A6 BAKER CITY HERALD • THURSDAY, JULY 7, 2022 THE WEST Offer made to buy Petersen Rock Garden New owner would preserve the roadside attraction near Redmond BY JOE SIESS The Bulletin The owner of the Petersen Rock Garden, one of Oregon’s beloved roadside attractions, is reviewing an offer from a potential buyer and plans to close it to visitors while the deal is reviewed, according to the owner’s real estate agent. Kaisha Brannon, of Cold- well Banker Sun Country Re- alty, the seller’s agent, said the possible new owners would like to renovate and maintain the rock garden for the public. The prospective new owners of the rock garden are long- time residents of Central Or- egon and wish to remain un- named, Brannon said. “I know that it will remain the rock garden and be open to the public, but I can’t really say what they plan on doing because we ultimately don’t know what they are going to Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin, File The owner of Petersen Rock Garden is reviewing an offer to purchase the roadside attraction south of Redmond, her real estate broker said. get pushback on,” Brannon said. Deschutes County land use officials said last week that zoning questions about the permissible use of the prop- erty still need to be addressed. The county told stakehold- ers, including Brannon, that many potential issues could come up given the property is zoned exclusively for farm use, the most restrictive zon- ing in unincorporated De- schutes County. The property, on SW 77 Street southwest of Redmond, is also listed on the National Register of Historic Places, creating another layer of uncertainty regarding how the property can and cannot be used or altered by a new owner. Brannon did not disclose financial details about the of- fer. The rock garden’s owner, Susan Caward, 57, is selling the property because of health reasons. The rock garden was put on the market in early June and listed for $825,000, a price that includes all the art and rocks and the peacocks that freely roam the property. It was built by Danish immigrant Rasmus Petersen in the 1940s and ’50s and sits on 12 acres that was not zoned by the county until the 1970s. At this point, Brannon said, the potential buyers will have to engage in their own due dil- igence and research into the property, a process that could take months. Brannon said while the deal is not closed and the possi- ble buyers have yet to actually buy the property, the seller is accepting backup offers to be considered in case the current potential buyers pull out of the deal. Annette Perry, co-chair of the Petersen Rock Garden Preservation Association, a newly formed nonprofit orga- nization whose mission is to preserve the rock garden, said the association is both pleased to hear there is a potential pri- vate buyer and ready to help the new buyer in any way. “We almost feel it is a bless- ing that there is an outside buyer,” Perry said. “Because just starting out as a new non- profit, and us knowing the property and us having ex- perience in a lot of different areas...we know this is a huge task, and having a private buyer will allow our group to step in and focus on what our mission is.” At this point, Perry said the preservation association hopes to hear from the prospective new owners of the rock gar- den and is willing to lend a hand in any way it can. “We are staying true to our mission,” Perry added. “We would love to help whoever owns it. We can’t wait to hope- fully meet them at some point when they are ready to talk to people and find out what as- sets ... we can help them with.” In rural West, more worries about access to abortion clinics BY CLAIRE RUSH Associated Press/Report for America PORTLAND — In the cen- tral Oregon city of Bend, the sole Planned Parenthood clinic serving the eastern half of the state is brac- ing for an influx of patients, par- ticularly from neighboring Idaho, where a trigger law banning most abortions is expected to take effect this summer. “We’ve already started hiring,” said Joanna Dennis-Cook, the Bend Health Center Manager. Across the U.S. West, many abor- tion providers serving rural areas were already struggling to meet de- mand in a vast region where staffing shortages and long travel distances are barriers to reproductive ser- vices for women. Oregon alone is larger geographically than the entire United Kingdom. Some facilities serving rural com- munities in states where abortion remains legal worry those pre-exist- ing challenges could be further com- pounded by the overturning of Roe Voting Continued from A5 Early Western states allowed noncitizens to vote as a way to encourage settling specifi- cally by white European im- migrants, the students found. In Oregon, white men who had resided in the state for six months prior to an election and declared an intent to be- come U.S. citizens could vote. People have long applied measures of groups’ contribu- tions to society as a means to decide whether they should be able to vote, Stumpf said. Literacy tests and proxies of taxation such as property own- ership or residency were com- mon qualifiers historically. Charter review commit- tee members cited multiple reasons for expanding voting rights, including reducing tax- ation without representation. Undocumented people in Multnomah County pay an estimated $19 million in state and local taxes annually, ac- cording to a report by the Or- egon Center for Public Policy. About half of those taxes are property taxes and the other v. Wade, as more patients travel from states where the procedure is banned or greatly restricted. Anticipating an abortion ban in Idaho, Oregon lawmakers earlier this year created a $15 million fund to in- crease access to abortion services. Northwest Abortion Access Fund, a nonprofit that helps patients pay for travel and the procedure itself, has been tapped to receive the first $1 million. NWAAF has worked with the Bend clinic for 20 years, and they are collaborating to meet the needs of a growing number of pa- tients. Dennis-Cook says her clinic is providing additional training for staff and modifying schedules “to ensure that we can accommodate in- creases in patient numbers” as more people travel farther for care. Before the Supreme Court over- turned Roe v. Wade, 20% of U.S. women already had to travel at least 42 miles to reach the nearest abor- tion clinic, according to 2014 data analyzed by the Guttmacher Insti- half are income taxes and ex- cise taxes on goods like gas and alcohol, the report shows. Undocumented people ar- en’t eligible to access many of the social services to which they contribute, however. They can’t access Social Security, Medicare, the Oregon Health Plan after age 18, federal food assistance programs, and state and federal earned income tax credits, among others, the re- port states. Legal challenges Granting voting rights to noncitizens likely will face sub- stantial legal barriers, Katherine Thomas, assistant Multnomah County attorney, told committee members in March. First, Oregon’s constitution requires citizenship for voting. State statutes related to voting re- fer to citizenship requirements, including one that says state voter registration cards must in- dicate a person is a U.S. citizen. “Ultimately, it’s untested,” Thomas said. “I’m not aware that there is a local jurisdiction that has expanded voting to noncitizens. We don’t know how a court would necessarily treat tute, a research group that supports abortion rights, which published its findings in The Lancet Public Health. Across much of eastern Ore- gon, that distance can jump to nearly 180 miles. As more states move to enact trigger bans on abortion, dis- tances could increase further for many patients. Dennis-Cook says the Bend health center has been seeing patients com- ing from as far away as Texas. Bend’s clinic has six exam rooms and receives about 600 visits per month. As it is “on the smaller side,” Dennis-Cook said it is “limited” in what it can provide. “We only do first trimester pro- cedures here,” she explained. She added the clinic can’t do procedures involving general anesthesia. “We don’t have a plethora of nurses who can do that type of work to draw from.” Smaller abortion clinics, partic- ularly ones in rural areas, have his- torically grappled with shortages of staff and doctors who can perform that kind of proposal if it was challenged in court.” The committee will pres- ent by Aug. 4 all of its recom- mended charter changes to the county board, which files the ballot title and other informa- tion with the elections divi- sion. Any ballot title challenges must be resolved by Sept. 8 to appear on the ballot for the Nov. 8 election. If the measure passes, county staff would consult with the board about how to implement an expansion of voting rights, said Ryan Yambra, spokesper- son for the county. The committee also re- searched whether people un- der 18 and people currently prohibited from voting be- cause they’re serving a sen- tence for a felony conviction could gain voting rights. “The committee expects that the county will explore every possible avenue to ex- pand local voting access,” Yambra said. “The details of implementation would de- pend on a variety of factors, and so we can’t say at this time whether or what board action might be required.” the procedure. This in turn affects scheduling availability. Amidst growing demand for travel funds, NWAAF has already ex- hausted its planned operating bud- gets for this year, according to Riley Keane, a Practical Support Lead for the group. “Last year we gave away about $1 million all told,” Keane explained, referring to grants given to clinics to cover abortion costs and travel funds provided to patients. She said this year NWAAF is “on track to double that potentially.” Keane expects the $1 million from Oregon’s new abortion access fund will make “a huge difference” for NWAAF, which normally relies on individual donors. She says this year marks the first time the group is re- ceiving government money. NWAAF says it is concerned about providing travel funds to pa- tients in states where abortion is banned or greatly restricted, but added it is working with legal pro- fessionals to assess the shifting land- scape. “They keep us up to date on things we need to be concerned about,” Keane said. In response to laws such as those passed in Texas allowing private in- dividuals to sue abortion providers, the governors of Oregon, Wash- ington and California announced a joint commitment to protect patients and doctors “against judicial and local law enforcement cooperation with out-of-state investigations, in- quiries and arrests.” The three Democratic governors also said they will refuse “extradition of individuals for criminal prose- cution” for receiving or supporting abortion services that are legal in their states. NWAAF’s service region includes Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Alaska. Keane says NWAAF will continue its work for now. “Currently, our legal advisers hav- en’t told us that we need to stop op- erating,” she said. Text us your tire photo 541-519-8878 we will text back with a quote for new tires! Lew Brothers Tire Service 541-523-3679 210 Bridge St. Baker City, OR