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About The Blue Mountain eagle. (John Day, Or.) 1972-current | View Entire Issue (July 15, 2020)
NEWS MyEagleNews.com Hermiston man dies in ATV crash near Granite Sunday Blue Mountain Eagle A Hermiston man died after losing control of his ATV Sunday. Grant County Sher- iff Glenn Palmer said John Smith, 20, who was not wearing a helmet, failed to negotiate a corner and struck By Gary A. Warner For the Oregon Capital Bureau a tree at approximately 40 mph in the Pasture Creek area. Undersheriff Zach Mobley and Deputy Savan- nah Willey responded to the crash. Palmer said, from the evi- dence at the scene, it appears alcohol did not play a role in the crash. Contributed Image/Jim Hamsher Deardorff Fire contained with no injuries or structure losses The Deardorff Fire that started July 12 was contained on July 13. Oregon Department of Forestry Central Oregon Dis- trict Public Information Offi- cer Christie Shaw confirmed the fire was human-caused because there was no record of lighting in the area where the incident took place. The fire, which started near Forest Road 13, burned a lit- tle over 55 acres, and the fire was fueled mostly by grass with some brush mixed in and a few spots of timber, accord- ing to Shaw. ODF, the United States Forest Service and Prairie City Rural Fire Department worked together in fighting the fire. Initially, the Forest Service was looking for the fire, but the fire was incorrectly reported A5 Oregon forecasts potential ‘exponential growth’ in coronavirus A plane doing a retardant drop over the now-contained Dear- dorff Fire. By Rudy Diaz Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, July 15, 2020 and was located in land under ODF protection. “We responded to that fire, and then their (Forest Service) crew came over and assisted on our fire, and then we made the request for structural pro- tection, which came from the Prairie City Rural Fire Depart- ment,” Shaw said. “Suppres- sion and mop-up have been a coordinated effort” between the three agencies. On July 13, there were 50 firefighters assigned to the scene. There were no injuries reported and no damage to any of the structures that were threatened, according to Shaw. There was a resident and four associated outbuildings that were threatened. There were Forest Ser- vice and local ODF resources on site Tuesday continuing to patrol and look for interior hotspots. Oregon faces an “expo- nential growth” in COVID- 19 cases if current trends con- tinue, with ever rising numbers of infections, hospitalizations and deaths. “We have troubling news,” said Oregon Health Authority Director Pat Allen in present- ing the state’s updated forecast on the pandemic Friday. The state issued three fore- cast scenarios. Current trend: New daily COVID-19 cases would rise to 1,100 to 3,600 by the end of July. Hospitalizations would go from 17 to 49. Pessimistic: A 10% increase in infection rates would trigger exponential growth that could lead to 7,300 new cases and 76 new hospitalizations each day by July 31. Optimistic: A 10% drop in transmission rates would cap new infections at about 1,600, with hospitalizations rising to only 24 per day. While optimistic forecasts have not been reached in ear- lier months, the forecasts were based on numbers through July 2, prior to Gov. Kate Brown’s order requiring masks to be worn inside public places. On Friday, the count of new cases dropped to 278, with two deaths, one each in Lin- coln and Union counties. Uma- tilla County continued to be a hotspot, leading the state with 51 new cases. The state set a new one-day record for new infections on Thursday with 389 cases. Dr. Dean Sidelinger, the state’s chief medical officer, said the state has enough hos- pital capacity to handle case loads for the next 60 days, unless rates increase further. Despite the forecast, state officials announced no new mandatory policies. The Ore- gon Health Authority did add Pamplin Media Group file photo Pat Allen, Oregon Health Au- thority director, at a press con- ference earlier in 2020. one voluntary limit, asking people to keep indoor gather- ings to no more than 10 people for the next three weeks. The request does not change cur- rent rules regarding businesses, restaurants and bars. Allen said the state was constantly weighing the public health issues of transmission and the data showing the health and economic impacts of clos- ing down businesses or requir- ing people to stay at home. “It is an ongoing balancing act,” Allen said. OHA said it has seen an increasing number of cases coming from clusters of small gatherings such as graduation parties, birthdays, weddings, holiday get-togethers, bachelor parties, fraternity parties and exercise classes. “There is an inherent sense of safety,” Allen said of gath- erings with friends and fam- ily. “We tend to let our guard down.” The guidance goes beyond planning events, Allen said. If someone finds themselves in a gathering of more than 10 peo- ple indoors, they need to make a conscious decision about staying or leaving. “Think hard of whether that is a good choice,” Allen said. Oregonians were reminded to redouble efforts to keep a distance of at least 6 feet from others, cover faces and wash hands frequently with soap and hot water. The highest rate of growth in infections is among those 20-39 years old. While less than 1% of those under 50 will die if infected, the younger groups inevitably increase the exposure of the virus to older, sick and immune-compro- mised people. Events that mix households — or even generations within households — can cause transmission. “Find alternative ways for those who are vulnerable to participate,” Allen said. The state doubled the num- ber of health and liquor control officials checking up on busi- nesses over the July 4 holiday. Sidelinger said that while Port- land and Salem area businesses were largely following the rules, there was “widespread non-compliance” in a variety of locales, including Eugene and areas east of the Cascades. Oregon’s rate of positive tests is 6%, above the 5% mark needed to indicate the virus infection rate is under control. Oregon ranks 42nd in testing, with 105 tests per 100,000 peo- ple per day. The United States has more than 3.1 million coronavi- rus cases, with over 133,000 deaths. More than 60,000 new cases were confirmed on Thursday, another record-set- ting day. Worldwide, there have been an estimated 12.4 million infections and more than 550,000 deaths. Oregon has reported 232 deaths since the pandemic arrived in the state in late Feb- ruary. Sidelinger said the rel- atively low death rate was a positive, but cautioned that sci- entists are finding more long- term impacts from infections, ranging from inflammatory complications in children to long-term physical and mental damage in adults. The Friday press confer- ence came against a backdrop of pandemic-related news in Oregon, the nation and around the world. Statistics from Johns Hop- kins University show that the sharpest rise in new infec- tions in the nation is occur- ring in Idaho, where there has been a 153% increase in cases over the past two weeks. The state has far fewer COVID- 19 related restrictions in place than Oregon. Sidelinger said Oregon was monitoring the situation, but did not know what, if any, relation there might be to the spike in Idaho and the rise in cases in bordering areas in Eastern Oregon. “We collaborate on inves- tigations to control the spread of diseases,” Sidelinger said. “I do not have data specifi- cally on the number of cases with a tie to Idaho or other states.” Ohio State University said it would not send students and coaches to Eugene for a scheduled Sept. 12 football game against the University of Oregon. Ohio State is part of the Big Ten Conference, which announced its teams would not play regular season games outside of its confer- ence this fall. Sidelinger said the state currently would not allow large crowds to attend an event like a Ducks football game at Autzen Stadium. The future of in-class- room teaching this fall is increasingly under debate as the start of the school year approaches. President Don- ald Trump has demanded that children be sent to school. The Los Angeles teach- ers union called on local dis- tricts to keep campuses closed in the fall. Final guidance on Oregon schools, community colleges and universities is pending. 165 calls during the week of July 6-12, including: • John Day Police Department July 6: Cited Steven M. Warrington, 30, of John Day for driving while suspended and driving uninsured. July 7: Received a report of juveniles throwing rocks at another juvenile on West Main Street. July 8: Travis Freniere, 33, of John Day was cited for driving while suspended and no insurance. July 8: Received a report of a noninjury crash near a business on West Main Street. Britt Wilcox, 25, of John Day was cited for no insurance. July 11: Responded to a report of possible shots fired on West Main Street. July 11: Received a report of theft on Southwest Bridge Street. July 12: Two citations were given to Steven M. War- rington, 30, of John Day. • Oregon State Police July 4: Advised of cattle on the roadway on Highway 26 near milepost 137. July 9: Dispatch was advised of horses on the road- way on Highway 26 near milepost 159. A landowner was contacted and said they would catch them. • Grant County Sheriff’s Office July 6: A livestock owner was advised of cattle cre- ating a hazard on the road- way on Highway 26 near Dayville. July 6: Received a report of animal abuse on North Johnson Avenue. July 7: Received a report of fraud in Canyon City. July 7: Received a report of criminal mischief on Highway 26. July 8: Received a report of burglary on Ford Road. July 8: Received a report of criminal mischief in Granite. July 9: Received a report of an injury crash near Marysville. July 11: Received a report of theft on 11th Street. July 12: Received a report of a fatal motor vehicle acci- dent on Milton Street. • John Day ambulance July 8: Responded for a 19-year-old woman who was having an allergic reac- tion on South Washington Street. July 8: Dispatched for a 91-year-old woman with dif- ficulty breathing on Harper Creek Road. • Prairie City ambulance July 11: Along with John Day ambulance, dispatched for an ATV injury crash at Dixie Creek. • Prairie City fire July 12: Along with GCSO, responded for a United States Forest Service fire in Prairie City that was threatening structures on Forest Road 13. COPS AND COURTS Arrests and citations in the Blue Mountain Eagle are taken from the logs of law enforcement agencies. Every effort is made to report the court disposition of arrest cases. Grant County Circuit Court A count of harassment con- stituting domestic violence against Angeline I. Smith, allegedly committed March 31, was dismissed on July 9 based on a motion by Grant County District Attorney Jim Carpenter because of a lack of state resources due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Jared J. Baker, 25, pleaded guilty July 9 to a count of men- acing constituting domestic violence and a count of harass- ment constituting domestic violence committed on June 2. He was sentenced to serve 50 days in jail, 36 months of bench probation, 60 hours of community service and pay $200 in fines and bench pro- bation fees. Darron L. Huskey, 52, pleaded guilty on June 11 for a count of forgery in the first degree committed on March 23. He was sentenced to serve 10 days in jail, 18 months of bench probation, serve 30 hours of community service and pay a $100 fine in bench probation fees. Office reported the following for the week of July 8: Concealed handgun licenses: 7 Average inmates: 9 Bookings: 7 Releases: 10 Arrests: 0 Citations: 2 Fingerprints: 1 Civil papers: 20 Warrants processed: 2 Assistance/Welfare check: 1 Search and Rescue: 0 George Brown, 45, of Mt. Vernon was cited for sec- ond-degree criminal mischief. Carl Kalteich, 75, of Day- ville was cited for violation of the basic rule, 74/55 zone. Grant County Justice Court Violation of the basic rule: Jose Drramona-Borra- chan, 29, Shelton, Washing- ton, May 30, 76/55 zone, fined $165; Christopher R. Span- iel, 27, Portland, May 8, 74/55 zone, fined $165; Matthew G. Hubeny, 35, Prineville, June 4, 75/55 zone, fined $100. Failure to drive within lane: David G. Durfey, 51, Ukiah, May 6, fined $225. Shelby M. Long was con- victed of second-degree dis- orderly conduct after a plea of no contest. The defendant was ordered to pay a fine of $440. Oregon State Police Grant County Sheriff The Grant County Sheriff’s July 8: OSP received a complaint from the super- visor of the Oregon Depart- ment of Transportation at the Austin Section. Several inci- dents were reported of a sub- ject in a black Mercedes car, traveling at high speeds and routinely passing, in marked no passing zones. Several ODOT employees reported several different incidents that occurred on June 7. The vehi- cle was observed northbound in the early morning hours and later in the day when the vehicle traveled back through the Austin section traveling back towards the John Day Valley. Two citizen citations were filled out for Matthew E. Sagaser, 36, of John Day, who was the driver that was iden- tified. The citations are being forwarded to the Grant County Justice Court. July 10: OSP stopped a vehicle that swerved into their lane near milepost 165 on Highway 26. The driver exhibited signs of impairment and consented to standardized field sobriety tests. The driver performed poorly on the test and was arrested for driving under the influence of intox- icants. The driver submit- ted a breath test with a result of 0% blood alcohol concen- tration level. A drug recogni- tion expert exam was adminis- tered, and Ricky D. Weickum, 22, of John Day was booked for driving under the influence of cannabis. July 11: OSP stopped a vehicle on Highway 395C near milepost 7 for driving northbound in the southbound lane of travel. On contact, the driver, Jamey A. Mackebon, 41, Seattle, Washington, dis- played signs of impairment consistent with a controlled substance. Mackebon con- sented to field sobriety tests where he displayed further indicators of impairment. At the conclusion of field sobri- ety tests, the driver handed OSP a plastic baggie that con- tained suspected methamphet- amine. OSP arrested the driver for DUII and possession of methamphetamine. Fron- tier Towing responded and towed the vehicle. OSP trans- ported the driver to the Grant County Jail where he provided a BAC sample of 0%. The driver refused to participate in a DRE evaluation. The driver refused to provide a urine sample under implied consent. OSP obtained a search war- rant for a urine sample, which the driver then provided. The driver is a convicted felon. OSP issued the driver cita- tions for unlawful possession of methamphetamine, DUI of controlled substance and vio- lation citations for failure to drive within lane and refuse to take a test for intoxicants. OSP lodged the driver at the jail for unlawful possession of meth- amphetamine and DUI of con- trolled substance. Dispatch John Day dispatch worked One solution for oxygen at home, away, and for travel Prepare for unexpected power outages with a Generac home standby generator No more tanks to refi ll. No more deliveries. No more hassles with travel. 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