BAKER CITY HERALD — 3A TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 2021 State: 168 of 700,000 vaccinated later tested positive FORMER U.S. SENATOR FROM OREGON Gordon Smith returning to Pendleton ■ Smith stepping down as CEO of the National Association of Broadcasters By Antonio Sierra East Oregonian PENDLETON — Gordon Smith is returning home. Following 24 years in Washington, D.C., fi rst as a U.S. senator then as the chief executive offi cer of the National Association of Broadcasters, Smith is step- ping down to an advisory role with the lobbying group and returning to his birthplace: Pendleton. In a video message an- nouncing his retirement, Smith said he would step down at the end of 2021 to spend more time on his fam- ily business, his church and his family. “Many of these things I have put on hold this past quarter century to give public service and to be among broadcasters,” he said. “I look forward to time with them, doing things that grandfa- thers ought to do: attending baseball games, recitals and more.” As a lobbyist, Smith rep- resented some of the largest radio and television broad- casting companies in the country, including iHeartMe- dia, Cumulus Media and the Sinclair Broadcast Group. And although providing news is only one part of what these broadcasters do, it’s one of the topics he chose to focus on in his farewell video. “It has been my great honor to give the lion’s roar for broadcasters — those who run into the storm, those who stand fi rm in chaos to hear the voice of the people, those who hold to account the powerful — and to stand with those of the fourth estate who have the hearts of public servants,” he said. Although he won’t be in Washington full time any more, Smith plans to use some of his time as an advisor for the association advocating for local media in an increas- ingly inhospitable climate. Smith referred to himself as “a pea picker from Or- egon,” albeit one whose family also owns a food processing business that produces mil- lions of pounds of peas, corn, carrots and lima beans per year. Smith made a name for himself locally by taking over Smith Frozen Foods and its facility in Weston. But politics also ran through his blood. Pamplin Media Group Former Oregon U.S. Sen. Gordon Smith, the CEO of the National Association of Broadcasters, is stepping down from that position and returning to Pendleton. “I look forward to time with them, doing things that grandfathers ought to do: attending baseball games, recitals and more.” — Gordon Smith, former U.S. Senator from Oregon His father was an assistant agriculture secretary during the Eisenhower administra- tion and Smith has several cousins who have served in the U.S. House and Senate in Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado and Utah. Smith won a seat repre- senting Pendleton in the Oregon Senate as a Republi- can in 1992 and was elected Senate president a few years later. In 1996, Smith sought an open seat in the U.S. Senate only to narrowly lose to Ron Wyden, the fi rst time the state elected a senator by mail. Smith would get a second shot at the Senate later that year when Mark Hatfi eld retired, and this time he prevailed. Smith would go on to serve two terms in the Senate be- fore he lost reelection to Jeff Merkley in 2008, putting an end to his political career. He stayed in Washington and joined the National Associa- tion of Broadcasters a year later. Starting next year, Smith will serve as an advisor to the broadcasters association, necessitating only a few trips to Washington per year. In a Thursday, April 8, in- terview, Smith said he plans RESCUED Continued from Page 1A McClay said the car had a nearly full tank of gas, and the family ap- parently was able to run the engine to operate the heater and warm the interior. There are no weather stations within 15 miles or so of the site. A station at Salt Creek Summit, about 16 miles northeast, recorded a low temperature of 20 degrees Monday. The Baker City Airport tied a record low of 16 degrees Monday morning. In early March the Wallowa-Whit- man National Forest, prompted by multiple search and rescue calls this past winter along Road 39 in both Baker and Wallowa counties, issued a press release reminding drivers that the road is a snowmobile route during winter. The Forest Service placed barriers along the road to discourage passenger vehicles. According to the press release, the Forest Service planned to move the barriers farther up the road this spring as the snow recedes. Baker County Sheriff Travis Ash said Forest Service offi cials noti- fi ed him recently that the barriers would be removed. A sign remains warning the road is not maintained to use some of those trips to lobby Congress to take steps to save local media. The past 20 years have not been kind to local newspa- pers and broadcasters. As the internet became one of the dominant forms of consumption and com- munication, local businesses stopped advertising with lo- cal media outlets and started fl ocking to a handful of tech giants like Facebook and Google. Local media outlets relied on these advertisers to fund their news operations, and, as a result, many of them shrank or shuttered. Accord- ing to a 2019 study from the Brookings Institute, more than 65 million Americans live in a county where there is only one newspaper or none at all. The COVID-19 pandemic has only exacerbated these trends, and the effect is being felt locally. In March 2020, the EO Media Group, the parent company of the East Orego- nian and Hermiston Herald and the owner of more than a dozen newspapers in Oregon and Washington, laid off 47 employees company- wide, including eight locally. Since then, the company has also closed its Pendleton printing facility and laid off another 20 employees. Working with broadcast- ers, Smith said the same trend is happening at local TV and radio stations, and much of that has to do with the way tech companies have dominated the advertising market. Conducting the interview from his phone on a trip through the Columbia River Gorge on his way back to Pendleton, Smith said tech companies were not only hurting local journalism by consolidating the advertising market, but also elevating bad journalism and misinfor- mation that tends to prolifer- ate the web. “They are cannibalizing the advertising market, tak- ing broadcaster and newspa- per content, putting it online and then competing against it for advertising dollars,” he said. “At the end of the day, good journalism costs money. They don’t care about local- ism or journalism. They just care about making money.” Smith said the solution to local media’s decline could lie in Australia, where the country passed a law that re- quires tech companies to pay news outlets for their content posted on the companies’ platforms. Nearing 70, Smith said his move back to Oregon does not presage a return to poli- tics. He said his passion for elected offi ce died when he lost re-election in 2008 while acknowledging the state’s leftward turn would make it diffi cult for a Republican to try to win. And once he returns to Pendleton full time, he has no intention of leaving. “I was born in Pendleton and I will die in Pendleton,” he said. By Fedor Zarkhin The Oregonian/OregonLive So far 168 Oregonians have tested positive for the coronavirus despite being fully vaccinated against COVID-19, leaving 19 hospitalized and three dead — fi gures so small that offi cials said they were “good news.” The case count means that of the 700,000 people who reached full immunity, just 0.024% got infected anyway. “This shows the vaccines are working really well,” said Dr. Melissa Sutton, the Oregon Health Author- ity’s medical director for respiratory viral Few ‘breakthrough’ diseases. “All of those cases in NE Oregon numbers are good Although the state news.” report on fully vac- While coronavirus cinated Oregonians vaccines are proven who later test positive to be effective at for COVID-19 doesn’t preventing hospital- have county-level data, izations and deaths it does note that there among those who do were nine such “break- get infected, no vac- through” cases in the re- cine is foolproof. Sut- gion that includes Baker ton was not surprised County. That region also by the death and includes Morrow, Uma- hospitalization counts, tilla, Union, Wallowa and either. Malheur counties. “They are, of course, unfortunate,” Sutton said. But the numbers were “not more than we would have expected.” State offi cials calculated the number of so-called “breakthrough” cases among Oregonians who had reached full immunity, which comes two weeks after a fi nal vaccine dose. Offi cials track the cases because they could point to dangerous mutations of the virus. It’s unclear how many, if any, of the breakthrough cases Oregon announced were caused by virus vari- ants, Sutton said, though none of them are known to be. State offi cials said many of the people with identi- fi ed breakthrough cases reported no symptoms and were tested for other reasons, such as care-facility workers who must be screened at least once a month. None of the three deaths was tied to a variant, the state said. Oregon has now identifi ed 294 cases driven by variants the federal government is concerned about. COVID case affects Early Learning Center By Jayson Jacoby jjacoby@bakercityherald.com A student at the Baker School District’s Baker Early Learning Center, which has preschool and kindergarten classrooms, has tested positive for COVID-19, the school district announced Sunday, April 11. The district was notifi ed of the positive test Friday, April 9, according to a press release from the district. The student did not contract the virus at the Early Learning Center, which opened on Oct. 9, 2020, in the North Baker School building at 2725 Seventh St., accord- ing to the school district. The district still plans an open house Friday, April 16 from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m. at the Early Learning Center that includes installing a plaque commemorating the $2.3 mil- lion renovation that created the Center. Although the student who tested positive “did spend some time at school when they may have been conta- gious, the facility has been cleaned/sanitized thoroughly and anyone who may have been in close contact has been asked to quarantine for two weeks from possible expo- sure,” Lindsey McDowell, the district’s public information and communications coordinator, wrote in an email to the Herald on Monday, April 12. “You can do fi ne on that compact snow until you break through. Then you’re stuck.” — Sheriff Travis Ash that can hold the weight of a car. Until it doesn’t. “You can do fi ne on that compact snow until you break through,” Ash said. “Then you’re stuck.” He said people who aren’t famil- iar with snowmobile routes don’t recognize that a road hasn’t been maintained for wheeled vehicles. Ash said that although he’s happy the Brunsons are safe, he’s concerned that future episodes will not turn out as well. He believes bigger signs or some other more blatant notice to travelers who aren’t familiar with the area is necessary. “We have to do something,” Ash said. The sheriff is familiar with rescues Baker County Sheriff’s Offi ce/Contributed Photo on the snow-covered Road 39. A Beaverton family’s car got stuck in snow along Forest Road 39 in eastern Baker County on Sunday af- On Thanksgiving Day 2020 Ash ternoon, April 11. Baker County Sheriff’s Offi ce search and rescue members, summoned by a cellphone helped an 18-year-old Boise man call early Monday, rescued Jason Brunson, his wife, Jennifer, and their seven-year-old son, George. whose car became stuck in snow on the road more than 12 miles beyond during winter, but Ash said he ily didn’t see the warning sign. One problem with Road 39 and where the Brunsons’ car was mired. believes the sign is too small to be Road 39, which continues north several other forest roads that are Exactly 20 years earlier, on the effective. into Wallowa County, usually doesn’t popular with snowmobilers, Ash said, same holiday in 2000, Ash rescued He said the Brunsons told search fully open to vehicles until May or is that the snow machines compact three travelers from Germany who and rescue members that the fam- early June. the snow into a fi rm but thin surface became stranded in the same area.