SALEM, Ore. — Tens of thousands of workers laid off, losing income as rent or mortgage payments are due. Small businesses shut down because of the coronavirus outbreak, and at risk of never reopening again.
A new committee of the state Legislature, which has its inaugural meeting on Wednesday, is tasked with finding solutions to these cascading problems affecting so many across the state. The panel met as authorities said two more people died of coronavirus, raising the total number to three, the Oregon Health Authority reported Wednesday. The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Oregon rose to 75.
“I’m a bartender and my industry no longer exists. I just got this new job so I hadn’t had time to save money for emergencies. Rent is due and I don’t have enough money for food for the month,” a man named Dexter Stevens wrote to the Joint Special Committee On Coronavirus Response.
“Please freeze mortgages and rents and provide assistance to those of us trapped in quarantines across the state. Please help us. We have nowhere to turn,” Stevens said.
Larry Brennan, owner of Arch Rock Brewing Company in Gold Beach, Oregon, said Oregon Gov. Kate Brown’s closure of bars and restaurants for on-site consumption — necessary to slow transmission of the highly contagious COVID-19 virus — meant that orders for beer deliveries were canceled.
“Without some type of economic relief, we will be unable to make our payroll nor pay outstanding invoices and bills within 30 days,” Brennan wrote to the committee. “We need some help, please.”
Sen. Arnie Roblan, a Democrat from Coos Bay and co-chair of the coronavirus committee, said Oregon is experiencing “an economic disaster.”
He said the committee’s job is to get roadblocks out of the way of the governor’s office, figure out what mitigation and recovery efforts will cost and how to budget for it, which would then require approval by a special session of the Legislature.
After two people at the state’s training academy for law enforcement fell ill, training has been suspended, academy Director Eriks Gabliks said. The trainee was evaluated at a hospital and released back to the academy.
“Because of that situation and not being able to comply with the three-foot distancing for social interaction, and because of the angst that everybody has about COVID, we made a prudent decision to suspend training for at least four weeks,” Gabliks said in a phone interview.
The Department of Public Safety Standards and Training’s sprawling academy in Salem trains about 25,000 students per year.
Jefferson County Sheriff Jim Adkins said five of his deputies who were at the academy are in self-isolation at home.
Students and staff at the academy should take their temperature daily and anyone who feels sick or has a fever should stay home and contact their physician, Gabliks said.
State health authorities are also opening a temporary 250-bed hospital on the Oregon State Fairgrounds, Brown said. Oregon purchased the pop-up hospital several years ago for a crisis situation such as this and it will be completed by Friday, she said.
State health officials are working to identify 1,000 temporary beds around the state and patients in hospitals that do not have the new coronavirus, and who are in recovery, will be moved to those beds, she said.
Brown said the state has contracted with a private company for 20,000 test kits and that the first batch of 5,000 should arrive soon. The tests will first be used on frontline health care workers, first responders and those living in community-style nursing homes, she said.