FOOTBALL: PROSPECTORS POUND PIONEERS FOR FIRST WIN FRIDAY | PAGE A9 Wednesday, March 17, 2021 153nd Year • No. 11 • 16 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com County responding to surge in COVID-19 cases After only four cases in February, 29 new infections have been reported so far in March By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle Eagle fi le photo Kimberly Lindsay, the county’s pub- lic health administrator, during a session of county court. One year into the pandemic, Grant County health offi cials are getting in front of a surge of 29 positive COVID-19 cases this month, with infections turning up at a school and nursing home in Prairie City. Seven new cases were announced Mon- day from the Prairie City, John Day and Seneca ZIP codes. In a Monday press release, the Blue Mountain Care Center announced that six residents and seven employees have tested positive for COVID-19 since March 8. Prairie City School District had two peo- ple test positive for COVID-19 as well, according to a March 9 letter to parents from Prairie City Superintendent Casey Hallgarth. Lindsay said the recent uptick in cases, particularly among residents of the care cen- ter, concerns her. Eagle fi le photo See COVID-19, Page A16 Grant County Health Department Clinic Manager Jessica Wine- gar gets a COVID-19 test in November. Contributed image/U.S. Department of the Interior Oregon has fi ve congressional districts, whose current borders are shown below. Voters in each of these districts send one rep- resentative to Congress for a two-year term. In Oregon, con- gressional and state legislative district lines are primarily deter- mined by the Legislature. 2020 political redistricting: Fuzzy math and absent maps Contributed photo/The Nature Conservancy By Gary A. Warner Oregon Capital Bureau A large herd of elk on the Zumwalt Prairie in Wallowa County. ODFW proposing major changes in 2022 for archery elk hunters Controlled hunts proposed for 13 units and parts of three others By Jayson Jacoby EO Media Group A major change to archery elk hunt- ing seasons in most of Northeast Oregon could start in 2022. The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife is proposing to shift the archery season in 13 units and parts of three oth- ers from the current general hunt — meaning there’s no limit on the number of tags sold — to a controlled hunt, with a limited number of tags. In a controlled hunt, archers would have to apply for a tag through the state’s computer lottery system. In June 2020, ODFW announced the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission would consider changing the archery sea- son in all units east of the Cascades from general to controlled hunts, and for elk as well as buck deer hunting. But in August 2020 the agency said the commission would decide on changes to buck deer archery seasons, but it would delay any decision on elk seasons. In September 2020 the commission approved the proposal to change buck deer archery hunting from a general season to a controlled season starting in 2021. Oregon has had general archery hunts in Eastern Oregon, for buck deer and for elk, since 1979. Since 1983 the archery season for both species has lasted for one month, starting in late August. See Elk, Page A10 State to settle Grant County-based lawsuit halting relief funds for Black Oregonians John Day logging company set to receive $45,000, establish class action for other non-Black business owners who were denied funding By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle The state has agreed to settle a Grant County-based lawsuit halting coronavirus relief money for Black Oregonians. Should the court approve, the fund could resume paying out aid to Black-owned businesses and their families, and as part of the settlement, the state would pay an unde- termined sum to non-Black applicants who had applied for help from the fund last year, according to a proposed settlement agree- ment fi led March 12 in U.S. District Court in Pendleton. Great Northern Resources, a John Day logging company that lists Tad Houpt and Grant County Commissioner Sam Palmer EOMG fi le photo Tad Houpt, part owner of Great Northern Resources, addresses a crowd in John Day in 2016. as agents, fi led a lawsuit alleging race- based discrimination after being denied funding from the coronavirus relief fund See Lawsuit, Page A16 The fuzzy future of Ore- gon politics east of the Cas- cades went public last week: No diagrams, charts, data — really nothing tangible at all to show how new legislative and congressional districts will be drawn. “We don’t have any maps,” said Rep. Andrea Salinas, D-Lake Oswego, chair of the House Redistricting Commit- tee. “We don’t have any num- bers from the census.” Salinas and her Sen- ate counterpart, Sen. Kath- leen Taylor, D-Milwaukie, said they were making a good faith eff ort to hold the legally required 10 public hearings on new political maps. Maps that don’t exist — at least, not yet. The hearings are collat- eral damage from the constitu- tional car crash headed to the Oregon Supreme Court. The once-a-decade process of rebalancing populations in legislative and congressional districts is a smolderingly hot political wreck. Any fi x isn’t expected earlier than autumn. Like so many things over the past year, COVID-19 is the main problem. In normal times, the U.S. Census counts people every decade, in years that end in zero. The Legislature gets detailed Oregon data by April 1 of the following year. Law- makers have until the end of their session on July 1 to get maps of 30 Senate, 60 House and either fi ve or six congres- sional districts to the governor. If they can’t agree on a redistricting plan, the secre- tary of state takes over the mapmaking with an Aug. 15 deadline. But these are not normal times. COVID-19 crippled the census count. The Legislature received no data. No maps are being drawn for the governor. There’s no dispute for the sec- retary of state to resolve. The census offi cials in Washington, D.C., have been saying sorry for months. But given all the upheaval in their work, they now say data to draw districts won’t get to Oregon until Sept. 30. That is six months late and well beyond constitutional and stat- utory deadlines. To employ an over- used term during the cur- rent pandemic, the situation is “unprecedented.” Transla- tion: Nobody knows what to do because its never been done before. Adding to the drama: The offi cial population numbers are expected to earn Oregon a sixth congressional seat, its fi rst in 40 years. The new district will have to be shoe- horned into the existing con- gressional map. The Legislature has a “back to the future” solution. It’s ask- ing the Oregon Supreme Court to set the deadlines aside, reset the clock and give lawmak- ers another shot at redistrict- ing when the data arrives in the fall. A special session of the Legislature would meet to approve the work. Secretary of State Shemia Fagan supports the idea. The Legislature wants up to 90 days after the data arrives to create the maps. Fagan does not support that timeline. Pushing redistricting into December would be cutting things close, Fagan has said. Any hitch and there could be no maps when candidates are supposed to start fi ling for the offi ces in January. As the state’s offi cial election referee, she might have to step in. House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Portland, and Senate Pres- ident Peter Courtney, D-Sa- lem, fi led a petition with the Oregon Supreme Court this See Redistricting, Page A16