
In other business for the commissioners:
--Mike Sheldon of the Washington Counties Insurance Pool visited the board and reported that pool managers are planning to add retirement and long term care benefits for employees of member entities.
"We're proud that for the last five years, we've been able to keep rate increases in the single digits while they've been in 10-15 percent per year nationally," Sheldon said.
--Commissioner Dan Cothren reported that he and colleagues from Pacific and Skamania counties will meet July 8 with representatives of the state Department of Natural Resources to continue discussions of compensating counties for lost earnings on state managed timber trust lands.
An endangered sea bird, the marbled murrelet, nest far inland on the limbs of big trees, and the DNR has halted harvest of county timber trust timber stands with suitable habitat while it develops a murrelet management plan.
County officials say they need the revenue from the lands, and the state has a fiduciary responsibility to manage the lands to generate revenue. If the lands are going to be used as protected habitat, the county needs to be given other timberlands where harvests can occur, commissioners say, or there must be other compensation.
More about bats, rabies
Rabies is a viral disease that attacks the central nervous system in mammals, according to information from the Washington Department of Health.
Because rabies is a fatal disease, the goal of public health is, first, to prevent human exposure to rabies by education and, second, to prevent the disease by vaccination treatment if exposure occursm, Bright said. Tens of thousands of people are successfully vaccinated each year after being bitten by an animal that may have rabies.
The virus can be transmitted after a bite from an infected animal. It can also be spread to open wounds or mucous membranes by an infected animal’s saliva.
“People are most often exposed to rabies when they handle bats,” said Dr. Ron Wohrle, environmental health veterinarian at the state Department of Health. “Any bat that is found on the ground, has been caught by a pet, or is found in the house could have rabies. The local health agency should be consulted to consider testing the bat or for guidance on release or proper disposal.”
Bats can be found throughout the state; they are not aggressive animals and most of them don’t have rabies. Those seen flying at dusk and feeding on insects are usually healthy and will avoid contact with people. However, any bat that is flying during the day or appears sick and unable to fly is more likely to be rabid.
If you find a bat in the house, close the doors and windows to the room; wear leather or other thick gloves; capture the bat in a can or box without touching it; seal the container; and call your local health agency, which will determine if any people or pets in your home may have been exposed and can arrange to test the bat for rabies, if needed.