Menu
  • Home
  • Breaking News
  • Feature
    • Arts
    • Astrology
    • Business
    • Community
    • Employment
    • Event Stories
    • From the Pioneer
    • Government
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Non Profit News
    • Obituary
    • Public Safety
    • Podcast Interview Articles
    • Pioneer Pulse Podcast: Politics, Palette, and Planet – the Playlist
  • Weather
  • Guest Column
    • Perspectives
    • Don Backman Photos
    • Ardent Gourmet
    • Kitchen Maven
    • I’ve been thinking
    • Jim Heffernan
    • The Littoral Life
    • Neal Lemery
    • View From Here
    • Virginia Carrell Prowell
    • Words of Wisdom
  • Things to do
    • Calendar
    • Tillamook County Parks
    • Tillamook County Hikes
    • Whale Watching
    • Tillamook County Library
    • SOS Community Calendar
  • About
    • Contribute
    • Advertise
    • Subscribe
    • Opt-out preferences
  • Post Submission Test
  • Search...
Menu

Governor Announces Updates to County Risk Levels: Updated risk levels take effect Friday, April 9; Tillamook County to Move to “High Risk”

Posted on April 6, 2021 by Editor

(Salem, OR) — 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 spread—Extreme Risk, High Risk, Moderate Risk, and Lower Risk—and assigns health and safety measures for each level.

Effective April 9 through April 22, there will be 14 counties in the High Risk level, six at Moderate Risk, and 16 at Lower Risk. As case counts and hospitalizations increase and counties qualify for higher risk levels, restrictions on businesses and activities will resume. 

A complete list of counties and their associated risk levels:

County Risk Categories, Effective April 9 – 22
(Data as of April 3, 2021)
Changes from Previous Two-Week Period are Marked in Green and Red
Lower Risk (16)
Baker(1)
Crook
Gilliam
Grant (Moved from Moderate)
Harney
Hood River
Jefferson
Lake
Lane(2)
Malheur (Moved from Moderate)
Morrow
Sherman
Wallowa
Wasco
Wheeler
Yamhill(3)

Moderate Risk (6)
Clatsop
Columbia(4)
Polk(5)
Umatilla (Moved from High)
Union
Washington

High Risk (14)
Benton
Clackamas (Moved from Moderate)
Coos (Moved from Extreme)
Curry (Moved from Extreme)
Deschutes (Moved from Moderate)
Douglas
Jackson
Josephine(6)
Klamath(7) (Moved from Moderate)
Lincoln
Linn (Moved from Moderate)
Marion
Multnomah (Moved from Moderate)
Tillamook(8) (Moved from Moderate)

Extreme Risk (0)

1 Baker County qualifies for Extreme Risk but is given a two-week caution period at Lower Risk because it
moved down from Moderate Risk in the last movement period.
2 Lane County qualifies for Moderate Risk but is given a two-week caution period at Lower Risk because it
moved down from Moderate Risk in the last movement period.
3 Yamhill County qualifies for Moderate Risk but is given a two-week caution period at Lower Risk because it
moved down from Moderate Risk in the last movement period.
4 Columbia County qualifies for Extreme Risk but is given a two-week caution period at Moderate Risk
because it moved down from High Risk in the last movement period.
5 Polk County qualifies for High Risk but is given a two-week caution period at Moderate Risk because it
moved down from High Risk in the last movement period.
6 Josephine County qualifies for Extreme Risk but remains at High Risk because the statewide trigger for
Extreme Risk has not been met.
7 Klamath County qualifies for Extreme Risk but moves to High Risk because the statewide trigger for Extreme
Risk has not been met.
8 Tillamook County qualifies for Extreme Risk but moves to High Risk because the statewide trigger for
Extreme Risk has not been met.


“We are at a critical moment in this pandemic as we face more contagious variants of COVID-19 taking hold in our communities,” said Governor Brown. “Now more than ever it’s imperative that we all continue wearing masks, maintain physical distance, stay home when sick, and get the vaccine when it’s available to you.”

New statewide metric added for determining Extreme Risk level
COVID-19 hospitalizations are a key indicator of severe illness in Oregon communities. As vaccine distribution increases, case counts and percent positivity will not be adequate indicators on their own for measuring the threat COVID-19 poses to public health. This week, Oregon is adding a statewide hospitalization metric for moving to Extreme Risk.

Beginning this week, for counties to move to (or remain in) Extreme Risk, they must meet the county metrics for case rates and percent positivity, plus a new statewide metric: COVID-19 positive patients occupying 300 hospital beds or more, and a 15% increase in the seven-day average over the past week. Counties that meet the criteria for Extreme Risk but for the statewide trigger will be assigned to High Risk. This week there are three counties that qualify for Extreme Risk based on their county metrics, but are assigned High Risk because the statewide trigger has not been met: Josephine, Klamath, and Tillamook.

Four counties enter two-week caution period
The two-week caution period applies to counties facing backward movement. 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, are given a two-week caution period to re-focus efforts to drive back down creeping case numbers and give local businesses additional certainty on their plans for operating.

This week, the caution period applies to five counties:

  • Baker County qualifies for Extreme Risk but is given a two-week caution period at Lower Risk because it moved down from Moderate Risk in the last movement period.
  • Columbia County qualifies for Extreme Risk but is given a two-week caution period at Moderate Risk because it moved down from High Risk in the last movement period.
  • Lane County qualifies for Moderate Risk but is given a two-week caution period at Lower Risk because it moved down from Moderate Risk in the last movement period.
  • Polk County qualifies for High Risk but is given a two-week caution period at Moderate Risk because it moved down from High Risk in the last movement period.
  • Yamhill County qualifies for Moderate Risk but is given a two-week caution period at Lower Risk because it moved down from Moderate Risk in the last movement period.

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 April 20 and take effect April 23.

Updates to Warning Week data and county risk levels will be posted to coronavirus.oregon.gov.

Featured Video

Slide Contribute SUBSCRIBE

Tillamook Weather

Tides

Tillamook County Pioneer Podcast Series

Tillamook Church Search

Cloverdale Baptist Church
Nestucca Valley Presbyterian
Tillamook Ecumenical Service

Archives

  • Home
  • EULA Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Opt-out preferences
  • Search...
Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on pinterest
Pinterest
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
Linkedin
Catherine

Recent Posts

  • Tillamook FFA Excels in State Career Development Events: Two Teams Headed to Nationals

    May 12, 2025
  • Tillamook Police Department Invites Community for Coffee with a Cop May 14th

    May 12, 2025
  • GORDON'S WEEKLY WEATHER UPDATE 5/12/25: Showery Pattern Continues Through Week

    May 12, 2025
©2025 | Theme by SuperbThemes

Manage Cookie Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}