GOVERNOR KATE BROWN ANNOUNCES UPDATES TO COUNTY RISK LEVELS

(Salem, OR) โ€” (Release from the Governor’s Office) Governor Kate Brown today announced updates to county risk levels under the state’s public health framework to reduce transmission and protect Oregonians from COVID-19. The framework uses four different risk levels for counties based on COVID-19 spreadโ€”Extreme Risk, High Risk, Moderate Risk, and Lower Riskโ€”and assigns health and safety measures for each level. Effective March 12 through March 25, there will be two counties in the Extreme Risk level, nine at High Risk, 12 at Moderate Risk, and 13 at Lower Risk. A complete list of counties and their associated risk levels is available here. “We are largely seeing case rates decline across the state, with the most counties in the Lower Risk level since the framework was introduced in November,” said Governor Brown. “This should serve as a reminder that when we follow the health and safety measures we know work against this virus, we can truly make a difference in infection spread. But, we still have more work to do before we reach the level of community-wide protection we need in order to return to a sense of normalcy. I encourage all Oregonians to keep it up and to get your vaccine when it’s available to you.”Jackson and Malheur Counties enter Two-Week Caution PeriodA modification has been made to the two-week caution period process announced last week, which had only addressed counties moving back to Extreme Risk. Beginning this week and continuing until further notice, counties that reduced their COVID-19 spread enough to move down in risk level in the previous two-week period, but see their numbers go back up in the next two-week period, will be given a two-week caution period to bring COVID-19 case rates back down again. This week, the caution period applies to two counties: Jackson County qualifies for Extreme Risk but is given a two-week caution period at High Risk because it moved down from Extreme Risk in the last movement period. Malheur County qualifies for High Risk but is given a two-week caution period at Moderate Risk because it moved down from Extreme Risk in the last movement period. The caution period will allow counties to re-focus efforts to drive back down creeping case numbers and give local businesses additional certainty on their plans for operating. If at the end of the caution period, case rate data still puts the county at a higher risk level, the county will move to that level. The Oregon Health Authority will examine and publish county data weekly. County risk levels will be reassigned every two weeks. The first week’s data will provide a “warning week” to prepare counties for potential risk level changes. The next assignment of risk levels will be announced on March 23 and take effect on March 26. Updates to Warning Week data and county risk levels will be posted to coronavirus.oregon.gov.