Business Ag Life B Thursday, April 1, 2021 The Observer & Baker City Herald Ambulance service answers the call for fires, COVID-19 By BILL BRADSHAW Wallowa County Chieftain Phil Wright/The Observer Cecil stays still as Debbi Larson grooms him Tuesday, March 30, 2021, at her La Grande business Best of Breed. She is no longer taking new clients because her business has been so busy during the pandemic. Where’s the stimulus? Local businesses may not be feeling injection from personal stimulus money By PHIL WRIGHT The Observer LA GRANDE — The latest round of personal stimulus money may not be making its way into local businesses. Most people nationwide are using the latest round of stim- ulus payments to cover the costs of food, utilities and household supplies, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey. Paying down debt and paying for housing and vehi- cles also are among the top ways the survey indicates people are using the funds. Spending on household items, such as TVs and furniture, giving to charity or family and pur- chasing recreational goods are at the bottom of the list. But some La Grande business owners said there is more to the stimulus spending picture. Shaun Daggett and his father, Mike Daggett, own and run Northwest Furniture & Mattress. Shaun Daggett said their big issue is not a lack of customers looking to spend stimulus money. “If we had inventory, I’m sure that would help us,” he said. The pandemic has led to a slowdown in production. Trying to maintain social distancing in manufacturing, he said, means furniture makers are not pro- ducing as much. The La Grande store usually has 36 sets of living room furniture, he said, but Tuesday, March 30, there were only four. Other factors are com- pounding the inventory shortage. Nearly 50 ships carrying goods for stores across the United States are stuck in Southern California. A spike in coronavirus cases among dock- workers there is creating a bot- tleneck of goods as more ships Maria Vazquez said she has noticed a slight increase in sales the last couple of weeks at her pizza and sandwich shop, New York Richie’s. Rather than a surge, she said, it seems more like a steady climb. And while business remains slow overall, “We’re definitely doing OK, but I think if we could get product, we would be doing phenomenal.” — Shaun Daggett, co-owner Northwest Furniture and Mattress, La Grande come in while goods are going out at a trickle. Add to this, Dag- gett said, the massive container ship that blocked marine traffic through the Suez Canal for nearly a week. All of that means delays in getting goods to people. Just the other day, he said, customers came in looking to buy a sofa. But if they want something not on the floor, that means ordering and waiting seven or eight months. “So we’re waiting until October, November of this year,” he said. Still, Daggett said, business is not taking a downturn. “We’re definitely doing OK,” he said, “but I think if we could get product, we would be doing phenomenal.” sales are good. She also said the stimulus payments are a boon to the fam- ilies who needed it to keep their homes and pay for essentials, such as clothing. Debbi Larson said she cannot tell if stimulus money is making a difference for her business, Best of Breed, which provides pet sup- plies, food and grooming, but the pandemic sure has. “My business has increased probably 30% since the pandemic started,” she said. She attributed the uptick to a few situations. More people have sought pets during the pandemic. Dog own- ership nationwide jumped, she said, as people bought “pan- demic puppies.” And people are spending more time with their pets, so grooming services have increased. “I groom two days a week,” she said, “and my service is booked through the end of the year.” She said she had to stop taking new clients. Another groomer who uses the space at the shop three days a week, Larson said, has appointments for the next seven weeks. Whit Hartz at his busi- ness Mountain Works Bicycles doubted he has seen a surge, but then again, it could be hard to tell. Mountain Works, he said, has been “unprecedentedly busy.” The pandemic forced gym goers and exercise enthusiasts to seek out new ways to work out, and that meant going outdoors. Ski and bicycle shops, Hartz said, have stayed busy during the pandemic. While the business has not noticed an uptick in local spending from stimulus pay- ments, he also said spring is just starting in the Grande Ronde Valley and even more business could come with the change in weather. As COVID-19 cases continue to trend down, Hartz and some of the other local business owners said they see some light at the end of the coronavirus tunnel and a greater return to normalcy. “I think people are ready to be people again,” Hartz said. “I hope.” ENTERPRISE — An ambu- lance service based in Eastern Oregon that often helps with wild- fire victims has turned its atten- tion to the still-raging COVID-19 pandemic that, unlike last year’s wildfires, has not yet subsided. Owned by Chris Arvidson, of Baker City, Med Transport is a privately held ambulance service that responds to calls — in addi- tion to Oregon — in California, Texas, Maryland and New Jersey. Arvidson said he has a pool of 45 paramedics and a handful of emergency medical technicians who can be deployed. “We have changed the ser- vices offered by our service and have been fortunate to send out the experienced personnel to rep- resent our community and our service throughout the country,” Arvidson said in a press release. In Eastern Oregon, para- medics reside in Enterprise, Baker City, La Grande and Pendleton, Arvidson said. Arvidson spoke highly of his Enterprise paramedic, Sean Cariss, who has worked on fires and disaster-relief assignments with the service. “I spent a good part of October on an ambulance with See, Ambulance/Page 3B Researchers study spent hemp biomass as animal feed By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press CORVALLIS — Hemp already is touted for its healthful and ther- apeutic benefits in humans. Researchers at Oregon State University now are studying whether the plant also could be part of a nutritious diet for livestock. The project, which received a nearly $300,000 USDA grant in February, aims to determine whether “spent hemp biomass” can be fed to animals including lambs, chickens and dairy cows, and whether any residual cannabis compounds are present in the meat and milk. Spent hemp biomass is the leafy byproduct left over after processing hemp for cannabidiol, or CBD, oil, which makes up the vast majority of Oregon hemp production. The research team, led by Mas- simo Bionaz, has found this mate- rial is similar in both appear- ance and chemical composition to See, Hemp/Page 3B Pilot project vaccinates hundreds of agricultural workers By BRYCE DOLE East Oregonian BOARDMAN — Maria Corona knew she wanted to get the vaccine. Three months ear- lier, eight of her family members tested positive for COVID-19. So had many of her coworkers and neighbors. “I was really concerned,” said Corona, who, at 49, spends half the year working in food pro- cessing plants and the other half working in the fields near her home in Boardman. “You hear a lot in the news that people are dying, so you get afraid.” The day after Corona learned through Facebook that she and her coworkers were eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine, she hopped in her Dodge Car- avan and made her way down to the SAGE Center, where state and county health officials were offering doses to farmworkers in a four-day clinic that was the first of its kind. “In order to not infect other people, to feel safe with your family and to be secure is what’s most important,” Corona said through a translator after getting her vaccine on Wednesday, March 24. Akiko Saito, deputy director for the COVID-19 response and recovery unit, a joint divi- sion between the Oregon Health Authority and the Oregon Depart- ment of Human Services, said the clinic was a “pilot project” specifically geared to immunize a community long understood to be especially vulnerable to COVID-19. In all, officials vaccinated over See, Vaccines/Page 3B Maria Corona receives her first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine during an event for farm and food process- ing workers at the Sage Center in Boardman on Wednesday, March 24, 2021. State and county officials offered doses of the vaccine to farmworkers during a four-day clinic. Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian