and death. during the pandemic. overwhelming its limited the spread in rural America ic, Umatilla County divided resources and employees. to outbreaks in workplaces, virus-related tasks among be cautious when traveling outside the “I’m tired,” said Griggs, living facilities and social the 30-person public health county, in particular to places with recent who’s working as a contact gatherings. Food processing department. Continued from Page 1A outbreaks. tracer. plants and farms, where peo- For Griggs, that meant her The cases were the fi rst since July 14, the Bennett said some of the Baker County The pandemic sweeping ple typically work in cramped role supervising the agency’s day before the Oregon Health Authority residents were infected outside the county. added Baker County to eight other counties He didn’t say how many were in that cat- as the federal agents started taking action on a “watch list” due to sporadic cases — egory, but that the list doesn’t include the on the streets of Portland. ones not directly tied to an outbreak. fi ve U.S. Forest Service employees who are Continued from Page 3A Speaking on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Mark Bennett, the county commissioner among the county’s 15 cases. The violence happened as local and Democratic Mayor Ted Wheeler said acting as incident commander for the “A lot of it is just being prudent and exer- state leaders expressed anger with the federal offi cers “are not wanted here. We county during the pandemic, said Monday cising good judgment,” Bennett said. presence of the federal agents, saying that haven’t asked them here. In fact, we want afternoon that no one is hospitalized in the He encouraged residents, whether they the city’s protests had started to ease just them to leave.” county due to COVID-19. travel outside the county or not, to continue Bennett said contact tracers from the to practice social distancing and to wear county Health Department are investigat- face coverings when they can’t stay at least ing the two new cases. 6 feet from others when in social settings or Baker County starting Wednesday afternoon Bennett also urged county residents to while visiting local businesses. and continuing through Thursday afternoon Continued from Page 1A for lightning. Although initial storms could The possibility of storms is important be dry — which increases the risk of light- because lightning sparks a majority of wild- ning sparking fi res — storms that linger into fi res on public lands in the region. Thursday have a better chance of delivering “That’s one of our bigger concerns,” said rain, according to the Weather Service. Noel Livingston, fi re staff offi cer for the Livingston said the fi re season so far has Wallowa-Whitman National Forest. been about average — typically the highest Fire danger now is moderate on the risk for major fi res in the region runs from Wallowa-Whitman. late July through August and, occasionally, A computer model that estimates how continuing into September. much energy a fi re would release — a key This year so far is quite different from sev- indicator of the fi re danger — has been eral recent summers, including 2018, when near or below average since June 1 but as of June was warmer and drier than average, Monday was rising to near average in parts the fi re danger index set record highs in late of the forest, Livingston said. July, ranging from 79 to 84. By comparison, “It’s starting to dry up,” Livingston said. the readings for Sunday ranged from 47 to Widespread rain during the latter half of 61. May and the fi rst half of June pushed the fi re One advantage to the fi re danger remain- danger below average. ing below average well into July is that fi re- But with little rain falling in the past fi ghting crews, aircraft and other resources month — just 0.03 of an inch since June 16 at are comparatively plentiful, Livingston said. the Baker City Airport, barely enough to lay The largest local fi re, which burned 6 515 Campbell Street Baker City the dust — the potential for a fi re to spread acres on July 15 near California Gulch, quickly has increased steadily, Livingston about 14 miles southwest of Baker City, 541-523-4318 said. was quickly controlled by fi re crews on the Meanwhile the temperature at the Baker ground and with aerial assistance from two City Airport reached 80 or higher on all but single-engine tankers and one helicopter. two of the fi rst 20 days of July. The National The fi re, which started near Highway Weather Service is predicting highs in the 7, was human-caused, and Forest Service 90s today and Wednesday. offi cials are investigating, said Travis Mason- The Weather Service on Monday issued Bushman, a public information offi cer for the a fi re weather watch that includes most of Wallowa-Whitman. By Sara Cline Associated Press/Report for America COVID-19 PORTLAND WILDFIRE Open for dining in 6 am to 12 am Daily Take out and Catering is Available. Visit the store for Baker’s best Gifts