Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $1.50 FRIDAY • January 8, 2021 EDISON BUTTE SNO-PARK Offers separate trails for snowshoers and snowmobilers » EXPLORE, B1 BEND-LA PINE SCHOOLS Insurrection aftermath Siege by pro-Trump mob forces hard questions In-person school to resume later this month BY JACKSON HOGAN The Bulletin Ten months after the COVID-19 pan- demic closed school doors, students in Bend, La Pine and Sunriver will begin re- turning to in-person learning on Jan. 25. But students will return in waves, not all at once. Early Thursday morning, Bend-La Pine Schools — Oregon’s largest school district east of the Cascades — unveiled its plan to transition its nearly 17,500 students back into classrooms, with K-5 coming back first. “For me, and for many families and staff, it’s very exciting,” Superintendent Lora Nor- dquist said of the reopening plan. The announcement came about two weeks after Gov. Kate Brown ceded control of school reopenings to local school districts in late December. Previously, the state set strict reopening standards for much of the COVID-19 pandemic. See Schools / A6 BEND John Minchillo/AP Capitol police officers stand outside of fencing that was installed around the exterior of the Capitol grounds on Thursday in Washington. A violent throng of pro-Trump rioters spent hours Wednesday running rampant through the Capitol. A woman was fatally shot, windows were bashed and the mob forced shaken lawmakers and aides to flee the building, shielded by Capitol Police. With 13 days left in Trump’s term, a nation shaken by the violence carried out in his name is left wondering what he might do next BY LISA MASCARO AND MATTHEW DALY The Associated Press W ASHINGTON — One day later, the violent siege of the U.S. Capi- tol by President Donald Trump’s supporters forced painful new questions across government — about his fitness to re- main in office for two more weeks, the abil- ity of the police to secure the complex and the future of the Republican Party in a post- Trump era. In the immediate aftermath, the attack on the world’s iconic dome of democracy, shocking imagery flashed around the globe, reinforced lawmakers’ resolve to stay up all night to finish counting the Electoral Col- lege vote confirming Democrat Joe Biden won the presidential election. Trump Cabinet officials quit Two members of President Donald Trump’s Cabinet quit Thursday, a day after a pro- Trump insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has be- come the second Cabinet secretary to resign. Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao ten- dered her resignation earlier Thursday. In a resignation letter DeVos blamed Pres- ident Donald Trump for inflaming tensions in the violent assault on the seat of the nation’s democracy. She said, “There is no mistaking the impact your rhetoric had on the situation, and it is the inflection point for me.” Graham: Trump must accept role Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, one of President Donald Trump’s top congressio- nal allies, said the president must accept his own role in the violence that occurred at the U.S. Capitol. The South Carolina senator said Thursday that Trump “needs to understand that his actions were the problem, not the solution.” Congress finalizes Biden victory; Oregon’s Bentz objects to electors Amid national chaos, 4 new members of City Council sworn in BY BRENNA VISSER The Bulletin n a day scarred by a historic violent at- tack on the U.S. Capitol as Congress met, shaken lawmakers insisted on resuming a session that went late into the night to ap- prove the Electoral College vote for Presi- dent-elect Joe Biden early Thursday morning. Lawmakers had come to Congress on Wednesday expecting a contentious day of debate as a splinter group of Republicans said they would slow and perhaps even halt the traditional reading of the votes for presi- dent cast Dec. 14 by the Electoral College. President Donald Trump had been cease- lessly pushing claims that the election was stolen from him despite losing to Democrat Joe Biden by more than 7 million votes and a 306-232 tally in the Electoral College. Amid one of the most historic and chaotic days in American history, at least one event in Bend continued as scheduled: the swear- ing-in of four new members of the Bend City Council. In a virtual meeting held Wednesday, new councilors Melanie Kebler, Anthony Broad- man, Megan Perkins and Rita Schenkelberg took the oath of office. The four replace for- mer councilors Justin Livingston, Bill Mose- ley, Chris Piper and Bruce Abernethy. The siege earlier Wednesday in the na- tion’s Capitol, where a pro-President Donald Trump mob infiltrated the halls of Congress to disrupt the final counting of Electoral College votes in the presidential election, prompted the council to cancel an in-per- son ceremony at the Deschutes County Ser- vices building and opt for a virtual one after Mayor Sally Russell expressed some reserva- tions about possible safety concerns. See Congress / A4 See Council / A6 BY GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau I See Siege / A4 2020: A YEAR OF CHALLENGES The humility of medicine Baskerville heads OHSU intensive care unit; he watched families make unthinkable decisions Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin Mark Baskerville and his wife, Jennifer, stand on their back patio over- looking the Deschutes River in Bend on Dec. 19. TODAY’S WEATHER A little snow High 41, Low 19 Page B5 INDEX Most people would call three hours a long commute. Bend resident Mark Bask- erville calls it “therapy.” Baskerville, a 52-year-old physician, has made the drive from Bend to Portland, and back, for eight years as director of the intensive care unit at Oregon Health & Business Classifieds Comics A7 B6 B7-8 Dear Abby A6 Editorial A5 Explore B1-2, 9-10 Horoscope Local/State Obituaries A6 A2-3 A 4 Science University, arguably the grimmest front in the state’s war against COVID-19. In shifts lasting up to two weeks, he’s nearly always on when he’s in Portland. In 2020, a difficult year for most Americans, he watched families make unthinkable de- cisions, and patients slowly die from the disease, or, just as randomly, pull through and survive. Puzzles Sports B8 B3-5 $1,000 GIFT CARD Winners drawn weekly! Sign up at bimart.com today! See Challenges / A6 The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Vol. 119, No. 7, 18 pages, 2 sections SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER You’ll be Entered for a Chance to Win a Living in Bend affords Baskerville rel- ative anonymity and a chance to focus on his family when he’s off work, which is also usually for around a week or two at a time. The physical distance also provides a clearer separation between Baskerville’s personal and professional lives, which he says has been nice during the pandemic. DAILY BY GARRETT ANDREWS The Bulletin U|xaIICGHy02329lz[