A14 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 9, 2021 Mask burnings in Idaho are latest protest against virus restrictions BY THERESE BOTTOMLY The Oregonian COEUR D’ALENE, Idaho — More than a year into a pan- demic that has claimed 523,000 lives in the United States, right- wing protesters in Idaho, in- cluding a handful of elected officials, set protective masks aflame, claiming face coverings stifle their personal liberties. Although local, state and federal health officials are clear that masks are crucial in the fight against COVID-19, helping to prevent the disease from spreading, 70 adults and children — none wearing face coverings — stepped forward on a downtown street corner in Coeur d’Alene and dropped masks into a symbolic burn pot containing dry ice. “U.S.A, U.S.A,” they chanted. The protesters held mask-burnings Saturday in lo- cations across the state, where masks are strongly recom- mended but not required by Idaho Gov. Brad Little. At a gathering of more than 100 in the state capital, protesters tossed coverings into a flaming barrel and cheered at support- ive remarks by Lt. Gov. Janice McGeachin, a far-right militia supporter whose relations with Little, a fellow Republican, are strained. “If a woman can kill an un- born child and it’s her body and her choice, I can decide whether to wear a mask,” a man shouted at the rally in Coeur d’Alene, a hub of the conservative northern Idaho panhandle. The protesters appear to in- habit an alternate reality, one in which they claim that the coro- navirus is no more dangerous than the flu and that public health directives based on sci- ence are dictatorial. On Saturday, they planned burnings in two dozen Idaho cities, equating them to the Boston Tea Party despite the fact that tea dumped into the harbor by colonists to protest British taxes in 1773 did not, like masks, help protect others from a deadly disease. Experts on extremism say that dismiss- ing the rallies simply as antics of a fringe movement would be a mistake, much like over- looking signs of an imminent attack on the U.S. Capitol. “The denial of the reality of the pandemic and the denial of the legitimate results of the election are not too far apart from each other,” said Lindsay Schubiner, a program director at Western States Center, an or- ganization that tracks extrem- ist groups. “It’s hard to have a functioning democracy if we don’t live in the same shared reality, and that’s one reason why spreading conspiracy the- ories has been so damaging and such a useful tool for the far right.” The Portland organization had been monitoring activists planning Saturday’s rallies in private Facebook groups and other online forums that fall below the radar of everyday social media. Such groups in- clude People’s Rights, an orga- nization founded by Ammon Bundy, who led the 2016 occu- pation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, and Idaho G-416 Patriots, described as an anti-Muslim hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center. What the CDC says you can do once vaccinated BY LENA H. SUN AND LENNY BERNSTEIN The Washington Post Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com General Merchandise 204 Want to Buy or Rent 607 Rooms for Rent Wanted $ Cash paid for vintage, fake, & fine jew- elry. Top $ paid for Gold & Silver. I buy in bulk. Honest Artist. Elizabeth 541-633-7006 3 cute furnished bed- rooms for rent. Female owner, prefers female tenants. No smoking or drinking, Christian home. No children or pets allowed. La Pine, OR. $500-$800/month. Call Mary 541-977-6560. Looking to buy 25-foot travel trailer, in good condition. 458-600- 7845. Will pay cash. 210 Pets & Supplies Patrick Semansky/AP ple need to be vaccinated before everyone can stop following COVID-19 precautions. CDC will continue to update this initial guidance, perhaps loosening travel restrictions if new infections continue to de- crease as vaccinations increase, Walensky said. But with more than 90% of the population still unvaccinated and levels of vi- rus high, even those who have received the shots “might get breakthrough infections with lesser amounts of virus,” she said, referring to a fully vacci- nated person getting infected. For now, officials are con- tinuing to discourage travel be- cause “every time that there is a surge in travel, we have a surge in cases in this country,” Walen- sky said. “We know that many of our variants have emerged from international places, and we know that the travel corri- dor is a place where people are mixing a lot.” The guidance outlines sev- eral ways that fully vaccinated people can return to their old routines, although it is more general than what some people might have hoped for. It doesn’t explicitly say, for instance, whether vaccinated grandpar- ents can hug and kiss their un- vaccinated grandchildren, but appears to endorse such behav- ior by saying vaccinated peo- ple can safely gather indoors with those in one unvaccinated household without masks or physical distancing, as long as no one is at risk of severe dis- ease. A growing body of evidence suggests that fully vaccinated people are less likely to spread the virus to others, the CDC says. While some prevention measures continue to be nec- essary, the benefits of reducing social isolation “may outweigh the residual risk of fully vacci- nated people becoming ill with COVID-19” or transmitting the virus to others, the guidance says. In addition, relaxing certain measures for vaccinated people “may help improve COVID-19 vaccine acceptance and uptake,” CDC says. “Therefore, there are several activities that fully vac- cinated people can resume now, at low risk to themselves, while being mindful of the potential risk of transmitting the virus to others.” Small gatherings likely rep- resent minimal risk — with the safest situations being for the fully inoculated to get together with one another in private set- tings, such as a dinner among vaccinated friends in your home, the CDC says. But risk increases as gath- erings get larger, take place outside the home and include more unvaccinated people be- cause they may come from places with high rates of trans- mission. For the fully vaccinated, de- cisions about social interactions come down to how much risk they are willing to take. The level of caution people need to exercise should be de- termined by the characteristics of those who are unvaccinated, the CDC says. Unvaccinated people from a single household, or people living under one roof who are at low risk for severe COVID-19 disease, for in- stance, can visit with vaccinated people indoors without wearing masks, such as grandparents visiting their grandchildren. But if the unvaccinated neighbors stop by, the visit should take place outdoors or in a well-ven- tilated space, and everyone should mask because there is a higher risk of virus spread among them. If a fully vaccinated person visits with an unvaccinated friend who is 70, and therefore at risk of severe disease, the visit should also take place outdoors, with masks and physical dis- tancing, the guidance says. Vaccinated people should also continue to follow CDC’s travel recommendations, which include delaying travel while cases are extremely high. That means vaccinated grandparents are advised against flying to see their grandchildren. Grandpar- ents can visit with their unvac- cinated children and grandchil- dren “who are healthy and who are local,” Walensky said. And vaccinated people must still follow the same require- ments before, during and after domestic or international travel, including wearing masks. The CDC requires all international travelers to show proof that they had tested negative for the coronavirus before boarding flights to the United States. In public settings, vacci- nated people should continue to follow all public health pre- cautions, including wearing a well-fitted mask, physical dis- tancing and avoiding poorly ventilated spaces. The virus has been shown to spread in set- tings such as gyms and bars. The CDC said fully vac- cinated people who have been exposed to someone with suspected or confirmed COVID-19 do not have to quarantine or be tested if they remain without symptoms. But if the exposure takes place in certain crowded settings that increase the risk of spread, such as prisons and group homes, they must still quarantine for 14 days and get tested. Advocates for older people embraced guidance that loos- ens restrictions on social in- teraction. Many older people, especially those who live alone, they said, have spent the past year in virtual isolation, hun- kered down against a virus that mainly kills people over 65. “If the CDC is offering new ways for older people to con- nect more in a way that’s safe and healthy, this is really good news,” said Katie Smith Sloan, president and chief executive officer of LeadingAge, which represents 5,000 nonprofit orga- nizations that provide services to older people. “I think clarity is so important, and good com- munication around that. So we welcome this. It takes some of the mystery out of it.” Recreation & Sports 800 804 Motorhomes, 5th Wheels, Travel Trailers AKC Collie Puppies Excellent tempera- ments and blood- lines. $850 each. Call 503-860-6433 Golden Double Doodle Puppies born 12/28. Black/Apricot. Males $900 Females $1000. La Pine. (805)279-1105 213 Furniture & Appliances Oak table, with leaf, seats 6 people. Chairs included. $50. 714-315- 7174. 219 Antiques & Collectibles President Joe Biden, left, visits a COVID-19 vaccination site Monday and watches as Dr. Navjit Goraya gives a vaccine to Air Force Col. Margaret Cope. Rentals 200 600 2 RH Sorensen leather chairs for sale $950 for both (360)510-3153 F ederal health officials re- leased guidance Monday that gives fully vaccinated Americans more freedom to so- cialize and pursue routine daily activities, providing a pandem- ic-weary nation a first glimpse of what a new normal may look like in coming months. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said people who are two weeks past their final shot face little risk if they visit indoors with unvac- cinated members of a single household at low risk of severe disease, without wearing masks or distancing. That would free many vaccinated grandparents who live near their unvacci- nated children and grandchil- dren to gather for the first time in a year. The CDC also said fully vac- cinated people can gather in- doors with those who are also fully vaccinated. And they do not need to quarantine, or be tested after exposure to the coronavirus, if they have no symptoms. Peter Hotez, co-director of the Texas Children’s Center for Vaccine Development, wel- comed the advice, but said it has taken too long for the CDC to tell an exhausted public when their masks can come off. “The sooner we move to tell- ing people if you’re fully vacci- nated, you don’t have to wear masks, that will be an incentive for people to get vaccinated,” Hotez said. The five-page guidelines of- fer a road map of sorts to those who have made it through the rocky vaccine rollout to re- suming aspects of daily life that have been on hold for more than a year. They come as the government and public health officials are racing to vaccinate people as fast as possible to out- pace highly transmissible ver- sions of the virus spreading in the United States. Coronavirus cases have plateaued at a dan- gerously high level. After a slow start, the pace of inoculations is accelerating, with more than 60 million peo- ple in the United States having received one shot and nearly 31 million people now fully vaccinated, or about 9% of the population, according to CDC. President Joe Biden has vowed to have enough supply for every adult who wants a shot by late May, raising hopes of a return to normal life. CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said the recommen- dations sought to balance po- tential risk to those who are unvaccinated, and impacts on community transmission, against the benefit of “getting back to some of the things that we love in life” for those who are inoculated. She and others warned that millions more peo- C LASSIFIEDS The Bulletin WE BUY RV’S! LICENSED, BONDED AND INSURED. CALL FOR A FREE ESTI- MATE TODAY! 503-689-0669 Legal Notices 1000 1001 Legal Notices & Public Notices Buying Lionel/American Legal Notice Flyer Trains and acces. CROOK COUNTY, 541-408-2191 OREGON INVITA- TION TO SUBMIT PROPOSALS 270 Batterer’s Intervention Lost & Found and Prevention Pro- gram (BIP) Sheriff’s Office – Com- Found: Mens watch @ munity Corrections old mill dog park on Division Columbia. Very large, NOTICE IS HEREBY lots of buttons. Call GIVEN that Crook (541)389-9577 County, through its County Court, is 282 seeking a qualified contractor for the Community array of services as- sociated with Batter- er’s Intervention and Prevention Program services. Sealed proposals will be received until 4:00 p.m. Friday, April 2, 2021. Each proposal must be enclosed in In observance of the a sealed envelope, 20th anniversary of marked “Proposed 9/11, I am writing a book Crook County Bat- about the Flight for Free- terer’s Intervention dom, the trip 1,000 Or- and Prevention egonians made to New Program Treatment York City in October Provider,” and deliv- 2001 to support New ered on or before the Yorkers after 9/11. This deadline to Crook was an effort unequaled County Community by any other constituen- Corrections, 301 NE cy in the country. I am 3rd St., Prineville, trying to locate them so OR 97754, Attn: I can speak with them Lieutenant Brett and document their Lind. The bid open- memories. I can be ing will take place reached at this email at 4:05 p.m. on April address: sbourrie@veri- 2, 2021, at Crook zon.net. I’ve also started County Community a @FlightForFreedom- Corrections, 301 NE Book2021 Facebook 3rd St., Prineville, page. OR 97754. Final award will be an- nounced during Farm County Court at ap- proximately 10:00 Market a.m. on Wednesday, May 5, 2021. Complete bidding doc- uments and any ad- denda are available for download from the County’s website at http://co.crook. 404 or.us/rfps or from Hay, Grain, Feed Lieutenant Brett Lind, Community Corrections, 301 NE Horse Hay For Sale 3rd Street, Prineville, 75lb two tie orchard Oregon 97754; tele- grass. (541)604-1258 or phone: (541) 447- (541)-604-4795 3315; email: Brett. Lind@crookcoun- tysheriff.org, and is designated as the Employment person to whom all inquiries are to be di- rected regarding the RFP or requests of a faxed or hard copy of the RFP. Crook County re- serves the right to accept the bid and 501 award the contract Domestic & to the most respon- sive, responsible In-Home Positions bidder which is in the best interests of the La Pine OR female car County, to postpone owner needs driver to the acceptance of post office & Bend OR. bids received and Call Mary 541-977-6560 the award of the con- tract for a period not to exceed thirty (30) 504 days, or to reject any Employment Opportunities and all bids received and further advertise for bids. GreenSpace Recy- cling is seeking a Legal Notice self-motivated person IN THE CIRCUIT with a clean driving COURT FOR THE record to join our STATE OF ORE- team in Bend, OR. GON FOR THE COUNTY ***REQUIRED: the OF DESCHUTES ability to drive a man- ual transmission*** No. 20PB05682 In the Matter of the Visit our website at Estate of CAROL www.greenspacere- CHAPPELL De- cycling.com and click ceased. on the “Become A NOTICE TO INTER- Team Member” link ESTED PERSONS to apply. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN h h 400 500 1001 Legal Notices & Public Notices GIVEN that the un- dersigned has been appointed person- al representative. All persons having claims against the estate are required to present them, with vouchers attached, to the undersigned personal represen- tative c/o Lawrence W. Erwin, Attorney at Law, 221 NW Lafay- ette Avenue, Bend, OR 97703, within four months after the date of first publica- tion of this notice, or the claims may be barred. All persons whose rights may be affect- ed by the proceed- ings may obtain ad- ditional information from the records of the court, the per- sonal representative, or the attorney for the personal repre- sentative, Connie Smith. Dated and first pub- lished March 09, 2021. /s/ Connie Smith Personal Represen- tative Legal Notice NOTICE TO INTER- ESTED PERSONS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Doro- thy Roth under the Robert and Dorothy Roth Joint Trust, dated February 9, 2009, as amend- ed on February 4, 2020, has petitioned the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Deschutes, under Circuit Court Case No. 21PB01241 to determine the claims of the creditors of the trust settlor, Robert Rene Roth, who is now deceased. All claims against the trust estate must be present with vouchers attached, to Dorothy Roth, c/o Lisa Andrach, Fitch & Neary, P.C., 210 SW 5 th Street, Suite 2, Redmond, OR 97756, within four (4) months after the date of first publica- tion of this notice, or the claims may be barred. All persons whose rights may be affect- ed by the proceed- ings may obtain ad- ditional information from the records of the Court, the Trust- ee, or the Attorney for the Trustee. Dated and first pub- lished March 9, 2021. (Publish 3 times) ATTORNEY FOR TRUSTEE: Lisa Andrach 210 SW 5 th Street, Suite 2 Redmond, OR 97756 P: (541)316-1588 Legal Notice LEGAL NOTICE TO INTERESTED PER- SONS Donna M. Hines has been ap- pointed as Adminis- trator of the Estate of Emily Mabel Smith, Deceased, by the Deschutes County Circuit Court, State of Oregon, Case No. 20PB07305. All persons having claims against the estate must present the claims to the Administrator at C/O McCord & Hemphill, LLC, 65 NW Gree- ley Ave., Bend, OR 97703, within four months after Febru- ary 23, 2021 which is the date of first publication of this notice, or the claims may be barred. Ad- ditional information may be obtained from the Court, the Administrator, or the attorney for the Ad- ministrator: Brian T. Hemphill. Legal Notice NOTICE TO INTER- ESTED PERSONS Gary K. Lovegren has been appoint- ed Personal Rep- resentative (PR) of the estate of Jeffrey Randall May, de- ceased, by the Cir- cuit Court, State of Oregon, Deschutes County, Case No. 21PB00264. All per- sons having claims against the estate are required to present them, with vouchers attached, to the PR at 204 SE Miller Ave, Bend, OR 97702, within four months after the date of March 2, 2021, the first publi- cation of this notice, or the claim may be barred. Additional information may be obtained from the records of the court, the PR, or the lawyer for the PR, Patricia Nelson. Add your web address to your ad and readers on BendBulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.