THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 2021 A7 Vaccine Continued from A1 Brown said she welcomed Biden’s “audacious announce- ment.” “I will do everything I can to make it happen,” Brown said. Oregon’s current staggered priority groups wouldn’t match Biden’s deadline until July 1. States have the central au- thority over public health, and Brown said the present plan would stay in place until there was a guaranteed supply be- fore she would unleash addi- tional demand onto the already strained system. Oregon officials were only recently told they would re- ceive 200,000 doses per month, up from the previous 120,000 doses. Asked how much more vac- cine Oregon would need to meet Biden’s schedule, Ore- gon Health Authority Direc- tor Patrick Allen said it would “require a doubling of those doses.” “It would need to be an in- crease on that kind of order of magnitude,” Allen said. “Maybe 300,000.” Part of the math problem has to do with the vaccines themselves. Until recently, Or- egon was only receiving the Pfizer and Modern vaccines, each of which requires two shots given about a month apart. The state has received the initial shipments of a new vac- cine from Johnson & Johnson that requires a single shot. Brown and Allen both said their caution came from not wanting to set off the kind of policy whiplash that hit Orego- nians in mid-January. When the Trump adminis- tration announced the imme- diate release of a large stockpile of additional doses, Brown dropped her carefully crafted priority tier policy. She an- nounced everyone in Oregon age 65 and over would be eligi- ble for shots. Trump officials said within 48 hours that there was no stockpile of new doses. “This is a deception on a na- tional scale,” Brown said at the time. The governor had to reverse herself and put eligibility re- strictions back in place. Biden said Thursday that he wanted the nation far enough along in its vaccination pro- gram to allow for small cele- brations of July 4. Horses Continued from A1 McCarl insisted several times that the horses were fine, even when confronted with graphic evidence of alleged neglect. McCarl was arraigned in January on two counts of fel- ony animal neglect. On Thurs- day, she appeared in court for a settlement conference and is due back again in late April. It’s not the first time Mc- Carl has been accused of ne- glecting her horses. In 2001, Lane County officials charged her with six counts of misde- meanor animal neglect. She pleaded guilty to three of the charges and was sentenced to three years probation. In March, neighbors on SE Pony Springs Road east of Prineville began contacting au- thorities to report two horses in the area looked unhealthy and were clearly not being fed. Police learned the horses be- longed to McCarl, though the property was not hers, and she had recently had a falling-out with the property owner, ac- cording to court records. One horse was a 24-year-old gray and black gelding named Tops, whose hips and ribs were prominently showing, according to police. The other was a white and brown pinto named Gracie, about 10 years old, who was diabetic, suffered persistent problems associated with a club foot and bore a deep and infected cut on one of her legs from getting tangled in barbed wire. Veterinary treatment for Gracie would cost around $4,000, according to Kate Beardsley, founder of the Bend-based nonprofit Mus- tangs to the Rescue, who also received calls regarding the horses, court records state. Beardsley called McCarl and learned she didn’t want her horses going to a rescue group, “If we all do our part, this country will be vaccinated soon, our economy will be on the mend, our kids will be back in school, and we’ll have proven once again that this country can do anything,” Biden said. Though Oregon officials have a much higher level of confidence in Biden’s stream- lined transport system and in- creased manufacturing of vac- cine, Allen said supply needed to be on the way first. “We know the previous ad- ministration made previous announcements it was unable to fill,” Allen said. Oregon is currently limiting shots to health workers, resi- dents of nursing homes, educa- tors and day care workers, and most recently, all residents age 65 and older as of March 1. The next eligible group can seek shots March 29. It’s a long list that includes adults age 45 and older with specific med- ical issues, agricultural and other food processing workers, homeless people, residents of low-income housing, those dis- placed by last year’s wildfires and wildland firefighters. Pregnant women age 16 and over were recently added to the group. OHA has not been able to give estimates on how many people will become eligible on March 29. May 1 — the date that Biden wants eligibility to be offered to all adults nationwide — is cur- rently listed as adding front- line workers — those who deal daily with the public — those living in multigenerational households, and those age 16- 44 with certain medical con- ditions. Brown’s plan calls for every- one age 45 and older to be el- igible on June 1. On July 1, all adults would be able to seek shots. Allen said the vaccination effort involving seniors was go- ing well statewide, though he noted some counties — such as Deschutes — were ahead of the goal to have 75% of eligible seniors inoculated, while other counties lagged behind. Rep. Cliff Bentz, R-Ontario, joined all House Republicans in opposing the bill, saying it was too expensive and in- cluded too much nonpan- demic related spending. The rest of Oregon’s congressional delegation — all Democrats — supported the bill. e e gwarner@eomediagroup.com though she didn’t have the means to care for them herself. Beardsley explained to McCarl the severity of Gracie’s condi- tion but McCarl “minimized” it and insisted she’d never give up Tops and Gracie, Beardsley told police. Crook County Sheriff’s Of- fice deputy Jacob Koski warned McCarl her conduct was enter- ing criminal territory. “I explained to Richele that her horses needed to be fed and watered daily and that it had to happen today,” Koski wrote in a court document. McCarl removed the horses from the property but in late October, Beardsley called po- lice to say she’d again been hearing McCarl’s horses were being neglected. Sheriff’s deputies next con- tacted Dennis Frisby, a prop- erty owner on SE Combs Flat Road, where Tops and Gracie were found. Frisby told dep- uties that McCarl’s boyfriend had knocked on his door one night that summer asking Frisby if he could pasture two horses on a small, dirt-covered patch of land on Frisby’s prop- erty for “two weeks” while they were moving house. But after two months, it was clear the couple had no inten- tion of returning for the horses, Frisby told deputies. Frisby had tracked down the boyfriend and learned he and McCarl had broken up. Frisby told deputies he called McCarl nu- merous times to get her to pick up her horses. He’d tell her, “I don’t want to wake up and find a dead horse,” to which she’d typically reply: “I’m trying,” court docu- ments state. Tops and Gracie were seized and earlier this year, a judge approved a forfeiture order, though McCarl fought it in court. e e Reporter: 541-383-0325, gandrews@bendbulletin.com Climate Continued from A1 “Some of the climate model projections show that the snowpack will become more variable, and will lessen, even as precipitation amounts stay the same, but there will be more rainfall instead of snow,” explained O’Neill. In his talk, O’Neill will ex- plain how the changing cli- mate could affect this area’s outdoor recreation potential, as less snow and higher snow- lines will diminish the snow quality and season length at Hoodoo and Mt. Bachelor. Climate change could also bring an increase in invasive species, such as cheatgrass, in Central Oregon, and impact nesting bird habitats. There’s the human impact too, in- cluding an increased risk for wildfire and inconsistent flow of water for irrigators. “That will put more stress on agriculture. There won’t that spring run-off, and the climate is just going to be warmer,” said O’Neill. O’Neill’s knowledge of cli- mate change is the culmi- nation of years of study and research in California and Or- egon. He studied atmospheric science at UC Davis and then earned a master’s degree in Oceanography from Oregon State University. It was at OSU where he focused his research on how the ocean and the weather interacted with each other. “Ocean temps and currents affect weather. And lower fre- quency variability in the at- mosphere impacts the ocean,” said O’Neill. “I used models and satellite observations to study that. I continued to this day studying how the earth’s climate is impacted by the in- teraction between the ocean and the weather.” His interest in the weather from an early age comes from growing up near Rapid City, Oregon State University/Submitted photo Larry O’Neill is an associate professor in the Oregon State University College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmo- spheric Sciences. South Dakota, where his fa- ther worked as a foreman at a cement plant. As a kid, he was fasci- nated by the variable Mid- west weather. In summer he watched the thunderstorms and the occasional tornado. In winter it was blizzards and cold snaps that sent the mer- cury into rapid retreat. “Especially in spring and fall, we’d get these huge changes in temperature,” said O’Neill. It would be beautiful and 70 de- grees and then the next day it would be 50 degrees and snow- ing, that was just infinitely fas- cinating to me.” O’Neill’s family moved from South Dakota to Sacra- mento when he 13. It wasn’t the easiest of transitions. “Everyone was more so- phisticated and we were like these country bumpkins. We didn’t dress or talk right. It was a rough age to move there,” he said. But O’Neill soon found his own way. He volunteered at a local TV station, helping out the station’s weatherman a few days a week. “The forecasts weren’t very good so he had to make ad- justments or do his own thing, so sometimes I would have to add up numbers and do some basic calculations,” said O’Neill. That led to an eye-opening four years at UC Davis, where his interest in oceanography blossomed. He considered at one point relocating to a trop- ical beach and setting up in- struments in the sand to mea- sure the ocean’s impacts. “I quickly realized that most of (the work) is in front of a computer, involving satellite data and model data,” said O’Neill. “Occasionally I do get to go out and see and collect data from instruments that I employ.” O’Neill’s most recent focus is on precipitation and drought variability over the Pacific Northwest, and how that im- pacts people and business sec- tors — work he does when he is wearing his state climatologist hat. Every two years that role requires him to issue an Ore- gon climate assessment. He also receives grants from NASA to conduct weather and ocean monitoring work. In October he will board a 200-foot ship and spend three weeks off the coast of San Francisco conducting research and experiments, specifically on surface currents. The work includes launching radio- sonde balloons and testing new equipment. At Oregon State this past fall he taught a graduate-level class on Fluid Earth, an in- troductory class on ocean- ography, weather, and cli- mate. This winter semester he taught satellite oceanography, teaching students how sat- ellites measure the tempera- ture of the ocean, winds, and ocean color. Doing instrumentation on a tropical beach still sounds alluring but Oregon — with all its snow, wind, rain, and temperature changes — has become his passion. “I love the PNW now. I like the rainy season now,” said O’Neill. “The first season I was here it was a shock to the sys- tem after moving from Cali- fornia but after that, I became fine with it. I started skiing, got some waterproof clothes for hiking, and learned how to adapt. Now that I am doing drought monitoring work I re- ally appreciate the rain!” The March 16 Science Pub talk with Larry O’Neill is scheduled for 6 to 7:30 p.m. Interested individuals can sign up for the talk through the OSU-Cascades website. From the campus’ main page (osucascades.edu), click on “for the community” and then “science pubs.” e e Reporter: 541-617-7818, mkohn@bendbulletin.com