LADY PROS BOUNCE BACK, SWEEP STANFIELD | PAGE A9 Wednesday, March 10, 2021 153nd Year • No. 10 • 16 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com The Eagle/Steven Mitchell The Moderna COVID-19 vaccine. A shot in the arm Grant County encouraging people to join COVID-19 vaccine waitlist By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle The Eagle/Rudy Diaz Jim Spell takes a box of pears March 4 at the Grant County Food Bank. DELIVERING HOPE Request for peanut butter leads to 15,000 pounds of food for Grant County Food Bank By Rudy Diaz Blue Mountain Eagle A simple request for peanut butter turned into 15,000 pounds of food for the Grant County Food Bank. Grant County resident George Sintay said peanut butter got expensive, and the food bank was unable to obtain the popular item from their pro- vider. He knew, however, that his church, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, made their own peanut butter in Texas. He made a request to George Chad- wick of La Grande, who is the local leader of the church in Northeast Ore- gon, and Chadwick secured a donation from the church to the Northeast Oregon Regional Food Bank. Chadwick found the food bank was in need of a boost and helped get an entire shipment of food. The shipment was delivered to the Northeast Oregon Regional Food Bank to boost supplies throughout the region. Chadwick said his role in the large donation was a minor one. “The Stake (church leadership) The Eagle/Rudy Diaz George Sintay, left, and Jim Spell begin to unload 15,000 pounds of food delivered to the Grant County Food Bank on March 4. decided that the John Day Food Bank would get 40% of the 38,000 pounds of food,” Sintay said. “They said when the truck comes it would come with more than just peanut butter. It would come with commodities that would be useful anywhere, but the neat thing about the peanut butter is that they sent strawberry jam with it.” Sintay rode along March 4 with John Day Mayor Ron Lundbom, who donates his time and resources to pick up the food monthly for the food bank, and they came back with 15,000 pounds of food. “I was really pleased at the amount of food we got, and President Chadwick said he was dumbfounded at the amount of food the region received,” Sintay said. As the state’s supply of the COVID-19 vaccine increases, county health officials anticipate receiv- ing between 200 and 400 doses for the next couple of weeks. Kimberly Lindsay, the county’s public health administrator, said those 65 and older on the coun- ty’s vaccine waitlist received shots recently. Lindsay said the Oregon Health Authority encour- aged the health depart- ment to formally reach out to people in groups six and seven of Phase 1b of distribution. Group six consists of adults between 45 and 64, with underlying health conditions, such as diabe- tes, heart disease, obesity and cancer. The group also includes seafood, agricul- tural, migrant farm and food processing work- ers. OHA also lists wild- land firefighters, those impacted by wildfire and seniors in low-income, group and independent living situations, as well as anyone experiencing homelessness, according to OHA’s website. Group seven, referred to as frontline workers, are defined by the Cen- ters for Disease Control as grocery, retail, restaurant workers, kitchen staff, bartenders, postal work- ers, bus drivers and other workers who are in fre- quent contact with others. Lindsay encouraged anyone interested in the vaccine to get on the wait- list, but especially people in groups six and seven. ‘False sense of safety’ After the county saw an uptick in COVID-19 after a two-week lull in Dr. Bailey answers questions about vaccines By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle Grant County’s health officer, and a longtime physician at Strawberry Urgent Care, Dr. Zach Bailey spoke to the Eagle Thurs- day to talk about s o m e c o m - mon con- Dr. Zach cerns and Bailey questions about COVID-19 vac- cines. This interview has been edited for clarity and space. How do vaccines work, and why are they important? The concept of vacci- nation is that, when some- one is exposed to a por- tion of the virus, their immune system recog- nizes a foreign memory of that virus. It can some- times kill it off, some- times even before they become symptomatic. Why should someone who had the coronavirus get vaccinated? The vaccine has the potential to give you immunity in a way that your body has not seen before. And so, getting the vaccine further pro- tects you from catching the virus a second time. It is by no means a guaran- tee, but it is an easy price to pay when you consider the pros and cons and the risks and benefits. Analogous to chick- enpox, later on down See Q&A, Page A16 See Food, Page A16 See Vaccine, Page A16 Oregon counties oppose new timber tax despite revenue potential New severance tax would amount to $25 per thousand board- feet of timber, based on current prices By Mateusz Perkowski EO Media Group Oregon’s county govern- ments are opposing a pro- posed timber severance tax due to its economic impacts even though they’d stand to get money under the proposal. Lawmakers are consider- ing re-imposing a 5% sever- ance tax on the value of har- vested timber to replace the existing forest products privi- lege tax, which is currently 90 Contributed photo/U.S. Forest Service Logs are loaded onto trucks after a thinning operation. Oregon counties oppose a new severance tax on timber despite the po- tential to gain revenue. cents per thousand board-feet. Legislative analysts hav- en’t yet calculated the finan- cial impacts of House Bill 2379, which would impose the severance tax, but it’s expected to steeply increase revenues and taxes on logs. Based on current log val- ues, the new severance tax would amount to $25 per thousand board-feet of timber, compared to the current tax of about $4 per thousand board- feet — more than a six-fold increase, said Roger Beyer, lobbyist for the Oregon Small Woodlands Association. The Association of Oregon Counties has come out against HB 2379, despite the poten- tial for counties to receive 25% of the new tax revenues for wildfire and emergency preparedness. Though county govern- ments require tax dollars to provide crucial services, the need for revenues must be bal- anced against the economic prosperity of their communi- ties, according to AOC. Rural areas have already suffered from a downturn in tourism and hospitality due to the coronavirus pandemic, the group said in submitted testimony. Meanwhile, the timber industry is adjusting to Ore- gon’s new corporate activity tax and is preparing for stricter regulations under a pending agreement with environmental groups and a state habitat con- servation plan for protected species, according to AOC. “As a result, the last thing our local governments need is for the state legislature to pass any new taxes on an indus- try that can continue to oper- ate and provide much-needed family wage jobs with benefits to their residents during these difficult economic times,” the group said. Recent hearings on the proposed timber tax overhaul were largely dominated by See Timber, Page A16