NEWS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, 2021 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A3 Local demand for COVID-19 vaccine dropping ‘dramatically’ By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR Jade McDowell/Hermiston Herald A fi refi ghter from Umatilla County Fire District 1 battles a fi re along the Oxbow Trail on March 26, 2021. Fire district bond would pay for equipment, vehicles, facilities By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR In addition to races for board and commissions, vot- ers in the May 18 election who live in Umatilla County Fire District 1’s boundaries will have a choice on back- ing a $13.1 million bond. The bond would assess up to 23 cents per $1,000 of assessed value on prop- erties for the next 20 years. The money would be used on equipment, vehicles and facility upgrades for the fi re district. Fire Chief Scott Stan- ton said the projects focus on improving fi refi ghter and EMT/paramedic safety. One of the fi rst purchases if the bond passed would be new turnouts, which are the pro- tective, fi re-resistant suits fi refi ghters wear. “They’re only supposed to be good for fi ve years and we have folks wearing eight- to nine-year-old turn- outs,” Stanton said. The district would pur- chase additional radios, to improve communication and coordination on the scene of large fi res, Stan- ton said. It would also pur- chase new loading systems for ambulances, designed to not only help load patients into the ambulance faster but also to reduce incidences of back injuries for those doing the loading. Another project, which includes expanded vehicle bays and upgraded engine exhaust systems, would reduce staff ’s expo- sure to diesel exhaust carcinogens. The department would also replace or refurbish old vehicles, including a 31-year-old brush truck and 25-year-old ladder truck, and replace aging equip- ment used to extract patients from vehicles at the scene of a crash. New cardiac moni- tors for emergency medical services are also on the list, which includes a variety of other items. “Some of the equipment we’re looking at is very expensive but also very crit- ical to our mission,” Stanton said. UCFD1 is also plan- ning to spend some of the bond money on upgrades to its buildings. Two stations have leaking roofs that need replaced, Stanton said. The district wants to add living quarters to the Stanfi eld sta- tion, add new bays to the sta- tion on Westland Road and create a separate living quar- ters for female personnel at the main station in down- town Hermiston. Stanton said the bond will off er an opportunity to refi - nance old debt service the district carries, saving more than $200,000 a year, and he hopes to use the bond dollars to help leverage state grants to work on seismic upgrades to the district’s stations. The UCFD board already created a bond oversight committee that would over- see spending of the bond dollars, and Josh Burns, who sits on the committee, said as he has spent time with UCFD personnel and in the district’s facilities he has been impressed by the need for better living conditions and better safety equipment for fi refi ghters and other per- sonnel. He said the area has seen “tremendous growth” since the district was fi rst formed, and funding has not kept up with it. He also pointed out that outdated equipment can reduce a fi re district’s ISO rating, which aff ects home insurance rates. “I think this is proba- bly the most common sense bond measure I have ever seen,” he said. Voters will choose whether to fund the 20-year bond by voting on Mea- sure 30-148. At 23 cents per $1,000, the bond would cost the owner of a home valued at $250,000 about $57.50 per year. As Umatilla County is headed back into the “high risk” category for COVID- 19, Umatilla and Morrow counties are turning away vaccine allocations from the state because supply has outpaced demand. Umatilla County Pub- lic Health Director Joe Fiu- mara said the county told the state it could send last week’s allocation for Uma- tilla County to a county with higher demand, and will likely do so again this week. “Our demand level is dropping dramatically,” he said. Fiumara said Umatilla County Public Health cur- rently has about 6,000 vac- cine doses on hand, but is hearing from partners in the county that they don’t need more doses yet. Last week, the county itself adminis- tered less than 500 doses total, and most of those were second doses. At some points during their most recent free clinic, Fiumara said, staff were just sitting and waiting around for any- one to arrive — a stark dif- ference from the long lines a few weeks ago. According to Oregon Health Authority’s vac- cine dashboard, Umatilla County is the least vacci- nated county in the state, with just 23% of its popula- tion at least partially vacci- nated, compared with 41% statewide. The dashboard shows an incomplete picture, however. Some Umatilla County residents have been vaccinated through federal vaccine allocations directly to the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Res- ervation, and information about those doses goes to the federal government before making its way to the state. Others have received the OHA database. Fiumara said from the information he has been given, it appears the CTUIR has administered about 5,000 doses of the two-dose Pfi zer vaccine so far, and yet only 2,819 Pfi zer doses given to Umatilla County residents are listed on OHA’s website, suggesting that some data from CTUIR clinics has yet to make its way to the state. Fiumara also noted, however, that the CTUIR opened up its latest clinic to all of its ceded ter- ritories across 11 counties, meaning not everyone vac- cinated by the Tribes is a Umatilla County resident. “We think our rate is higher, but we don’t know how much higher,” he said. In Morrow County, the OHA dashboard shows 29% of county residents have been vaccinated. As area health depart- ments, hospitals, medi- cal clinics and pharmacies work to increase the local vaccination rate, they did get some good news over the weekend — Oregon counties were once again cleared to begin administer- ing the Johnson & Johnson version of the vaccine. The vaccine was paused temporarily in the United States after six women out of nearly 7 million peo- ple vaccinated experienced dangerous blood clots. Since then, panels of experts at the state and federal level has determined the benefi ts of continuing with the vac- cine far outweigh the risks. Fiumara pointed out that many over-the-counter medications sold in grocery stores have higher risks of serious side eff ects. “It’s still, relatively speaking, a very safe vac- cine,” he said. Before the pause, he said, the county heard from many Umatilla County workers, particularly in agriculture and food pro- county has about 800 doses of the vaccine on hand now, and Fiumara said it remains to be seen whether the demand has changed at all. During the county’s Fri- day, April 30, clinic at 2260 S.W. Court Ave. in Pendle- ton, Umatilla County Pub- lic Health will have all three vaccine options — Pfi zer, Moderna and John- son & Johnson — available for anyone ages 16 and up (the Pfi zer shot is the only version available to people ages 16 and 17). “We’re hoping that will generate some additional demand, but we’re very nervous that the pause (on Johnson & Johnson) may have impacted the way peo- ple see the vaccine,” he said. In Morrow County, Commissioner Melissa Lindsay said the county is also struggling to fi nd people to get vaccinated, although she hopes that resuming the Johnson & Johnson shot will help. “We’ve defi nitely seen demand dropping,” she said. “It used to be we had a long list we could call when we had an extra dose in a vial, and now we are strug- gling to fi nd someone.” She said the county cur- rently has about 1,400 John- son & Johnson doses, 300 Pfi zer and 240 Moderna. They are planning on doing some targeted eff orts to use those doses, including working to get students ages 16 and 17 vaccinated with the Pfi zer. Lindsay said that eff ort could make a big dif- ference in preventing out- breaks as schools attempt to start indoor sports. If the county can’t fi nd enough local residents to get vaccinated, she said, they have discussed invit- ing people from metro areas who are still struggling to get an appointment to come and get vaccinated in Mor- row County. 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