January 15, 2021 Business and development tidbits Middle school Furniture will be ordered for Warrenton’s new middle school in less than 45 days. Construction is that far along. Project Manager Scott Rose reported during Wednesday night’s school board meeting that all steel construction is complete, the second-floor slab has been poured, they’ve begun roofing work and 25 percent of the exterior wall framing is complete. Drywall installation should be com- plete by Feb. 1. The school is “still on tar- get” for completion by late July with the site ready for students in the fall. New Gearhart trail The Ridge Path is under construction in Gearhart. It’s a new trail being built by vol- unteers and paid for by dona- tions. The path begins on the right side of City Hall, 698 Pacific Way, and passes through sev- eral neighborhoods. Walkers will find Sitka spruce, west- ern hemlock, salal, shore pine, and pink honeysuckle. A loop back to City Hall pass- es along the golf course and the Necanicum Estuary. City of Gearhart Volunteers work on the Ridge Path. The Columbia Press 3 Clatsop sees its fourth death from coronavirus volving COVID-19 should The Columbia Press report it to the Depart- Clatsop County had its ment of Justice hotline at fourth COVID-related 866-720-5721. death this week and also returns to the state’s “ex- Vaccines for vets treme risk” category on Veterans age 75 and old- Friday, Jan. 15. er should soon receive a The county’s fourth death phone call from Veterans was an 85-year-old Clat- Administration staff to sop County man first diag- schedule COVID-19 vacci- nosed Dec. 3. He died Dec. nations. 31 at Legacy Meridian Park Currently, operators Medical Center in Tualatin. and staff will not be able The county’s redesigna- to schedule veterans who tion as “extreme” means call in for a vaccination, so additional restrictions be sure to take phone calls on businesses and social coming from the VA. events. The county had The VA encourages peo- been downgraded from “ex- ple to check for vaccine in- treme risk” to “high risk” on formation online at port- Jan. 1, but increased cases land.va.gov or by calling a during the two-week period Heather Bashor/Oregon Military Dept. recorded information line meant a return to the more at 503-220-3434. Oregon National Guard Spc. Toby restrictive class. Restrictions again have SeWell vaccinates a Salem resident Fitness center fined been placed on bars, at the Oregon State Fairgrounds on Oregon Occupational restaurants, gyms, the- Wednesday. aters, conference centers, Safety and Health Administra- ly converted small business tion has fined a Salem fitness and nursing homes. The declaration by Gov. Kate COVID-19 relief funds into center $126,749 for willfully continuing to expose employ- Brown is based on the county’s their personal use. Andrew Aaron Lloyd, 50, ees to coronavirus disease de- case count per 100,000 peo- of Lebanon and Russell A. spite a public health order to ple. There were 103 cases from Dec. 27 to Jan. 9, putting the Schort, 38, of Myrtle Creek limit capacity. The fine was the result of county’s “metrics” above 200 were charged by the U.S. At- cases per 100,000 population. torney’s Office on Jan. 7 with While in the extreme risk wire fraud, bank fraud and category, restaurants and bars money laundering. They’re accused of filing false are allowed no indoor dining applications to receive $2.2 or drinking, although outdoor million in Paycheck Protection dining is allowed. All indoor recreation and entertainment Program funds and Economic establishments are closed. No Injury Disaster Loans using indoor visitation is allowed at three separate bogus business- es. long-term care facilities. The loan application packag- There had been 35 cases recorded in Clatsop County es included some of the same during the previous seven days information across the differ- ent business entities, includ- that ended Wednesday. Since the first case in March, ing physical locations and the the county has had 660 peo- names of several dozen em- ple contract the virus. Eleven ployees. After receiving the funds, people have been hospitalized. The rest have recovered or are Lloyd transferred at least $1.8 million to a personal online recovering. Statewide, there have been brokerage account and pur- 129,109 cases and 1,708 deaths chased various securities. In the months that followed, the attributed to coronavirus. investments increased to $10 Pandemic fraud Two Oregon men face feder- million. Anyone with informa- al charges after they alleged- tion about attempted fraud in- an inspection launched in re- sponse to multiple complaints against Capitol Racquet Sports on Commercial Street. It is the largest penalty is- sued to an employer by Oregon OSHA for a violation related to COVID-19. The division cited the violation as “willful” and, at the discretion of the admin- istrator, imposed the maxi- mum penalty allowed. Send in the Guard The Oregon National Guard is helping distribute vaccina- tions to residents. On Jan. 12, 40 medical per- sonnel who are guard mem- bers were activated by the governor to assist the state in distributing vaccines at the Oregon State Fairgrounds in Salem. The state had vaccinated 120,000 people as of Wednes- day. Help from the National Guard was initiated through a plan developed by Salem Health Hospitals and Clinics. Use of the State Fairgrounds as an alternative hospital lo- cation was established at the beginning of the coronavirus outbreak.