TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, 2022 • Redmond, Oregon • $1 food and more Rodeo music rides FUN YOU for INSIDE » Deschutes County Fair & Rodeo section A special good morning to subscriber Highland Baptist Church in ’22 Deschutes County Fair & Rodeo Aug. 3 - 7 redmondspokesman.com Pacific Northwest heat wave @RedmondSpox DESCHUTES COUNTY FAIR & RODEO Determined teen takes reins as Deschutes rodeo queen BY TIM TRAINOR Redmond Spokesman Nick Rosenberger/Spokesman Attendees crowd under shade at Music on the Green on Wednesday, July 27, at Sam Johnson Park in Redmond. REDMOND ROASTS Crushing temperatures reach all corners of Central Oregon life BY NICK ROSENBERGER • Redmond Spokesman T he sun bludgeoned much of the U.S. West this week, with temperatures reach- ing 109 degrees at the Red- mond Airport and forcing res- idents to face the crushing heat and uncertainty of future Cen- tral Oregon summers. With thermometers read- ing triple digits on Wednesday, crowds at Music on the Green stuck to the shade of Sam Johnson Park. On Thursday, food trucks like the Mighty Greek in Redmond stored iP- ads in their fridge to keep from overheating. Some construc- tion workers started their day at 5:45 a.m., before the sun and temperatures rose. Homelessness The local unsheltered com- munity is especially at risk for extreme heat. For dozens of Redmond residents living among the sage and junipers east of 17th Street, the baking sun was overwhelming and in- escapable. Many made their way to two blue tents set up city streets, wrapped by hoses that sprayed a cooling mist of water into the air. A blue kiddie pool with water balloons and a floating ice pack rested nearby. Water spilled on the cement sizzled and popped. Volunteers provided pota- ble water, bags of ice, popsicles, food, shade and support. Colleen Thomas, a home- less services coordinator for Deschutes County Health Ser- vices, helped coordinate ser- vice providers and mutual aid groups. The tent and misters were set up by Bob Bohac and Jericho Road. But it was Larry, a man expe- riencing homelessness himself, who “manned the battleship.” “He helped organize this,” said Kathryn Osborne, a com- munity volunteer and candi- date for Redmond City Coun- cil. “It wouldn’t have happened without him.” REPRIEVE FROM Shepherd’s House provides daytime respite from triple-digit temperatures BY LEO BAUDHUIN Redmond Spokesman Kim Neal spent daytime hours during last week’s heat wave at Shepherd’s House, located off Highway 97 south of downtown Red- mond. She came equipped with her phone, iPad and books for entertainment and spent the week hang- ing out with others in the safety of the air-conditioned shelter. The building served as a cooling center from Monday to Saturday be- tween 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. — though Neal said director Andrew Hoeksema would sometimes let her in to es- cape the heat as soon as he showed up each morning. The cooling center was “a godsend,” Neal said. Neal has been homeless since 2014, first living out of a smaller car and now a van. She’s currently parked out- side of Shepherd’s House. Neal is hoping her sister will send her gas money so she can pick up her medication and relocate once tempera- tures drop, she said. “You learn to live with it,” she said, but it’s still not ideal. “I have a ton of family, but not any that want to be family right now.” When the cooling center closes in the evening, Neal moves outside to the van. See Cooling / A4 See Heat / A4 A woman changed the course of Jessica Sperber’s life when she walked into her fourth- grade class at Tumalo Community School. Her name was Em- ily Cox. She wore jeans and a western snap shirt, a cowboy hat atop her head and sash across her chest. Cox was queen of the Deschutes County Photo by Jeff Sperber Fair & Rodeo and she Jessica Sperber is the looked and acted the queen of the 2022 De- part. She signed auto- schutes County Fair & graphs and chatted with Rodeo. awestruck elementary students. Sperber, 10 years old at the time, was one of them. “I knew right then I wanted to be queen of the Deschutes County Fair,” she said. For most young people, dreams come and go. But not for Sperber. Now 18 and a graduate of Ridgeview High, she never wavered from her de- sire to be queen of her local rodeo. Earlier this year, that desire became a reality. After undergoing the rigorous pageant process, Sperber was named queen of the 2022 Deschutes County Fair & Rodeo. That she succeeded was no surprise to her mom, Carla. “She is the most focused, most determined kid I’ve ever seen,” she said. “She’s had that attitude from the beginning. And she has the most im- pressive follow through.” To claim the crown, Sperber was tested not just on her horsemanship, but on her public speaking skills, a written test of rodeo history and rules, her presentation and her academics, athletics and extracurricular activities. One look through her bio, and it was clear that no one could keep Sperber from her title. She was the salutatorian of the Ridgeview’s 249-person Class of 2022, graduating with a 5.0 GPA as member of the National Honor Society. She served on student council, volunteered as a math tutor, was captain of her soccer team, was a counselor at the Deschutes County Horse Camp, president of her 4-H horse club and a four-year member of Ridgeview’s track and equestrian teams. She also worked part time at Stone Pony Dressage and Wilco Farm Store. “She became involved in absolutely every- thing,” said Carla Sperber. “That’s the kind of kid she is.” The Sperbers own about 10 acres between Tumalo and Redmond, enough room for their five horses and the numerous 4-H animals Jes- sica Sperber brings each year to the fair. See Queen / A4 Planned Oasis village homeless shelter sees progress New timeline means construction to start next May, grand opening in November 2023 BY NICK ROSENBERGER Redmond Spokesman With increasing housing prices and continued inflation, homelessness has continued to tick up across Central Oregon. Whether nestled on unused roads or on the edges of Redmond, Bend or Sisters, it’s not difficult to find dozens of people — all with their own diverse stories, personalities and histories — dreaming of home. Those dreams might be closer to reality as Oasis Vil- lage, a planned Redmond transitionary shelter, pushes forward despite delays. On Wednesday, July 20, the Board of Directors for Oasis Village presented their updated plans to the three-person Deschutes County Board of Commis- sioners. In it, they detailed a new time- line: a May 2023 start of construction with the goal of welcoming residents by November 1. “This looks like a pretty firm time- line,” said James Cook, a community advocate and vice-chair of the Oasis Village Board of Directors. “Right now I think we’re in pretty good shape.” The Spokesman uses recycled newsprint INDEX Cook and the rest of the board will meet with the City of Redmond on Calendar ........A2 Sports ............A5 Tuesday, July 26, to discuss plans and Doc ument 3. Puzzles qx d ...........A2 2/ 22/ 05 Classifieds 1: 07 .....A6 PM will meet with ODOT by the end of the year. They aim to submit a site plan Volume 112, No. 48 USPS 778-040 to the city on September 1 with a deci- sion by December. “We’re well on our way,” said Bob Bohac, chair of Oasis Village. 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