Business & AGLIFE The Observer & Baker City Herald B Thursday, December 1, 2022 State jobless rate rose to 4.1% Unemployment in Oregon increased in October even though state added 5,200 jobs BY KATE DAVIDSON Oregon Public Broadcasting SALEM — Oregon added 5,200 jobs in October, even as the state’s unemployment rate rose to 4.1% and economic fore- casters warned a mild recession is likely within the next year. The state jobless rate edged up from 3.8% in September, breaking 4% for the first time since the beginning of 2022. It’s now slightly higher than the national unemployment rate of 3.7%. “Despite the uptick in unem- ployment, it’s still really low by historical standards, at 4.1% in Oregon,” said state employment economist Gail Krumenauer in a recorded statement. Krumenauer noted that, af- ter a net job loss in September, hiring bounced back in Octo- ber. The unemployment rate is measured differently from the tally of jobs statewide. For sev- eral reasons, it’s possible for the jobless rate to rise even as more positions are filled. In fact, Oregon’s private sec- tor reached an all-time high of 1,682,300 jobs in October, ac- cording to the Oregon Employ- ment Department. That’s well above its pre-pandemic peak. Three sectors added more than 1,000 jobs each last month: financial activities; manufactur- ing; and health care and social assistance. Within the broad category of financial activities, employment gains in real estate and rental and leasing were par- ticularly robust, with 1,900 new jobs. Construction and leisure and hospitality businesses also added hundreds of jobs, with construction also reaching re- cord-high employment. Conversely, government and retail trade groups lost hun- dreds of jobs last month. State economic forecasters warned Wednesday, Nov. 16, that they expect a mild reces- sion to hit within the next year, causing the state unemploy- ment rate to peak at 5.4% in early 2024. Forecasters antic- ipate a loss of roughly 24,000 jobs, many of them in industries tied to construction and man- ufacturing. “A mild recession is now the most likely outcome for the economy,” state economists wrote in their quarterly forecast. It’s too soon to know how deeply layoffs in the tech indus- try could affect Oregon’s work- force. Intel, the state’s largest corporate employer, said last month it would undertake ag- gressive cost-cutting measures including targeted job cuts. Amazon, Twitter and Meta’s lay- off plans have rocked the tech world, but their impact is far more pronounced in Washing- ton. Meta and Twitter have laid off at least 900 Washington em- ployees so far. Josh Rindfleisch/Wallowa County Chieftain Dr. Nick West examines patient Bill Smergut during a visit at Winding Waters Medical Clinic on Monday, Nov. 21, 2022. An Imbler High School graduate, West is now on staff at the Wallowa County health center. Hanging his shingle Imbler graduate Dr. Nick West joins staff at Winding Waters Medical Clinic BY TRISH YERGES For The Observer ENTERPRISE — Dr. Nick West, a board certified family physician, is hanging his doctor’s shingle and taking new patients at Winding Waters Medical Clinic, Enterprise. West’s return to Northeastern Oregon is the fulfillment of a long- held dream to serve the health care needs of rural families and patients in his home territory. “Winding Waters is very happy to welcome Dr. West and his family to our team and our community, and we look forward to many years of serving our patients together,” Winding Waters Chief Executive Officer Nic Powers said. West is the son of Russ West, a retired judge, and Mary West, an Imbler schoolteacher. He grew up on the family’s cattle ranch north- east of Imbler and graduated from Imbler High School in 2009. He then attended Oregon State University, where in 2014 he earned a bachelor of science degree in bio-resource research with minors in toxicology and chemistry. He earned a doctorate in 2019 after which he and his wife, Alex, relo- cated to Klamath Falls, where he completed his three-year resi- dency in family medicine in June 2022 at OHSU Cascades East your newspaper nitive stimulation he receives while filling these roles. “It’s just been so much fun to be back practicing here and having the reception from patients, coworkers and colleagues,” he said. “In the last couple months I’ve been getting busier and busier.” It’s the enthusiasm Powers sees in West that makes him such a good fit for the job. “He’s of the community and un- derstands a lot about people from having grown up here,” Powers said. “Whereas if we had brought someone here from far away, they might not get it.” West said that he believes in the comprehensiveness of family med- icine at Winding Waters and the team approach that is utilized to solve a patient’s health problems. Being a rural health care system, the Wallowa County health center offers an integrated approach with wraparound services that conve- niently meet the needs of the indi- vidual patient or family. West will be seeing patients at the main clinic next to the hospi- tal, and he’ll also be on a rotating schedule at the clinics in Wallowa, Enterprise and Joseph. Generally, new patients have a short wait list, and after they are seen, patients have access to the county’s care provider portal. States take key role in fighting fake online reviews BY ELAINE S. POVICH Stateline.org Your guide to Eastern Oregon entertainmant weekly inside Family Medicine. medical school that he worked at “At Winding Waters, Dr. West Winding Waters for six months. joins a team of primary care profes- “I really fell in love with Wind- sionals providing care at clinics in ing Waters, and since I was already Enterprise, Joseph, very committed to “We are very excited rural family med- and Wallowa,” Powers said. icine, this experi- about his joining West will also ence kind of ce- Winding Waters, and mented that,” West take care of pa- tients through said. we’ve been working home visits, deliv- “Then in my on it for years,. We ering babies in the second year of res- hospital, and work- idency, I spent an- were aware of Nick ing shifts in the other five weeks at Wallowa County West when he was just Winding Waters. emergency de- It was at that point a medical student, partment and as that I signed the rotation hospital- and we knew he was contract to work at ist doing inpatient Waters.” interested in coming Winding rounds. Powers said West “We are very back to Northeastern is an asset to Wind- excited about his ing Waters because Oregon to take care joining Winding of his sharp apti- Waters, and we’ve of people. Happily, he tude for medicine been working on and his commit- reached out to us to do ment to Northeast- it for years,” Pow- ers said. “We were ern Oregon. He a clerkship.” aware of Nick West was willing to offer —Winding Waters, Chief when he was just “frontier medicine” Executive Officer Nic Powers in all of its deliver- a medical student, and we knew he ies, including mak- was interested in ing frequent home coming back to Northeastern Ore- visits, pulling shifts in the hospital gon to take care of people. Happily, ER, working as a hospitalist every he reached out to us to do a clerk- eight weeks and seeing patients at ship.” several clinics. It was during West’s third year of West said he thrives on the cog- WASHINGTON — With studies showing that at least three-quarters of online shop- pers check product and ser- vice reviews before they buy, the evaluations have become more important than ever in global commerce. But fake re- views upend the system. In the United States, state attorneys general and a key federal agency are leading efforts to crack down on false or manipulated reviews that can lead to purchases of shoddy products or services and sometimes leave little re- course for consumers. Still, efforts to address the problem pale in comparison to the number of fake reviews and the economic damage they cause, according to re- cent studies from the Center for Data Innovation and the World Economic Forum. About 4% of worldwide on- See Reviews / B2 Dreamstime via TNS The Federal Trade Commission and state attorneys general are leading efforts to crack down on fake prod- uct reviews.