FROM PAGE ONE A8 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 2021 Dog Park: Continued from Page A1 originally hoped to hold a ribbon cutting for the play- ground on Memorial Day, but but Fetter said construc- tion delays now have the playground slated for com- pletion mid-June, with an official opening celebration held on July 4. The new playground is made of a compressed plas- tic that will be less vulner- able to fire than the previ- ous, wooden playground that burned down in 2019. It will sit over a colorful rub- ber-like surface instead of wood chips, and features will include everything from a train to a pirate ship. The project also adds a restroom and concessions stand build- ing, and an additional picnic shelter. After Funland is wrapped Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Malibu, a golden retriever, looks up from a dog bowl while exploring the Hermiston Bark Park during its “grand unleashing” on Friday, April 30, 2021. up, Fetter told the city coun- cil recently, the department can focus on a renovation of Riverfront Park that will add a new, larger playground to replace the former structure damaged by floods in Feb- ruary 2020. The new play- ground and a new park- ing lot will be moved to the south side of the park, which is mostly protected from flooding, while sod will be laid over the north side where the currently parking area stands. Fetter said the city plans to open the Hermiston Fam- Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Dogs, and their owners, arrive at the Hermiston Bark Park for its “grand unleashing” on Friday, April 30, 2021. ily Aquatic Center this sum- mer, and the parks and recre- ation department is focusing more of its summer rec- reation programs on out- door activities, which have been deemed by scientists to lessen the risk of spreading COVID-19. BMCC board approves layoffs By ANTONIO SIERRA STAFF WRITER Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Lines sit empty at a Umatilla County Public Health mass COVID-19 vaccination site in Pendleton on Friday, April 30, 2021. Vaccines: Continued from Page A1 would avoid getting the vac- cine if possible. The findings are similar to a separate sur- vey from Quinnipiac Uni- versity, which found 45% of Republicans say they don’t plan to get a vaccine. According to a New York Times survey of nearly every U.S. county, vaccina- tion rates and interest was lower on average in counties where the majority of resi- dents voted to reelect former President Donald J. Trump, leaving some areas with more vaccines than there is demand. That trend appears to be present in Umatilla County, where voters largely favored Trump and where vac- cine rates have long ranked lowest in Oregon, despite reporting some of the high- est infection rates in the state in recent months. And this week, the county health department asked the state to briefly withhold vac- cine shipments as demand is rapidly declining. With case counts rising on average over the past few weeks, the county was moved from moderate risk back to high risk this week, bringing greater restrictions on businesses and gather- ings, and raising concerns among officials who say local businesses can’t with- stand the constant shifts. New cases tied to unvaccinated residents Officials say newly reported cases are coming almost entirely from resi- dents who have yet to be vaccinated. “I think it’s frustrating to me that I get calls over and over and over again from people who want us to open up the county, open up large events, and have us start moving back to where we were,” Murdock said. “But we can’t order people to get vaccinated. It’s such a con- tradiction to hear all day, every day, from people that want us to go a certain direc- tion, there’s a path to go there, and they don’t want to go down it.” Joe Fiumara, the county’s public health director, said the county lacks concrete data showing vaccine hesi- tancy falls along party lines, but added, anecdotally, that appears to be the case. “We hear nationally that the Republican white man is the least likely to be get- ting the COVID vaccination right now,” he said. “And we know we have a decent sized population of white Republi- can men in this county. And so the assumption I make is there’s probably something there.” However, Fiumara noted that some Hispanic and Latino residents, as well as people from some religious groups, are also hesitant to get vaccinated. To combat this, Fiumara said county health officials are working to create new ways to inform specific groups about the impor- tance, safety and efficacy of vaccines, though he didn’t provide specifics. ‘Mind-boggling’ resistance to vaccine For the commission- ers and Fiumara, what is “mind-boggling” is the vac- cine is now seeing reluctance from Republicans when it was, in fact, designed under a Republican administration. With Operation Warp Speed, an effort that saw vaccines developed at an unprecedented rate with bil- lions of dollars from the Trump administration, the former president repeatedly said vaccines would be the solution to the pandemic and took credit when they were cleared for use in November 2020. The Biden administra- tion, however, promptly took steps to hasten the roll- out after the election and drove the development of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which has reached nearly 7 million Americans despite being paused briefly after six women reported blood clots. The vaccine has now been cleared by the Food and Drug Administration with a warning label noting the potential for rare blood clots. “This really isn’t about Republican or Democrat, this is not a control move, this is not many of these conspiracy theory items that are fun and off-the-wall sometimes,” Fiumara said. “It’s much more straight- forward. It’s about protect- ing yourself and protecting those around you, because they’re the ones who end up suffering if something goes wrong.” By getting vaccinated and speaking out about vac- cinations, Shafer said he’s looking to shift the stigma with some hopes the county can make progress toward reopening in time for sum- mer events. “I want our county to be open,” he said. “I don’t want any restrictions in place because of our numbers. And the way to do that is the vaccine.” Fiumara said despite the county’s low vaccination rates, he’s optimistic that more and more people will get vaccinated as the rollout continues. Even now, he said health officials are seeing people change their minds. “I think people are rec- ognizing that this is our path out of here,” he said. “Peo- ple who were more on the fence aren’t so on the fence now that millions and mil- lions across the country are receiving it with very low side effects or down side.” By a 5-2 vote, the Blue Mountain Community Col- lege Board of Education approved reducing the col- lege’s staff by 14 positions, including seven layoffs, at a special board meeting on Friday, April 30. The move represented a slight improvement from a previous projection that anticipated 11 layoffs as a part of 16 staff reductions, but BMCC administrators maintained the cuts needed to happen so the college could stabilize itself as it attempts to recover from a sustained period of declin- ing enrollment exacer- bated by the COVID-19 pandemic. BMCC will lay off five supervisory employees that covered areas like grants, student success, admissions and marketing. The college is also laying off a business instructor and a web con- tent specialist. “This is a really hard list,” interim President Con- nie Green said. “These are real people with real lives that made an impact on students.” After the meeting, Green said the college was able to reduce layoffs and position eliminations by negotiat- ing with the union and also permanently cutting some unfilled positions from the budget. While only one fac- ulty member is being laid off, the college is cutting six vacant teaching posi- tions in subjects like math, Spanish and biology in addition to one administra- tive position. Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald, File The Blue Mountain Community College Board of Education voted 5-2 on Friday, April 30, to approve the reduction of the college’s staff by 14 positions, a move that will include seven layoffs. Board Chair Jane Hill gave the college’s two union presidents time to make brief remarks. Pete Hernberg, the president of the Blue Mountain Faculty Association, used his time to try to save the business instructor’s job. Hernberg argued that eliminating the position would actually lose the col- lege $280,000 instead of saving them money due to a loss of enrollment resulting from a decrease in business offerings to students. “This is extremely dam- aging to our students,” he said. John Fields, the col- lege’s vice president of instruction, said there was a “difference in interpreta- tions” of what the college would lose or gain from laying off business fac- ulty, while Hill defended the administration’s recommendation. “We have a job to pro- vide stability,” she said. Board member Kim Puzey suggested the col- lege solicit donations from the college’s unions or start GoFundMe pages to help save the positions. “I’m throwing any noo- dle that’ll stick to avoid los- ing this much talent,” he said. But Green said BMCC needed to look for a way to sustainably operate, and while fundraising drives could help in the short term, it couldn’t offer a long-term solution for the college’s fiscal issues. After about a 30-minute discussion, the board voted 5-2 to approve the staff- ing cuts. Puzey and board member Heidi Van Kirk voted against the motion. The latest round of staff reductions nearly completes a rough 12-month period for BMCC. The college cut 23 positions in May 2019, five positions from its cor- rections education program earlier this spring, and now another 14 reductions. In an interview after the meeting, Green said she understood the impact the cuts would have on the ser- vices the college offers and morale. But she added that the restructuring the college is making at the supervisory level and the new initiatives BMCC is starting would put the college on the path to success. “BMCC is choosing opportunities over closing,” she said. House passes bill erasing requirement for pseudoephedrine prescription By PETER WONG OREGON CAPITAL BUREAU Oregon would no lon- ger require a prescription for medicines contain- ing ephedrine or pseudo- ephedrine under a bill that has cleared the House. House Bill 2648 went to the Senate on a 54-4 vote on Wednesday, April 28. The requirement for a prescription was written into law in 2005, when people were buying med- icines containing pseu- doephedrine — a precur- sor chemical — for use in making methamphet- amine, a powerful stimu- lant that is illegal. Oregon was the first state to do so. “We had a meth-lab problem and it was really bad,” Rep. Bill Post, a Republican from Keizer and the bill’s floor man- ager, said. “It worked. Meth labs went way down to almost nothing.” The law made it harder to obtain some medicines commonly used for colds and allergies. But since then, meth- amphetamine manufac- turing has switched from homegrown labs to Mex- ico. Methamphetamine remains illegal, although under a ballot measure Oregon voters passed last year, possession of small amounts is no longer a crime. Ephedrine is banned as a performance-enhancing drug by college sports and some professional sports leagues. House Bill 2648 retains some restrictions on access to such medi- cines. People can obtain them by showing a photo identification to establish age — the minimum is 18 — and receive them from behind the store counter. In addition, purchases are tracked by a system known as the National Precursor Log Exchange (NPLEx). Mississippi, the only other state that required a prescription, recently passed a similar bill. The Oregon bill, if passed by the Senate and signed by Gov. Kate Brown, would begin the new requirements on Jan. 1, 2022. Oregon bill speeds siting of emergency shelters By PETER WONG OREGON CAPITAL BUREAU Cities and counties are empowered to waive some requirements to allow the siting of emergency shel- ters and temporary hous- ing under a bill that is headed to Gov. Kate Brown. The Senate passed House Bill 2006 without amendments on a 26-1 vote Monday. The bill allows local governments to waive design, planning and zon- ing requirements for shel- ters or housing operated directly by them, by orga- nizations with at least two years’ experience, or by nonprofits that partner with either one. Shelters still have to comply with some build- ing codes and health and safety requirements. They must have access to transportation and can- not be placed in hazardous zones, such as federally designated floodplains. This bill revives legisla- tion that passed in the first 2020 special session (June 24-26) of the Oregon Leg- islature. But its waivers ended 90 days later on Sept. 28. This bill’s waivers end on July 1, 2022. Sen. Deb Patterson, D-Salem, said the short- age of housing has wors- ened during the corona- virus pandemic and the 2020 Labor Day wildfires. She said cities often resist state requirements. “But this bill is differ- ent,” Patterson, the bill’s Senate sponsor and floor manager, said. “Multiple cities have come out in support of the bill because they recog- nize the need in their com- munities — in every com- munity — for us to take steps toward alleviating the suffering of our neigh- bors who have lost their housing. It should not take an emergency for us to recognize this need. But we are in an emergency now. We must act.”