THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2021 BAKER CITY HERALD — A5 LOCAL & REGION Umatilla County reports 179 COVID-19 cases in Round-Up outbreak By BRYCE DOLE East Oregonian PENDLETON — Umatilla County health offi cials have traced nearly 180 COVID-19 cases to events that occurred during the week of the Pendleton Round-Up. But the initial spike in cases that followed the week-long rodeo seem to be on a slight decline, said Umatilla County Public Health Director Joe Fiumara. “I’m hoping we’ve gotten past the initial bump,” Fiumara said after reporting the 179 cases. “Time will tell. It will be important for people who are sick to stay home.” County offi cials were expecting to report a record-high COVID-19 case count last week, but as the week wore on, case counts began to lower. Last week’s total amounted to 487 cases, making it the county’s third most infectious week since the pandemic started. It’s a positive sign after an alarming initial bump in cases, Fiumara said, but infection rates remain far higher than they were before the delta variant surge began in mid-July. “It’s hard to be happy with cases dropping to 50 or 60 each day,” Fiumara said. The decrease, Fiumara said, also doesn’t mean increased COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths won’t follow, as they have after previous pandemic surges. “Both of our hospitals have seen cases and hospitalizations go college football games in Oregon that have those requirements and have yet to see an outbreak. There is no state rule that says organizers must require a proof of COVID-19 vaccination or negative test to hold an event. Pendleton Round-Up General Manager Erika Patton did not re- turn a call seeking comment prior to press time. Cases stemming from the week-long rodeo have so far been reported in Oregon, Washington and Montana, as well as Umatilla, Jefferson, Morrow, Wallowa and Union counties, according to Mike Stensrud, an epidemiologist with Umatilla County Public Health. The vast majority of cases have been reported in Umatilla County — 166. But the county still doesn’t know if the outbreak could be Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian, File larger, as contact tracers have only been able to interview 81% of Fans cheer during the grand entry Sept. 18, 2021, of the 111th Pendleton Round-Up at the Round- Up Grounds. identifi ed cases stemming from the Round-Up. The county plans to disclose up a little,” Fiumara said of Good As of Monday, Oct. 4, 10 out of showed 85% of COVID-19 cases Shepherd Medical Center, Hermis- the hospital’s 18 inpatients had traced to the week-long rodeo were more data soon about where the cases occurred during Round-Up ton, and CHI St. Anthony Hospital, COVID-19. among unvaccinated people. week to inform residents about Pendleton. “With 25 inpatient beds set up Health offi cials have said some of their likelihood of exposure to the Harry Geller, St. Anthony’s and staffed, we have not yet gone the cases came from people who president, said in an email that over capacity,” Geller said. “We’ve had COVID-19 symptoms prior to virus and and to inform future event planning. the hospital has seen a “signifi cant come close on many occasions, but Round-Up but still chose to come. Umatilla County has reported increase” in patients admitted to its so far, so good.” The Round-Up required no proof 13,596 COVID-19 cases since the emergency department during the of vaccination or negative CO- past two weeks. Staff are treating Unvaccinated account for 85% VID-19 to enter the grounds. Had pandemic began, according to coun- between 45 to 55 patients per day. there been a requirement, Fiumara ty health data. In all, 129 county of cases from Round-Up residents who have contracted the “During normal times, we aver- said some of the infection could Data provided by the county virus have died. age 32 patients per day,” Geller said. health department late last week have been avoided. He pointed to Fire retardant could be ‘game-changer’ in fi ghting wildfi res after a couple inches of rain, making the one-and-done ap- BOISE — U.S. offi cials on plication less expensive. Cost, Goldberg said, de- Tuesday, Oct. 5 approved a long-lasting fi re retardant that pends on the topography and could signifi cantly aid in fi ght- ranges from $7,000 to $15,000 per mile covering a 20-foot- ing increasingly destructive wide strip. wildfi res by stopping them Goldberg said the product before they ever start. will likely be most effective in The U.S. Forest Service the drier climate of the U.S. approved Perimeter Solu- West, and could be applied in tions’ fi re retardant that the spring to offer fi re protec- is intended to be used as a preventive measure and can tion throughout the wildfi re season. In July, it was applied last for months. to the grounds at former It’s similar to the com- President Ronald Reagan’s pany’s red-dyed retardant coastal mountain ranch in dropped from aircraft while the Santa Ynez mountains fi ghting active wildfi res, in California near Santa but it’s clear and sprayed Barbara. by ground-based workers The company also said and equipment. the new fi re retardant had “The real game-changer been applied at the start of here is once you treat it, you the wildfi re season along a can forget it,” said Edward fi re-prone, 4-mile stretch of Goldberg, chief executive California’s Route 118. That offi cer of St. Louis, Missouri- resulted in no fi res that sea- based Perimeter Solutions. “It’s there for the whole year.” son, the company said, after the previous fi re season saw The company said its primary use will be by indus- 37 fi res start along the same trial customers such as utility stretch of road. Stanton Florea, a spokes- companies and railroads, but man for the U.S. Forest it can also be used to protect Service based at the National residential and commercial properties. It’s intended to be Interagency Fire Center in Boise, said the agency had no sprayed on vegetation, not comment about its approval homes themselves, but can be sprayed on such things as of the Perimeter Solutions’ fi re retardant. wood fences. Goldberg said the new The company’s existing retardant is also used for that retardant has the potential to purpose, but can be problem- reduce the overall number of atic because it’s only effective wildfi res, freeing up fi refi ght- ers that have been in short until rain washes it away. Goldberg said the new product supply in recent years. The fi re center on its will remain effective even By KEITH RIDLER Associated Press Ethan Swope/Associated Press, File Flames consume a house near Old Oregon Trail as the Fawn Fire burns about 10 miles north of Redding in Shasta County, California, on Sep. 23, 2021. website said that so far this year, about 46,500 wildfi res have burned 10,000 square miles. Those numbers are at roughly the 10-year average for number of wildfi res and area burned. Currently, there are 52 large wildfi res, 18 of them in Idaho, nine in California and nine more in Montana. The center is currently at National Preparedness Level 3, having dropped down from the maximum level 5 earlier this year when resources for fi ghting wildfi res were hard to come by. The center said that cooler, more favorable weather will pass through much of the Western U.S. in the next several days, but that drought conditions still leave the region open for continued wildfi re potential. 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