TUESDAY, MAY 3, 2022 • Redmond, Oregon • $1 INSIDE » Good time to explore Cline Buttes Page A5 » redmondspokesman.com A special good morning to subscriber Hart Wagner LLP @RedmondSpox Vandals damage Redmond park bathrooms BY TIM TRAINOR Redmond Spokesman Vandals struck five bath- rooms in Redmond parks, causing at least $50,000 in damage and forcing the facil- ities to close for more than a month. As of April 26, restrooms are closed for repairs at Sam Johnson, Fairhaven, American Legion, Kalama and Quince parks. Vandals broke toilets and sinks, clogged plumbing, scrawled obscene graffiti on walls and more. “Some, apparently youth, have gone in there with basalt rocks and destroyed the bath- rooms,” said Mayor George Endicott. He called the van- dalism “very disturbing.” According to the Redmond Police Department, the park bathrooms opened for the season just two weeks ago. The cost to repair and replace damage to the toilets, sinks and other amenities is esti- mated to be $10,000-$15,000 per location. According to Heather Cas- saro, communications man- ager for the city, the parks department plans to replace Flight school to help fill pilot shortage BY TIM TRAINOR Redmond Spokesman Forrest Reading was looking for- ward to getting behind the controls of an airplane for the first time. “A little nervous, a lot excited,” he said on the tarmac of the Redmond Airport. Reading is a new student at the Hillsboro Aero Academy, a private flight school with a campus in Red- mond. Reading grew up in Pasco, Wash., and worked as a gate agent for Horizon Air. Over the years, Reading would chat with pilots as they waited to board their planes in Pasco. He came to realize that he, too, could make a career out of flying. After talking it over with his wife, he decided to go back to school and get his pilot’s li- cense. “It’s a big chance and a big use of time and money,” he said. “But it’s gonna be worth it.” Reading is exactly the kind of stu- dent the industry is hoping to attract. Historically, most airline pilots came either from the military or from a traditional four-year college. Many airlines required a bachelor’s degree, in addition to the numerous licenses required to pilot a plane. That’s an expensive proposition for young people and those considering a ca- reer change. It costs roughly most students roughly $70,000-$90,000 to secure all the necessary licenses and training required to fly a major air- craft. “In the past, there were so many applicants and a degree was used to narrow the field,” said Nik Kresse, vice president of airplane operations for Hillsboro Aero. “Now, there’s a se- rious shortage of pilots and everyone is being creative about ways to fill those spots.” Boeing estimated that major air- lines will need to hire 645,000 pilots in the next 15 years — with 212,000 of those based in North America. To meet the demand, Horizon Air and Alaska Airlines partnered with Hillsboro Aero to start the Ascend Pilot Academy. The academy aims to the porcelain sinks and toilets with stainless steel amenities, which should be more imper- vious to vandalism. Cassaro said there are video cameras in some of the parks where the vandalism occurred, but police continue to look for more information. Most city parks are open until one hour after dusk and the restrooms have remained unlocked overnight. Lieutenant Jesse Petersen of the Redmond Police De- partment said that they always increase officer patrols of the parks during the summer months once school is out, but he expected those to increase immediately. “We will pay more attention to them, given the trends that we’re seeing,” said city man- ager Keith Witcosky. “We hav- en’t ever seen it at this level, in terms of the disrespect of the infrastructure.” If you have information re- garding vandalism, or witness a crime in-progress, report it to the Redmond Police De- partment non-emergency line at 541-693-6911 or online at https://redmondoregon.gov/ reportacrime. Photo courtesy Redmond Police Department One of the park bathrooms damaged recently in Redmond by vandals. LAY OF THE LAND New homeowner looks to create School of Ranch BY TIM TRAINOR Redmond Spokesman M ark Gross knows he fits the stereotypes. He grew up in New York, then spent much of his successful ca- reer making good money in the Bay Area. He is a progressive, left- wing Jewish man who touched down in Central Oregon just two years ago. He and his wife snapped up 10 acres outside Terrebonne that offer stunning views of the Cas- cades. On clear days, you can see all the way to Mount Hood. “I know we’re lucky,” he said. “I definitely know it.” Before he moved to the prop- erty, Gross had never used a chainsaw. He had never attached a plow to an ATV and cleared a snowy driveway. And he’d never had to fix that ATV on a cold, dark morning when the driveway really needs to be cleared. You know — the basic requirements of owning property in Central Oregon. “I quickly discovered if you don’t how to learn to do it your- self, you’re going to kill yourself,” he said. In an attempt to improve safety and knowledge of home and land improvements among new resi- dents of Central Oregon, Gross is starting the School of Ranch. He describes it as a casual, social group that he hopes can be a place where new landowners can talk about problems they’ve encoun- tered and skills they’d like to learn. He also hopes that long- time residents who hope to pass along their priorities and knowl- edge show up, as well. The goal, he says, is to pull together a Photo by Tim Trainor Mark Gross drives his ATV on his 10-acre property outside of Terrebonne. He is hoping to connect new landowners with old hands who know how to care for rural homes and ranchlands. solutions-focused group made up of both rural newbies and folks who know the Central Oregon landscape like the back of their hands. Urban upbringing Gross is a fast learner who has picked up a number of different skills throughout his varied ca- reer. He was a professional poker player for a spell, then became a high school teacher and later cre- ated an educational software sys- tem that made its way into class- rooms nationwide. But learning how to care for of a piece of the High Desert, and become self-sufficient on land outside city services, has been an entirely new challenge. “In my life it has always been a software problem,” he said. “Out here, it’s a hardware problem.” The problems — and possible solutions — were innumerable and overwhelming. “The biggest yard I’ve ever had was an eighth of acre. The only question was where to put the plant,” he laughed. “Now I have 80 of those (eighth acres) — it’s more about terraforming and caring for the land than putting in one plant. What’s one plant going to do?” The old hand Bob Baker, 74, has a lot more experience on a lot more land. The Redmond resident grew up on his grandfather’s cattle, horse and sheep ranch near Bakersfield, California. The ranch, older than California itself, sprawled over more than 2,000 acres. “My riches are all my memories growing up down there,” he said. “I’d take a horse and go out riding and ride all day and never leave the place.” Baker was drafted and served a year in Vietnam. After he got out of the Army, he took a job as a te- legrapher for the Southern Pacific Railway. “The telegraph was rapidly dis- appearing to make way for the telephone,” he said. “But I learned the old way.” His wife at the time was from Central Oregon, so he lived here for a while. Then he went to train dispatch school and was sent to stations throughout the West, dis- patching and scheduling trains from the Canadian border all the way down to Mexico. He retired in 2008 and bought 5 acres of See Ranch / A5 See Flight / A4 Houseless single mom clings to future hopes BY SUZANNE ROIG The Bulletin When sheriff’s deputies evicted Tessy Moon from her Redmond home, she told her children they were going camping. At first, it seemed like fun, but two and a half years later, it’s anything but that. Being houseless has taken more imagination and hard work than Moon could have ever imag- ined. Getting drinking water and propane for electricity and heat to the camp site requires a half mile or more walk and a plan on how to carry the heavy tanks across unstable Moon terrain. She used rocks and found wire fence material to carve a playground out of sagebrush and hard-packed dirt for her kids to play and ride their bikes. Throughout it all, Moon has remained hopeful that one day soon her family won’t be crammed into a fifth-wheel RV in the sagebrush of a re- mote area of Redmond. “We try every day,” said Moon, a 36-year-old mother of four. “It’s hard to stay clean when you’re homeless.” Their family van, which doesn’t have a current registration, runs, but only when there’s extra money for gas, Moon said. So most days, she and her family walk or use the one bicycle they own. Just a week ago, she was on her bicycle in Redmond when she was hit by a motorist. Moon suffered just a few scrapes and bruises and the bicycle is See Hope / A4 The Spokesman uses recycled newsprint INDEX Puzzles ............. 2 Calendar .......... 2 Flashback ........ 6 Classifieds ....... 5 Volume 112, No. 36 USPS 778-040 U|xaIICGHy02326kzU