The Redmond spokesman. (Redmond, Crook County, Or.) 1910-current, April 21, 2021, Page 6, Image 6

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    P6 Th e Spo k eSma n " Wed n eSday, a pr il 21, 2021
NEWS BRIEFING
OSHA fines Lowe’s $18,100
for COVID-19 infractions
The Lowe’s hardware store
branch in Redmond was hit
with $18,100 in fines Monday
from Oregon Occupational
Safety and Health — better
known as OSHA — for mul-
tiple COVID-19 violations.
The biggest penalty, cost-
ing $17,500, was for not re-
quiring customers to wear
face coverings, according to
an OSHA press release. State
inspections found that Lowe’s
branch supervisors knew of
the state-mask mandate, and
willfully chose to ignore it,
the release stated.
The Lowe’s store in Albany
received an identical fine
Monday for the same reason.
The store also received two
$300 fines for not creating a
risk assessment plan to iden-
tify possible employee ex-
posure to COVID-19, or an
infection control plan, the re-
lease stated.
Several yellow-bellied marmots,
also known as a rockchucks, were
found sitting near their burrows
at Hugh Hartman Elementary
School in Redmond on April 14.
Kiwanis donate $17,000
to Rimrock Trails
The Redmond Kiwanis
Foundation contributed nearly
$17,000 towards the Rimrock
Trails Residential Treatment
Program renovations, accord-
ing to a press release.
Built in 1994, for 27 years
the Rimrock Trail’s Adoles-
cent Residential Treatment
Program Facilities has been
a place of safety, comfort and
Ryan Brennecke/Bulletin photos
Rockchucks
Continued from P1
“Now that the students are
back, we have found the rock-
chucks are also back,” Miller
said.
This year, the rockchuck
infestation is more
widespread. Their feces and
dug-out holes have been
spotted at Redmond High
School and Ridgeview High
School, in addition to the
elementary school.
The school district is plan-
ning to work with the U.S.
Department of Agriculture
Wildlife Services Department,
which will have a wildlife spe-
cialist exterminate the rock-
chucks by fumigating their
burrows. The specialist places
gas cartridges in the burrows,
which give off carbon mon-
oxide.
This time, the work will be
done early enough in the sea-
son to catch rockchucks before
they start hibernating again at
Hours:
Monday - Friday
10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
In a year when many stu-
dents will only get a few
months of in-person learning
or less, some Oregon school
districts have rebelled against
standardized testing.
But Central Oregon’s two
largest school districts will
stay the course. Bend-La Pine
Schools and the Redmond
School District will still offer
standardized tests this year,
and families will still have to
ask to opt out if they don’t want
their students to take the tests.
“We’re going to stick with it
as is,” said Chris Morton, Red-
mond’s director of school im-
provement, who oversees stan-
dardized testing for the district.
Dave VanLoo, Bend-La
Pine’s director of school im-
provement, said this year’s
dramatically scaled-back stan-
dardized tests mean less class
time is lost.
Standardized testing was
largely canceled in 2020 due
to the COVID-19 pandemic,
and with students barely back
in the classroom this spring, it’s
been scaled back throughout
Oregon.
Earlier this spring, the Ore-
gon Department of Education
and the U.S. Department of
Education agreed that instead
of Oregon students taking
the traditional suite of tests in
various subjects, each student
would only take one test in one
subject this spring. Which sub-
ject a student is tested on de-
pends on the grade level.
“We don’t really anticipate a
detrimental impact on student
learning, having kids take one
test that takes an hour,” Van-
Loo said.
Other Oregon school dis-
tricts — like Ashland and Ea-
gle Point in Southern Oregon
City sells land for $2.8M
The city will sell 14 acres
of vacant land in Redmond’s
industrial east side to a con-
struction materials company
planning to build a large in-
dustrial campus there.
The $2.67 million sale —
unanimously approved by
the Redmond City Council
— will allow for the eventual
creation of 35 to 60 new jobs
after the campus is complete.
The company, which man-
ufactures and distributes con-
struction materials, wishes to
remain anonymous for now.
Company leaders report-
edly hope to break ground
on the distribution site by the
end of 2021.
to place an ad call
541-385-5809
“Now that the students are back, we have found the rockchucks are also back.”
— Sheila Miller, Redmond School District spokesperson
the end of July, according to
wildlife officials.
“Right now is when they all
start showing back up,” Miller
said. “Hopefully, we can get it
done early enough that it will
be effective this season.”
Rockchucks are the largest
squirrels in Oregon and are
known for being plump and
larger than other marmots.
They are often seen on rocks
throughout the Old Mill Dis-
trict in Bend.
e e
SOLUTION
Sudoku on Page 2
— are taking the opposite ap-
proach to standardized testing:
opt in. That means students
won’t take any standardized
tests, unless their family emails
the school district and asks if
their child can participate.
Other school districts have de-
cided to not offer standardized
tests at all this year, including
Oregon Trail School District
and Salem-Keizer. Salem-Keizer
School District spokesperson
Sylvia McDaniel said the school
board canceled the tests because
students have had limited op-
portunities for in-person learn-
ing during the pandemic.
VanLoo said Bend-La Pine
Schools’ ability to bring back
students earlier than many
other large districts means
missing a bit of regular instruc-
tion for tests isn’t as tough for
local students. While Bend-La
Pine high schoolers returned
to hybrid learning in February
and full time in-person Mon-
day, Portland high schoolers
won’t return to buildings until
next week, and it will be part
time.
Both VanLoo and Morton
said they’ll respect the wishes
of any family that chooses to
pull their kid out of standard-
ized testing.
Bend-La Pine and Red-
mond teachers’ union leaders
had mixed responses to their
schools moving forward with
the opt-out method for stan-
dardized tests this year.
Sarah Barclay, president of
the Bend Education Associa-
tion, is pushing for her school
district to move to an opt-in
style. She believes standardized
tests are a waste of time when
students had to spend more
than half the school year learn-
ing online.
“We have really precious
time with students in-person
this spring,” Barclay said. “So
even one week (of testing) is
just not a good use of time.”
Barry Branaugh, board
member of the Redmond Edu-
cation Association, doesn’t be-
lieve there should be standard-
ized testing this year. But if the
district is going to still give the
tests, it’s still easy for students
and families to opt out if they
choose, he said.
“I don’t think we really
should be having it, but given
that’s what the state wants,
it’s fine,” Branaugh said. “The
opt out is not a difficult thing.
It’s just a matter of filling out
a piece of paper or going to a
website.”
e e
Find us
ONLINE
www.redmond
spokesman.com
and on
SOCIAL
MEDIA
@RedmondSpox
Roman Catholic
1720 NW 19th Street
Redmond, Oregon 97756
541-923-3390
Father Todd Unger, Pastor
541-923-0301
Sabbath School 9:30 am
Worship 10:45 am
Real Estate
For Sale
700
719
Real Estate Wanted
Wanted home in NW
Bend. Cash buyer
no commissions
no hassles. Scott
(206)227-4614
Recreation
& Sports
Estate Sale Fri-Sun 23-
25 9am-5pm. 2154 SW
19th St Redmond
Winnebago Sunstar
2018 32YE 7300 miles
Very good condition
3000.00 Down &
Take over Payments
5419076217
1001
Legal Notices &
Public Notices
Legal Notice
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that Jennie
Ann Buswell has
been
appointed
Personal Represen-
tative of the Estate
of Shirley Sullivan
Buswell, deceased,
Deschutes County
Circuit Court Case
No.
21PB02535.
All persons having
claims against the
estate are required
to present the same
within four months
from the first date
of publication of this
notice to the Person-
al
Representative
c/o Janice E. Hat-
ton at 777 High St.,
#300, Eugene, OR
97401, or they may
be barred.
Any person whose
rights may be af-
fected by these pro-
ceedings may obtain
additional informa-
tion from the records
of the above-entitled
Court or from the
Personal Represen-
tative or from the
Personal Represen-
tative’s
attorneys,
Luvaas Cobb, P.C.
DATED and first pub-
lished: April 14, 2021.
/s/ Jennie Ann Buswell
Personal Represen-
tative
Public Notice
Auction:
Eric Boutchyard
unit 107/142
coBudget
Storage
Redmond Or
Auction will be on April
24, 2021 on
bid13.com
PLAY FOR FREE
ONLINE
Mass Schedule:
Weekdays 8:00 am
(Except Wednesdays)
Wednesday 6:00 pm
Saturday Vigil 5:00 pm
First Saturday 8:00 am (English)
Sunday 8:00 am, 10:00 am (English)
12:00 noon (Spanish)
Confessions on Wednesdays
From 5:00 to 5:45 pm and on
Saturdays From 3:00 to 4:30 pm
Seventh Day Adventist
945 W. Glacier Ave.,
Redmond, OR
GOT AN OLDER CAR?
Donate it to the
Humane Society.
1-866-270-1180
800
300
301
Garage Sales - General
St Thomas Roman Catholic
Church
Non-Denominational
CLASSIFIEDS
Search the area’s
most comprehensive
listing of classified
advertising. Real
estate to automotive,
merchandise to
sporting goods.
Call
541-385-5809
Black Butte School
District is hiring a
District Clerk/Business
Manager at .75 FTE.
blackbutte.k12.or.us/
employment 541-595-
6203
801
Recreation Vehicles
Baptist
For the most current information
for Bible study and worship:
www.hbcredmond.org
504
Employment Opportunities
Garage
Sales
Highland Baptist Church
How can hbc pray for you?
prayer@hbcredmond.org
204
Want to Buy or Rent
Legal
Notices
200 500 1000
YOU NEED STUFF
HAULED? I NEED
TO HAUL STUFF!
CALL THE WORKIN’
MAN. SPECIALIZ-
ING IN PROPERTY
CLEANUP AND
ITEM REMOVAL.
(541)610-2926
Worship Directory
Sunday gathering times:
9AM Blended,
10:30AM Contemporary,
12PM Traditional Worship, masks only
please
6PM Acoustic
Employment
282
Community
Reporter: 541-617-7854,
jhogan@bendbulletin.com
3100 SW Highland Ave., Redmond
541-548-4161
Barry Campbell, Lead Pastor
General
Merchandise
Wanted $ Cash paid for
vintage, fake, & fine jew-
elry. Top $ paid for Gold
& Silver. I buy in bulk.
Honest Artist. Elizabeth
541-633-7006
Reporter: 541-617-7820,
kspurr@bendbulletin.com
Schools plan scaled-back
standardized tests for 2021
BY JACKSON HOGAN
The Bulletin
support for over 4,000 indi-
viduals and their families.
One of only five adolescent
residential treatment pro-
grams in the State of Oregon
serving teens with severe sub-
stance use and mental health
disorders, the campus pro-
vides a supportive therapeu-
tic environment conducive to
learning, empowerment and
change.
Recognizing the impact
Rimrock Trails has had on
the community and the im-
portance of updating the fa-
cilities for the teens it serves,
the Redmond Kiwanis
Foundation donated nearly
$17,000 toward a $50,000
project to renovate the facili-
ty’s restrooms.
Advertise your
worship listing today!
New advertisers get 2 weeks free.
Call Rachel Liening
at 541-617-7823
to place your ad today!
CROSSWORD • SUDOKU
WORD SEARCH
www.bendbulletin.com/puzzles