GO! EASTERN OREGON MAGAZINE | INSIDE Wednesday, October 20, 2021 153rd Year • No. 42 • 16 Pages • $1.50 MyEagleNews.com CLOSING THE Steven Mitchell/Eagle fi le photo Grant County Judge Scott Myers during a May session of the County Court. My- ers told audience members during the Wednesday, Oct. 13, session of the court that in-person attendees are now re- quired to mask up, with no exceptions. COP SHOP County will now require masks By STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle CANYON CITY — After months of not enforcing the state mask man- date at public meetings, the Grant County Court will now require in-per- son attendees to mask up when attend- ing court sessions. County Judge Scott Myers said Oregon Occupational Safety and Health warned the county it could get slapped with a $5,000 fi ne after observing a Sept. 22 Facebook Live video stream of a County Court meet- ing that showed most people not wearing masks. Aaron Corvin, a public infor- mation offi cer with Oregon OSHA, said in an email that the agency had received a confi dential complaint on Sept. 22 regarding a session of the Grant County Court. “Holding a public meeting with no masks or face coverings,” the com- plaint alleged. “This is streaming live on the Blue Mountain Eagle Face- book page.” Corvin said no similar complaints had been fi led this year involving Grant County. In August, amid a sharp rise in COVID-19 cases, Gov. Kate Brown announced that masks, face shields or other face coverings would once again be required in indoor public spaces. Nonetheless, some audience mem- bers at the Oct. 13 session pushed back on the face-covering require- ment. Myers told them they would need to mask up or leave the court- room, adding there would be no exceptions. Prairie City resident Frances Pres- ton told Myers she would pay the $5,000 fi ne and that the court should not back down to Oregon OSHA. Myers told Preston that he would not allow disruptions to the meeting and that she would have to wear a mask or leave the courthouse. Preston ultimately put a mask on. Meanwhile, county residents John Rowell and Charlene Morris contin- ued to defy the judge’s order. In a fi ery exchange, Rowell asked Myers what he would do if he did not Bennett Hall/Blue Mountain Eagle Grant County Sheriff Todd McKinley. Once the John Day Police Department closes up shop at the end of the month, the primary responsibility for law enforcement in the city will fall on the Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce — which McKinley said is already stretched too thin. John Day is suspending its police department. Now what? By BENNETT HALL Blue Mountain Eagle L aw enforcement in John Day will look a whole lot diff erent in the future, but for now, nobody seems to know exactly what shape it will take. On Oct. 12, the John Day City Council voted unanimously to suspend the city’s police depart- ment at midnight Oct. 31 (see related story, Page A3). But the need to get everything ready for the shutdown meant the city’s offi cers would have to switch from patrol duties to other activities, and they took their last calls from the county’s 911 dispatch center on Thursday, Oct. 14. The council’s decision accelerated a process that has been discussed for years but that began in earnest last spring. On April 6, in his annual budget message, City Manager Nick Green informed the council that the city did not have enough general fund revenues to cover the department’s costs for the coming fi scal year. He presented charts showing that the depart- ment had been running a defi cit for years, with expenses outpacing bud- geted revenues by more than $300,000 annually. After years of using fund EO Media transfers from other parts John Day Police of the budget to prop up Chief Mike Durr the police department, he said, the city had no more reserves to draw on. Green presented the council with a stark choice: Either transfer local law enforcement functions to the Grant County Sheriff ’s Offi ce by Sept. 1, or hold a special election for a fi ve-year operating levy to help cover the department’s budget shortfall. The council voted to put a levy on the ballot for Aug. 17, asking John Day residents to pay up to 50 cents per $1,000 of assessed valuation on their property tax bill, which would equate to $100 a year for the owner of a $200,000 property. City offi cials set about trying to persuade local residents to vote for the measure but faced vocal opposition from critics of the city’s spend- ing priorities — including a number of people who live outside the city limits, as well as former Grant County Sheriff Glenn Palmer. In the end, the measure received 284 votes in favor vs. 169 votes against but didn’t pass because of the special election’s double major- ity requirement. Only 453 of the city’s 1,168 eli- gible voters cast a ballot, according to County Clerk Brenda Percy, 132 short of the 50%-plus- one, or 585 ballots, needed for the result to count. In a last-ditch eff ort to keep the department afl oat, the city applied for a three-year federal policing grant of $125,000 a year. Grant awards were supposed to be announced in October, but after the announcement date was pushed back indefi nitely, the City Council voted to suspend police operations at the end of this month. See Police, Page A16 See Mandate, Page A16 Roughly 40-60% of local covered workers vaccinated By STEVEN MITCHELL Blue Mountain Eagle The vaccination deadline for health care workers, K-12 educators and certain state employees in Grant County arrived Monday, Oct. 18. When Gov. Kate Brown issued the sweeping order this sum- mer, her announcement was clear: Show proof of vaccination against COVID-19 on or before Oct. 18 or lose your job. Since then, however, labor unions have worked on ironing out condi- tions of employment, thousands of workers have requested exemptions, and the state has granted new exten- sions for certain employees. Although defi nitive statistics are hard to come by, vaccination rates for covered employees in Grant County appeared to be running cine documentation, so the hos- pital anticipated that number to increase before the end of the day on Monday. Rigby said just over 30% have opted for vaccination exceptions along medical or religious lines, adding that the number should increase as the hospital contin- Eagle fi le photo ues to receive employee exception A vial of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine. requests before the deadline. Rigby said the hospital antici- between about 40 and 60% based on pates losing fewer than 10 employ- available information. ees but emphasized that employees can still submit vaccine exception Health care paperwork until the 5 p.m. Mon- As of Friday, Oct. 15, 60% of day deadline. Blue Mountain Hospital’s staff Kimberly Lindsay, Grant had been vaccinated, according County public health administra- to Var Rigby, director of human tor, was out sick Monday and was resources at the hospital. How- unavailable to comment on how ever, Rigby added that some of the her department might be impacted staff had not yet submitted vac- by the vaccine mandate deadline. School districts Casey Hallgarth, Prairie City School District superintendent, said about 42% of his staff had been vac- cinated and that 58% had opted for medical or religious exceptions. “We have a directive from Gov. Brown, and we have to follow it,” Hallgarth said. “Some of our staff are for and some are against, but at the end of the day, we have to comply to keep our jobs.” Hallgarth said there were several conversations with the staff and com- munity about the man date, and his sense was that the majority felt get- ting the jab should be a choice. “Some people are upset because they are being forced to do some- thing they might not believe in,” Hall- garth said. “And I think that is OK, See Vaccine, Page A16