LOCAL & STATE BAKER CITY HERALD • THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 2022 A5 Northeastern Oregon vets air concerns at virtual town hall delays in delivery of care and recommendations to move VA care further away from East- PENDLETON — Veterans in Northeastern Oregon raised ern Oregon.” He added he was a number of questions and is- concerned Eastern Oregon veterans did not get enough sues Saturday, June 4, during voice in the changes and pro- a virtual town hall meeting to posals, and he wanted to make discuss possible Veterans Ad- ministration changes to deliv- sure the Veterans Adminis- tration was not making “some ering health care in the area. shortsighted cost cutting” at This was the first of three virtual meetings Oregon Sen. the expense of veterans. Wyden then opened the Ron Wyden, D, is holding for floor to questions for Boyd veterans to give input in the wake of vets at a recent Union and Kelter. County town hall expressing concerns over a proposal to Staffing at center of delays move some VA health care Veteran Ken McCormack, services from Walla Walla chair of the veteran advisory council for the La Grande to Spokane. “The veterans who partici- community-based outpatient pated were particularly trou- clinic, or CBOC, was first up bled about what they felt was with several matters. Community care in La the direct touch that’s so im- Grande can mean waiting on portant for veterans health care was just going away from the phone 20 to 30 minutes for someone to answer be- the rural part of the state,” cause of short staffing, he said, Wyden told those attending and reimbursement for travel the June 4 event. Following the Union County is backed up to last summer. meeting, he said, he contacted He also said the call center in Walla Walla seems to drop Dr. Teresa Boyd, network di- messages and has to han- rector for VISN 20, the VA dle a larger area than in the Northwest Health Network, and Scott Kelter, medical cen- past. He also said it took six months for the La Grande fa- ter director of the Jonathan M. Wainwright Memorial VA cility to hire a registered nurse Medical Center in Walla Walla, and another month for the where many veterans in North- new hire to learn the system. Kelter said most delays are eastern Oregon go for services. They both agreed to participate due to staffing issues. “We have been trying every in the three town halls. hiring flexibility that is avail- Wyden said local veterans are “troubled by a whirlwind of able to recruit staff,” he said, hasty changes, involving a new but the VA is competing with electronic health record system, employers who can offer bet- him can record appointments to review later to help him un- derstand what a provider said. BY PHIL WRIGHT East Oregonian Discussion on AIR Commission recommendations Boyd and Kelter also ad- dressed concerns on the As- set and Infrastructure Review — AIR — Commission to modernize and realign the VA health care system. Boyd said at this point, changes to Walla Walla and other places are just recommendations, and imple- Linda Wondra/Jonathan M. Wainwright Memorial VA Medical Center, File mentation will take years. Be- A veteran undergoes an eye exam in 2018 at the Jonathan M. Wain- tween now and then, she said, wright Memorial VA Medical Center, Walla Walla. The Veterans Admin- there are going to be numerous steps for more input. istration is considering moving its rehabilitation services from Walla “It’s going to take all of us to Walla to Spokane. come to a good implementa- A question from a Umatilla tion plan,” she said. ter pay and incentives. And coaxing people back to work County resident also brought Kelter said the question up delays. Shanna — no last after learning to work re- comes down to how do we motely due to the pandemic is name available — said her fa- take the recommendations ther is a vet and has hearing another challenge. of the AIR Commission and loss, so telehealth does not Catching up on travel re- make sure they have positive imbursements, he said, also is work for him. But she was not results, including balancing the about staffing and could come able to get him an appoint- use of technology and in-per- down to contracting that out. ment in person until the end son care. of July. She said she was con- “Obviously that will be at He noted this process does cerned about moving his care not take the place of smart deci- higher cost to do that, but even farther away. we are committed to getting sions in the field, and when the “We’re almost driving two those claims down,” he said. recommendations ultimately hours round trip to get him Recruiting registered come down, the VA is looking nurses “is challenging across seeing providers in Walla at some matters that will affect Walla,” she said. the board,” Kelter said, and Eastern Oregon veterans. Kelter said as a veteran him- while the VA has made hir- The VA is looking at more self and with a son and daugh- telehealth care in Boardman ing incentives, applicants ter in the military now, he is might pass because they can and Enterprise, and Kelter said get on somewhere else faster. keenly interested in access to he wants to see a provider at The VA also has cut down its veteran care, and the delay in those locations more often as on-boarding process, but the his care is a concern. He said well as a nurse. he would follow up and look VA still has the obligation to “The staffing model that ensure someone treating vets into the situation. He also said we’re pursuing there I think her father or whoever is with is safe. will help in those areas in par- ticular,” he said, adding the VA also is looking at how it can best staff the La Grande clinic to meet veterans needs. The AIR Commission is rec- ommending to increase ser- vices in the Tri-Cities because the need is there, he said, but it remains to be seen what that means for Walla Walla. “Just because we increase it in the Tri-Cities does not necessarily mean the demand decreases in Walla Walla to where we won’t support those services any more,” Kelter said. He stressed the AIR Com- mission is about providing more and better care to veter- ans, not about cutting costs. And he said shifting Walla Walla’s rehabilitation treatment to Spokane is what is on the plate, but not other services. One questioner pointed out Boise is closer to Union County than Spokane, so could Union County become part of veteran care out of Boise if changes in Walla Walla go through? That seemed to pique the interests of Boyd and Kelter. Boyd called the sugges- tion an “interesting thought” and worth looking over. Kelter said this fits with the AIR Commissioners looking at aligning service areas. Wyden at the end said de- tails will be forthcoming on the next two meetings, but his point in all this is making the government go the extra mile for veterans rather than mak- ing veterans go extra miles for their care. High-profile candidates try to break Democrat, GOP control tion rights, policing, climate change and much more, leav- SALEM — A former law- ing a lot of middle-ground op- maker in Oregon who as a portunities for independent young woman flew a and third-party can- helicopter around an didates. erupting Mount St. As of one year ago, Helens is aiming to 31% of registered vot- shake up state poli- ers identified them- tics by running as an selves as independents unaffiliated candidate or members of third for governor. parties in states that Betsy Johnson, allow them to indicate Johnson who served in both partisan affiliation on the Oregon Senate and House registration forms, according and who once belonged to — to an analysis by Ballotpedia. A and then quit — both the Re- total of 40% registered as Dem- publican and Democratic par- ocrats and 29% as Republicans ties, sees a path to victory with in those 31 states, Washing- the increasing polarization of ton, D.C. and the U.S. Virgin the two major parties. Islands. And so do candidates run- But when it comes to the ning as independents in ballot box, that slice of unaffil- major races in at least two iated/third-party voters hasn’t other states. translated into independents In California, Anne Ma- claiming many victories. rie Schubert, the Sacramento Trump’s election as president County district attorney whose in 2016 arguably widened the office led the prosecution of divide between liberals and the Golden State Killer, is run- conservatives. But that didn’t ning as an independent for cause large numbers of unaffil- state attorney general, having iated voters to abandon the two left the Republican Party in big parties in either the 2018 or 2018. She needs to survive Cal- 2020 elections in favor of alter- ifornia’s primary on Tuesday. native candidates, analysts say. The top two vote-getters move “What ends up happening on to the general election. with voters is they typically re- “I’ve been told a million spond to surveys or in focus times that I have to be a Re- groups, talking about how they publican or a Democrat to win want somebody outside of the the race for Attorney General. two parties, but then in prac- I’ll say it a million more times: tice they tend to vote and be- No I don’t,” Schubert tweeted have mostly like (Democratic confidently last month. or Republican) partisans,” said And in Utah, former CIA Jake Grumbach, an assistant case officer Evan McMullin is professor of political science at running as an independent in a the University of Washington. U.S. Senate race. Astonishingly, There are only two inde- Utah Democrats are backing pendents in the U.S. Senate, McMullin instead of one of Angus King, a former gov- their own in hopes of defeat- ernor of Maine who won a ing incumbent Sen. Mike Lee, landslide victory in 2012, and a Republican, in the decidedly Bernie Sanders of Vermont, red state. who was first elected to the Among Republican vot- Senate in 2006. Both caucus ers McMullin is wooing are with Democrats. those who don’t support for- Retired professional wres- mer President Donald Trump. tler Jesse Ventura’s winning run McMullin recently tweeted his as a Reform Party candidate opponent “aligns himself with for governor of Minnesota, in Donald Trump time and time 1998, is a distant memory. again. That includes work- Former radio personality ing behind the scenes to help Cory Hepola made a stab this overturn the 2020 election and year at following Ventura’s keep Donald Trump in power.” footsteps, as part of Andrew The Republican and Demo- Yang’s new Forward Party. cratic parties have dominated But Hepola dropped out of politics in America since the the Minnesota governor race 1850s. These days, they’ve on Wednesday, saying it is staked out sharply opposing “unlikely that 2022 will be the positions on gun control, abor- breakthrough year.” BY ANDREW SELSKY Associated Press Johnson, though, is betting on dissatisfaction among vot- ers to boost her run in Ore- gon. Her campaign war chest already tops $8.6 million, in- cluding $1.75 million from Nike co-founder Phil Knight. Her reported total was more than the Democratic and Re- publican candidates combined. Johnson has garnered endorse- ments from a former Demo- cratic governor and from a for- mer Republican U.S. senator. Under Oregon election rules, Johnson could start collecting signatures last Wednesday. Her campaign must deliver at least 23,744 registered voters’ signatures to the secretary of state’s of- fice by Aug. 16 to get her on the ballot. Johnson said the volunteers are “ready to hit the ground running.” “We have Betsy brigades in every county, and we will have chairpersons in those counties responsible for explaining the intricacies of signature gather- ing,” Johnson said. Paul Rummell, who tradi- tionally votes Democratic, is the Johnson chairperson in Clackamas County, near Port- land, and sees her as a “great counter-balance between the two ideologies.” “I’m looking for somebody that can help bridge the di- vide in our state,” said the 51-year-old, who works in the alternative fuels industry. “I think that, unfortunately, there’s a chasm ... between rural Oregon and the metro area. And I think that Betsy is the perfect example of a leader who can help lead the dialogue that needs to happen to repair that divide.” If she gets on the ballot, the 71-year-old will be running against Democratic nominee Tina Kotek, a former Oregon House speaker and a staunch liberal, and Republican nom- inee Christine Drazan, a for- mer House minority leader. Johnson, who wears huge eyeglasses and colorful scarves, used to run a helicop- ter company that helped fight forest fires and got aerial shots for movies. Her company also set up seismometers at Mount St. Helens. On the morning of May 18, 1980, her head me- chanic called to say the vol- cano was erupting. “I jumped in my car and drove like a bat out of hell ... jumped in a helicopter and we were flying that day,” Johnson said, recalling risky flights over lava flows. “We were out of our minds, in hindsight.” That maverick attitude is ev- ident in her stances on issues that are front-page news again because of recent horrific mass shootings and the pending U.S. Supreme Court decision on Roe v. Wade. To liberals who want more gun safety measures, she is unapologetically pro-gun rights. She sees even attempts to ban bump-stocks and high-capacity ammunition magazines as chipping away at Second Amendment rights on gun ownership. Kotek de- nounced Johnson’s stance, saying: “As the nation reels from one of the deadliest school shootings in history, Betsy continues to spout the talking points of the NRA.” To conservatives who want to ban or restrict abortions, Johnson is unapologetically in favor of a woman’s right to choose. Johnson is running against the odds — the last time an unaffiliated candidate was elected governor in Oregon was about 90 years ago. She could also be a spoiler for Democrats or Republicans, depending which candidate she draws votes away from. Kotek could be vulnerable if enough moderate Democrats and unaffiliated voters go for Johnson. While Oregon hasn’t elected a Republican gover- nor since 1982, Democrat Kate Brown — who’s now term-lim- ited — edged Republican Kn- ute Buehler by only 6% in the 2018 election. James Foster, professor emeritus of political science at Oregon State University-Cas- cades in Bend, expects Kotek to win. But he’s not ruling out a Johnson victory or a spoiler. Foster said if inflation contin- ues to soar, voters might be- come alienated from “status quo politicians,” giving John- son some traction. “A whole lot can happen be- tween now and November in this crazy upside-down world we’ve got,” Foster said. “My wife and I listened to a speech by Betsy Johnson. She’s one hell of an orator.” Kareen Harris Bybee/Contributed Photo Caitlyn Calaway of Baker City with one of the medals she has won while competing in swimming events at the Special Olympics USA Games in Orlando, Florida, from June 5-12, 2022. Calaway Continued from Page A1 She also competed in the 50- yard freestyle on Tuesday, June 7, and then was a mem- ber of Oregon’s relay team on Wednesday, June 8. “What they do is they have them swim a preliminary for a time that puts them into a division based on their times,” Kareen said. “And then they swim a final race in that division that then awards them medals and things like that.” Between races, Kareen said Caitlyn and the other athletes participate in team-building events, as well as visiting Dis- ney World. Kareen said Caitlyn has been beaming the entire time. Though she doesn’t see her daughter for more than two or three minutes after each race, they text often. An Independent Insurance Agency Associates Reed & Associates for for vice excellent service LOCALLY! 10106 N N. ‘C’ • Island City 541-975-1364 Toll Free 1-866-282-1925 www.reedinsurance.net ance.net “From what I’ve heard, her first day she was pretty ner- vous,” Kareen said. A lot of athletes were ner- vous to compete for the first time since COVID hit more two years ago. After the first rounds, they began to cheer up and Calaway was beam- ing. “When she swam her sec- ond round, she had her rac- ing stance on before she came up,” Kareen said. Caitlyn is the first Baker County resident to qualify for the Special Olympics in more than 20 years. “This is her first time getting to go and represent for nationals,” Kareen said in an interview last month. “It’s a big honor. She is very excited.” Caitlyn has been com- peting in Special Olympics since she was in junior high, and she’s been a competitive swimmer for about a decade. Your guide to arts and entertainment around Eastern Oregon Read more at GOEASTERNOREGON.COM Medicare, Auto, Home Insurance and Annuities