PAGE A6, KEIZERTIMES, FEBRUARY 26, 2016
unrelated warrants.
“We're not calling them
suspects in our Keizer case,”
Kuhns added. “We just
identifi ed two people we
wanted to talk to. We arrested
them on warrants. We never
took them back to the Eugene
Police Department.”
The names of the two men
have not been released. Kuhns
wouldn't say if the men lived
in the house where they were
found in Eugene.
“During the course of any
investigation of this magnitude,
a lot of names will come up,”
Kuhns said. “Through leads and
information and interviews,
we identify the need to talk to
individuals. We found they had
warrants, which made it even
easier to talk to them. We're still
plugging away, working hard to
put all the pieces of the puzzle
together.”
The shooting took place
shortly after 6:30 p.m. Feb.
14 in the parking lot near the
Starbucks in Keizer Station.
Police stated early last week the
shooting was not random and
that there was no immediate
risk to the public.
According to Goodpaster's
obituary, he was born in North
Carolina in 1987 but was raised
in Salem. He graduated from
McNary High School in 2006
SHOOTING,
continued from Page A1
Nobody has been charged with
any alleged crimes related to
our investigation.”
A statement released by the
Eugene Police Department
on Feb. 17 stated the EPD
assisted the KPD “to locate and
apprehend a wanted, possibly
armed suspect.”
A Community Emergency
Notifi cation System warning
was issued shortly before the
arrest since cops were chasing
one of the suspects.
Kuhns said Feb. 18 the
warrants weren't for KPD or
EPD.
“We learned they were
in Eugene,” Kuhns said. “We
called (the EPD) and asked if
they would help us. We were
all there. We found the house
they were at. A car left the
house. One suspect was in the
car, one in the house. Half of
the cops followed the car. He
ran and thus the warning. He
was soon arrested by Eugene
Police. The other half of the
cops arrested the guy at the
house. Then they were brought
back here to the Keizer Police
Department. They have been
taken to Marion County Jail on
and married Angela later that
year.
A public viewing was held
at Virgil T. Golden Funeral
Home in Salem on Feb. 19,
with a celebration of life on
Feb. 20 at Peoples Church in
Salem.
“Jerrid had a passion for life
and the people around him,” the
obituary read in part. “He loved
spending time with his family
and friends. Jerrid enjoyed
spending his free time in the
outdoors hunting with his dog,
fi shing with friends, eating
seafood and working on cars.
He especially loved holidays,
family events and traveling, but
he mostly loved and cherished
the quiet moments at home
with his wife Angela.”
Sandee Metcalf, Goodpaster's
mom, posted about her son on
Facebook Feb. 16.
“He deeply loved and cared
for his family and friends and
was the most compassionate
person I have ever known,”
Metcalf wrote in part. “I love
you son.”
Memorial fl owers and
donations may be sent to or
presented to Virgil Golden
Funeral Service or the Peoples
Church in care of Angela
Goodpaster and family, or can
be mailed to 4965 Happy Drive
NE in Salem, 97305.
School district reaps rewards
of long-term planning efforts
McNary-area schools
will soon be at capacity
By HERB SWETT
For the Keizertimes
Salem-Keizer School District offi cials are
known for looking ahead, and the results of
their planning were discussed at a school board
work session Tuesday.
Most of the discussion involved the capi-
tal bond that took effect in 2008. Mike Wolfe,
chief operations offi cer for the district, and
Bruce Lathers, manager of maintenance and
construction, told the board about progress that
has been made with the bond.
Wolfe noted that the bond was passed three
years after the board agreed to form a task force
for facilities planning. Lathers reviewed the re-
pair and renovation projects and said the task
force focused on seismic work. He also showed
a list of businesses in Marion and Polk counties
that contracted with the district and noted that
there was enough cooperation for “not one
lawsuit” to be fi led.
Showing total expenditure and construc-
tion charts for the time since 2008, Wolfe ob-
served that total bond expenditures declined
almost consistently after reaching a high point
of $73.3 million in the 2010-11 school year.
Projected for 2017-18 are expenditures of $5.8
million, with cumulative spending expected to
be $290.1 million by then.
Construction expenditures have followed
a similar pattern, with $100,000 projected for
2017-18 and a cumulative $99.1 million ex-
pected. Another similar pattern, for repair and
renovation, has $5.8 million and a cumulative
$161 million projected for 2017-18.
Wolfe said the district is working on short-
and long-range plans for facilities to address
student enrollment and program needs. He
showed maps indicating that three of the cur-
rent high school attendance areas, including
that of McNary High School, are expected to
have high school enrollments exceeding school
capacity by 2020.
Other maps showed that the middle schools
in the McNary area are projected to have a to-
tal enrollment within 60 percent of capacity by
2020, and that for elementary schools in the
area, there will be places exceeding capacity,
within 60 percent, and with lower enrollments
than 60 percent below capacity.
Nancy MacMorris-Adix, a board member,
said she has been bothered that older schools
do not have facilities as good as those of newly
built schools. Wolfe said the administration is
assessing that problem.
Chuck Lee, the board member in the Mc-
Nary area, said the district should stay familiar
with political issues involving district plans and
make sure the community understands district
needs.
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