With graduation ceremonies less than two weeks away for Camas-Washougal seniors, our first CHEERS goes out to our local graduates in the class of 2022. This class only had one “normal” year of high school before COVID hit, and then jumped into a world of remote learning, event cancellations, limited in-person communication with their peers and other mitigations meant to rein in our community’s COVID transmission rate. Despite so many upheavals, this class kept pushing forward through each new upheaval. May this sense of resiliency stay with them as they embark on their post-high school lives.
CHEERS also goes out to the group of local student-athletes who placed in their top 10 in the state during recent state championship meets, games and tournaments. Local riders on the Washougal equestrian team took home their first No. 1 state title in 14 years, and a number of Camas-Washougal golfers, track and field athletes and tennis players recently earned top honors at their respective state meets. (See related coverage on pages A1 and A6 of this week’s Post-Record).
A third CHEERS for the return of the Camas Farmer’s Market this week. The first market of the season opened Wednesday, June 1, and featured not only its normal array of locally grown produce and flowers, but also a health fair sponsored by Ripple Wellness and featuring more than a dozen local health-related businesses touting the benefits of everything from yoga and chiropractic adjustments to naturopathic medicine and dental care.
And while we are all more than ready to focus on healthy living after living through a global pandemic for more than two years, we cannot leave COVID-19 in our rearview mirror quite yet, unfortunately. In fact, COVID cases, hospitalizations and deaths are rising again across the country.
In Clark County, from May 19 to May 26, the rate of new COVID cases per 100,000 residents climbed to 217.5, up 51.8 from the week prior. Cases increased by 1,157 even without community wide testing centers that helped us keep a better handle on how many people were testing positive for COVID during the first two years of the pandemic. Local hospitalization rates due to COVID are also ticking up and we added four more deaths to our total of 811 Clark County residents who have perished from this disease.