THE 100TH ‘62 DAYS CELEBRATION | PAGE A3 Wednesday, June 16, 2021 153nd Year • No. 24 • 18 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com Getting back to New sheriff building stability ‘NORMALCY’ McKinley focusing on maintaining personnel, cultivating collective vision By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle Grant County Sheriff Todd McKin- ley has been busy since he took the helm of the sheriff ’s offi ce in January. The former undersheriff , who in his second bid for sheriff unseated long- time Sheriff Glenn Palmer, said his offi ce had been on more calls this year than last. McKinley said he is not sure what he would attribute the uptick in calls to. Grant County “I can’t exactly Sheriff Todd put my fi nger on it McKinley yet,” he said. “Maybe we’re doing business a little diff erent, and people are more willing to call.” Nonetheless, he said, he has been going out on calls himself. “This is not a place where you can just sit in the offi ce and type all day,” he said. Building stability EOMG fi le photo Registered nurse LeAnn Alexander administers a dose of the Phizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine to Yellowhawk Tribal Health Center CEO Lisa Guz- man at the health clinic in Mission in December. When 70% of eligible adults are vaccinated statewide, mask, social distance and other limits in all 36 counties will be lifted By Gary A. Warner Oregon Capital Bureau O Like most states, Oregon is left with a remaining eligible population who either haven’t found the time and opportunity for vaccination, or are hesitant for personal reasons. its goal to get at As yet unknown is how many eligible adults are opposed to inoc- ulations — what OHA once termed “vaccine bel- ligerent.” County vaccination rates for getting one shot into eligible arms range from 34% in rural Lake County to nearly 71% in the tech hub areas of Washington County near Portland. Umatilla County has offi cially put shots in just under 39% of eligible adult residents as of Fri- day. Some county offi cials have argued the count is too low because it doesn’t include people who were inoculated in nearby Washington and Idaho or at federal and other facilities that don’t show up in OHA counts. Public health offi cials are using fl exible hours, drop-in sites, outreach to remote communities, lot- PMG fi le photo tery prizes and other rewards to attract more arms Gov. Kate Brown, at a 2020 press for now readily available vaccination needles. event, wearing her social distancing Brown and state offi cials presented a mix of opti- mask in public. mism, frustration and concern over the COVID-19 situation in Oregon. regon is about 90,000 people short of least one shot of vaccine into the arms of the state’s eligible adults in order to lift most COVID-19 restrictions by June 25, state offi cials said Friday. “We are so close to fully reopening our econ- omy,” Gov. Kate Brown said during an afternoon press conference. Brown has said, when 70% of eligible adults are vaccinated statewide, she will lift mask, social distance, restaurant occupancy, audience size and other limits in all 36 counties. The offi cial mark as of noon Friday: 67%. After a spring that saw Oregon residents racing to get vaccinated, the pace has slowed to the point that supply far outstrips demand. The Oregon Health Authority reported Friday that 15,761 doses of COVID vaccines per day were being administered. That is down from an early April peak that saw more than 50,000 shots admin- istered on some days. To date, 2,303,485 people in Oregon have had at least one dose. See Normalcy, Page A18 McKinley said he and his deputies are there to provide a service to the voters. At its core, he said the sheriff ’s offi ce is a business. “We’re supplying a service to the voting public, and I want them to get a good product,” he said. Building stability within the offi ce is critical, he said. McKinley said the focus within the offi ce right now is keeping personnel long enough to cultivate a collective vision. McKinley said he had been sur- prised that an institution as old as the Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce had not been further along in bringing that shared vision into the community. The future of the John Day Police Department The prospect of John Day losing its police department due to a lack of funding may require the sheriff ’s offi ce to reassess their priorities. The city plans to ask voters to approve a levy to fund the police department, and if that fails, city offi - cials have said they plan to close the police department and transition the offi cers over to the sheriff ’s offi ce. McKinley has said it would be dif- fi cult for the sheriff ’s offi ce to absorb the cost of John Day’s three police offi - cers long term. He said too that ser- vices in John Day would be “greatly diminished.” “You have to put it in context: It’s a See Sheriff , Page A18 Grant County judge faces possible recall eff ort By Steven Mitchell Blue Mountain Eagle Grant County Judge Scott Myers faces a potential recall eff ort. Chief petitioner Joshua Walker of Seneca fi led a prospective recall peti- tion with the Oregon Secretary of State’s Offi ce June 10. Walker wrote in his justifi cation that Myers has shown a “lack of adminis- trative oversight,” a “refusal to collab- orate,” “fi nancial mismanagement” and a “lack of transparency.” In addition, Walker wrote that Myers has lacked oversight over departments and county personnel, which has led to a lack of confi dence in his leadership and over- all dysfunction. Walker wrote that “critical pub- lic funds” were unaccounted for and misspent, which prolonged economic recovery in the county. He said Myers is unwilling to invest in economic devel- The Eagle/Steven Mitchell Grant County Judge Scott Myers during a June 9 session of Grant County Court. opment in the county, leading to “con- tinual population decline, decreased revenue, and the loss of basic services and amenities.” He claims Myers is violating his oath of offi ce by refusing to meet with other elected offi cials. Myers told the Eagle Monday, “The record will show my position on the potential of wasting money when COVID-19 started, and it is evident that I wouldn’t spend road fund dollars on development on private property.” Walker declined to comment Sunday and said he wanted to wait until peti- tions begin to circulate before speaking publicly about it. Lydia Plukchi, a compliance spe- cialist with the Elections Division of the Oregon Secretary of State’s Offi ce, said their offi ce notifi ed Myers that a recall had been fi led against him. Plukchi said templates were issued to Walker and that both a cover and signa- ture sheet for a prospective recall petition must be approved in writing by the elec- tions offi cial before the chief petitioner may begin circulating the petition. A June 11 letter emailed to Myers from Deborah Scroggin, the state’s direc- tor of elections, wrote that the chief peti- tioner must collect and submit at least 578 valid signatures from registered vot- ers no later than 5 p.m. on Sept. 8. According to Scroggin’s email, if enough signatures are not gathered, then the recall petition becomes void. If the recall petition contains the required number of valid signatures, Myers would have fi ve days to decide whether to resign from offi ce, or fi le a Statement of Justifi cation that would be included on the ballot in the special recall election. The county must hold a spe- cial county-wide election for the recall within 35 days. If the majority votes to recall Myers, the governor would appoint a replace- ment until the next pertinent election. The last recall for a county judge was for Mark Webb in 2009, and it failed. A coalition of citizens failed to recall for- mer County Commissioner Boyd Brit- ton in 2016.