P2 The SpokeSman • TueSday, april 5, 2022 Wind-driven grass fire burns three acres near Canal BY TIM TRAINOR redmond Spokesman A grass fire burned about three acres on a gusty Thurs- day afternoon in Redmond. No one was injured and no structures were damaged, ac- cording to Redmond Fire & Rescue. Crews were alerted to the fire in the 3600 block of NW Canal Blvd. about 2:48 p.m., after a large column of black smoke became visible in northeast Redmond. Crews arrived on scene to find a wind-driven brush fire moving across multiple pas- tures. Due to limited access and the gusting winds, the fire burned across open pasture ground until crews were able to gain access and stop the fire’s advancement. Before it was extinguished, it burned roughly three acres. According to an initial in- vestigation, a landowner was actively burning a nearby ditch when the winds picked up and carried the fire beyond their control. Reminder, call 541-504- 5035 to determine if burning is allowed. Residents planning to burn are required to have on hand a shovel, garden hose or water truck to control any fires that may get out of con- trol. Crooked River Ranch Fire & Rescue assisted at the scene. photo courtesy redmond Fire & rescue A grass fire burned about three acres off Canal in Redmond on Thurs- day, March 31. photo courtesy redmond Fire & rescue Crews mop up after a grass fire burned Thursday in Redmond. Redmond librarian amplifies culture, diversity in schools BY BRYCE DOLE The Bulletin Pia Alliende says her pas- sion for storytelling stems from her parents. Libraries in her hometown of Santiago, Chile, were “piti- ful,” she said. Being a librar- ian in the capital city, which sits in a valley at the foot of the Andes mountains, was not a popular career choice. Books were expensive. Her family was relatively well-off, but her parents were stern, urging the family to be cau- tious with money. Books and reading became a family treat, delivered on Sundays by Alliende’s father, a lawyer with high standards and a “strong but soft heart.” Alliende’s father would read to the family from books he crafted with pieces of card- board and kept in a basket in the closet. This was how books be- came a guiding force for Al- liende, a librarian whose life and career have spanned multiple countries and im- pacted students, teachers and libraries around the world. While school districts across the country are ban- ning books about gender and race amid a national reckon- ing over equitable education, Alliende is stocking shelves in Redmond School District libraries with books that il- luminate the experiences of people from underserved and marginalized commu- nities. The 60-year-old Alliende has played a major role in dean Guernsey/The Bulletin Librarian Pia Alliende in the Elton Gregory Middle School library Thursday in Redmond. Alliende is one of three librarians in the coun- try recently nominated for School Librarian of the Year by the School Library Journal. revamping libraries in the district, replacing withered old books with new ones and getting rid of literature that perpetuates racist stereo- types. “I want to have books that represent them, not misrep- resent them,” said Alliende, who serves as part of the Redmond School District Equity Task Force and is co- chair of the Oregon Library Association’s (Equity, Di- versity and Inclusion) and Antiracism Committee. She added: “I feel that it’s really, really sad that we, as school librarians, need to fight for kids to read.” Alliende’s work has not gone unnoticed. She is one of three librarians in the country recently nominated for School Librarian of the Year by the School Library Journal. CROSSWORD Alliende’s goal is to provide students with the option to explore the stories of people from backgrounds and cul- tures different from theirs. She wants to use storytell- ing to instill empathy and compassion, particularly for those students whose experi- ences have historically been ignored. She said, “Some- times, the kids are invisible.” Recently, Alliende helped the district obtain four grants amounting to more than $25,000 to improve programs at libraries in Redmond schools that have higher con- centrations of Hispanic and Spanish-speaking students. Those include Elton Gregory Middle School, where more than one in five students identify as Hispanic and one in 10 speak Spanish as their first language. In addition, she raised more than $2,500 by com- pleting a 347-mile bike-pack- ing trip through Oregon, just before her 60th birthday. The funds went to libraries across the district, she said. Alliende uses part of the grant funds to bring in Span- ish-speaking authors and hold monthly bilingual fam- ily engagement nights where students and their families hear stories and play Latin American games. She said she wants to “foster the idea that their Spanish is good, that their culture is good, that whatever they do is good, and feel proud.” It was through her parent’s storytelling that Alliende found an interest in history. She attended a Catholic high school and university in Chile, but she grew bored. She wanted to go to America. She applied, and received a scholarship through the U.S. Fulbright Program, the flag- ship international academic exchange program meant to foster relationships between countries. With the grant, Al- liende traveled to New York in 1990 to study history at Stony Brook University. The move was hard on her relationship with her parents, she said. But Alliende fell in love with big city nightlife — and with a Spaniard from the Montana farmlands. Af- ter college, she struggled to find work because of lan- guage barriers. With her new husband and a child on the way, Alliende moved back to Chile and to her childhood home. “We had nothing,” she said. After having children, Alliende and her husband moved their family to a town south of Santiago. She worked at a private school, but Chile still wasn’t where she wanted to raise her kids. The family headed back to the United States after ob- taining work visas. She landed a job as an interpreter at a school in Arlington, Vir- ginia, where she became an advocate for families from Latin America. There, she found a love for libraries. Her commute to work near Washington, D.C. was long, requiring the family to leave their kids in day care for hours. So she proceeded to look for jobs elsewhere in the country. She eventually landed a job as a media li- brary specialist at Redmond High School in 2006. Three years later, amid the nation- wide housing crisis and en- suing economic meltdown, Alliende was laid off. Fortunately, she found a job as the head librarian at the International School of Seville San Francisco de Paula in Spain. Her family moved to Seville, where they remained for a decade. Al- liende helped modernize li- braries and led workshops for librarians and teachers in places like Dubai, Budapest, Thessaloniki, Paris and Ma- drid. Meanwhile, her chil- dren, who had lost some of SUDOKU their knowledge of Spanish while living in the U.S., be- came bilingual, she said. “That was pretty neat,” she said of her kids. “I couldn’t have done it.” In 2019, after Alliende’s children finished high school, the family returned to Redmond and moved back into their home on the Crooked River Ranch. Af- ter applying to nearly every school district in Central Oregon, she accepted a job as a library technician at a local elementary school in Redmond. Alliende looked toward schools with more economically disadvantaged families and saw that many of the schools had outdated books. She wanted to help. The pandemic only strengthened Alliende’s re- solve to help struggling stu- dents. She made weekly videos for children and helped them engage with their schooling as they nav- igated online learning. She purchased a reading app for district students to have ac- cess to digital materials and pushed for bilingual vid- eos. As one of the few Span- ish-speaking teachers at the school, she wanted to fos- ter the idea in students that “their countries, their cul- tures, matter.” She’s moved to help them by a book she has in her home, a book written by a friend and mentor who once told her: “Everyone has a story to tell and if you don’t write it, it doesn’t exist.” WEATHER Fill in the grid so every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the numbers 1 through 9, with no repeats. FORECAST Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday monday LAST WEEK HIGH LOW 48 66 74 62 55 51 50 25 34 39 34 32 26 27 HIGH LOW partly Cloudy partly Cloudy partly Cloudy partly Cloudy partly Cloudy partly Cloudy partly Cloudy PRECIP Saturday, march 26 71 28 0 Sunday, march 27 66 39 0 monday, march 28 61 37 0.03 Tuesday, march 29 68 31 0 Wednesday, march 30 54 34 0 Thursday, march 31 53 23 0 Friday, april 1 64 23 0 precipitation to date this year: 1.15 inches * = daily record national Weather Service broadcasts are on 162.50 mhz. Answers on Page 6 Mailing Address: p.o. 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