WINNER OF THE 2020 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31, 2021 HermistonHerald.com EasternOregonMarketplace.com Hermiston plans return to full-time classes Change in distancing rules allows new schedule starting April 13 By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR What’s the diff erence between 3 feet and 6 feet? For Hermiston students, it’s the diff erence between hybrid learning and full-time school. On Monday, March 22, the Oregon Department of Educa- tion announced that schools would only be required to keep students 3 feet apart in the classroom. The next day, Hermiston School Dis- trict announced that all grade lev- els would be returning to class full time, fi ve days a week, starting April 13. Superintendent Tricia Mooney said the previous 6-foot require- ment had been the thing holding the district back from off ering full time school sooner. Once 6 feet was only recommended, but not required, the district was eager to move forward. “We might have to look at how we use some spaces diff erently, but we’re excited to have every- one back,” she said. Building administrators are working out the logistics now. According to ODE’s “Safe Schools, Ready Learners” guide- lines, elementary school students can sit 3 feet apart regardless of their county’s COVID-19 case levels, while middle and high school students can be 3 feet apart in counties with fewer than 200 cases of COVID-19 in a 14-day period. Umatilla County has been averaging roughly half that in recent weeks. In some situations — includ- ing physical education classes, choir or band classes and times when students are taking off their masks to eat lunch — 6 feet of space between students are still required. Mooney said in Hermiston, See Classes, Page A9 Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Students in Lucas Eivins’ social studies class sit socially distanced during class at Sandstone Middle School in Hermiston on Thursday, March 26, 2021. UPDATES COVID-19 numbers updated HERMISTON HERALD Umatilla County saw 42 new cases of COVID- 19 reported in the past week, from Wednesday, March 24, to Tuesday, March 30, according to Umatilla County Public Health. The regional dash- board on the health department’s website also showed seven new cases and one new death of a person with COVID- 19 reported in Morrow County. Statewide, The Ore- gonian reported on Mon- day, March 29, that Ore- gon averaged 351 cases a day over the past week, up 28% since March 15. The paper’s analysis also found the state’s test pos- itivity rate had increased, to 3.8%, and active hospi- talizations of COVID-19 patients had increased by 22% to 142. The increase of cases in Oregon and in the United States as a whole comes as Centers for Dis- ease Control and Preven- tion Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky and other fed- eral offi cials have asked states to keep up their COVID-19 restrictions a little while longer, warn- ing that people are relax- ing their precautions too quickly before enough of the population is vaccinated. The American Health Care Association and National Center for Assisted Living released a study showing positive news for nursing homes, however. The organizations, which together represent more than 14,000 nurs- ing homes and long-term care facilities across the country, released a report on March 30, stating that nursing homes have seen a 96% decline in new COVID-19 cases among residents since Dec. 20, 2020, and COVID-19- related deaths in nurs- ing homes declined by 91% during the same time period. INSIDE Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Jaime Aguilera, left, receives a dose of the COVID-19 vaccine during a mass vaccination event for farm and food processing workers in Morrow County at the Sage Center on Wednesday, March 24, 2021. Roll up those sleeves Umatilla and Morrow counties begin vaccinating ag workers By BRYCE DOLE STAFF WRITER Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Staff at a COVID-19 mass vaccination clinic at the Sage Center in Boardman administer doses of the COVID-19 vaccine on Wednesday, March 24, 2021. Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Cars navigate a COVID-19 mass vaccination event at the Sage Center in Boardman on Wednesday, March 24, 2021. A3  A windstorm over the weekend caused scattered power outages in the region A6  Churches and cities off er an array of free community Easter activities Offi cials in Umatilla and Mor- row counties are ramping up vaccine eff orts after receiving approval from the state to broaden eligibility to agricultural workers immediately in an eff ort to help a workforce hit disproportionately hard by the pandemic. While agricultural workers, food processing workers, preg- nant women and people ages 45 and up with underlying condi- tions became eligible statewide on Monday, March 29, Umatilla and Morrow counties had already received permission to start vac- cinating those groups a week early. In Morrow County, offi cials from the Oregon Health Author- ity worked with county offi cials at a four-day mass vaccination clinic at the Sage Center in Boardman through Saturday, March 27. Akiko Saito, deputy direc- tor for the COVID-19 response and recovery unit, a joint divi- sion between the Oregon Health Authority and the Oregon Depart- ment of Human Services, said the clinic was a “pilot project” specif- ically geared to immunize a com- munity long understood to be espe- A7  New grants will be available in April for restaurants, event ven- ues and other businesses INSIDE For a list of vaccine clinic loca- tions and contact information, see Page 9A. cially vulnerable to COVID-19. In all, offi cials vaccinated over 1,000 agricultural workers at the clinic, according to the Morrow County Health Department. Saito said state offi cials are looking to hold similar eff orts statewide. State offi cials recently conducted a survey with 585 agri- cultural facilities that showed more than 21,000 workers were eligible for the vaccine. “We’re working with our local public health authorities to con- nect agricultural, migrant and sea- sonal workplaces to see if they can do an event(s) like this” across Oregon, Saito said. In Umatilla County, health offi - cials have started reaching out to agricultural and food processing facilities, hoping to bring vaccines to people who are both hard to connect with and often can’t take time off work. “We are trying to aggressively See Vaccine, Page A9 A9  The same construction com- pany will build both of Hermiston’s new elementary schools