GRANT UNION WINS FIRST HOME TRACK MEET SINCE COVID-19 | PAGE A9 Wednesday, May 12, 2021 153nd Year • No. 19 • 16 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com COVID-19 kills fi fth Grant County resident Turning the tassel 89-year-old man died May 5 Grant County high schools have all made plans for outdoor graduation ceremonies this year. Grant Union Junior/Senior High School Principal Ryan Gerry said they will have graduation at 10 a.m. June 5 outdoors on the football fi eld. They have 31 seniors this year at Grant Union. Gerry said in a let- ter to parents that each graduate will be allotted 15 tickets for fi eld level entrance at the graduation ceremony. The graduate’s family or friend By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle Another Grant County resi- dent has died of COVID-19. The Oregon Health Author- ity reported Friday that an 89-year-old man from Grant County tested positive April 12 and died May 5 at his residence. OHA reported he had underly- ing conditions. The death was one of eight announced Friday and brings Grant County’s death toll to fi ve. Grant County Health offi - cials reported 18 cases in the last week. The county’s rate of COVID-19 infections was 180 per 100,000 people as of May 10, the third highest in the state. The Centers for Disease Control reported that Grant County has inoculated 30.9% of its residents, and the county remains among the least vacci- nated in Oregon. However, the county fully vaccinated more than half of the county’s seniors over 65 as of Monday, the CDC reported. In addition, the CDC noted that roughly 30% of Grant County residents 18 and over had received the vaccine. In Grant County’s region seven, shared with Deschutes, Harney, Klamath, Jeff erson, Klamath, Lake and Wheeler counties, the Oregon Health Authority reported 15 vari- ant cases. The CDC identi- fi es B.1.526 — which has been identifi ed in Grant County — as a “variant of interest,” which is being monitored, but not a “vari- ant of concern” that has been shown to cause increased trans- missibility or disease severity. Region seven has two inten- sive care unit beds and 53 non- ICU beds available. St. Charles Hospital in Bend reported Monday that the hos- pital had nearly 40 COVID-19 patients, with six in ICU and fi ve on ventilators. Grant County is one of three counties that will drop in risk level Friday, Gov. Kate Brown announced Tuesday. The county will move from high risk to moderate risk, eas- ing restrictions on businesses. Restaurants will be able to seat people indoors at 50% capacity up to 100 people, and up to 150 people outdoors. Closing time remains 11 p.m. Grant County schools prepare for graduation By Rudy Diaz Blue Mountain Eagle groups will be assigned certain seat- ing sections on the fi eld. Drive-in and additional seating will be available in the football stands area separate from the fi eld area. The ceremony will be live-streamed on the NFHS Network and on the Grant Union Facebook page. Masks will be required for people in attendance during the ceremony, according to the letter. “It has been a very unique and challenging year in general with COVID, so we are really looking for- ward to having the opportunity to cel- ebrate our seniors and their accom- plishments at this year’s graduation ceremony,” Gerry said. Contributed photo/Tanni Wenger Photography See Graduation, Page A16 Graduates from Prairie City School toss their caps in the air at their 2020 grad- uation ceremony. Locked and unloaded EOMG fi le photo Two gun proposals were combined in a fi nal bill headed to Gov. Kate Brown for signature. Senate vote sends gun legislation to Gov. Brown By Peter Wong Oregon Capital Bureau ov. Kate Brown is the fi nal stop for the Oregon Legislature’s major gun legislation of 2021. The Senate voted Wednesday, May 5, to accept the House version of a bill that combines requirements for locks and safe storage of fi rearms with a narrowed ban on concealed-handgun license holders bring fi rearms into some public places, notably the Capitol and the Portland airport. The vote was 17-7. Sen. Betsy Johnson of Scappoose was the lone Democrat to join six Republicans in opposition to the revised Senate Bill 554. Five Republicans and one independent were recorded as excused or absent. Sen. Floyd Prozanski, a Democrat from Eugene and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said the bill follows the principles laid out by a 2008 U.S. Supreme Court decision. The court for the fi rst time concluded there was an individual right to bear arms under the Sec- ond Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, but that right can be regulated. “What we do know is that reasonable regu- lations can be placed on these individual rights we have,” Prozanski said. “The bottom line is that we have a bill that does in fact address certain areas that we feel as a state need to be regulated.” Oregon would join 11 other states with some form of requirements for locks and safe stor- age of fi rearms, according to the Kaiser Fam- ily Foundation. As for the narrower scope of the ban on guns G “IT CLEARLY INFRINGED “SAFE STORAGE SAVES ON THE RIGHT TO PEOPLE’S LIVES, HELPING PREVENT SELF-DEFENSE. I VOTED UNINTENTIONAL TO SUPPORT WOMEN SHOOTINGS AND FIREARM AND MINORITIES IN MY SUICIDES. IT WILL MAKE IT DISTRICT WHO WANT THE HARDER FOR POTENTIAL OPPORTUNITY FOR SELF- SCHOOL SHOOTERS TO DEFENSE FOR THEMSELVES AND THEIR FAMILIES AS THE OBTAIN A GUN, AND IT WILL SUPPORT RESPONSIBLE OREGON CONSTITUTION GUN OWNERSHIP.” ALLOWS FOR.” —Sen. Tim Knopp of Bend —Henry Wessinger, State of Safety Action president in some public places, Prozanski said it was a compromise. The original Senate version would have left it to all local governments to decide restrictions for themselves; the fi nal version limits the option to school districts, commu- nity colleges and state universities. The option for cities, counties and special districts was removed. The ban still applies to the Capitol in Salem and the passenger terminal at Portland Interna- tional Airport. As a state representative in 1995, Prozanski voted for a law that pre-empts local govern- ments from regulating fi rearms, other than dis- charging them in public. “But I will tell you that even though I thought it was the best decision I could make at that time, today is a diff erent day,” he said. State of Safety Action, a nonprofi t that advo- cates prevention of gun violence, issued a state- ment of support after the vote. “Safe storage saves lives, helping prevent unintentional shootings and fi rearm suicides,” Henry Wessinger, the group’s president, said. “It will make it harder for potential school shooters to obtain a gun, and it will support responsible gun ownership.” Senate Republican Leader Fred Girod of See Guns, Page A16