THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9, 2021 BAKER CITY HERALD — A3 LOCAL & STATE PIPING PHARMACY Continued from A1 Continued from A1 “To have the pipeline con- necting one pond to the other is pretty exciting,” Owen said. “We’re almost there. It’s progressing and as soon as we get that freeway bore completed and all the pipe installed, that will be a super accomplishment,” She said the goal is to have wastewater moving from the current lagoons to the new lagoon by January 2022. Also this winter, the city is preparing to apply for a state permit allowing the city to use the wastewater from both the current and new lagoons to irrigate nonfood crops. “We have to have a new type of permit in place before we can do the irrigation,” Owen said. The city will have to drain the existing lagoons to allow workers to install gates and valves that allow wastewater to move between the current and new lagoons. Water will drain by grav- ity from the current lagoons to the new pond, but the pipe- line can also be pressurized so water can be moved be- tween the two sites as needed for irrigation, Owen said. In January 2021 the City Council voted to hire Gyllenberg Construction of Baker City, the lowest among 10 bidders, to oversee the project. Owen said the new lagoon will increase the city’s wastewater storage capacity, making the city better able to deal with population growth. The additional storage also will allow the city to hold water when there’s no need for irrigation water. Wyden has also asked federal offi cials to review pharmacy closures across the U.S. over the past fi ve years. Wyden has cited in par- ticular the fees charged by pharmacy benefi t managers (PBMs) and by Medicare Part D plans, and their paltry reimbursements to pharmacies. “Exploitative business practices conducted by pharmaceutical middlemen are driving locally owned pharmacies out of business,” Wyden said. “These practices are not unique to the Pacifi c Northwest, so I am calling on the FTC to investigate this trend on a national level so action can be taken to protect local businesses.” Brian Mayo, executive director of the Oregon State Pharmacy Association, also called PBMs a culprit in the pharmacy crisis. Mayo said the Pharmacy Association has been warning for years that reimburse- ments are too low. The organization is calling on elected offi cials to reform the PBM system and to ex- empt prescription drugs from Oregon’s Corporate Activities Tax, which the Legislature approved in 2019 and which took effect Jan. 1, 2020. Mayo said Oregon Gov. Kate Brown’s mandate that health care workers, including pharmacists and pharmacy technicians, be vaccinated or receive a medi- cal or religious exception, has had a “minimal” effect on the current staffi ng short- ages because most affected employees are vaccinated. According to the Oregon Health Authority, as of Nov. 1, 88% of Oregon pharmacists were vaccinated, and 83% of pharmacy technicians. Baker City Public Works/Contributed Photo A liner has been installed at Baker City’s new wastewater storage lagoon east of the Baker City Airport and south of Highway 203. The city had to choose a lagoon site more than 10,000 feet from the Baker City Airport, because the lagoon could attract fl ocks of geese and other birds that can pose a danger to aircraft. The city bought a 51- acre property in 2019 for $123,000. The site is at the eastern end of Baker Valley, active steps the Forest Service has taken to warn travelers that Road 39 is closed during Continued from A1 the winter months,” Ash “The driving factor pushing said. “So far, we have been fortunate to locate and save us towards installing extra signage at these locations has stranded motorists, and I hope the additional signage will been the recent uptick with search and rescues involving prevent people from trying to traverse the closed road.” Wallowa, Union, Grant, and The most recent rescue on Baker counties,” Dan Story, the Wallowa Mountain Loop roads manager for the south zone of the Wallowa-Whitman, Road was in April 2021, when a Beaverton couple and their said in a press release. son got stuck in their Ford “We carefully considered Fusion sedan about 8.9 miles the language, colors, and north of Highway 86. placement of these signs to Three members of the help more people understand that wheeled vehicles cannot Baker County Sheriff’s Of- fi ce search and rescue team safely pass through these roads while they are covered rescued the trio 12 hours after with snow,” Story said. “Signs their car got stuck. None of the three was hurt. are bright yellow or orange There were several other to get the driver’s attention search and rescue calls on before entry.” Most of the new signs are the road the previous winter in both Baker and Wallowa along the two routes where counties. That prompted the several rescues have taken Forest Service to issue a press place over the past decade release reminding drivers that or so — Forest Road 73, the Elkhorn Drive Scenic Byway the road is open to snowmo- west of Baker City, and Road biles and other over-snow vehicles during winter. The 39, the Wallowa Mountain Loop Road, in eastern Baker Forest Service also placed bar- County and southern Wallowa riers along the road to discour- age passenger vehicles from County. continuing, along with a sign. Both are paved, two-lane roads that are popular scenic The barriers didn’t prevent snowmobiles from accessing driving routes during sum- mer but which traverse high the road. Ash, however, said that the elevations where deep snow Beaverton couple told rescuers accumulates each winter. they hadn’t seen the warning Depending on the year, sections of both roads are im- sign. Peter Fargo, public affairs passable to wheeled vehicles offi cer for the Wallowa-Whit- for several months. man, said the barriers could The new signs will be removed or covered after the be put up again this winter, snow melts in the spring and depending on circumstances. “Our current plan is to rely the roads reopen. Baker County Sheriff Tra- on the signs to inform motor- ists that these major roads vis Ash, who has personally are closed to wheeled vehicles rescued drivers stranded on because of winter snow,” the Wallowa Mountain Loop Fargo said. “As the season pro- Road, lauded the Wallowa- gresses, if we continue to see Whitman’s new signs. “I’m pleased to see the pro- vehicles passing those signs SIGNS south of Highway 203. The city also paid $37,900 for an easement across another property that the pipeline crosses. In November 2020 the City Council agreed to have the city borrow as much as $7.5 million from the state to pay for the wastewater project. The city will repay the loan over 30 years with a 1.36% annual interest rate, and annual payments on the loan are estimated at $275,000, Owen said. Based on the contract with Gyllenberg Construc- tion, for about $5.7 million, the city likely won’t need to borrow the full amount, which could reduce the an- nual payments somewhat, she said. and getting stuck in the snow, we will consider additional safety measures, including barriers.” During that rescue, crews plowed snow from the road, which allowed the Boise man to drive much farther into the mountains than would have been pos- Other rescues Several months prior to the sible otherwise. Coincidentally, Ash spring 2021 incident, on Dec. had rescued someone in a 7, 2020, a San Diego couple similar predicament exactly got their four-wheel drive 20 years earlier, also on Toyota Tacoma pickup truck stuck in snow on Forest Road Thanksgiving Day in 2000. 73 between Anthony Lakes and the North Fork of the Drivers lured into trouble John Day River. Ash said one issue with The couple used their Roads 39 and 73, and sev- satellite device to alert police eral other forest roads that that they needed help. are popular with snow- Volunteers in three side- mobilers, is that the snow by-side ATVs, equipped with machines compact the top tracks rather than tires, layer of the snow into a fi rm reached the couple about surface that can support the three and a half hours after weight of a regular car, con- they had sent the emergency vincing drivers that they’re message. on a road maintained for They also were unhurt. wheeled vehicles. On Thanksgiving Day But even a small section 2020, Ash rescued an of softer snow can give way, 18-year-old Boise man whose leaving a car mired up to its car got stuck in snow on fenders. Road 39 when he was driving “You can do fi ne on that to drive to Lewiston, Idaho. compact snow until you The man, who left his break through,” Ash said. Volkswagen Jetta and “Then you’re stuck.” started hiking north toward Another issue that Joseph, was cold but other- Story cited is the failure of wise fi ne when Ash found navigation systems, which him. are installed in most new That incident might not vehicles, as well as phone- have happened if not for based apps and GPS receiv- an early episode when a ers, to alert users to roads group of travelers also was that are not maintained for stranded in deep snow in the winter travel by wheeled same area. vehicles. Kevin Whitlock/Massillon Independent-TNS Narcan nasal spray. SPRAY Continued from A1 The Narcan includes directions on how to use the spray in the case of a sus- pected opioid overdose, said Andi Walsh, public relations and grants manager for New Directions Northwest. That includes the require- ment to call 911 after ad- ministering the medication, because the treatment can cause harmful withdrawal effects, she said. Naloxone is an “opioid antagonist,” which means it attaches to opioid receptors and reverses and blocks the effects of opioids such as fentanyl, heroin, oxycodone, hydrocodone, codeine and morphine. Offi cials in Northeastern Oregon have reported an increase in drug overdoses this year. On Nov. 23, the Grande Ronde Hospital and Clinics, Center for Human Devel- opment, La Grande Fire Department and La Grande Police Department released a statement about a recent rise in heroin and fentanyl overdoses in Union County. The Grande Ronde Hospital Emergency Department reported eight heroin overdoses in the six days prior to the statement, which is a 400% increase. The department typically sees two to three overdoses per month in Union County. Offi cials at the hospi- tal in La Grande suspect heroin is being tainted with additional drugs, such as fentanyl, which can lead to accidental overdoses. “People may be tak- ing substances thinking they are one thing but are actually mixed with other things that are more potent or have a different effect than they are expecting,” said Carrie Brogoitti, public health administrator at the Center for Human Develop- ment in La Grande. Walsh said there are also reports of pills that purport to be one drug but are in fact the more potent fentanyl. She said several people who have overcome drug addictions will be at the Dec. 14 Narcan drive-thru event and available to talk about their experiences. The nasal sprays will be available to anyone, Walsh said — including people who aren’t drug users but want to be able to help someone in the event of a possible overdose. “Anyone who feels they might be able to use it,” she said. Sara Blair, division chief for EMS at the Baker City Fire Department, said the de- partment’s ambulance crews carry Narcan, both in nasal and intravenous forms. Although she didn’t have any specifi c statistics, Blair said crews do administer Narcan occasionally, and when the number of overdos- es increases in Union County a similar trend often follows in Baker County. Blair said emergency responders can use Narcan in both confi rmed and suspected opioid overdoses. The product won’t harm the patient even if opioids aren’t involved, she said. If Narcan has no effect on a patient who is in respirato- ry distress, that can indicate that opioids aren’t an issue, which affects how the patient is treated, Blair said. 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