A special good morning to subscriber Hans Rohne Tuesday, November 15, 2022 • Redmond, Oregon • $1 redmondspokesman.com @RedmondSpox MIDTERM ELECTION | 2022 Fitch ahead in tight race for mayor Redmond Parks District rec center bond leading Schimmoller trails by 229 votes, but election still too close to call $49M bond for new recreation center pulls ahead in unofficial results, operations levy likely failing BY TIM TRAINOR Redmond Spokesman Ed Fitch is leading in a tight race for mayor of Redmond. According to unofficial election tallies, Fitch has a 229-vote lead over Ben Schimmoller in the race to replace longtime mayor George Endicott. Fitch has 4,728 votes, Schim- moller has 4,499, Jay Patrick has 4,338 and Charles Baer is fourth with 213. All Redmond precincts have been unofficially counted, though mail-in ballots are still Fitch being tallied. It’s unknown how many ballots are still to be counted, but Deschutes County Clerk estimated a few thousand across the entire county. As of press time, Fitch was not ready to declare victory. “If these initial votes hold it will be a sign that Redmond is Schimmoller ready for a change,” said Fitch on Election Night. By the next morning, the count had tightened considerably. “This is a close race and I’m not sure I’ve won it,” he said. Schimmoller said felt it was “pretty unlikely” that he would pull out the victory, but he would watch See Mayor / A6 LOCAL BY NICK ROSENBERGER Redmond Spokesman After 14 years and two failed at- tempts to pass a recreation center bond in 2008 and 2019, the Red- mond Area Parks and Recreation District is on the cusp of building a new facility. Supporters of the bond knew it would be a close call heading into election night on Tuesday and their predictions came true: according to the latest tallies, the $49 million bond is 664 votes ahead. The accompanying five-year levy to support operations, however, was failing by over 4,500 votes. Election results will not be certi- fied until December. “It’s so close,” said Katie Hammer, parks district executive director, of the bond. Hammer said if the 20-year bond is able to pass while the levy does not, the recreation district will build the facility and could try to pass an operating levy at a later date. Zack Harmon, a park district board member, said they have mul- tiple options to go out for a future levy but that it wasn’t altogether necessary for the facility. Matt Gilman, the chairman of the parks district board of directors, Nick Rosenberger/Spokesman Supporters of the proposed Redmond recreation center check their phones for the first wave of election results at Initiative Brewing on Oct. 8 in Redmond. said he felt good being about 660 votes ahead for the bond but that he’s not “counting his chickens.” The levy, however, is a different story. “The levy is not going to pass,” Gilman said. “I’m okay with that.” The parks district put the levy on the ballot, he said, because they were trying to be as transparent as possi- ble so that when they built the facility they wouldn’t surprise people with “It’s so close.” — Katie Hammer, parks district executive director, speaking of the bond’s 664-vote lead another price tag. But, he said they don’t need to be raising the opera- tions money right at this moment. Had the levy passed, Gilman previously said they’d hoped pro- gramming and activities would fund the facility after the five-year levy expired. Additionally, the rec- reation district can use the next few years during construction to save the funds needed to operate the facility. However, the district may need to go out for another operating levy in the future depending on costs. See Recreation / A6 HELPING VETERANS Election results Central Oregon Veterans Ranch works to restore land, people Three in line to win council seats, A3 INSIDE Veterans Day Parade photos, information on local nonprofits, A8 BY GEORGE PLAVEN CO Media Group The night of his 32nd birthday, Robert Shaw went to his truck and pointed a pistol at his head, certain he wanted to die. A husband and father of two young children, Shaw had been drinking — as he often did — to blot out the the pain of trauma and abuse he suf- fered while in the U.S. Army. “That day was the point where I was done,” he said. “I didn’t want to be around anybody. I wasn’t good enough for my kids, for my wife — no one.” Shaw doesn’t remember exactly what hap- pened next, only that he didn’t pull the trigger. He woke up the next morning at his home in Bend and several days later arranged to talk with a peer support counselor for Deschutes County. George Plaven/Capital Press A sign marks the entrance into the Central Oregon Veterans Ranch between Bend and Redmond. The counselor recommended Shaw visit the Central Oregon Veterans Ranch, a 19-acre working ranch in the juniper-dotted high desert where veterans of all ages and eras can farm, tend animals and poultry, and lend each other emo- tional support. It took some convincing, but Shaw ultimately agreed. He was no stranger to agriculture, having participated in 4-H and FFA as a kid growing up in Northern California. Before enlisting in the Army, Shaw also worked on a commercial alfalfa farm and pump- kin patch where he did everything from field la- bor to equipment repair. About a month after arriving at the Central Oregon Veterans Ranch in the summer of 2021, Shaw said he could feel himself begin to change. He was opening up to others. Having somewhere to go, and something to do, gave him a renewed sense of purpose. See Veterans / A5 WEATHER FORECAST INSIDE Calendar A2 Opinion A7 Coffee Break A9 Classifieds A6 THIS WEEK’S FORECAST SPONSORED BY Volume 113, No 9 USPS 778-040 TUESDAY Cloudy WEDNESDAY Sunny THURSDAY Sunny FRIDAY Cloudy SATURDAY Partly cloudy SUNDAY Partly cloudy MONDAY Cloudy 41/15 47/21 46/18 38/11 39/16 42/23 46/27 The Spokesman uses recycled newsprint U|xaIICGHy02326kzU