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Families In The Park Returning

After missing 2020, the Families In The Park concert series will return this August.  The Hood River Lions Club is putting on the series, which will take place every Thursday evening in Jackson Park during the month of August.  The Lions Club’s Mike Schend says attendees will notice the renovated covered stage for the performances that was recently built by the club.  Hit Machine will provide the first concert this Thursday evening at 7 p.m.  Admission is free.

COVID Cases Spike In Wasco County

North Central Public Health District says Wasco County has seen more COVID-19 cases diagnosed in the last three days than for the entire month of June.  In a Facebook post this morning, the district reports Wasco County has had 44 COVID-19 cases, 39 of which involve people who have not been vaccinated.  The Oregon Health Authority’s daily case count released Thursday afternoon listed Wasco County with 27 new cases, while five new cases were listed for Sherman County and four for Hood River County.  The Oregon Health Authority’s COVID-19 Weekly Report released Wednesday showed a 53% increase in daily COVID-19 cases statewide for the week that ended on Sunday.  New COVID-19 related hospitalizations rose to 146, up from 123 the previous week.  There were 12 reported COVID-19 related deaths, down from 29 reported the previous week.  The OHA also reported that as of Tuesday 58.1% of the state’s total population had received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine.  Case rates have generally been higher in counties with lower COVID-19 vaccination rates.  During the week that ended Sunday, the 10 counties with case rates in excess of 100 per 100,000 had population vaccination rates below 50%.

Crews Deal With Pair Of Fires

Fire crews made two trips to McDonald Way in The Dalles on Wednesday to deal with fires.  The first call was just after 5 p.m.  Mid-Columbia Fire and Rescue’s Jay Wood says the fire was limited to under one acre.  It did burn a motorhome, car, and outbuilding.  Wood said the fire was human-caused, but could not release specifics.  He added access was an issue, as a bridge with a weight limit too light for a heavier engine led to crews waiting for smaller brush trucks to arrive.  Then just after 11 p.m. crews were brought out again to deal with a spot fire that occurred as a result of the first fire, and it burned about half-an-acre.  Crews from Dallesport, Mosier, the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area, and Oregon Department of Forestry assisted MCFR in dealing with the fires.  No one was injured in either fire.  

NW Natural Readies For Project In Bingen & White Salmon

NW Natural will be working in Bingen and White Salmon over the next two-and-a-half months on a project designed to improve distribution system pressures and reliability in that community. Project managers said during a virtual meeting with various stakeholders this week the existing natural gas system configuration is approaching capacity to supply customer needs on very cold days, and modeling shows the potential for outages during peak times if changes were not made.  Phase 1 work will begin Monday and continue through September 10 starting at the intersection of Ash and Humboldt in Bingen and working north up Jewett Boulevard to Dock Grade Road. The second phase set for September 16 to October 17 and continue on Jewett to NE Estes, then up to NE Tohomish ending at N Main.  NW Natural has sent letters to homes and businesses on the work route…and will provide updates on traffic impacts to local media throughout the project.  

Child Care Partners Studying Center Feasibility

Columbia Gorge Community College Child Care Partners is doing a study to determine the feasibility of a child care center on the school’s campus in The Dalles.  Program director Nancey Patten says the Ford Family Foundation provided the grant to do the feasibility study, but it will also provide information on overall child care needs in Wasco, Hood River, Sherman, Gilliam, and Wheeler counties.  Patten noted the child care center would have two goals:  provide affordable child care for families who are unable to place children in Head Start programs, and provide real-world instructional experience for students enrolled in CGCC’s Early Childhood Education program.  The survey is available at cgcc.edu, and at libraries, schools, and other locations.

HR Schools Get Ready For Upcoming Year

Hood River County School District Superintendent Rich Polkinghorn says the district is working on its plans for the upcoming school year.  Polkinghorn said they are receiving guidance from the Centers for Disease Control, Oregon Health Authority, and the Hood River County Health Department as they get ready for welcoming students for regular school days on a daily basis.  Polkinghorn noted they will be submitting an operational blueprint to the Oregon Department of Education in the near future.

White Salmon Woman Injured In Highway 14 Accident

A 59-year-old White Salmon woman was taken to a hospital after a one-vehicle accident Wednesday morning on Highway 14 east of Dallesport.  According to the Washington State Patrol, the car she was driving was eastbound on Highway 14 near milepost 88 when the accident occurred.  The vehicle left the roadway to the right, rolled, and came to rest on a fence.  The woman was taken to Mid-Columbia Medical Center in The Dalles with unspecified injuries.  The WSP said the woman was not wearing a seatbelt, and the vehicle was totaled.  The accident occurred around 9:25 Wednesday morning.

HRVPRD Continues To Consider Property For Westside Park

The Hood River Valley Parks and Recreation District continues to consider whether to purchase 20 acres at the intersection of Fairview and Belmont just west of Hood River for a potential park.  District executive director Mark Hickox says the district is looking to make a decision on whether to pay for a second year of option on the land.  Hickox says a recent survey and virtual open house showed support for a park for a variety of potential uses, but he added that purchasing the land does not mean building a park on it would be imminent.  Hickox noted the district is considering going to voters next year to deal with both capital needs like renovating the aging Hood River Aquatic Center and increasing operational capacity.

Fed Money Helps Goldendale Child Care Effort

With last week’s announcement by Southwest Washington Congresswoman Jamie Herrera-Beutler that over $583,000 has been included in a federal appropriations bill to help develop a child care center in Goldendale, local officials backing the project have been energized.  Washington Gorge Action Programs executive director Leslie Naramore says the federal dollars are a good start toward generating the estimated $2 million needed to construct the center.  Naramore says they are seeking grants from other federal, state, and private sources.  A recent study done by the Klickitat County Childcare Committee showed there are no licensed care providers for infants and toddlers in Goldendale, and just one Head Start program for pre-schoolers.

NCPHD Reports More Seeking Vaccine

North Central Public Health District reports it is seeing more people seeking first doses of the COVID-19 vaccine in light of the highly transmissible Delta variant.  There has been an uptick in COVID cases in Wasco County, with 31 in the most recent 14-day lookback released on Monday.  The district also reports Mid-Columbia Medical Center has begun offering COVID-19 vaccine at its Internal Medicine, Family Medicine, and Immediate Care locations for patients coming in for routine appointments.  The district called that encouraging, as nationwide polling has consistently shown that healthcare providers are the most trusted source for accurate information regarding the vaccines, and many people may prefer getting the vaccine in a private setting rather than at a vaccine clinic.  The vaccine is also offered every weekday at One Community Health in The Dalles, and is offered Thursdays and Fridays at North Central Public Health District in The Dalles.  Wasco County has vaccinated 64.3 percent of those 18 and older, Sherman County 55.1 percent and Gilliam County 43.5 percent.

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