REDMOND SPOKESMAN • TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 2022 A3 LocalNews Holiday events continue through the season For the most up-to-date informa- tion on upcoming holiday events in and around Redmond. To submit an event, email classifieds@redmond- spokesman.com WHERE TO GET GIFTS Children’s Holiday Party — St. Vincent De Paul: 651 SW Veterans Way, Redmond, 3-6 p.m. (Please fill out sign up form from lobby for each child and return by Dec. 1) Fri., Dec. 16 Northern Lights Display – Redmond City Hall: 411 SW 9th St., 5-7 p.m. Fri., Dec. 9 Northern Lights Display – Redmond City Hall: 411 SW 9th St., 5-7 p.m. Sat., Dec. 10 Know Joy: The Uncharted Project Holiday Performance – Redmond Library: 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond, 3-4 p.m. Live at the Vineyard: John Denver Christmas Concert with John Hoover & the Mighty Quinns – Faith Hope & Charity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Dr., Ter- rebonne, 5-8 p.m. Sat., Dec. 17 Christmas in the Canyon Holiday Mar- ket – Over the Edge Taphouse: 13959 SW Commercial Loop Rd, Crooked River Ranch, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Northern Lights Display – Redmond City Hall: 411 SW 9th St., 5-7 p.m. Wed., Dec. 21 Know Joy: Holiday Family Movie Night – High Desert Music Hall, 818 SW Forest Ave., Redmond, 6-8 p.m. Northern Lights Display – Redmond City Hall: 411 SW 9th St., 5-7 p.m. WHERE TO GIVE BACK Sun., Dec 11 Breakfast with Santa – FivePine Lodge & Spa: 1021 E Desperado Trail, Sisters, 10:30 a.m.-12 p.m. Tue., Dec. 13 Know Joy: The Twelve Tones Music Event – Redmond Library: 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond, 2-3 p.m. Thurs., Dec. 15 Thurs., Dec. 8 Pint Night Benefiting Crook County Education Foundation – Wild Ride Brewery — Prineville: 1500 NE 3rd St., Prineville, 5-8 p.m. Tue., Dec. 20 Light Up A Life — An Evening of Re- membrance — Hospice of Redmond’s Community Room: 732 SW 23rd St., 5:30-7 p.m. Harrison McKinney/Spokesman Shoppers poke around a holiday market in Redmond on Nov. 19, 2022. Odem Medo project wraps up construction BY NICK ROSENBERGER Redmond Spokesman Photos by Nick Rosenberger/Spokesman Construction on a new road and roundabout on SW Salmon Ave. in Redmond opened on Nov. 23 to help decrease congestion and fix a danger- ous intersection Precipitation lags across Oregon BY GEORGE PLAVEN CO Media Group A new water year is off to a slow start in Oregon, where much of the state remains in a multi-year drought. Warm and dry weather persisted through mid-October, digging an early deficit for precipitation in most basins — particularly those in central and southern Oregon, where drought conditions are the worst. However, climate experts say there is still plenty of time to catch up and La Nina could bring ample rain and mountain snow this winter to the Pacific Northwest. Every drop is needed to reverse what has been a painfully long drought dat- ing back to November 2019, said Larry O’Neill, Oregon state climatologist. “We need at least an average amount of precipitation, and average temperatures,” O’Neill said. “Precipitation is the key. We (also) desperately need the snowpack to be above-average, and we need that snow- pack to stick around past April 1. That will set us up pretty well for recovering.” While overall precipitation since Oct. 1 has been “slightly discouraging,” O’Neill said the peak wet season doesn’t typically begin until later in the winter and early spring. According to the U.S. Drought Monitor, about 95% of Oregon is in some stage of drought, ranging from “abnormally dry” to “exceptional,” the highest possible cat- egory. The only exceptions to drought are in northeast Oregon, including parts of Umatilla, Morrow, Union and Wal- lowa counties, as well as a sliver of Curry County along the southwest coast. Data from the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service shows the Umatilla, Walla Walla and Willow basins in north- east Oregon have received 126% of their average water year precipitation as of Nov. 28. That’s good news for the region’s dry- land wheat farmers, O’Neill said. Other basins have not been as fortunate. Those hardest hit by drought in central and southern Oregon have only received about 75% of average precipitation, in- cluding the Upper Deschutes, Crooked, Klamath, Rogue and Umpqua basins. “We haven’t really recovered in regions where we really need to see improvement,” O’Neill said. The typically rainy Willamette Basin is also just 80% of average for precipita- tion since the water year began on Oct. 1. Through Oct. 20, there was no recorded precipitation in Portland, Salem and Eu- gene, which hadn’t happened since 1987. However, it has rained since then. Not only was it dry, but it was also the second-warmest October on record for Oregon, said Matt Warbritton, hydrologist for the NRCS in Portland. Warbritton said more precipitation is sorely needed to boost low soil moisture in drought-stricken basins. If the ground is too dry, he said it can absorb snowmelt before reaching streams, rivers and reser- voirs that farmers depend on during the irrigation season. But there are reasons for encourage- ment. Snowpack is largely near- or above-nor- mal statewide, and La Nina has the po- tential to bring cooler, wetter weather that would allow snow to remain high in the mountains for longer into the year and melting gradually when it is needed most by farms and fish. “All we can really do is hope for an above-normal snowpack season,” Warbrit- ton said. “We’re still very much in a dry phase. It may not seem like it, because we had some early season snowpack. But that precipitation, we just need more of it.” Carpet Vinyl Hardwood Laminate (541) 526-5543 1950 SW Badger Ave #102, Redmond, OR 97756 A new road connecting SW Odem Medo Way and SW Salmon Ave. opened on Wednesday, Nov. 23, to help decrease congestion and fix a dangerous intersection be- tween Salmon and SW Canal that saw two hit-and-runs. The $1.14 million con- struction project kicked off in July and crews will com- pletely finish the project on budget by early to mid-De- cember with finishing touches, cleaning, additional striping, signage and land- scaping. “(Construction) went very very good,” said Steve Wil- son, civil engineer for Red- mond. “We wanted to get that intersection live before the holiday traffic started.” The re-alignment project, which has been on the city’s to-do list for 17 years, in- cluded the implementation of a stoplight, cul-de-sac, sidewalks, pedestrian ramps and the demolition of an old Parks & Recreation building. The new roadway con- structed by Knife River Northwest bends into the Odem Medo intersection and requires drivers to reduce their speed to make a left turn onto South Canal. █ Reporter: nrosenberger@ redmondspokesman.com Certified 2022 election results show no change in Redmond races BY NICK ROSENBERGER Redmond Spokesman Results of the 2022 election were certified on Dec. 2, with no change in the outcomes from the previous Nov. 30 tally. Ed Fitch won the race for Red- mond mayor with a total of 5,143 votes. Ben Schimmoller finished second with 4,850 votes while Jay Patrick finished the election with 4,640 votes. Charles Webster Baer ended with 228 votes. In the Redmond city council election, results stayed the same with the top three candidates earning seats. Cat Zwicker came in first with 8,564 votes followed by Kathryn Osborne with 7,790 and John Nielsen with 7,723 total votes. Bill Trumble, with 6,177 votes, and Branegan J. Dixon, with 4,986 votes, will not be join- ing city council next year. The Redmond Area Parks and Recreation District bond squeaked by with 12,483 in favor of the bond to fund a new rec center and 11,606 against. The accompanying parks dis- trict levy, however, failed with 14,326 people voting against it and 9,523 voting in favor. The psilocybin manufactur- ing ban passed with 8,667 votes in favor of the ban and 6,717 against it. The psilocybin treatment cen- ter ban also passed with 8,046 votes in favor of the ban and 7,092 against it. The outcome for House Dis- trict 53, which covers the south- ern half of Redmond, also stayed the same. Democrat Emerson Levy won the district with 19,584 votes while Michael Sipe, the Republican candidate, received 19,075 votes. House District 59, which cov- ers the northern half of Red- mond, showed Republican Vikki Breese-Iverson staying in the lead with 9,194 votes and Dem- ocrat Lawrence Jones with 4,753 votes. 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