A10 The BulleTin • Monday, april 12, 2021 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY TUESDAY TONIGHT HIGH 57° LOW 31° Plenty of sunshine Abundant sunshine ALMANAC FRIDAY 58° 30° Intervals of clouds and sunshine Sunshine Yesterday Normal Record 54° 56° 80° in 1978 30° 30° 16° in 1905 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.66" in 1926 Month to date (normal) 0.00" (0.27") Year to date (normal) 1.18" (3.62") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30.15" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Today Tue. 6:27am/7:46pm 6:25am/7:47pm 7:02am/8:34pm 7:24am/9:36pm 6:20am/7:06pm 6:20am/7:13pm 6:43am/8:06pm 6:42am/8:08pm 9:23am/1:03am 9:22am/1:02am 4:24am/2:41pm 4:20am/2:38pm 3:49am/1:32pm 3:45am/1:29pm 7:09am/9:11pm 7:05am/9:07pm Full Last New Apr 19 Apr 26 May 3 May 11 Tonight's sky: Auriga, the charioteer, drives across the western evening sky this month. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 6 6 4 The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index ™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. ROAD CONDITONS For web cameras of our passes, go to www.bendbulletin.com/webcams I-84 at Cabbage Hill: Mostly sunny today. Overcast evening, then partly cloudy. US 20 at Santiam Pass: Plenty of sunshine today. Mainly clear tonight. US 26 at Gov't Camp: Plenty of sunshine today. Clear tonight. US 26 at Ochoco Divide: Plenty of sun today. Partly cloudy and cold tonight. ORE 58 at Willamette Pass: Plenty of sun today. Clear to partly cloudy tonight. Sunshine Tuesday. ORE 138 at Diamond Lake: Plenty of sunshine today. Mainly clear tonight. SKI REPORT 67° 33° Mostly sunny, pleasant and warmer EAST: Partly to mostly sunny across the re- gion. Mainly clear and chilly tonight. Mostly sunny on Tuesday. Astoria 62/42 Warm with periods of clouds and sunshine Hood River NATIONAL WEATHER -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s Base 80-80 0-95 42-62 92-111 0-205 66-91 0-189 0-45 46-66 45-75 0-100 45-53 38-69 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Rain Showers Snow Flurries Ice Warm Front Stationary Front Cold Front Source: OnTheSnow.com Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 93/49/0.00 Akron 63/56/0.63 Albany 70/51/0.02 Albuquerque 78/39/0.00 Anchorage 30/14/Tr Atlanta 75/57/0.01 Atlantic City 60/51/0.47 Austin 87/38/0.00 Baltimore 81/59/0.54 Billings 46/29/0.09 Birmingham 75/52/0.00 Bismarck 47/35/0.25 Boise 52/29/0.00 Boston 49/47/0.00 Bridgeport, CT 53/50/0.11 Buffalo 67/60/0.69 Burlington, VT 72/47/0.01 Caribou, ME 57/28/0.00 Charleston, SC 77/61/0.00 Charlotte 76/59/0.12 Chattanooga 75/56/0.00 Cheyenne 47/27/0.00 Chicago 56/45/Tr Cincinnati 52/50/0.08 Cleveland 63/57/0.45 Colorado Springs 65/35/0.00 Columbia, MO 71/46/0.15 Columbia, SC 79/56/Tr Columbus, GA 79/57/0.04 Columbus, OH 58/51/0.28 Concord, NH 61/47/0.00 Corpus Christi 82/57/0.00 Dallas 87/49/Tr Dayton 53/50/0.25 Denver 56/41/0.00 Des Moines 64/39/0.02 Detroit 59/51/0.56 Duluth 45/39/0.34 El Paso 86/59/0.00 Fairbanks 35/8/0.00 Fargo 59/30/0.00 Flagstaff 67/26/Tr Grand Rapids 61/46/0.65 Green Bay 57/46/0.58 Greensboro 75/60/0.13 Harrisburg 73/56/0.64 Hartford, CT 65/51/0.01 Helena 40/29/Tr Honolulu 79/64/0.07 Houston 88/51/0.00 Huntsville 72/47/Tr Indianapolis 52/47/0.20 Jackson, MS 78/48/0.00 Jacksonville 70/57/0.97 Today Hi/Lo/W 76/50/pc 59/45/c 53/39/r 74/45/pc 38/30/c 81/58/s 52/46/sh 86/61/c 62/47/sh 42/24/pc 82/56/s 37/20/sn 57/35/s 48/42/sh 51/43/r 58/45/sh 62/44/c 53/38/c 83/59/s 80/53/s 81/54/s 39/21/pc 62/42/pc 65/44/pc 60/46/sh 52/30/pc 63/43/pc 83/54/s 83/55/s 62/44/pc 52/38/sh 83/72/pc 81/56/t 62/42/pc 51/29/pc 60/35/pc 63/43/sh 42/31/sh 86/57/c 41/22/pc 39/23/sn 66/35/pc 59/39/c 54/38/sh 76/52/s 58/47/c 53/40/c 44/24/pc 81/68/pc 86/69/pc 81/54/s 65/43/pc 85/55/pc 83/56/s Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Beirut Berlin Bogota Budapest Buenos Aires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary Cancun Dublin Edinburgh Geneva Harare Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg Lima Lisbon London Madrid Manila 46/34/pc 66/52/s 74/63/r 82/58/pc 93/80/sh 69/49/pc 62/51/sh 47/33/c 67/50/c 68/41/pc 71/59/s 80/63/s 73/51/s 38/22/pc 88/78/pc 46/34/sh 49/27/pc 48/34/r 81/55/s 81/73/pc 54/44/pc 59/46/s 81/55/s 72/64/pc 68/55/c 48/32/pc 62/39/s 94/79/pc Tuesday Hi/Lo/W 64/51/t 65/45/pc 61/44/pc 71/46/pc 41/34/pc 82/60/pc 57/47/pc 74/62/t 63/48/c 36/20/c 83/58/pc 32/21/c 60/33/c 52/44/pc 58/45/pc 57/42/pc 63/46/pc 53/31/c 82/58/s 78/53/pc 78/54/pc 35/23/sn 58/37/pc 67/47/pc 64/45/s 43/31/c 61/42/pc 81/55/s 86/58/pc 66/47/pc 61/41/pc 84/74/r 73/55/t 65/45/pc 45/31/c 54/32/c 64/41/pc 38/31/c 85/56/pc 41/26/pc 34/27/sn 61/37/s 56/35/c 49/32/c 75/51/pc 63/47/pc 61/43/pc 41/24/c 81/69/pc 83/69/t 78/55/pc 64/43/s 80/60/t 84/60/pc City Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, WI Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa Fe Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfi eld, MO Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington, DC Wichita Yakima Yuma Yesterday Hi/Lo/Prec. 37/22/Tr 76/40/0.00 60/49/0.38 87/62/0.00 55/48/0.03 70/29/0.00 80/46/0.00 74/58/0.00 59/55/0.15 56/48/0.61 74/50/0.00 91/72/0.61 56/42/0.37 55/42/0.00 73/50/0.00 81/67/0.00 57/54/0.43 58/52/0.92 81/64/0.21 82/37/0.00 69/34/0.00 70/63/1.40 95/66/Tr 52/45/0.27 69/56/0.82 93/65/0.00 66/58/0.43 50/43/0.00 54/53/0.07 79/61/0.21 50/36/0.01 68/41/0.00 80/57/0.11 62/58/1.04 84/44/0.00 69/49/0.20 54/40/0.00 90/53/0.00 67/57/Tr 68/48/0.00 73/43/0.00 75/36/0.00 74/57/0.00 54/35/0.01 64/29/0.00 49/23/0.00 75/40/0.00 76/67/2.14 91/58/0.00 84/42/0.00 79/61/0.19 83/37/0.00 56/22/Tr 93/66/0.00 Today Hi/Lo/W 39/37/r 62/38/c 62/40/sh 87/62/pc 66/45/s 61/31/s 82/55/pc 72/57/pc 71/50/pc 56/37/c 81/58/pc 86/67/t 60/41/c 49/33/sh 79/53/s 83/66/pc 50/45/r 50/45/r 72/52/s 64/46/c 60/34/s 84/59/pc 93/62/s 62/39/pc 53/46/sh 91/65/s 60/46/sh 50/42/c 51/41/c 77/53/s 45/24/s 66/39/s 72/50/s 53/43/sh 82/49/s 67/46/pc 57/39/s 90/66/c 66/59/pc 67/51/pc 73/48/pc 71/38/pc 84/59/s 60/40/s 53/29/pc 52/34/s 64/46/pc 84/63/pc 89/58/s 66/50/c 65/50/pc 63/40/c 61/40/s 90/59/s Tuesday Hi/Lo/W 42/39/r 60/38/pc 59/35/pc 85/56/s 66/48/c 58/30/pc 69/50/pc 66/55/sh 69/52/pc 50/32/c 73/54/c 84/67/s 54/36/pc 40/32/c 71/53/c 77/69/r 62/50/pc 63/49/pc 62/47/c 64/44/c 56/31/pc 88/64/pc 87/56/s 59/38/s 62/48/pc 88/62/s 66/46/pc 56/40/pc 56/43/pc 75/51/pc 42/19/pc 56/36/pc 69/47/c 59/41/pc 76/47/s 64/45/pc 57/40/c 79/66/t 64/56/sh 62/51/pc 67/46/pc 63/38/c 83/59/pc 64/41/s 44/25/pc 53/35/s 59/42/pc 87/68/pc 87/55/pc 64/46/c 65/51/c 60/40/c 62/38/s 88/51/s 96/72/0.00 85/59/0.00 64/45/Tr 63/39/0.00 77/59/0.01 84/72/0.00 99/68/0.00 68/41/0.00 45/21/0.10 68/46/0.00 45/41/0.16 88/70/0.00 63/52/0.26 82/44/0.00 82/66/0.00 63/32/0.00 70/41/0.02 64/57/1.33 91/79/0.12 48/27/0.46 64/53/0.00 83/64/0.03 65/55/0.00 62/49/0.00 63/55/0.41 48/32/0.00 65/45/0.00 68/43/0.06 94/69/s 80/59/s 59/44/c 62/48/c 77/60/pc 82/68/t 101/72/pc 74/57/pc 40/34/pc 60/43/sh 52/34/pc 91/75/s 59/48/r 84/51/s 82/64/s 60/43/pc 61/51/sh 65/57/sh 88/77/sh 46/33/r 67/53/s 84/68/s 66/55/pc 65/57/pc 51/44/sh 56/41/s 64/36/pc 62/37/c 93/69/s 79/57/pc 62/43/s 71/51/pc 77/61/r 82/68/s 102/76/pc 67/59/r 44/25/s 60/44/pc 53/33/pc 79/72/t 59/40/r 86/50/s 68/60/t 55/38/sh 62/38/s 70/51/pc 89/77/t 44/28/s 71/56/s 87/69/r 68/55/s 65/61/c 56/41/sh 57/41/s 40/36/r 44/36/r INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 101° at Death Valley, CA National low: 8° at Daniel, WY Precipitation: 2.52" at Crystal River, FL T-storms Partly sunny NATIONAL Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 53/30/0.00 62/42/s 64/41/s La Grande 48/24/0.02 55/29/s 56/28/s Portland 60/32/0.00 67/42/s 69/41/s Baker City 48/21/0.00 55/26/s 56/25/pc La Pine 51/28/0.00 55/27/s 48/27/s Prineville 52/27/0.00 61/29/s 48/30/s Brookings 68/39/0.00 62/46/s 64/47/s Medford 68/32/0.00 74/38/s 69/37/s Redmond 53/30/Tr 58/27/s 56/27/s Newport 50/32/0.00 59/44/s 61/45/s Roseburg 61/34/0.00 69/38/s 68/37/s Burns 54/17/0.00 55/27/s 54/26/pc Eugene 59/30/0.00 66/38/s 66/37/s North Bend 52/36/0.00 58/43/s 61/43/s Salem 58/29/Tr 66/41/s 67/38/s Klamath Falls 60/20/0.00 63/29/s 56/27/s Ontario 56/32/0.00 61/33/s 65/37/c Sisters 58/41/0.00 58/31/s 55/31/s Lakeview 56/25/0.00 59/25/s 52/26/pc Pendleton 53/23/0.00 59/32/s 62/31/s The Dalles 60/29/0.01 64/40/s 67/37/s Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, Tr-trace, Yesterday data as of 5 p.m. yesterday -10s 76° 35° TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla 63/45 Rufus Hermiston 62/42 63/44 63/44 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 63/42 66/38 67/42 53/29 Wasco 53/27 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles CENTRAL: Sunshine Tillamook 50/24 60/41 59/32 Sandy 64/40 McMinnville 64/41 will give way to Joseph Heppner La Grande 64/43 Maupin Government 66/46 some clouds during 55/29 50/25 Camp 58/37 Condon 53/33 Union Lincoln City the afternoon hours. 52/31 49/32 55/29 Salem 59/49 Spray Mainly clear and chilly Granite Warm Springs 66/41 Madras 59/30 Albany 49/25 tonight. Newport Baker City 60/34 61/31 Mitchell 59/44 64/42 55/26 WEST: Partly to mostly Camp Sherman 55/28 Redmond Corvallis John Yachats Unity sunny today. Mainly 57/32 58/27 63/41 Day Prineville 54/26 clear and cool tonight. 57/48 Ontario Sisters 61/29 Paulina 55/27 61/33 Sunshine and a few Florence Eugene 58/31 Bend Brothers 54/28 Vale clouds on Tuesday. 60/45 66/38 57/31 52/26 Sunriver 61/32 Nyssa 55/28 Hampton Cottage La Pine 61/31 Juntura Oakridge Grove 55/27 53/28 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 57/30 68/37 68/37 Fort Rock 60/44 55/27 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 56/28 55/26 High: 68° 55/26 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at Medford Beaver Frenchglen Silver 58/45 69/38 56/27 52/31 Low: 17° Marsh Lake 55/29 Port Orford 57/28 56/26 at Burns Grants Burns Junction Paisley 59/45 Pass 57/31 Chiloquin 59/24 76/42 Rome Medford 62/30 Gold Beach 74/38 59/32 59/47 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 55/31 72/38 63/29 55/31 62/46 59/25 Seaside 60/45 Cannon Beach 59/46 SUNDAY 72° 32° Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday Ski resort New snow Anthony Lakes Mtn 0 Hoodoo Ski Area 0 Mt. Ashland 0 Mt. Bachelor 0 Mt. Hood Meadows 2 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 Timberline Lodge 0 Willamette Pass 0 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 Squaw Valley, CA 0 Park City Mountain, UT 0 Sun Valley, ID 0 SATURDAY OREGON WEATHER TEMPERATURE Rise/Set Sun Moon Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus First THURSDAY 53° 29° 54° 32° Mainly clear Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low WEDNESDAY 46/37/0.69 64/43/0.00 71/64/0.12 75/59/0.00 95/79/0.74 68/54/0.00 63/53/0.19 68/44/0.05 70/52/0.09 59/37/0.13 70/61/0.74 90/63/0.00 70/54/0.00 41/23/0.00 88/79/0.00 46/28/0.25 45/26/0.16 61/46/0.44 78/54/0.00 81/69/0.00 55/36/0.00 57/44/0.00 83/60/0.00 77/66/0.00 65/55/0.02 48/34/0.02 59/50/0.34 93/77/0.00 49/33/pc 66/53/s 71/60/pc 82/55/pc 93/81/t 62/40/s 65/54/s 49/31/c 69/51/c 48/34/sh 71/63/s 82/62/s 76/55/s 43/22/pc 87/76/pc 51/38/pc 52/31/pc 50/34/r 80/56/s 83/74/s 61/50/s 62/48/s 81/59/s 71/65/pc 70/56/pc 52/35/pc 67/43/c 97/80/pc Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow Nairobi Nassau New Delhi Osaka Oslo Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Sao Paulo Sapporo Seoul Shanghai Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei City Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw Hesitancy Vaccine Continued from A1 Continued from A1 As Oregon prepares to open the vaccine floodgates to everyone 16 and older April 19, state health offi- cers and rural leaders in some coun- ties face a potential issue: What to do with the not-insignificant portions of the population who apparently aren’t clamoring for a shot. It’s a question that’s hummed in the background for months until finally reaching a crescendo last week, when Oregon Health Authority Director Patrick Allen said seven counties had vaccinated less than half their seniors. The problem, health officials warned, would likely grow as younger and healthier Oregonians become eligi- ble and any possible late-adopters get crowded out. Allen told lawmakers during a leg- islative hearing Wednesday that Or- egon will change how it distributes vaccines to a more “demand-based model” instead of directing largely on per-capita eligibility. That would seemingly spell bad news for Uma- tilla County and other locales where demand has been tepid. Allen said the change is “so that we don’t over-allocate to places where we can’t administer those doses efficiently.” The policy change could create a self-fulfilling prophecy, where early hesitancy prompts fewer doses in the community and helps keep some counties under vaccinated. Fewer people vaccinated makes it easier for the virus to continue spreading and, potentially, mutate. Some people who’ve received John- son & Johnson’s vaccine have posted giddy and celebratory Tweets under the popular hashtag #OneandDone. Gov. Kate Brown received a John- son & Johnson dose in early March. The one-dose vaccine also has been a valuable resource for states eager to immunize hard-to-reach or mobile populations, such as individuals who are homeless, jail inmates, migrant workers or college students. Overall, the hit to Oregon’s John- son & Johnson allocation will result in an overall 20% reduction in total vaccines received — from 258,190 last week to 205,830 this week — because shipments of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines are staying relatively consis- tent and Johnson & Johnson alloca- tions have been comparatively small, according to numbers from the state. Those numbers, however, don’t include doses sent to pharmacies through the federal retail pharmacy program. The number of doses sent to the program weren’t yet available, as of Friday. Allen said he predicts the Johnson & Johnson production problems will amount to only a slight delay to Ore- gon’s goal of inoculating 70% of resi- dents 16 and older by the end of May with at least one dose of one of the three available vaccines. “That may shift a week or two based on what we’re currently beginning to see, but not by months or months or anything like that,” Allen said. The number of Johnson & Johnson vaccines shipped to Oregon and other states since the federal government granted emergency use authorization in February has seesawed from week to week because of production chal- lenges overseas, where all doses of the vaccine are currently manufactured. Two weeks ago, the federal govern- ment sent nearly 2 million Johnson & Johnson doses to states. Last week, it was nearly 5 million. This week, it’s just 700,000. Washington is seeing its allocation drop from 109,000 to 12,900. Califor- nia’s is going from 572,700 to 67,600. Although Allen said the reduction might delay Oregon’s overall vaccina- tion efforts by a week or two, the tim- ing of Johnson & Johnson’s produc- tion difficulties is unfortunate. New COVID-19 cases are up 44% and hospitalizations 46% over the past two weeks, as the state battles a fourth surge that started weeks ago. Nation- wide, new known cases are up 13% and hospitalizations up 7% over the same time period. Infections vs. vaccinations The scale of the challenge in parts of rural Oregon remains difficult to enumerate. Some of the counties hardest hit by COVID-19 appear to be among the least vaccinated. But rural leaders question if there are un- knowns behind those numbers, like how many residents were vaccinated by tribes, the federal government or in neighboring states. Umatilla County previously ranked near or at the top in state data for most infections per capita and at the bottom in vaccines administered per capita — a problem that health officials, busi- ness leaders and politicians acknowl- edge likely reflects reality. As of Friday, Umatilla still had the lowest vaccination rate in the state, with about 21% of people at least par- tially inoculated, and Malheur was second worst at 22%, according to the state’s recently updated database. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which calculates rates based on full vaccinations, ranks Ben Lonergan/East Oregonian file The Pendleton Round-Up Arena sits empty on what would have been the third day of the Round-Up in September. Instead, it was canceled for 2020. This year’s massive event is scheduled for Sept. 11-18. both better. tion “unconscionable” and decrying Umatilla County officials think the the “embarrassing contradiction” in figures are slightly better than what the state’s vaccine plans by not fun- shows up in Oregon’s database, par- neling more shots to Morrow, Mal- ticularly among people 65 and older. heur and Umatilla counties. “We think perhaps 60% of our “We have several things in com- seniors have probably gotten a vac- mon with both of those counties in cine,” said George Murdock, chair of that we have collectively suffered from the Umatilla County Commission. the highest rates of infection and we “But when you realize that 75% of are three of the five counties with the the deaths are among that age group, highest Latino population,” Murdock it’s mind-boggling why that number and the other commissioners wrote. wouldn’t be considerably higher.” Murdock said he is now concerned In fact, as of Friday, the county, which typi- only about 55% of the cally has a low percent- county’s seniors had age of people who get “I can’t fathom received at least one flu shots, will miss out dose of vaccine. That’s on its coveted summer why somebody significantly below the events — fairs, rodeos, wouldn’t. I got statewide average for the iconic Pendleton seniors of more than Roundup and more mine on the first 70%. — because the state day (of eligibility).” “I can’t fathom why will not authorize large somebody wouldn’t,” gatherings due to low — George Murdock, Murdock, 78, said of vaccination rates or 78, who chairs the getting the vaccine. “I perceived COVID-19 Umatilla County got mine on the first risks. Commission day” of eligibility. Over in Hermiston, The hesitancy is Kristina Olivas, the frustrating, Mur- new executive director dock said, because he’s adamant the of the local chamber of commerce, county should have received more said she’s not surprised by the low doses in the first place. County offi- adoption rate and high infection rate. cials were particularly steamed when Olivas, who was born and raised doses from many rural parts of the in Hermiston, said her 87-year-old state were funneled toward the metro grandmother is one of those locals area in late January to help inocu- who is doing well, as is, and is unin- late healthcare workers and teachers terested in a vaccine. there. That anger lingered. “I don’t leave the house anyway,” The commission sent a blister- she said of her grandmother’s think- ing letter to Gov. Kate Brown’s office ing, “I’m not getting it.” March 3 calling the vaccine distribu- When asked if Olivas tried to con- vince her to take the shot, Olivas de- murred: “She’s a real strong woman, she’s going to do what she wants.” Early intervention Where Umatilla has struggled even in recent weeks, Morrow County got a shoutout from the governor and health officials for its successes last week. Melissa Lindsay, a county com- missioner, said the county raised its hand two months ago to partner with Federal Emergency Management Agency to reach agricultural workers in the rural area. The mobile clinics brought shots directly to people at their workplaces. It was a pain to get the program off the ground, she said, but ultimately the county administered 1,000 doses in the span of four days. Despite that success, Lindsay is concerned there’s still reluctance from some quarters in the county, where about 25% of the population has received at least one vaccine dose. Some calls to big employers are met with reluctance, with people saying they would wait and see what re- strictions, if any, will meet those who don’t opt for a vaccine. Some express concern about the long-term effects of the new vaccines, Lindsay has heard, a concern scien- tists say isn’t an issue. She’s worried that while the mobile clinics were a success, other agricultural workers are already in the fields and may not be reachable. “The spring has sprung, and ev- eryone is going full speed ahead,” she said.