The Northern Light: January 7-13, 2021

Page 1

January 7 - 13, 2021

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Community Newspaper of Blaine and Birch Bay HHHECRWSSHHH Postal Customer

Meet Birch Bay’s new deputy, page 5

Investigation continues on train derailment, page 3

IN THIS

ISSUE

Stafholt to receive vaccinations, page 8

PRSRT STD U. S. Postage PAID Permit NO. 87 Blaine, WA 98230

Middle and high school students return to buildings New Covid-19 reopening plan to group counties by hospitalizations By Ian Haupt

s The first cohort of ninth grade students started their first day of classes at Blaine High School on January 6. See story on page 2. Photo by Ian Haupt

2020 year in

REVIEW (Part 2)

July • The Birch Bay Chamber of Commerce held its annual Sand Sculpture Competition virtually through July to comply with social distancing. â€˘ Recent Borderite graduates held Blaine’s first Black Lives Matter rally on July 3. • Whatcom County officials, including sheriff Bill Elfo and health department director Erika Lautenbach, asked community members to stay away from Birch Bay for Fourth of July celebrations. During a Birch Bay Chamber of Commerce meeting discussing the unofficial event, community members voiced concern regarding Birch Bay’s older population.

THANK YOU SPONSORS & DONORS FOR HELPING US LIGHT UP BLAINE! BLAINE MART • GARTH & KELSEY BALDWIN • JEN FREEMAN & LEAH

CREWS @ WINDERMERE REAL ESTATE • JIJ CORP • LARK GROUP • DRAYTON HARBOR OYSTER COMPANY • NEW WORLD PROPERTIES • THOMAS HAYES • PETER ROBINS ESTATE • THE NORTHERN LIGHT • JOAN MATZ • SPOKEN DESIGNS • RICHARD SKEERS • WILLIAM HUNT • MIKE & ROSE KENT • THE VAULT WINE BAR + BISTRO •Â

SEMIAHMOO MEN’S CLUB • SEMIAHMOO MARINA • KAREN TOPHAM • PATRICIA SKANNES • C. A. FAIRMAN • SEMIAHMOO’S WOMEN’S CLUB • JAY TYRRELL • LINDSAY ANDERSON • TONY TSEUNG • SEMIAHMOO CONDO ASSOCIATION • GRAHAM HUNTER • MICHAEL JONES • ALEX WENGER • BONNIE ONYON • JEFF FERRY • BYRON WILSON • CHARLES HAWKINS • DIANA MEYERS • MARJORIE GROSS • TIM WOODARD

CHARITY

BOUTIQUE

A look back at the year that was • Washington State Department of Agriculture set 600 Asian giant hornet traps, half of which were in Whatcom County. The agency anticipated more hornet sightings in the summer and invited the public to hang homemade traps. • Whatcom County Library System began collecting personal experiences from Whatcom County residents about their pandemic experiences to document history. • Peace Arch Park flourished in the summer as Canadians and Americans met with family, friends and significant others in the neutral park. • City council approved east Blaine property development that will create 353 housing units, a 24,000-square-foot

(See Year in Review, page 3)

INSIDE

Governor Jay Inslee announced a new plan January 5 for reopening the economy from his Covid-19 restrictions that will go into effect on Monday, January 11, when the current restrictions are set to expire. The governor’s “Healthy Washingtonâ€? plan will allow regions to reopen when they meet four hospitalization and case data targets. Under the plan, state counties are combined into regions, which makes more sense from a public health perspective since many healthcare systems are regional, Inslee said in a January 5 press conference. Whatcom County is in the north region along with Skagit, San Juan and Island counties. When the plan goes into effect January 11, all regions will be in phase 1 of the two-phase plan. Inslee said more phases will be added to the plan when it becomes clear that the state has reduced Covid-19 transmission “emphatically.â€? To enter into phase 2, a region must meet the four targets: • 10 percent decreasing trend in case rates • 10 percent decrease in Covid-19 hospital admission rates • ICU occupancy rates lower than 90 percent • Test positivity rate lower than 10 percent The new phase 2 allows for indoor dining and indoor fitness centers at 25 percent capacity, sports competitions with limited spectators, and increased wedding and funeral capacity, the governor said. There will not be any application process for regions to move into a new phase, he said. The region will automatically move into a new phase if they meet the required metrics, which will be collected and monitored by the Washington State Department of Health. Some restrictions will be lifted January 11, such as live entertainment with tight capacity and certain fitness programs, Inslee said. The governor first placed restrictions on indoor dining and other activities in mid-November, which were extended multiple times until January 11.

Coming Up . . . . . 14

Classifieds . . . . . . 11 Letters . . . . . . . . . . 4 Police . . . . . . . . . 14 Tides . . . . . . . . . . 14

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