Tuesday, sepTember 6, 2022 A7 REDMOND SPOKESMAN Write to us: news@redmondspokesman.com GUEST COLUMN Thornburgh Resort project reduces plan for water use BY KAMERON DELASHMUTT T he Thornburgh’s began ranching and farming 400 acres in Terrebonne in the 1920s acquiring 1,500 acres on Cline Buttes in 1953, along with grazing rights on 30,000 acres of BLM Land for summer pasture. In 2003, JELDWEN offered to buy the Thornburgh’s Cline Buttes property to expand Eagle Crest. Instead, we began planning the Thornburgh Resort. The conceptual master plan was submitted in 2005 and approved by the Board of Commissioners in 2006. In 2018, Thornburgh received ap- proval of the final master plan. Prior to construction, we be- gan a significant reassessment of amenities and the resort’s overall resource management resulting in numerous adjust- ments, including: This month Thornburgh submitted a plan to Deschutes County planning committing to: • Reduce water use by foregoing the building an approved golf course, • Reduce water use by replacing some planned lakes, irri- gated parks and green space in favor of natural landscaping, • Employ resource-sensitive landscaping for all resort ame- nities and homes to better steward our environment These commitments allow Thornburgh to reduce the re- sort’s water needs from 2,129-acre-feet per year to no more than 1,460 acre-feet. This equals average consumption of about 787,000 gallons per day, or: • a 35% reduction in consumption • a 43% reduction in resort-amenity water usage • less than two-tenths of 1% of water use of 775,000 acre- feet in the Deschutes Basin. Thornburgh water use for all resort related facilities is 663 acre feet per year. For context this is about the same amount of water required to pasture 55 horses in Tumalo. Thornburgh isn’t creating new water uses or increasing water usage in the basin. Instead, it purchased certificated water rights already in use and stopped pumping the water allowed under those rights. That water is presently left in the aquifer and river reducing water usage in the basin and increasing flows in the river. This largely occurs during the critical summer period when flows are lowest and tempera- tures the highest. This increased summertime flow, or excess mitigation will continue for decades, ultimately accumulating to roughly 24,000 acre-feet more stream flow than the resort with- draws, or roughly 17 years of the resort’s full use. Not only is the resort reducing its water needs and increasing stream flow, over 2/3rds of the excess mitigation is cold ground- water Thornburgh is leaving in the aquifer ultimately to be discharged into the river. Once there, the cold groundwater cools stream temperatures improving fish habitat. While the approved master plan contains 3 golf courses, construction of each course requires site plan approval. In its approved site plan for the initial golf course, planned by renowned minimalist architects Coore and Crenshaw, and built by Whitman Axland and Cutten, Thornburgh notes ir- rigated turf areas are held to the bare minimum. Majestic old growth trees are retained with native grasses to blend golf into the natural surroundings with as little impact as possi- ble. Thornburgh voluntarily reduced by 20% the amount of overnight lodging, reducing impacts to water, traffic, and wildlife. This reduction was approved by Deschutes County. Thornburgh is also implementing a program of juni- per thinning on about 4,000 acres of juniper forest on BLM lands. Juniper removal can restore water flows by up to 1-acre-foot per four to five acres managed. Thornburgh’s ef- forts mirror other regional programs to restore water flows lost to Juniper expansion. Deschutes County is promoting Juniper thinning while Crook County is pursuing large-scale programs to reduce Juniper coverage to restore stream flows. Central Oregon is a secret no more. As people come, they need lodging, facilities and housing, which strains the short- ages existing today. While we cannot stop people from com- ing, we can provide for them responsibly. While Thornburgh’s original plans proposed density of only one-third what the code allowed, with 30% more open space than the minimum required, it also had elements that didn’t steward resources efficiently. Thornburgh has made dramatic changes since, to lower impacts on natural resources, with more planned. Thorn- burgh is defining responsible development. As we continue to adjust, Thornburgh will become the most environmentally-conscious master planned community in the West, if not the United States. █ Kameron Delashmutt is the owner and developer of the Thornburgh Resort at Cline Buttes. WRITE TO US Letters policy: We welcome your letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 300 words and include the writer’s phone number and address for verification. We edit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhere and those appropriate for other sections of the spokesman. Guest columns: your submissions should be between 600 and 800 words and must include the writer’s phone number and address for verification. We edit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject those submitted elsewhere. How to submit: • email is preferred: news@redmondspokesman.com • Or mail to: 361 sW sixth street, redmond Or 97756 GUEST COLUMN Redmond schools chose to be reactive, not proactive on guns BY HEATHER MCNEIL A fter the recent shooting in Bend speakers and politicians stated the necessity for “thoughts and actions.” I am addressing an action that I believe is essential for sending a mes- sage about gun safety, especially on school grounds. On August 24 the Redmond School District Board failed to adopt a pol- icy about prohibiting guns from school grounds. Instead, they have decided to act reactively, rather than proactively. The Oregon State Legislature passed Senate Bill 554 in 2021, which allows schools to adopt a policy (referred to as KGBB in schools) that prohibits guns on campus, including those belonging to in- dividuals with a concealed carry permit. Umatilla, Portland, Klamath Falls, Eugene, Pendleton, Salem, and Bend La Pine are just a few of the 29 districts who decided KGBB was essential and have adopted the policy, as recommended by the Oregon State School Board. But not Redmond. I am sure that those other districts had legal advice, considered liability, and had pol- icies in place prohibiting guns. However, they decided that KGBB was also essential and would send a strong and important message to visitors and parents. But not Redmond. One Board member insisted that they have sufficient policies already in place. How many parents and visitors have actu- ally read all of the policies and are familiar with JFCJ, GBJ, KGB, and JFCM? Another Board member said that a par- ent could enter school grounds unaware of the law and be held liable. That’s why the policy recommends posting the informa- tion at school entrances, so no one has the excuse of ignorance. Personally, I’m more concerned about the fear and confusion that would result from a student or teacher seeing the gun than I am about upsetting the adult who carries it on campus. Another Board member believed that the policy says to leave firearms lying out in plain view in your car. In fact, Senate Bill 554, which is the law that supports KGBB, requires that firearms be secured and states, “…(A) firearm is not secured if…the firearm is a handgun, is left unat- tended in a vehicle and is within view of persons outside the vehicle.” A board member insisted that KGBB had been discussed fully already, and she couldn’t understand why there was so much concern being expressed in letters and testimony. However, that discussion was in executive session, which the public cannot attend, and readings were at work sessions when the public cannot comment. These facts from everystat.org make it clear that action is necessary in the United States to prevent gun violence: • The rate of gun deaths has increased 33% from 2011 to 2020 in the United States. • Firearms are the leading cause of death among children and teens in the United States. • In 2022 there have already been at least 102 incidents of gunfire on school grounds. I highly recommend that concerned cit- izens take a look at the following: • An overview of gun violence in the United States, with many statistics and facts. everystat.org/wp-content/up- loads/2020/03/Gun-Violence-in-United- States.pdf • A new, extensively researched report from the American Federation of Teach- ers, the National Education Association, and Everytown, entitled How to Stop Shootings and Gun Violence in School. everytownresearch.org/report/how-to- stop-shootings-and-gun-violence-in- schools/ Superintendent Cline stated that guns are not allowed on school grounds but that he was open to adopting KGBB if that was the board’s decision. It failed on a vote of 3 to 2. Please contact the Redmond School Board if you have concerns. █ Heather McNeil is a member of Central Oregon Moms Demand Action for Gun Safety and lives in Bend. GUEST COLUMN Parents should know district’s gun policies safety policy defined by a recently passed he leading cause of death for chil- law in Oregon and recommended by dren in the U.S. is gun violence. American Federation of Teachers and the Why is this terrible epidemic only National Education Association. The pol- icy has been adopted by 29 other school worsening? The 2021–2022 school year districts in Oregon, including Bend-LaP- had the highest number of incidents in ine, with many others still considering. preschools and K–12 schools since 2013. What can any of us do to stop the vio- The law was carefully crafted to close a lence in and around our schools? The an- loophole that could allow individuals with swer must be we need to do everything in a concealed weapon permit to be exempt our power to stop inten- from gun bans on school Well, many of us are riled tional assaults, but also properties and to enforce the increasingly com- secure firearm storage up because children, mon accidents. We’ve laws. A critical aspect at increasing rates, are seen that shootings at of the policy the board schools can happen any- being injured and killed in voted down also speci- fies that signs should be where, nowhere is safe posted on every entrance from accidents that arise accidents and intentional door to educate the pub- when guns are allowed attacks. lic about the “no guns” on campus, even by commitment and the the most well-meaning potential of criminal liability. adults. The Redmond district does have poli- In 2018, according to the Associated Press, more than 30 mishaps were publicly cies in place intended to prevent guns on campus. I ask, how many of us are aware reported involving firearms brought onto of these district policies buried among school grounds. Guns in the possession the thousand or so others? It is incredibly of anyone other than a law enforcement ironic that we are willing to post “no to- officer have no place in our schools. The bacco” signs on every entrance but not “no commitment should be simple: gun free guns”. Do we care enough to look carefully schools. This policy and this commitment at policies written several years ago and are critical steps in saving our children’s update them to reflect the fact that the in- lives. cidence of school gun violence is horrific Redmond school district parents and and increasing? families need to know that the school I attended the meeting and heard these board on August 24 specifically voted reasons for declining to adopt a new pol- down the chance to implement a gun BY STEVEN AND JEAN CARLTON T icy, among others. A board member cited his concern that he is afraid that since many of the people he knows carry a gun everyday, they would forget and bring it into the school and be prosecuted. It is just this situation that the law is designed to prevent and I would ask if we are commit- ted to protecting our children, or careless adults? Another board member very inaccu- rately described the law as allowing guns to be left in view in cars in the parking lot. More than one board member misstated the penalties specified by the law. Another member complained that she doesn’t know why people are “all riled up” about this. Well, many of us are riled up because children, at increasing rates, are being in- jured and killed in accidents and inten- tional attacks. The new law is consistent with researched methods to control vio- lence. It provides an opportunity to take a close look at loopholes, make an effort to address them, and to educate everyone on school property about safely securing our guns. Clearly we all need to be better in- formed and willing to look at every aspect of making our schools safer. Parents, please contact the Redmond School Board with your concerns. There are some simple and rational steps to re- duce the chances of gun violence in your children’s school, particularly while we wait for upgrades to security systems that we heard at the same board meeting are up to a year out.