TUESDAY, MAY 17, 2022 • Redmond, Oregon • $1 INSIDE » Time to vote! Ballots are due at 8 p.m. A special good morning to subscriber Autumn Stace redmondspokesman.com @RedmondSpox Ballots due on $40M bond for new police station BY JOE SIESS EO Media Group Voters in Redmond will de- cide on May 17 if they want to pass a $40 million bond to fund a new police station in the rapidly growing city. If approved, the city will tax Redmond homeowners based on the assessed value of their property to pay for the sta- tion, which city officials say is a much needed upgrade to the existing facility. The $40 million general obligation bond translates to about $0.73 per $1,000 of as- sessed property value. The average taxpayer would pay around $148 a year, or $12 a Realms High School students get outside the classroom for on-the-ground learning BY BRYCE DOLE EO Media Group The Realms High School teens knelt down in the tall grass on a recent blustery day at Smith Rock State Park, pulling up plants that a park ranger described as “a big problem.” “Every plant we leave is 400,000 plants next year,” the ranger, Sam Vanderbeek, told the students. Students from the Bend school were there to help the ranger remove invasive plants, learn about a new profession and engage with their com- munity. Each year, groups like this one from Realms High School take on a variety of ed- ucational deep dives during a weeklong “intensives” pro- gram meant to engage stu- dents with activities outside of ordinary coursework. “It’s really humbling be- cause it’s bigger than we are,” said Hannah Gainey, a senior at Realms High. Realms High educators say these programs are helping students find their passions after the pandemic-damaged interest in education among some students. “Post-pandemic, kids are questioning the value of school more than I’ve ever seen before,” said Realms High School Principal Roger White, who championed expedition- ary learning. Walking along the paths near the towering multicol- ored rock walls for which the park is known, White said programs like this are essen- tial to showing students how their schooling is applicable to the real world. The programs are particularly helpful for stu- dents who struggle in a tradi- tional classroom environment, Realms High educators say. He and other Realms High educators emphasized that learning from professionals in the field like Vanderbeek in- troduces students to potential career opportunities that they might not otherwise know about. And by bringing stu- dents out of the classroom, they can provide important help and establish relation- ships in the community, too. “While you’re in school, it shouldn’t just be preparation for doing good in the world, but the act of doing good for the world,” said Zach Harju, the assistant principal for the high school, who added: “This is a place where they feel in the community, like a leader.” month. Redmond Police Chief Devin Lewis said the current building, built in the 1990s, is the same building the po- lice department originally moved into, and was meant to accommodate 38 employ- ees. Since then, the number of employees working at the police department has grown to over 60, and the population of Redmond has about tripled, Lewis said. The most recent popula- tion count from the U.S. Cen- sus Bureau is 33,274 in 2021. In 2010 the population was 26,214, census bureau data showed. The current building lacks a safe and secure lobby for peo- ple to come and engage with law enforcement officers, he said. The parking lot is also inadequate and could be more secure for officers and staff, and members of the commu- nity. “The hope is that if we get the new station, we will have room and more support staff,” Lewis said. “We would really like to start looking at differ- ent specialized teams, and un- fortunately, we are unable to do that right now because we don’t have the staffing or the space.” See Bond / A4 SPIFFING UP SMITH ROCK Wyatt Winter- bottom, a Realms High School junior, pulls invasive plants at Smith Rock State Park as part of a school program. Bryce Dole / The Bulletin See Realms / A4 Realms High School students encourage each other as they prepare for rock climbing during an alternative learning opportunity at Smith Rock State Park on May 5. Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin Realms High School students climb at Smith Rock State Park on May 5 during an alternative learning op- portunity. DeBone to chair new regional emergency training center CORE3 project planned for site near airport BY TIM TRAINOR Redmond Spokesman Deschutes County Commissioner Tony DeBone will be the first chair- man of a steering team that will work to develop a regional emergency train- ing center. The project, known as lease. “Central Oregon has a CORE3, is planned for 300 critical lack of training facili- acres near the Redmond Air- ties for emergency service per- port. sonnel and desperately needs “The pandemic and recent a central hub for emergency catastrophic wildfires taught operations if a major disaster many of us in Central Oregon strikes.” that we all need to be better The multi-agency steering DeBone equipped for emergency situ- team is made up of 25 people ations, especially government overseeing the project. Bend agencies,” DeBone said in a news re- Police Chief Mike Krantz will be vice chair. The current plan for CORE3 is to create a training for law enforcement, fire, paramedics and other emergency personnel, at a cost of roughly $41 million. It will include an indoor gun range and burn building for firefighter training. The project will also function as an emergency coordination center, during major regional or statewide di- sasters. The Spokesman uses recycled newsprint INDEX Puzzles ............. 2 Obituaries ....... 5 Flashback ........ 6 Classifieds ....... 5 Volume 112, No. 38 USPS 778-040 U|xaIICGHy02326kzU