SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2021 BAKER CITY HERALD — A3 LOCAL & STATE A changing demographic By BILL BRADSHAW and ALEX WITTWER EO Media Group WALLOWA COUNTY — It’s no secret that em- ployers across the state are struggling to fi nd workers. Business owners collectively furrow their brow at the trickle of job applications as more and more businesses open and the share of work- ers seems to be vanishing into thin air. For some, that means clos- ing restaurants entirely — but far more often the effects on a tightening labor market mean that expansion of op- erations becomes diffi cult. “It’s pretty much across all industries,” said Stacy Beck- man, general manager of Wallowa County Grain Grow- ers in Enterprise. “Managers I’ve talked to are having dif- fi culty trying to get help.” He said the business he runs didn’t actually lose any workers to the pandemic, but expanding his workforce has been a challenge. ROBBERY Continued from A1 On the morning of Sept. 17, police responded to a report of a robbery and burglary at 1305 Seventh St. The homeowner told police that upon returning home, a person wearing a mask was Boomers retiring at a faster rate Eastern Oregon saw only negligible gains in popula- tion over the the past decade, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. And looming within the numbers is a certainty that has taken the back seat to pandemic woes and commentary: The boom- ers are retiring. In Eastern Oregon, the working population is aging out much quicker than in previous years. The Oregon Employment Department reported in May 2021 that the working population in Eastern Oregon had grown younger staff than in normal years, though the restaurant industry has historically been staffed by younger workers and those looking for part- time work, and the data from the U.S. Census Bureau and Oregon Employment Depart- ment indicate there hasn’t been any signifi cant changes in the employment level for those under the age of 18. Angelica Zurita, who with her husband, Jose Lopez, owns the La Laguna Family Mexican Restaurants in En- terprise and Joseph and the Rusty Spur Saloon in Joseph, said they employ about 15 people at the three establish- ments. During the summer tourist season, they were fortunate to fi nd college students who were eager to work. But now, as the students return to campus, fi nding reliable help The impact “One of the other factors is is a problem. “They really don’t want a that boomers are retiring at job,” Zurita said of some of the an enormous rate, which is, locals who have applied. “They in a way, sucking everybody show up drunk, call in sick, up the the corporate ladder or corporate world,” said Matt don’t show up at all or they Scarfo, a Union County com- show up late.” Still, as the tourist season missioner and owner of Long ends, she’s optimistic the Branch and Benchwarmer’s restaurants and saloon will Pub & Grill in La Grande. “Everyone’s getting the bump manage. “It’s slowing down to where up to those higher positions, if they did have them, and so it’s I think we’ve got it covered,” causing a vacuum down to the she said. The trades, too, are hav- X, Y, Z generation.” ing a tough time fi nding On the ground, restau- workers. Jared Hillock, man- rants and service industries reported having to hire much ager and co-owner of Hillock inside, and pointed a gun at the homeowner before fl ee- ing. Police determined that the gun was stolen from the home. Baker City Police detec- tives and offi cers, including members of the Baker County Narcotics Enforcement Team, investigated and tied the Sept. 17 robbery with the Sept. 15 burglary, according to the press release. Police obtained a search warrant for a travel trailer parked at 2260 Wabash St. in south Baker City, where police believed Griffi n was liv- ing. Police executed the search warrant the evening of Sept. 17 and found several items “Trying to add (workers) is tough,” he said. “It’s even tougher in a smaller commu- nity like we are.” Cindy Ellis, who owns and operates Heavenly’s Restau- rant in Enterprise, switched to takeout only when the pan- demic fi rst struck, but was able to resume indoor seating as businesses were allowed to reopen. But then reliable employees became scarce. “We had to cut our indoor seating because someone we hired didn’t show,” she said. Ellis said Heavenly’s was open for indoor seating when interviewed on Thursday, Sept. 16. “We got a lot of folks from Elgin,” she said, and de- spite a small workforce, “we were swamped.” signifi cantly older from 2010 to 2020. That increased share means the number of workers age 55 and over makes up 26% of the overall workforce. That’s up nearly 4% from its 2010 numbers. As well, the population of older workers has started declining since 2017, when it reached its peak, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. The rate at which the baby boomer generation has been retiring is accelerating, according to Pew Research Center. From 2019 to 2020, approximately 28.6 million baby boomers — those born between 1946 and 1964 — retired; a 3.2 million uptick from 2019. On average, that number had previously been increasing by around two mil- lion retirees per year. COVID Continued from A1 Of the other 23 residents, the youngest are two men, both age 59. One died in February 2021, the other in July 2021. “I’m so sorry for her family and friends’ loss,” Baker County Commis- sioner Mark Bennett said in a press release announcing Cleo’s death. “Please keep her family and friends in our thoughts and prayers.” Cleo’s death was the fourth reported this week among Baker County resi- dents, and the fi fth during September. That’s the most in any week during the pandemic. Statewide during the pandemic, 27 people age 29 or younger have died after testing positive, according to OHA. That’s 0.7% of the 3,661 deaths through Thurs- day, Sept. 25. Almost 71% of those who have died were 70 or older. September has set a record for the most cases in Baker County, with 379 through Sept. 23. The previ- ous record was 300 cases during August 2021. Summer Carr/Contributed Photo Cleo Shepherd, left, on graduation day at Ontario High School with her younger brother, Gavin. was the head teacher for tod- dlers, Summer said. “She was a natural born mother,” Summer said. It was an experience with another child — Alanna, the daughter of one of Summer’s friends — that “changed the course of what she wanted to do with her life,” Summer said. Alanna had cancer at age 4, and she died at age 6. That prompted Cleo to pursue a career as a pediat- ric oncology nurse, Summer said. Cleo, who struggled with obesity for much of her life, was planning to have gastric ‘She loved children’ bypass surgery, and then Cleo, who was born in to enroll in nursing school, Kansas City, Kansas, lived for about a decade in Ontar- Summer said. “She had dreams,” Sum- io, graduating from Ontario mer said of her daughter. High School, before moving “We just never got that far.” to Huntington, where her Summer said Cleo “suf- grandmother lives, about two fered a great deal” as a child years ago, Summer said. due to her weight, dealing Cleo was like a second mother to her three younger with bullying in middle school and high school. brothers and two younger “She didn’t have the sisters, Summer said. typical teenage existence,” Cleo contracted CO- VID-19 at the Payette, Idaho, Summer said. Cleo’s favorite diversion day care center where she was listening to — and sing- ing along with — the pop singer Pink. “She had the voice of an angel,” Summer said of her daughter. “She always wanted to be famous, to be a singer. I regret that she never got to meet Pink, or to see her in concert.” But after a diffi cult child- hood, during which she was also the victim of sexual abuse, Cleo had begun to “blossom” in the several months before her death, Summer said. “She had just started to come out of her teenage shell,” Summer said. “The last six months of her life were probably the best six months she had.” Summer said she was concerned when she learned that her daughter had tested positive for COVID-19 be- cause she knows that people who are obese have a greater chance of having a severe illness. Summer said Cleo was not vaccinated “due to personal and closely held religious convictions.” “You’ll love the work we do. I guarantee it.” - JR 225 H Street • East of I-84 • 541-523-3200 • grumpysrepair.com Bill Bradshaw/EO Media Group A customer enjoys the outside seating Wednesday, Sept. 15, 2021, at La Laguna Family Mexican Restaurant in Enterprise. The restaurant, along with a similar one in Joseph and the Rusty Spur Saloon in Joseph, got by through the summer largely with college students as employees. Electric, said the biggest problem is a lack of qualifi ed electricians around. “There are just not enough people in the trades right now,” he said. “I think it’s important we get kids in trades and not preach so much college.” He said a starting electri- cian right out of high school — after a four-year apprentice- ship — can make $32 an hour, with benefi ts. “We’re trying to push more kids to think about trades,” he said. “You can make a good family wage right out of high school.” He does have an opening for a counter person, which he’s not gotten many ad- equate applications for. “We get a lot of random resumes dropped off, which guess is people trying satisfy job-search requirements,” Hillock said. Renaissance Design, Fabrication & Powder Coat- ing opened in May in Joseph. The business has numerous well-paying positions that are not fi lled, owner Rick LaFave said. “I’m still trying to hire three or four more welders,” LaFave said. “People don’t want to work, I guess. … I’ve talked to several people who’ve put feelers out, but I’m not getting people who want to go to work.” Though he doesn’t have concrete evidence, he has his opinion on the cause. “My opinion is because the (unemployment) money hasn’t run out,” he said. “Hopefully, we’ll get people wanting to go back to work once that runs out.” that had been stolen from the Clark Street home, and the gun stolen from the Seventh Street home. Police also found other items that they suspect were stolen elsewhere, possibly from local storage units over the past year. Police also found methamphetamine and “items indicative of drug traffi cking,” according to the press release. Police arrested Griffi n the evening of Sept. 17. He was taken to the Baker County Jail on a parole violation charge. He had been re- leased from the jail recently after spending three days there on a separate parole violation charge. On Thursday, Sept. 23, a Baker County grand jury in- dicted Griffi n on the robbery, burglary, menacing and felon in possession of a fi rearm charges. The grand jury did not consider possible drug traf- fi cking charges, but that could happen in the future, accord- ing to the press release. After she tested positive, Cleo quarantined in a travel trailer parked at her grand- mother’s property in Hunting- ton, Summer said. After about fi ve or six days, during which Cleo complained about how much her chest hurt, she called Summer one day saying she was struggling to breathe. A Baker City Fire Depart- ment ambulance took Cleo to Saint Alphonsus Medical Center in Ontario. Summer said she was not pleased with the care Cleo received at the hospital dur- ing the four or fi ve days she was there. But the experience was quite different at Saint Alphonsus Medical Cen- ter in Boise, Summer said. There, nurses and other staff treated Cleo, braided her hair and treated her “as if she was their own child,” Sum- mer said. Cleo’s condition, however, continued to worsen. The disease affected her kidneys, and she had to un- dergo constant dialysis. Although Cleo wasn’t able to communicate, Summer said she was able to play Pink’s music through the video chat. Cleo’s funeral is scheduled for Saturday, Oct. 2 at 1 p.m. MDT at the First Christian Church, 906 Second Ave. North in Payette. She will be interred next to her grandfa- ther at Riverside Cemetery in Payette. A viewing is scheduled for Friday, Oct. 1 from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. MDT at Shaffer-Jensen Memory Chapel, 112 N. Ninth St. in Payette. “She was the most beauti- ful girl,” Summer said. Breakthrough cases have been less common in Baker County than in Oregon as a whole. According to OHA, the rate of breakthrough cases statewide has been 20.2% since Aug. 1. That includes a breakthrough case rate of 23.2% from Sept. 12-18, the highest weekly rate on record. Cases in schools The latest OHA weekly report, dated Sept. 22, lists Breakthrough cases recent cases in Baker County schools, including the date of The Oregon Health Au- thority (OHA) on Thursday, the most recent case. Sept. 23 released its weekly • Baker High School: report of breakthrough cases eight students, one staff — infections in people who member, latest onset Sept. 16 are fully vaccinated. • Baker Middle School: In Baker County, break- seven students, no staff, through cases accounted for Sept. 15 10.8% of cases from Sept. • Haines Elementary: fi ve 12-18. Of the 139 county students, one staff, Sept. 14 residents who tested positive • South Baker Intermedi- during that period, 15 were ate: fi ve students, one staff, fully vaccinated. Sept. 14 From Sept. 5-11, the • Brooklyn Primary: fi ve county’s breakthrough case students, no staff, Sept. 8 rate was 12.5% — 14 of •Baker Early Learning 112 cases. Center: four students, no From Aug. 1 through Sept. staff, Sept. 9 10, the county’s breakthrough • Pine Eagle Charter case rate was 9.5% — 45 of School, Halfway, nine stu- 474 cases. dents, two staff, Sept. 14 B H Show off your hunting skills BRAGGIN' RIGHTS HUNTING PHOTO CONTEST ENTER NOW bakercityherald.com/braggin-rights