A8 NEWS Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, December 29, 2021 2021 Continued from Page A7 George Chadwick, leader of the Mormon Church’s oper- ations in Northeast Oregon, found that Grant County’s food bank was in need of a boost and helped get the county’s donation. The state agreed to set- tle a Grant County-based law- suit aimed at halting corona- virus relief money for Black Oregonians. Great Northern Resources, a John Day logging company that listed Tad Houpt and Grant County Commissioner Sam Palmer as agents, fi led a law- suit alleging race-based dis- crimination after being denied funding from the coronavirus relief fund set up to help Black- owned businesses. Under the settlement terms, Great Northern received $45,000, plus up to $186,000 in fees for its attorneys. Palmer told the Eagle in December of 2020 that he was not involved in the law- suit, while Houpt declined to comment. APRIL State health offi cials reported that three COVID- 19-related deaths were linked to an outbreak at a Prairie City nursing home, Blue Mountain Care Center. Courtesy of Opsis Architecture This conceptual drawing shows what the proposed aquatic center at the Seventh Street Sports Complex might look like. Oregon Health Authority’s data showed that 31 cases were associated with the outbreak. The county’s public health administrator, Kimberly Lind- say, noted that the total number of cases and deaths in the out- break included some involving people outside the facility. Rebekah Rand, Blue Moun- tain Health District’s direc- tor of emergency services, and Lori Lane, health information manager, said there was no way to determine how the virus entered the care center. Amid reports that care cen- ter employees had fl outed coronavirus guidelines, Derek Daly, the CEO of BMHD, told the Eagle that he hoped staff members were following them but could not mandate what they do off the clock. As COVID cases continued to soar, the Centers for Dis- ease Control and Prevention reported that Grant County had the highest rate of infections per capita in Oregon and the worst vaccination rate in the state. The county’s infection rate was 625 per 100,000 peo- ple, while the vaccination rate was 17.4%. Later in the month, the county got some excellent news when Monument grad- uate Skye Fitzgerald, a fi lm- maker, earned his second Oscar nomination for his latest documentary, “Hunger Ward.” To end the month, the Ore- gon Department of Fish and Wildlife reported a 9.5% increase in wolves statewide, with 10 in Grant County, up from seven the previous year. John Day ODFW district biologist Ryan Torland told the Eagle that the agency did not believe that this was the total number of wolves in the county. Instead, it was what they considered a minimum population. MAY Tensions fl ared over COVID-19 — and so did mis- information. After Gov. Kate Brown’s executive orders des- ignating an “extreme risk” and banning indoor dining at restaurants in 15 counties, including Grant, to slow a spike in COVID-19 infections, several residents urged Grant County leaders to publicly pro- claim the county would not comply with the restrictions. Despite echoing many of MEET OREGON’S NEXT GOVERNOR DR. BUD PIERCE COME MEET AND TALK WITH BUD AT THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS ON WEDNESDAY, JAN 12 Ontario John Day Baker City 8:00 AM at the Plaza Inn Restaurant 11:00 AM at Ogilvie Field 6:00 PM at the Baker County Conference & Event Center RSVP TODAY TO INFO@BUDPIERCE.ORG “Please join us. I would like to meet you and hear your ideas about Oregon’s future!” —BUD PIERCE Want to be on our mailing list? Send an email to info@budpierce.org and we will sign you up! 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Kate Brown reversed course on her June 30 executive order handing over public health decisions to counties amid a resurgence of COVID-19. As the rapidly spreading delta variant sent COVID case counts soaring, the governor issued a fl urry of new execu- tive orders mandating masks in K-12 schools, inside state build- ings and, fi nally, in all public indoor spaces in the state. Those moves quickly drew fi re from Grant County leaders. No more tanks to refi ll. No more deliveries. No more hassles with travel. The INOGEN ONE portable oxygen concentrator is designed to provide unparalleled freedom for oxygen therapy users. It’s small, lightweight, clinically proven for stationary and portable use, during the day and at night, and can go virtually anywhere — even on most airlines. Inogen accepts Medicare and many private insurances! 15 % & 10 % RD TH GU TE 1 JULY Grant County entered July in the grip of one of the worst droughts on record. The dry conditions prompted Gov. Kate Brown to issue an emer- gency drought declaration. According to the National Integrated Drought Informa- tion System, it was the dri- est year in 127 years, with 2 to 2½ inches less rain the average. Nearly two-thirds of the county at that point was expe- riencing extreme drought conditions. Pastures were brown and barren, hay yields were low, and producers were selling off cattle to avoid the high cost of supplemental feed and forage. Shaun Robertson, pres- ident of the Grant County Farm Bureau, told the Eagle that every rancher he talked to told him conditions were the worst they’d ever seen. On July 13, the John Day City Council voted unani- mously to overturn the city’s ban on retail marijuana sales. The repeal paved the way for more grow sites and dispen- saries in town, but there are still restrictions on where such operations can go. A city ordinance prohibits a dispen- sary or grow site within 1,000 feet of an educational facility, library, park, youth facility or other dispensary. By year’s end there still were no dispensaries oper- ating within the city limits, although two cannabis retail- ers — Rocky Mountain Dis- pensary and Burnt River Farms — had announced plans to set up shop in town. Introducing the INOGEN ONE – It’s oxygen therapy on your terms EXCLUSIVE LIMITED TIME OFFER! NATIO in June and charged with 20 new sex-related charges stemming from incidents that occurred between 2015 and 2020. Brogan McKrola, 22, faces a lengthy prison term if convicted on all of the new Measure 11 charges, which carry a minimum sentence of at least six years with no possibility for any sentence reduction. In November, McKrola’s plea hearing was rescheduled to Jan. 24. Roughly 1,500 people turned out to commemo- rate the 100th year of Grant County’s ‘62 Days Celebra- tion, marking the discovery of gold in Canyon Creek in 1862. Colby Farrell of the Whis- key Gulch Gang, which orga- nizes the event, said at the time that it looked like it would be the county’s fi rst social gathering with eased COVID restrictions. “This is really important that it could be the kickoff event in getting back to nor- mal,” he said. “It’s a chance to get together fi nally after all this time and get back to being a community.” One solution for oxygen at home, away, and for travel ’S T A Mt. Vernon man on pre- trial release for sex crime charges was sent back to jail N E the valid opinions expressed in a letter signed by County Court members that went to the gov- ernor, many of the arguments made in the county relied on misinformation. County Commissioner Sam Palmer incorrectly cited a Stanford University study stat- ing masks were detrimental to long-term health. However, according to Stanford’s senior manager of media relations, Lisa Kim, the study’s author, Baruch Vain- shelboim, had no affi liation with the university when the journal Medical Hypothesis published the article. “Stanford Medicine strongly supports the use of face masks to control the spread of COVID-19,” she said. She said Vainshelboim was a one-term, one-year visiting scholar in 2016 for “matters unrelated” to the 2020 article about face masks. Palmer, a registered nurse, said the study looked like oth- ers he sees in medical journals he reads to stay current with changes in medicine. “Maybe I should have done a little more homework,” he said. “But I’ll own what I did.” Palmer issued an apology to Myers, Hamsher and Grant County’s residents for quoting the debunked study. Still, as a “health care advocate,” Palmer said he does not believe masks are the answer to curbing the spread of COVID-19. Dr. Jeremy Kamil, an asso- ciate professor of microbi- ology and immunology at the Louisiana State Univer- sity Health Sciences Cen- ter, disagreed with Palmer’s assertion. “The preponderance of public health data is over- whelmingly in favor of how effi cacious masks are at pre- venting the spread of fl u and other respiratory viruses,” he said. Two hundred people attended a town hall at the Grant County Fairgrounds on May 12 to express their frus- trations with statewide lock- down measures to mitigate the spread of COVID-19. Dubbed a “nonpartisan eff ort,” the event organiz- ers stated in a mailer their goal was to let the county’s elected offi cials know where the community stood on Gov. Kate Brown’s COVID-19 mandates. Almost unanimously, the crowd voted for Grant Coun- ty’s commissioners to adopt Baker City’s Resolution No. 3881, which calls for the dec- laration of an economic, men- tal health and crime crisis due to the governor’s COVID-19- related lockdowns and state of emergency. In his view, organizer Bill Newman said the resolution does not have enough teeth, but will carry more weight as an offi cial position. “From the bottom of my heart,” he said, “I think it’s the right thing to do.” A few weeks later, organiz- ers with Community Counsel- ing Solutions and other county agencies abandoned a plan to buy a hotel and convert it into transitional housing after an emotional — and at times hos- tile — public meeting in the Trowbridge Pavilion at the Grant County Fairgrounds, where those in attendance voted down the project 75-50. Prepare for unexpected power outages with a Generac home standby generator REQUEST A FREE QUOTE! 877-557-1912 FREE 7-Year Extended Warranty* A $695 Value! 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