COMMUNITY THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 2021 BAKER CITY HERALD — 3A “We’ll continue checking people at the doorways and making sure they’re healthy.” — Mark Witty, Baker School District superintendent SCHOOLS Continued from Page 1A Baker County Sheriff’s Offi ce/Contributed Photo A 1998 Ford Ranger pickup truck driven by Craig Monteith, 17, of North Powder, rolled over Tuesday, March 23. Teen cited for reckless driving in rollover crash on gravel road “He was driving too fast negotiat- ing the corners,” Ash said of Monte- A 17-year-old North Powder boy was ith. “He was out of control for about cited on a charge of reckless driving 60 yards.” after his pickup truck failed to negoti- The vehicle came to rest on its top ate corners on the graveled McCarty at the side of McCarty Road near Bridge Road, careened into an embank- Conro Road near North Powder. Ash ment and rolled at least twice Tuesday was dispatched to the crash at about afternoon, March 23. 2 p.m. A Baker City ambulance crew, Craig Monteith was the driver of North Powder quick response unit the 1998 Ford Ranger pickup truck in- and the Haines Fire Department also volved in the crash, said Baker County responded. Sheriff Travis Ash. A passenger in the front seat of Monteith was wearing a seatbelt and the pickup, Aaron Clinkenbeard, 20, was not injured. of Kennewick, Washington, who was Ash attributed the cause of the crash not belted in, remained in the vehicle to speed. as it rolled. Clinkenbeard was taken By Chris Collins ccollins@bakercityherald.com CHIEF “After much consider- ation, I believe Lt. Duby Continued from Page 1A has the ability, commitment Since January 2021, Du- and leadership qualities to man’s title has changed to continue leading our Police interim police administrator Department and address because as of Jan. 1 he is no the issues affecting Baker longer a certifi ed police of- City, its residents and visi- fi cer. In order to retain that tors,” Cannon stated in a certifi cation, the 62-year-old press release. Duman would be required Duby was hired by the to return to the police acad- Baker City Police Depart- emy. Instead, he will retire. ment in 2019 after retiring He was hired in July from a 25-year career with 2019, as interim police OSP. chief, to replace former “It is apparent Ray Chief Dustin Newman, who Duman, current adminis- resigned to accept a position trator of the department, with the Polk County Sher- and Lt. Duby worked iff’s Offi ce. well together over the last two years to create a very cohesive depart- ment,” Cannon said. “They reestablished the Baker County Drug Task Force and consistently looked for ways to strengthen our city ordinances.” Duby’s law enforcement career includes service as an OSP patrol trooper, de- tective, patrol sergeant and criminal division sergeant, in addition to his role as lieutenant with the Baker City Police. Duby grew up in the Unity area and received an associate degree from Blue Mountain Community VACCINE and it will give the second shot to hundreds more this Friday Continued from Page 1A at Baker High School. Because Yet as gratifying as the those residents are already numbers are, Baker County counted as partially vaccinated Commissioner Mark Bennett, on the OHA database, their sec- the county’s incident command- ond inoculation won’t increase er throughout the pandemic, the county’s total. said he doesn’t believe as many The health department has county residents have been vac- had large vaccination clinics at cinated as the state database, BHS every other Friday since available on OHA’s website, early February. shows. But some of the numbers “We aren’t there,” Bennett don’t add up. said on Tuesday. “We’re trying For instance, according to the to sort it out. It’s intriguing.” OHA database, a total of 1,101 Which is not to say that people age 80 or older have Bennett isn’t pleased with the been partially or fully vacci- county’s progress. nated in Baker County. The Baker County Health Yet a spreadsheet that Ben- Department administered 717 nett obtained from the state doses of vaccine on March 12, lists the number of residents HARDY Continued from Page 1A Hardy said most students at her uni- versity grew up in Virginia, and had more knowledge of the local history around the Revolutionary War, Civil War, and civil rights. “I had a lot of catching up to do,” she said. “It was amazing to learn what I didn’t know. If you’re at these historic sites, you get so many more details than from history books.” She graduated from the University of Mary Washington in 2019 with a degree in historic preservation and music, and a mi- nor in museum studies. That summer she came home to work at the Eltrym Theater, where she’d worked during high school. In July 2019 she left for a study abroad program in Paris, France. The next month she and her mom, Kelly Hardy, drove across the country from Baker City to Fredericksburg. “I’ve done that trip many, many times,” Gracie said. She begin her internship at the National Museum of the Marine Corps in Triangle, Virginia, that same month. “They have the capacity to do huge pro- grams,” she said. “I gained experience there I couldn’t get anywhere else.” That internship ended in December 2019. Although she’d hoped to be hired as an assistant, budget cuts eliminated all the assistant positions. So she worked as a substitute teacher by ambulance to Saint Alphonsus Medical Center. No information about his condition was available in time for this report. A third passenger, Natalia Bol- lander, 15, of North Powder, who also was wearing a seatbelt, sustained bumps and bruises on her head, Ash said. Her parents picked her up at the scene. The three also were traveling with a goat. Ash said they were all lucky to have survived the crash, especially Clinkenbeard. “The whole passenger side of the roof was caved in,” Ash said. College. He has received his basic, intermediate, advanced and supervisory certifi cates from the De- partment of Public Safety Standards and Training. When he’s not on the job, he’s an avid outdoorsman. “My goal for the Depart- ment is to continue to provide excellent service to this community and maintain accountability of our members,” Duby stated in the press release. “I look forward to continuing to work with and lead our dedicated group of offi cers, detectives and volunteers as their chief.” in the county who are 80 and older at 1,028 — 51 fewer than the number of people shown as vaccinated. Bennett said he doesn’t be- lieve the county has vaccinated every one of its residents 80 and older. Nor is the 80-and-older category the only one with such a discrepancy. The OHA database shows that 984 residents ages 75 to 79 are partially or fully vaccinated. Yet the spreadsheet pegs the county’s population in that age range at 876. For the age range 70 to 74, the vaccination total is 1,311, but the estimated population is 1,264. The source of the differ- “The thing I like about Baker, that I didn’t fi nd anywhere else, is the sense of community.” — Gracie Hardy for a while, then got hired at a children’s museum in Richmond, Virginia. “I worked there for one week and then COVID hit and we got shut down,” she said. And, in her words, “COVID dragged on.” “For the fi rst time I couldn’t visit my fam- ily whenever I wanted,” she said. Finally, in August 2020 she and her boy- friend, Paul King, came home to visit. Her mom showed her the job opening at the Baker Heritage Museum. And then she ran into Terry McQuisten, the Museum’s director, who also told her about the job opening. “I said ‘Terry, I’m not moving back to Baker,’ ” Hardy said. She and King returned to Richmond, and he encouraged her to at least apply for the museum job. So she applied. And she was offered the job. She and King moved to Baker City in January 2021. “The thing I like about Baker, that I didn’t fi nd anywhere else, is the sense of community,” she said. “And I like going to the grocery store and seeing people I know.” See the current issue of GO! magazine, included with today’s issue, about new exhibits at the Baker Heritage Museum. ences is not apparent. Timothy Heider of the OHA wrote in an email to the Herald that information on the agency’s website “is provided to us by the local public health authority. We report the figures provided by them.” Bennett pointed out that the health department is not the only vaccine provider in the county. Saint Alphonsus Medical Center-Baker City, St. Luke’s Clinic Eastern Oregon Medical Associates and the Pine Eagle Clinic in Halfway also adminis- ter vaccines. So do the pharmacies at the Albertsons, Safeway and Bi- Mart stores in Baker City. Baker County’s rising vac- cination rate has been driven largely in the past week or so by doses of the Pfizer vaccine, according to OHA figures. From March 15 to March 22, about 64% of the doses admin- istered in the county — 2,049 of 3,199 — were Pfizer, according to the OHA database. Staff must still maintain 6 feet of physical distancing, however, “as best they can,” Witty said. The 6-foot distancing also must be maintained when students are eating or when students from different classrooms are passing in hallways between periods. The passing periods will not put students within close proximity for 15 minutes, the guideline for determining whether those who come in close proximity with a person who has tested positive for COVID-19 must quarantine or isolate themselves from others, Witty said. Staff and students also will be required to continue wear- ing masks. Witty said the April 12 return to full-time classes will allow a two-week buffer between the March 29 return from spring break and any increase in COVID-19 cases that might result from travel during the week-long vaca- tion. Nine Baker School District students have tested positive for COVID-19 since classes started in September. None of those students contracted the virus at school, accord- ing to the school district and the Baker County Health Department. The most recent case, a middle school stu- dent, was reported Feb. 5, and there have been just two student cases since Dec. 9. There will be no change to the schedule for children in kindergarten through sixth grade, who returned to four days of in-person instruction weekly on Oct. 14. The secondary level stu- dents went back to in-person classes one day per week on Nov. 9, and to two days per week on Jan. 25. Overall, a total of 4,266 doses of the Pfizer vaccine have been give in Baker County. That’s considerably more than the number of Pfizer doses admin- istered in nearby counties such as Union (325 doses), Umatilla (1,994) and Malheur (1,795). The Baker County Health Department mainly uses the Moderna vaccine, along with some of the single-dose John- son & Johnson vaccine, because they don’t have to be stored at such a low temperature as the Pfizer vaccine, Bennett said. Baker City Safeway and Albertsons stores have been administering only the Moderna vaccine at their pharmacies, Jill McGinnis, director of communications and public affairs for the company that owns both stores, wrote in an email to the Herald. McGinnis wrote that the stores’ pharmacists have administered Pfi zer doses at external clinics, in conjunc- tion with the county, but she Witty said comprehensive distance learning would remain in place for those who choose not to return to the classroom. The Baker Virtual Academy will continue to operate providing livestream- ing classes and Eagle Cap Innovative High School will provide online classes for students to work at their own pace to serve families that make that choice, he said. While many students choosing the online option have continued to do well in their studies, many will be happy to return to the class- rooms full time, Witty said. “Most kids — including me — do better in person,” he said. The routines for sanitizing surfaces, washing hands and staying home when you’re sick that have been estab- lished throughout the year will continue to serve the schools well as the second- ary students return to full- time classes, Witty said. “We’ll continue check- ing people at the doorways and making sure they’re healthy,” he said. “We’ll keep doing our routines, and I’m confi dent that will continue to work.” Witty worked closely with partners across the state, including the governor’s of- fi ce, to push for changes that would allow the schools to return secondary students to more time in the classroom, the press release stated. “As community risk lowers via greater numbers of vac- cinations, we need to rebal- ance and focus on the social, emotional, and academic needs of our students,” Witty stated in the press release. “I am thrilled that we are now able to plan for our secondary students to have the opportunity to be back in school full time before the end of this school year.” Baker dropping to lowest risk Baker County will drop from moderate to lowest risk level for CO- VID-19 spread on Friday, March 26. The county’s two-week new case total dropped by 44 to 24. The county reported six new cases on Tuesday, March 23, the most since seven on March 4. didn’t have any numbers or other details. St. Luke’s Eastern Oregon Medical Associates is admin- istering the Moderna vaccine only, Joy Prudek, public rela- tions manager for St. Luke’s, wrote in an email to the Herald. Bennett said the health de- partment doesn’t require people at vaccination clinics to prove they live in Baker County, so people from outside the county could be inflating the numbers somewhat. Try the SHIP TO STORE feature at mil ershomecenter.com 3815 Pocahontas Road, Baker City 541-523-6404 3109 May Lane, La Grande 541-963-3113 BRINGING QUALITY PRODUCTS AT AFFORDABLE PRICING TO EASTERN OREGON