WednesdAy • April 14, 2021 • Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $1.50 SPORTS PULLOUT, A5-8 State halts use of vaccine from Johnson & Johnson Health officials await ‘green light’ before resuming distribution By GARy A. WARneR Oregon Capital Bureau Oregon has paused using the Johnson & Johnson one- shot COVID-19 vaccine even though none of six newly re- ported severe reactions to the vaccine occurred in the state, health officials said Tuesday. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention urged states to temporarily stop using the vaccine given to 6.8 million people after six women who received the vaccine became seriously ill and one died. “This appears to be ex- tremely rare,” Dr. Paul Cieslak, Oregon Health Authority’s medical director for acute and communicable disease and im- munizations, said during an af- ternoon press call. The CDC said the six women were aged 18 to 48. They became ill from one to three weeks after their vaccina- tion. The cause appeared to be a rare blood clot disorder. The state has given about 82,000 Johnson & Johnson shots, a tiny fraction of the 2.3 million vaccine doses administered since Decem- ber. OHA said about 212,000 doses are on hand in 225 lo- cations around the state and can be kept in regular refrig- eration units for later use when federal officials lift the advisory. COVID-19 could get worse until it gets better in Central Oregon By sUZAnne ROIG The Bulletin Cases of COVID-19 could continue to climb over the next couples of weeks, but warmer weather, and more vaccinations, could thwart the spread. As COVID-19 weariness weighs on everyone, with young people returning to sports and social activities and bars and restaurants opening up, more people are lowering their guard, health officials say. But the risk could be outweighed if more people were vac- cinated. Starting Monday, anyone 16 and older in Cen- tral Oregon can sign up for a vaccine. “It’s very frustrating to have a conversation like this because it’s such a fluid and unknown environment right now,” said Michael Johnson, St. Charles Health System senior data scientist. “Every model I’ve looked at shows it getting worse before it gets better. But we don’t know the magnitude.” In the past two weeks, Deschutes County has seen daily case counts rise. On Tuesday, 34 new positive cases of COVID-19 were re- ported in the county three days after officials raised the risk level from moder- ate to high, which limits the amount of people who can gather inside and outside. See COVId-19 / A4 See Vaccine / A4 Construction continues Monday on new apartments at sW shevlin Hixon drive and sW Bradbury Way near McKay Park. Oregon Legislature lurches into second half of session Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin Lawmakers deal with slowdowns, shutdowns and death threats By GARy A. WARneR Oregon Capital Bureau By BRennA VIsseR • The Bulletin A new apartment building is coming to fruition near McKay Park in Bend. The building, which sits between the Colorado Avenue bridge and the Bend Park & Recreation District’s Pavilion, will eventually be home to 141 apartments. The building will be called The Eddy Apartments, according to the developer’s website. The project received significant backlash from neighbors, Developer scaled back design from four stories who lined nearby sidewalks to protest the idea of a four-story building, and from community members. See Apartments / A12 OSU-Cascades chief could take lead in Corvallis Board of Trustees considers Johnson as interim president after Alexander resigned By JACKsOn HOGAn The Bulletin Becky Johnson, the leader of Oregon State University- Cascades, could become the temporary leader of the entire Oregon State University sys- tem. The OSU board of trustees is considering hiring John- TODAY’S WEATHER son, the vice president of OSU-Cascades, to be OSU’s interim president. The board will vote on this promotion during its public meeting Fri- day from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. “Dr. Johnson … is most qualified to guide and help ad- vance the priorities and mo- mentum of the university,” Sunny High 53, Low 30 Page A12 INDEX wrote board Chair Rani Borkar in a letter sent Tuesday to the OSU community. “Under her leadership, OSU-Cascades is known as one of the most in- novative, new residential uni- versity campuses in the nation.” Borkar could not be reached for comment Tuesday afternoon. If Johnson is chosen, she would resign as OSU-Cas- cades’ vice president and begin a one-year term as interim Business Classifieds Comics A11 A14 A9-10 Dear Abby Editorial Horoscope A7 A8 A7 Corvallis. Provost president of OSU on and Executive Vice May 1, according to President Ed Feser university spokes- is serving as acting person Steve Clark. president until an in- Johnson would fill terim is chosen. the post that opened Borkar picked when F. King Alexan- Johnson after a two- der resigned March Johnson week period of chat- 23 after reports showed he mishandled sexual ting with OSU students, fac- ulty, staff and alumni from misconduct cases during his both the Bend and Corvallis time as the president of Lou- isiana State University, where campuses, Clark said. he worked before coming to See OsU / A4 Local/State Lottery Nation/World A2-3 A6 A4 Obituaries Puzzles Sports A4 A10 A5-7 See Legislature / A12 The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Vol. 117, No. 329, 14 pages, 1 section DAILY APARTMENTS TAKE SHAPE AFTER DISPUTE Disease, dysfunction and deadlines are challenging the Oregon Legislature as it starts the second half of the 2021 ses- sion. Friday was the 80th day of the 160 days the Oregon Con- stitution allows lawmakers to meet this year. The session has been marked so far by shut- downs and slowdowns. Senate Republicans walked out for the third session in a row, but just for a day to protest Democrat’s lock on the agenda. But some GOP senators would receive death threats from gun control opponents for not walking out on a bill to bar concealed weapons in state buildings. One email had a subject line “SELLOUT” and a chilling one-line message: “You should be shot.” Oregon State Police are in- vestigating the threats. All the turmoil has played out against the roller-coaster ride of falling, then rising COVID-19 numbers. As of Monday, the House had passed 115 bills since gav- eling to order Jan. 19. It cur- rently has a backup of 122 bills scheduled for a final vote. “The tension has started earlier,” House Speaker Tina Kotek said last week. “I think it is really hard to tell what is happening.” Committees in both cham- bers were scurrying to slide un- der the Tuesday night deadline to have legislation approved by committees and sent to the floor of the originating cham- ber (House or Senate). Other- wise, the mass majority die. “A number of those bills at the end of the day will not be ready for deadline,” Kotek said. “Things are pretty fluid.” What survives will still have a daunting road to the governor’s desk due to a basic partisan split on the direction of the session. U|xaIICGHy02329lz[