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CLOUDY WITH RAIN 52 • 46 | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 2020 | theworldlink.com
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Risk level downgraded for Coos County PORTLAND (AP) — Five Oregon counties — including both Coos and Douglas counties — will be upgraded from Extreme Risk to High Risk levels, based on the area’s current COVID-19 data, Gov. Kate Brown announced Tuesday. High Risk is the first level in which some businesses, including restaurants, can resume offering indoor services. “After weeks of diligent work by local leaders and public health officials to implement health and
safety measures in their communities, this week’s county data is a welcome sign that we are making progress in stopping the spread of COVID-19 in Oregon,” Brown said. “The county risk level framework is meant to put us on track to reopen our schools, businesses, and communities.” Oregon’s COVID-19 framework uses four different risk levels for counties based on COVID-19 spread—Extreme, High, Moderate and Lower. From Jan. 1 through Jan. 14,
there will be 24 counties in the Extreme Risk level, five at High Risk and seven at Lower Risk. Clatsop, Coos, Douglas, Lincoln and Morrow counties were moved to High Risk from Extreme. County risk levels are assessed every two weeks. The next assessment is Jan. 15. “Every week, more Oregonians are being vaccinated against this deadly disease. But, until vaccines are widely available with high participation
rates, the surest way to open our communities is to continue practicing the measures we know are effective in reducing the spread of COVID-19,” Brown said. However health officials say they have received less doses of the COVID-19 vaccines than they expected at this point in time. KOIN reports that more than 20,000 coronavirus vaccine doses had been administered in Oregon by Tuesday, but health leaders in the state had expect-
Two earthquakes hit off South Coast Two earthquakes hit west of the South Coast late Monday and early Tuesday, but experts weren’t worried about possible tsunamis. The larger of the two quakes came just after 11 p.m., about 127 miles west of Bandon and 6 miles below the earth’s surface, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. It had a magnitude of 5.7. A second, magnitude 3.2 quake hit nearby around 2:15 a.m. about 115 miles west of Langlois and 4 miles beneath the earth’s surface. No large-scale damage has been reported on land from the quakes, but one Coos Bay business owner suspects the events were the cause of a broken window discovered Tuesday morning. “I just think it was the right vibrations to shatter a window, but not to damage (inside),” said Steve Schneiderman, the owner of Marshfield Mercantile on U.S. Highway 101. Only one of the building’s windows broke — the others had been newly replaced, Schneiderman said. The building was built in the mid-1960s on pilings, and most neighboring buildings are newer construction. “I’m suspecting that it was
earthquake related,” Schneiderman said. “This is all old dredge fill down here.” There’s no evidence the break was a result of an attempted robbery, since the building’s motion sensors weren’t triggered, nothing else was moved or taken and no rock or other object was left behind. Schneiderman said video of the crash, though obstructed by a bookcase, shows the window shattering outward before a nearby hanging frame fell down. There were no tsunami warnings, advisories, watches or threats following the quakes, according to the U.S. Tsunami Warning System. The center can’t predict when the next tsunami will strike, but can forecast which earthquakes are likely to cause big waves. Some tsunamis can’t be forecasted in time for an official warning, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. It recommends watching for other warning signs, like strong earthquakes, a loud roar from the ocean or sudden changes in sea level. The Oregon Office of Emergency Management says those in low-lying areas should move immediately to high ground in case of a tsunami, and that coastal residents should be prepared for two weeks of evacuation. More resources are available on OEM’s website.
LONDON (AP) — Britain authorized an easy-to-handle coronavirus vaccine Wednesday and decided to stretch out the time between doses to allow more people to get some level of protection faster as infections surge. The first greenlight for the shot dubbed the “vaccine for the world” brought a measure of hope that the pandemic could be brought under control. The vaccine developed by Oxford University and drugmaker AstraZeneca is expected to be relied on in many countries because of its low cost and the fact that it can be kept in refrigerators rather than at the ultra-cold or freezer temperatures some other vaccines require. “This wonderful news brings renewed hope at a time of rising infections and unprecedented pressure on health services in the U.K. and beyond. It is now critical that this hope can be shared by all nations,” said Anna Marriot, Health Policy Manager at Oxfam aid agency. Even as the authorization was welcomed as a significant development in efforts to contain the virus that has killed nearly 1.8 million, the change in British policy on administering the shots drove home concerns about a new, potentially more contagious variant that authorities blame for rising hospitalizations in Britain. The new variant has been found in several countries, including the U.S. Because infections are
spreading so rapidly in the U.K., officials are now recommending prioritizing delivering a first dose to as many people as possible for both of the vaccines authorized for use in the country: the AstraZeneca one and another from Pfizer-BioNTech. Officials say both protect people even after just one of the two recommended doses — and that increasing the time between doses might even have a benefit. “The immediate urgency is for rapid and high levels of vaccine uptake,” Wei Shen Lim, chair of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation, told reporters Wednesday. “This will allow the greatest number of eligible people to receive vaccine in the shortest time possible, and that will protect the greatest number of lives.” Hundreds of thousands of people in the U.K. have already received at least one shot of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. British Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the rollout of the AstraZeneca one will start Jan. 4. The Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency, which recommended the AstraZeneca vaccine for emergency use, did not endorse one vaccine over the other. The regulator also updated its guidance on the Pfizer-BioNTech shot to say that pregnant women and women who are breastfeeding can get it after a consultation with a health professional about the benefits and risks. Previously,
ZACK DEMARS The World
ed more than 100,000 doses to arrive by the end of the year. Most of the doses have been given to healthcare workers who are in close contact with COVID patients, as well as staff and residents at some nursing homes and assisted-living facilities. The Oregon Health Authority reported 713 new confirmed and presumptive cases of COVID-19 Tuesday and 16 deaths. The latest figures brought the state’s coronavirus totals to 111,227 cases and 1,449 deaths.
Police find missing car, still searching for person of interest in killing By David Rupkalvis The World
Contributed Photo by Steve Schneiderman
Owner Steve Schneiderman believes an earthquake off the South Coast late Monday caused damage to a window at Marshfield Mercantile in Coos Bay.
U.S. Geological Survey
Two earthquakes hit off the South Coast Monday night and Tuesday morning. The first was a magnitude 5.7 and the second a magnitude 3.2.
Britain approves new ‘vaccine for the world’ the agency had not recommended the shot for pregnant women. And instead of advising against its use in people with severe allergic reactions to food, other medicines or vaccines, the regulator now says only people with an allergy to ingredients of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine should not get the shot. Both the AstraZeneca and Pfizer vaccines were tested with two doses, given a few weeks apart. Now, the British government said that for both vaccines it would prioritize giving as many people as possible a single dose — and everyone would get a second shot within 12 weeks of the first. While soaring case numbers played a part in that decision, Munir Pirmohamed, of Britain’s Commission on Human Medicines, said that there appeared to be no drawback to waiting for the second dose and that a longer time between shots might even improve efficacy. Pfizer responded to the new British policy by saying that any “alternative” dosing regimens should be tracked by health authorities. It noted that two doses are needed for “maximum protection” against the disease, and that it has no data that show protection from just one dose lasts longer than 21 days. The new strategy comes as the number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients in the U.K. has surpassed the first peak of the outbreak in the spring, with
authorities blaming the new variant, which was first identified in southeast England. Oxford University’s Dr. Andrew Pollard, one of the leaders of the vaccine development team, offered hope the newly authorized shot will help. “At the moment, there’s no evidence that the vaccines won’t work against the new variant,” Pollard told Radio 4. “But that is something which we have to look at. We can’t be complacent about this variant or perhaps future variants.” Pollard has called the AstraZeneca shot “a vaccine for the world.” The ultra-cold or freezer temperature storage required by other vaccines is “very impractical” in developing countries, said Dr. Gillies O’Bryan-Tear, chair of policy and communications for Britain’s Faculty of Pharmaceutical Medicine. It means the AstraZeneca one “may reach more parts of the world than the Pfizer one,” he said. The company has also said it will sell it for $2.50 a dose and plans to make up to 3 billion doses by the end of 2021. Partial results from studies in almost 24,000 people in Britain, Brazil and South Africa suggest the AstraZeneca shots are safe and about 70% effective for preventing illness from coronavirus infection. Questions also remain about Please see Vaccine, Page 2
North Bend police are still looking for a person of interest in a hit-and-run incident that killed a 28-year-old North Bend man Sunday. District Attorney R. Paul Frasier announced Tuesday that investigators were making progress but still had not located Joshua James Thompson, 40, who was last known to live in Coquille. Police believe Thompson was driving a Chevy Tahoe that ran over Michael David Moore in what authorities are calling a road-rage incident. According the information Frasier released, Moore was a passenger in a Ford Ranger pickup that had some altercation with the Tahoe and a red vehicle, now known to be a Toyota Camry. The incident started near the Liberty Theater in downtown North Bend. The vehicles traveled south on Sherman Avenue and turned west on either Oregon or Maryland avenues. During the chase, the Ford Ranger crashed into a curb and could no longer be driven. At that point, Moore exited the vehicle and confronted the driver of the Tahoe. The argument continued onto Union Avenue where police say the Tahoe ran over Moore before crashing into a home in the 2700 block of Union Avenue. Police allege Thompson then drove the Tahoe away, abandoning it a few blocks away and leaving in the red Toyota. Frasier said an autopsy was concluded on Moore on Tuesday, and the coroner determined Moore died for major crushing injuries to his body. Authorities from multiple law enforcement agencies began searching for Thompson and the red Toyota on Sunday. On Tuesday, they reported the vehicle had been found abandoned on a remote rural area of north Coos County on private forest land. Frasier said a concerned citizen called authorities after noticing a locked gate leading to the road had been crashed into. The citizen walked up the road and found the vehicle. Frasier said the person has seen press coverage about the incident and called authorities. Frasier said the vehicle was impounded and a search warrant was issued, giving police authority to search it. Frasier said authorities are continuing to search for Thompson. If anyone has seen Thompson or has information on the case, they are asked to call the North Bend Police Department.