WINNER OF THE 2020 ONPA GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16, 2021 HermistonHerald.com EasternOregonMarketplace.com UPDATES Burn bans in eff ect due to drought HERMISTON HERALD Eastern Oregon coun- ties are enacting burn bans in response to drought conditions. Umatilla County announced its annual nonagricultural burn ban went into eff ect at noon Tuesday, June 8, and an open burn ban to include agriculture goes into eff ect Wednesday, June 16. According to a press release, the Umatilla County Board of Com- missioners adopted the bans in a June 8 meeting “in response to serious drought related conditions in Umatilla County.” The bans include all unincorporated areas of the county but excludes lands belonging to the state of Oregon, the fed- eral government, the Con- federated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reser- vation and areas that are in rural fi re districts, the press release said. Some of those agencies have their own bans in eff ect. The burn ban prohib- its burn barrels, yard and garden debris piles and small-scale residential burning, and agricultural burning. Residents wanting to learn more about the burn ban or to report ille- gal burning can call the Umatilla County Plan- ning Department at 541- 278-6252 or Umatilla County Dispatch 541- 966-3651 after 5 p.m. and on weekends. Morrow County has implemented a burn ban that took eff ect on June 1 in the south part of the county, June 15 within Boardman Fire District and will start July 1 in Irrigon Fire District. Anyone with ques- tions about whether they can burn in their area should contact Morrow County Sheriff ’s Offi ce at 541-676-5317. Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Dr. Greg Jones, dentist for Fourth Street Dental, inspects a patient’s teeth during an exam Thursday, June 10, 2021, at the offi ce’s Hermiston location. Putting it off Patients delay getting preventive care during the pandemic By JADE MCDOWELL NEWS EDITOR As newly vaccinated patients are resuming their normal pre- ventative health care, some are fi nding those appointments they skipped during the pandemic have consequences. Dr. Greg Jones, dentist for Fourth Street Dental in Hermiston, said he is seeing some patients for the fi rst time in a long time. “You could tell people had put stuff off ,” he said. “Cavities were a little bigger, cleanings had been skipped, some broken teeth could have been fi xed sooner.” He also saw signs that peo- ple had been under additional stress, including an increase in cracked teeth, jaw pain and other side eff ects of people grinding or clenching their teeth. Jones said dentists in big cities where people are more cautious about COVID-19 still are see- ing lower patient volumes, but in rural areas, appointments mostly have rebounded after dropping off in 2020. He said it wasn’t uncom- mon last year for people to can- cel an appointment at the last min- ute because they had been asked Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Dr. Greg Jones, dentist for Fourth Street Dental in Hermiston, speaks with a patient prior to an exam Thursday, June 10, 2021. Jones said he has seen appointments rebound after dropping off in 2020 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. by the health department to quar- antine, while other people decided they weren’t comfortable with the risk of going in to the offi ce. “It was a little like a snow day, where some people don’t leave their homes and other people drive around like it’s no big deal,” he said. In Oregon, health care provid- ers were directed to only provide emergency services during the spring of 2020, to help preserve personal protective equipment that was in extremely short supply. In a weekly survey of 13,000 dentists nationwide by the Amer- ican Dental Association, 76% of dentists said their offi ce was only open for emergency patients and 18% said they were closed com- pletely on March 23, 2020. Those numbers slowly shrunk over the year, and by December, 39% described their practice as oper- ating normally and 60% said they were open but seeing fewer patients than usual. Jones said dentists already prac- ticed many of the guidelines for preventing COVID-19 transmis- sion even before the pandemic, including instrument sterilization and wearing gloves and masks while working on patients. But they have also added new precau- tions, including more frequent san- itization of the waiting room area and temperature checks when patients arrive. Cancer screenings One of the times delaying pre- ventative care can have the most serious consequences is when can- cer is involved. Dr. Nattamol Hosiriluck, a hematologist with Tri-Cities Can- cer Center, which has offi ces in Hermiston, said she has seen a few cases of people whose cancer is more advanced after delaying a See Delay, Page A12 Lifeways criticizes county’s decision Offi cials with the mental health care provider decry Umatilla County’s decision to choose CCS as ‘arbitrary and capricious’ By BRYCE DOLE STAFF WRITER Ben Lonergan/Hermiston Herald Lifeways, with its offi ce at 331 S.E. Second St., Pendleton, has been Umatilla County’s mental health services provider for 16 years. But the county earlier this month decided to not continue working with Lifeways and instead selected Community Counseling Solutions to provide mental health and addiction treatment. Lifeways is protesting that decision while claiming it can pivot to fi nd new ways to serve local clients. INSIDE A3  The Hermiston city council OKs changes to zoning codes and building department fee schedule A8  Lawmakers are petitioning the state to end its participation in increased unemployment benefi ts Lifeways is not going down without a fi ght. Offi cials with the community mental health services provider are criticizing Umatilla County’s decision to go with Community Counseling Solutions as its cen- tral provider for mental health and addiction services and are urging the county to change its mind. Lifeways, which has served A10  Hermiston’s public transpor- tation options continue to expand as the city grows the county for more than 16 years, claims CCS “is underqualifi ed and underprepared to take on the sig- nifi cantly more complex, higher volume work in Umatilla County,” Chief Executive Offi cer Tim Hoekstra said in a press release. The company argues Community Counseling won’t be able to get up and running in time to provide ade- quate care for the county’s more than 4,000 patients. See Lifeways, Page A12 A11  Hermiston will break ground on a $2.5 million industrial infrastructure project on July 7