TWO MEN CHARGED WITH MULTIPLE POACHING VIOLATIONS | PAGE A5 Wednesday, May 13, 2020 152nd Year • No. 20 • 14 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com Grant County submits plan to reopen economy for approval If approved, certain businesses could reopen May 15 with some restrictions By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle The Emergency Operations Center successfully submitted Grant County’s reopening plan Friday to the state for approval. As of Sunday, according to Gov. Kate Brown’s website, Grant County’s plan is being reviewed by the Oregon Health Authority. The process for evaluat- ing reopening plans is on a first-come, first-served basis, according to the governor’s website. EOC Incident Commander Dave Dobler said Brown’s office released sector-specific guidelines for restaurants, bars, barbers and salons and updated guidelines for retail, individu- als and businesses. As Friday marked the first quate hospital surge day counties in Ore- gon could submit capacity, quaran- tine facilities and plans to reopen grad- ually in the aftermath personal protec- tive equipment of Brown’s stay-at- and finalized sec- home orders, counties tor guidelines from must demonstrate they the state to commu- can meet seven public Interim Emergency nicate to individual health criteria. Management businesses. The benchmarks Coordinator Parts of those counties must meet Dave Dobler criteria — PPE include declining lev- els of COVID-19 hos- capacity, hospital pital admissions, min- and testing — must imum levels of testing and be met within a health region, contact tracing capacity, ade- groups of adjacent counties established by the governor. Grant County will be in region seven, along with Deschutes, Jefferson, Klam- ath, Crook, Lake, Wheeler and Harney counties. Dobler said Thursday in a teleconference meeting he received confirmation that region seven meets the criteria to move forward. Among the benchmarks counties must hit in the gov- ernor’s reopening plan is a 14-day decline in the number of COVID-19 patients admit- ted to hospitals — but this does not apply to counties with fewer than five positive cases such as Grant County. Grant County has had one confirmed positive case in mid- March, and the patient, who was not identified, followed all public health recommen- dations, which included stay- ing home and self-monitor- ing for symptoms, according to a health department press release. See Reopen, Page A14 The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Judy Kerr, finance chief for the Emergency Operations Center, presented a brief rundown of her job duties at the EOC. Kerr said she tracks workers’ hours and costs for materials and supplies. Contributed photo/Julie Watterson Prairie City School special education assistants put packets together for students. Special educators unified in learning and helping families By Rudy Diaz Blue Mountain Eagle Teachers and administrators in Grant County continue to teach stu- dents and themselves as distance learn- ing enters its fourth week of implemen- tation amid the COVID-19 outbreak. Special education administrators in Grant County shared their experience on how distance learning has been a learning experience for teachers, stu- dents and parents. “In our district, our case manag- ers looked at each kid’s (Individual- ized Educational Plan), and we talked about what they were going to need, their technology capability, and if their parents are still working,” said Rhonda McCumber, the director of special edu- cation in the John Day District. “And of course, lots of checking in and mak- ing adjustments.” Wendy Burrill, the Grant County Education Service District Special Ed Director/Specialist, said she can say the same for other schools in the county with how individualized dis- tance learning has been for students. Some kids adapted quickly when using technology, but there were other kids that struggled. Each situation at home may be dif- ferent, but individualized education and helping parents is a priority for administrators as distance learning is Contributed photo Marci Judd is a special education teach- er at Humbolt Elementary. applied in different ways. At Prairie City School, Julie Wat- terson, the special education director there, said she sat and met with her aids and decided from the beginning that the best way for them to teach stu- dents was to gather weekly packets and hand them to students every Thursday at 10 a.m. Another priority for Watterson is to schedule a time to reach out to parents to see how they are doing and respond to emails she receives. Shelley Myers, the speech language pathologist for Grant County schools, said she called all the parents and set up times for students to teach through Google Meets. Many students are met twice a week for their speech and lan- guage therapy. Technology provides the biggest challenge in distance learning for the county since it is a learning process for students and teachers. “Learning the technology was the big one and getting everybody trained on how to use Google classroom, and by everybody I don’t just mean the stu- dents, the teachers had to learn this stuff too,” McCumber said. “Older kids can understand the technology quickly, but we start going into the primary grades, and we have to rely on mom and dad to help them, but sometimes they are struggling with it as well.” Myers added that technology has been difficult at times due to the delay in audio between the teacher and stu- dent, which makes speech therapy diffi- cult, but they continue to make it work. Another struggle has been trying to accommodate the supports students had at school with distance learning, according to Burrill. She said speech- to-text or audio books were used with the help of staff at school, but with distance learning, the staff is learning how to continue to provide these sup- ports from a distance. See Educators, Page A14 Emergency Operations Center planning to request additional $25K for more protective equipment By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle The Grant County Emer- gency Operations Center is planning to ask for an addi- tional $25,000 in funding for personal protective equip- ment at the next county court session as the county looks to ease into the first phase of its reopening plan, according to the county’s interim Emer- gency Management Coordina- tor Dave Dobler in the loca- tion’s first onsite media tour Friday at the Grant County Regional Airport terminal. County Judge Scott Myers said Tuesday this week’s regu- lar county court meeting was canceled, but a special session may be held later in the week. He said the county recently received a shipment of per- sonal protective equipment. Dobler could not be reached Tuesday by press time to con- firm whether he still intended to request additional funding for PPE. As the county prepares to ease back into a recognizable version of normalcy with its plan to reopen under review with the Oregon Health Authority, Dobler said Friday the county needs to stay vigi- lant as the community moves forward to prevent a surge in positive cases and address the economic and mental health costs related to COVID-19. “This was a warmup and a shot across the bow,” Dobler said. The EOC was activated in early March in response to the new coronavirus and has been at the Grant County Regional Airport terminal since mid-April. Dobler, a sheriff’s office deputy, stepped into the lead role in early March after an emergency county court ses- sion saw the departure of his predecessor Ted Williams, who cited a long-standing feud with Grant County Sher- iff Glenn Palmer. Dobler said the EOC oper- ates as a hub of information, coordination and planning for the COVID-19 pandemic. Dobler said he is requesting approval to hire a grant writer to apply for Federal Emer- gency Management Agency’s Public Assistance Grant made available under the Coronavi- rus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act. The FEMA Pub- lic Assistance Grant, available to state and local agencies, offers up to 75% in reimburse- ment for costs associated with responding to the COVID-19 pandemic including overtime labor expenses, EOC operat- ing costs, PPE and search and rescue. See EOC, Page A14 Outlying communities share thoughts on pool By Rudy Diaz Blue Mountain Eagle The final report has been com- pleted for an aquatic center in Grant County as city leaders outside of John Day continue their discussions on the proposal. With Gleason Pool in John Day scheduled to close for good after this season, the proposal calls for a new tax- ing district encompassing Prairie City, Mt. Vernon, Canyon City and Seneca and their rural fire districts with a per- manent tax rate of 20 cents per $1,000 of a property’s assessed value for oper- ations costs, as well as a 20-year bond with a rate of 71 cents per $1,000 of assessed value. When Mt. Vernon and Canyon City leaders received details on how the aquatic taxing district would work, they both sent out sur- veys to measure the response from the public on the aquatic taxing district. Canyon City’s survey is currently Kenny Delano being conducted with results planned to be revealed at their next city council meeting on May 19. Meanwhile, Mt. Vernon sent out 200 surveys with 30% sending a response back to the city. In Mt. Vernon, 81% of respondents said they would not want to participate in the pool venture, according to City Recorder Tami Kowing. Mayor Kenny Delano said, while people in Mt. Vernon support the idea of a pool in Grant County, the plan to pay for the pool troubles many residents. “Our thought was that we have quite a bit of fixed income residents that really need any kind of small reduction that they can get (in taxes), Jim Hamsher and one thing they were looking forward to was the hospital bond to drop off (the tax rolls this year),” Delano said. “Although it looks like a small amount, it’s quite a bit for these folks.” Delano said some residents said they would prefer any taxes collected to go toward projects in Mt. Vernon. Delano said he wishes there were a way to provide a pool that wouldn’t be a long-term burden on taxpayers because he believes the project to be important for kids in Mt. Vernon, espe- cially those who participate on the swim team. However, he said that’s a limited number of kids, com- pared to the impact the new taxing district would have. Delano said the Steve Fischer survey was a factor when the city council voted not to support the resolution for Mt. Vernon to be included in the tax- ing district during a city council meet- ing on April 14. Prairie City Mayor Jim Hamsher said he hopes the pool steering com- mittee will present the final report to the aquatic district communities, detailing the plans for the pool and tak- ing questions from the public so citi- zens can make an informed decision. See Pool, Page A14