The BulleTin • SaTurday, april 17, 2021 A7 Center Continued from A1 She does that by looking up from the paperwork and connecting with the residents coming in for their vaccines. At various checkpoints, peo- ple made their way past or- ange-vested volunteers who waved them through. People arrived on time or early. On Wednesday, 3,100 vaccines were expected to be adminis- tered. The clinic could get bus- ier depending on how many vaccines are sent out by the Oregon Health Authority, but starting Monday, anyone age 16 and older will be able to sign up for a vaccination. To register, go to centralore- goncovidvaccine.com. Those without internet access can call 541-699-5109. On any given day, there are about 180 volunteers plus 30 U.S. Army National Guard members and 30 staffers from St. Charles, Volunteers in Medicine and the county, said Hayley Rich, Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office Emer- gency Services coordinator. There are two shifts per day, about 5½ hours each, Rich said. Volunteers are crucial to running the mass vaccination Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin Patrick Punch administers a COVID-19 vaccine to Teague Dupras during a vaccination clinic at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center. program. From the parking lot to the respite area, the en- tire process is organized each morning and volunteers are assigned different areas. Some volunteers come back repeat- edly, like Galyon. It’s the volunteers who make the process of admin- istering thousands of doses of COVID-19 vaccines to people in a 10-hour day run smoothly, said John Allen, a Deschutes County Health Ser- vices contact tracer assigned to organize the volunteers. For most, it takes 45 min- utes from parking their car to sitting in the respite area for 15 minutes after getting their vaccines. On a recent day, Allen ad- dressed a large group of or- ange-vested volunteers whose job it was to maintain flow through lines and operations. “Most of you have been here before,” Allen said. “We Disparity Volunteer Helena Conway wheels Karen Harrington, left, and volunteer Madeline Taussig wheels Dotty Parker out of the waiting area during a vacci- nation clinic at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center in Redmond. Continued from A1 About 75% of Oregonians are white, but white people account for 50% of COVID-19 cases and 71% of vaccinations. About 13% of Orego- nians are Hispanic or Latino, but they make up 25% of COVID-19 cases ac- count for 6% of vaccinations. A driver in the vaccine disparity is that Latinos in Oregon tend to be younger and often don’t work in the kind of jobs that had early access to vaccines. The state has sent additional vac- cines to federally qualified health centers, targeted migrant workers and worked with 170 community partners, and still access hasn’t been balanced, said Patrick Allen, Oregon Health Authority director, at a press conference Friday. Because it’s not COCC Continued from A1 “I want to be very clear that I never want anyone, internally or externally, to believe that our campus safety staff have any law enforcement function,” she said. “I leave the role of the police to the police.” Moving forward, the college will contract with Bend Patrol Services to perform four ran- dom patrols per day, each last- ing up to an hour. Chesley also announced she had installed Andrew Davis, longtime COCC director of student life, as interim campus safety director. He will report directly to her, Chesley said. Safety has been the subject of scrutiny at COCC since July 2016, when 23-year-old stu- dent Kaylee Sawyer was raped and murdered by an on-duty campus security officer, Edwin Lara. The judge at Lara’s sen- tencing said the case was ag- gravated by the fact Lara used the tools of his profession to commit his crimes. He used his police-like uniform to lure Sawyer into the back seat of his police vehicle, which had no interior door handles and was separated from the front seat by a divider. In July 2018, the school hired as its head of campus se- curity Peter Ostrovsky, a vet- eran law enforcement leader with heavy experience in drug interdiction at the U.S-Canada border. In 2019, a law was passed in Oregon in Sawyer’s honor intended to “de-police” cam- pus security forces, specifically, COCC’s. Later that year, the school and former Bend Police Chief Jim Porter announced COCC’s campus department was “fully compliant” with the new law. This included re- painting the department’s ve- hicles with the school’s bobcat mascot and new “highlighter yellow” vests for officers. But on March 9 of this year, the school announced it had placed its four-person cam- pus police staff on administra- tive leave while it conducted a third-party review of campus have a full complement of volunteers for the morning shift. Volunteers need to wear a mask and wear it in the proper fashion around the pa- tients. “It’s an example we’re setting for the patients.” Inside the cavernous expo building, 30 vaccination ta- bles were equally spaced apart and manned by green-vested volunteers where the vaccines were delivered. First, every- Dean Guernsey/ The Bulletin enough, vans will be sent out to rural communities to vaccinate those inter- ested, Allen said. “As a state we can and need to do better,” Allen said. “Vaccinations in Oregon have not been administered as equitably as they need to be. The numbers are stark and clear. For too many people, race and income are predictors of whether you can access a COVID-19 vaccine or not.” In Central Oregon, on March 17, Mosaic Medical’s 15 clinics began vac- cinating anyone in this underserved population 45 and older through a federal pilot program. Safety has been the subject of scrutiny at COCC since July 2016, when 23-year-old student Kaylee Sawyer was raped and murdered by an on-duty campus security officer, Edwin Lara. The judge at Lara’s sentencing said the case was aggravated by the fact Lara used the tools of his profession to commit his crimes. He used his police-like uniform to lure Sawyer into the back seat of his police vehicle, which had no interior door handles and was separated from the front seat by a divider. police activities. Chesley said Friday the school’s human resources de- partment had received com- plaints of “cop-like” behavior and also about the climate of the department and how staff communicated. She declined to provide more details about the com- plaints. “It was attitudinal,” she said. “And some of the trainings that were being done, in my view, were more appropriate for law enforcement rather than cam- pus safety officers.” She said the review turned up training materials for offi- cers inconsistent with her vi- sion of campus safety. Chesley, who took over as president in July 2019, said she was heartened that the com- pleted review turned up no violations of Kaylee’s Law, nor evidence of a hostile work en- vironment. But she said it did reveal areas where the school needs to improve, specifically, in crafting clear policy for se- curity staff and providing more and better training. As to the fate of the four cur- rent campus police officers, Chesley said she cannot com- ment on specific staffing deci- sions. The school is now working with another external consul- tant to help address concerns raised in the review, including developing new policies and training materials for security personnel. “I believe we have some work to do to continue our culture shift to make campus safety even more student-fo- cused, even more custom- er-service focused and rooted in education,” she said. Under its new contract with COCC, Bend Patrol Services will provide four patrols by a uniformed security officer in a vehicle. At least one of those patrols must be performed be- tween 8 p.m. and 3 a.m. The patrol will cost $489.65 per day. The contract also stipulates Bend Patrol Services must comply with Kaylee’s Law. For the company, this has meant removing front push bumpers from its vehicle fleet and applying a “campus safety” patch to uniforms, according to CEO Nick Thompson, who added his 15-year-old com- pany already complied with most provisions of the law, including record-keeping re- quirements and dashboard cameras mounted in all vehi- cles. Bend Patrol Services is not a stranger to COCC. It held the contract for campus safety at the college for seven years. Then the school contracted with a low-bidder, Security Pros, though that arrangement was short-lived. After Security Pros canceled its contract in 2015, the school opted to start its own campus police force, a rare expenditure for a community college in Ore- gon. The new force hired on Ed- win Lara, a Security Pros officer already working on campus. Thompson said the key dif- ference between his officers and certified police officers is his staff is focused on crime prevention, not investigation or enforcement. “When we had the contract, things ran smoothly,” he said. e e Reporter: 541-383-0325, gandrews@bendbulletin.com one goes to a registration table where blue-vested volunteers like Galyon and McCarthy work. Galyon, a retired chemical engineer, is among many vol- unteers who come repeatedly. She’s been there before the 10 a.m. opening 16 times. Vol- unteers arrive early, grab a bot- tle of water or a cup of coffee and wait inside a tent to get an assignment. Each volunteers for a job and some offer to stay the entire day. Each day the vaccination clinic finds something new to tweak: Post a volunteer at a bottleneck here, have an- other keep the line moving and maintain 6-foot spacing in the queue inside, or designate a volunteer to greet people, said Allen. In a separate room at the Expo Center, people who’ve had their shots sit in rows of green chairs that are evenly spaced apart where they are monitored by blue-vested vol- unteers. Wednesday was Shannon Bergstedt’s first time volun- teering at the clinic. A retired registered nurse, Bergstedt was manning a post that directed people to the area where they could sit for the required 15 minutes while they are ob- served for any reactions to the vaccination. Latinos make up 9% of the Central Oregon population, according to a study by the Latino Community As- sociation. The same study states that the me- dian age of Latinos in Central Oregon ranged from 22 to 28 years, compared to 43 to 51 years for the white popu- lation. Vaccine disparity is a national issue that cannot rely upon just a speedy rollout of vaccine delivery systems such as through the Oregon Conven- tion Center, the Salem fairgrounds or the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, although they play an import- ant role, Allen said. The vans will en- able the vaccines to get to communi- ties directly. As of Thursday, 1.5 million Ore- gonians received at least one dose of the vaccine. But because of concerns about rare blot clots, the state has Volunteers needed We are currently accepting applications for volunteers at the mass vaccine clinic at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center. Non-medi- cal and medical volunteers are encouraged to apply. Apply online at https://bit. ly/2O3MnmC. “I volunteer a lot,” Bergstedt said. “I try to give back, and I have skills they can use.” Samantha Freson, a 26-year- old Bend resident was in the respite area after getting her first vaccination. She, like many others, was on her phone waiting for the time to pass be- fore she could leave. She knew what to expect of the vaccination clinic, but was still impressed by how smoothly everything went. “It went pretty swiftly,” Freson said. “It feels good to get the vaccine. There are lots of people here offering to help or answer questions. “I had been anxious about getting my vaccine. I had put my name on every list. I wanted to get the vaccine. To me, it’s like any other vaccina- tion. It’s an extra safeguard.” e e Reporter: 541-633-2117, sroig@bendbulletin.com halted the use of the one-dose John- son & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine. Earlier in the week, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention urged states to temporarily stop us- ing the vaccine given to 6.8 million people after six women who received the vaccine became seriously ill and one died. That halt means Oregon will have 70,000 fewer vaccines available each week, Allen said. “We’ll continue to see tight appoint- ment availability in many parts of the state for the coming weeks at least un- til we know more about the availabil- ity of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine,” Allen said. “However, we have enough doses to vaccinate anyone 16 and older before summer.” e e e e Gary A. Warner contributed to this report. Reporter: 541-633-2117, sroig@bendbulletin.com