A2 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 2021 The Bulletin How to reach us CIRCULATION Didn’t receive your paper? Start or stop subscription? 541-385-5800 PHONE HOURS 6 a.m.-noon Tuesday-Friday 7 a.m.-noon Saturday-Sunday and holidays GENERAL INFORMATION 541-382-1811 LOCAL, STATE & REGION DESCHUTES COUNTY Deschutes County cases: 6,244 (21 new cases) Deschutes County deaths: 70 (zero new deaths) Crook County cases: 799 (1 new case) Crook County deaths: 18 (zero new deaths) Jefferson County cases: 2,005 (zero new cases) Jefferson County deaths: 31 (zero new deaths) Oregon cases: 162,806 (422 new cases) Oregon deaths: 2,370 (2 new death) COVID-19 patients hospitalized at St. Charles Bend on Thursday: 1 in ICU 130 (Dec. 4) What is COVID-19? It’s an infection caused by a new coronavirus. Symptoms (including fever, coughing and shortness of breath) can be severe. While some cases are mild, the disease can be fatal. 108 new cases 120 (Jan. 1) 90 new cases 7 ways to help limit its spread: 1. Wash hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds. 2. Avoid touching your face. 3. Avoid close contact with sick people. 4. Stay home. 5. In public, stay 6 feet from others and wear a cloth face covering or mask. 6. Cover a cough or sneeze with a tissue or cough into your elbow. 7. Clean and disinfect frequently touched objects and surfaces. 110 *No data available on Jan. 31 due to state computer maintenence (Nov. 27) 50 new cases 90 70 60 (Feb. 17) 50 (Nov. 14) 7-day average 28 new cases (July 16) 40 31 new cases (Oct. 31) 30 16 new cases (Sept. 19) 20 (May 20) 1st case 100 80 47 new cases 9 new cases ONLINE BULLETIN GRAPHIC 129 new cases COVID-19 data for Thursday, March 25: 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri. www.bendbulletin.com SOURCES: OREGON HEALTH AUTHORITY, DESCHUTES COUNTY HEALTH SERVICES New COVID-19 cases per day 10 (March 11) EMAIL bulletin@bendbulletin.com March 2020 April May June July August September October November December January 2021 February March AFTER HOURS Newsroom ................................541-383-0348 Circulation ................................541-385-5800 NEWSROOM EMAIL Business ........business@bendbulletin.com City Desk .............news@bendbulletin.com Features.................................................................. communitylife@bendbulletin.com Sports ................. sports@bendbulletin.com NEWSROOM FAX 541-385-5804 OUR ADDRESS Street .............. 320 SW Upper Terrace Drive Suite 200 Bend, OR 97702 Mailing ........... P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 SAN FRANCISCO — The endangered California con- dor could return to the Pacific Northwest for the first time in 100 years. The U.S. Fish and Wild- life Service plans to allow the release of captive-bred giant vultures into Redwood Na- tional Park as early as this fall to create a “nonessential exper- imental population” for Cali- fornia’s far north, Oregon and northwestern Nevada, the San Francisco Chronicle reported Wednesday. Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP San Francisco Chronicle A California condor takes flight in 2017 in the Ventana Wilderness east of Big Sur, California. B California condor could return to Northwest The project will be headed by the Yurok Tribe, which tra- ditionally has considered the California condor a sacred an- imal and has been working for years to return the species to the tribe’s ancestral territory. “Certainly within a year, we hope to have birds in the sky,” Tiana Williams-Claussen, di- rector of the wildlife depart- ment of the Yurok Tribe, told the Chronicle. The California condor is the largest native North American bird, with a wingspan of nearly 10 feet . The scavenger was once widespread but had vir- tually disappeared by the 1970s because of poaching, lead poi- soning from eating animals killed by hunters and destruc- tion of its habitat. The Oregon Zoo operates a California condor breeding program at the Jonsson Center for Wildlife Conservation in rural Clackamas County. The new initiative calls for releasing four or six juvenile condors each year for 20 years throughout Redwood National Park, which is about an hour’s drive from the Oregon border. ADMINISTRATION Publisher Heidi Wright ..............................541-383-0341 Editor Gerry O’Brien .............................541-633-2166 DEPARTMENT HEADS Advertising Steve Rosen ................................541-383-0370 Circulation/Operations Jeremy Feldman ......................541-617-7830 Finance Anthony Georger ....................541-383-0324 Human Resources ................541-383-0340 TALK TO AN EDITOR City Julie Johnson ...................541-383-0367 Business, Features, GO! 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Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Phone ......................................... 541-617-7829 CORRECTIONS The Bulletin’s primary concern is that all stories are accurate. If you know of an error in a story, call us at 541-383-0367. TO SUBSCRIBE Call us ......................541-385-5800 • Home delivery and E-Edition ..........................$7 per week • By mail .................................$9.50 per week • E-Edition only ...................$4.50 per week To sign up for our e-Editions, visit www.bendbulletin.com to register. TO PLACE AN AD Classified ......................................541-385-5809 Advertising fax ..........................541-385-5802 Other information ....................541-382-1811 OBITUARIES No death notices or obituaries are published Mondays. When submitting, please include your name, address and contact number. 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They may not be reproduced without explicit prior approval. Oregon Health Authority is monitoring 4 for Ebola BY GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau Four people in Oregon are being monitored by the Ore- gon Health Authority for pos- sible exposure to the deadly Ebola virus, state officials said Thursday morning. The four — whose identi- ties, nationalities or current locations have not been dis- closed — have not tested pos- itive for the virus or shown symptoms, said Dr. Richard Leman, an infectious disease expert with the Oregon Health Authority. “There is low risk for peo- ple in Oregon,” OHA said in a statement. OHA said it is following a public health protocol to in- form state residents when someone who has been in an area with a outbreak of a ma- jor virus comes to or returns to Oregon. While Ebola and COVID-19 are viral infections, they differ in how they spread and their deadliness. COVID-19 can spread rap- idly through droplets in the breath of an infected person. The World Health Organiza- tion reports COVID-19 has a worldwide mortality rate of about 3.4% of all those in- fected. The nearly 2.75 million COVID-19 deaths worldwide are because of the rapid spread that has caused 125 million in- fections . Ebola is spread through the blood or body fluids of an in- fected person exhibiting symp- toms. That limits the spread of the virus, but it is far deadlier — an estimated 50% of those infected die. Medical workers and staff Ebola is spread through the blood or body fluids of an infected person exhibiting symptoms. That limits the spread of the virus, but it is far deadlier — an estimated 50% of those infected die. Medical workers and staff treating those with Ebola are particularly at risk and can become ill from patients, as well as from the vomit, feces or belongings of those infected. treating those with Ebola are particularly at risk and can become ill from patients, as well as from the vomit, feces or belongings of those in- fected. Ebola can be spread through sex with an infected person. Infections have also been re- ported during the handling of Ebola victims’ corpses for burial and transmission through the breast milk of in- fected mothers. Unlike COVID-19, someone who is asymptomatic of Ebola cannot spread the Ebola virus. Leman said health authori- ties need to balance the level of possible threat to the general public vs. the privacy of the in- dividual who has been in an outbreak zone but not shown any symptoms. Releasing more informa- tion could generate unfounded fears about the person or their location, which Lehman said would keep people from self-reporting their presence in the regions and staying in touch with public health au- thorities. “It’s really a double-edged sword,” Leman said. Oregon has gone through the Ebola reporting protocols in 2014, 2015 and 2019, Leh- man said. No one in Oregon has be- come infected with Ebola during the prior periods. The current alert came after the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention an- nounced a new outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Guinea. Lehman said people who travel between Oregon and the two countries could include medical teams going to Africa to aid in disease prevention, religious missionaries, visitors from the countries or residents of Oregon who are from the countries and are returning home. Though OHA would not say where in Oregon the people are located, their whereabouts are known and local public health officials are being in- cluded in potential response or care. Lehman said Ebola usually has an incubation period of between two and 21 days and that the four being monitored are believed to be near the end of that period. When symptoms do arise, they come on rapidly. “It hits you like a ton of bricks,” Leman said. “A fever, very high, muscle aches, and chills.” gwarner@eomediagroup.com A S ENIOR M OMENT Senior Living Solutions A Senior Moment is committed to personally assisting you with fi nding the right community to meet your needs at no cost to you! • Retirement living • Foster care • Memory/Alzheimer’s care • Nursing homes • Independent living • Assisted living Nancy Gotchy, 541-408-0570 | Tiffany Plagmann, 541-788-3487 www.aseniormoment.us We are 100% local, independent and not affi liated with any single provider network. LOCAL BRIEFING Boys & Girls Clubs plan ‘90s-themed fundraiser Cue up your Smashing Pumpkins CD and pull your old flannel and Doc Martens out of the closet: Boys & Girls Clubs of Bend are holding a ’90s fundraising party. On May 8, the Bend branch of the national youth-focused nonprofit will host “House Party,” a virtual fundraiser themed around the ’90s, according to a Boys & Girls Clubs press release. Activities include an on- line auction, a raffle, trivia, a throwback photo contest and gift bags with ‘90s gear, the release stated. Register for the event at bgcbend.org/houseparty. More than $13,000 worth of tools stolen in Sisters More than $13,000 in equipment was stolen from the Sisters Rental equipment store Wednesday night, and Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office deputies are searching for two men. Deputies went to the site of the burglary Thursday morning and were told two men broke through the store’s glass door and stole chain saws and a concrete saw, ac- cording to a sheriff’s office news release. The news release said au- thorities are looking for two Latino men in their late 20s to early 30s, and states that the pair allegedly drove a newer white Honda Civic with unknown license plates to the scene. The two men wore masks during the bur- glary, the release states. If you have information about the burglary, deputies are encouraging the public to call the sheriff’s office at 541 - 693-6911. — Bulletin staff reports We hear you. We’re dedicated to helping you! Contact your local DISH Authorized Retailer today! Juniper Satellite 410 3474 410 3474 (541) 410-3474 410 3474 410 3474 635 SW Highland Ave., Redmond, OR junipersatellite.com