SUNDAY • February 7, 2021 Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $3 LEADER GUIDES NONPROFIT NEW EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE BEND ENDURANCE ACADEMY TAKES ON PANDEMIC CHALLENGES • SPORTS, B1 COVID-19 | Distance learning in Central Oregon Enrollment plummets at public schools BY JACKSON HOGAN The Bulletin Enrollment in Central Or- egon’s public school districts plummeted this school year. Bend-La Pine Schools and Redmond School District lost more than 1,500 students com- bined. Meanwhile, enrollment in private and online charter schools skyrocketed, the num- ber of local students being ho- meschooled has spiked, and many parents of younger chil- dren have opted to postpone starting school all together. The overarching theme of this massive shift in enrollment is that many parents had no interest in traditional school- ing during COVID-19, with distance learning, constantly Families left for homeschooling, charter or private schools — or pulled students out changing re-opening plans and post-reopening safety con- cerns. “We just wanted a school year where we didn’t have to be yanked around,” said Kris- tina Johnson, a Bend parent who moved her third grader from Lava Ridge Elementary to Bridge Charter Academy this fall. “We were (also) rea- sonably concerned about the risk of COVID transmission to us, and to our grandparents who moved next to us to be near kids.” Between October 2019 and October 2020, all six Central Oregon K-12 school districts schools, fell by 3.73%. saw a drop in enrollment, ac- cording to state data released Thursday. The biggest drops, by percentage, happened at Bend-La Pine Schools, at 6.3%, and Redmond and Cul- ver school districts, each with 5.4%. Crook County School Dis- trict had easily the smallest dip, only losing 0.4% of its student population, or 11 stu- dents. And since October, the Prineville-based school district has added 53 more students, according to Superintendent Sara Johnson. Statewide, public school en- rollment, including charter Where did the students go? Statewide and local educa- tion officials have various the- ories as to where public school students wound up. One big culprit is homes- chooling. This school year, the High Desert Education Service Dis- trict — a Redmond-based agency that, among many other educational duties, reg- isters local families for home- schooling — saw a sharp in- crease of homeschoolers. Since September, 803 local students signed up for home- schooling, compared to 131 last school year, service district spokesperson Linda Quon said. Student enrollment decreases in local school districts Between October 2019 and October 2020, all six public K-12 school districts in Central Oregon lost student enrollment due to various factors. Public school student enrollment fell statewide, too. Bend- Jefferson La Pine Redmond Culver County Sisters Crook County Statewide -0.4% -3.5% -3.7% -4.9% -5.4% -5.4% Source: Oregon Dept. of Education -6.3% The Bulletin graphic See Schools / A5 Warm Springs during the pandemic Leader navigates challenges, loss BY MICHAEL KOHN The Bulletin D anny Martinez, a member of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, has been through war in east Asia. At home, he has fought wildfires and served his community as emergency manager. At 67, he thought he had experienced all the challenges that life could throw at him. Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin Then came 2020. Martinez had his hands full throughout the past year, dealing with a COVID-19 outbreak on the Warm Springs Indian Reser- vation, a destructive wildfire sea- son, and infrastructure failures that shut off water to thousands of residents. Danny Martinez, emergency manager for the Warm Springs Indian Reservation, helps to ensure that there is enough water to support the community. See Warm Springs / A6 Lawmakers seek to ax timber tax cuts that cost communities billions Oregon lawmakers have filed a spate of bills aiming to reverse decades-old timber tax cuts that deprived counties of billions of dollars and to elim- inate a quasi-governmental state agency that has acted as a lobbying arm for the industry. The measures follow an in- vestigation published last year by Oregon Public Broadcast- ing, The Oregonian and Pro- Publica. The newsrooms found that timber companies, in- creasingly dominated by Wall TODAY’S WEATHER Street real estate trusts and in- vestment funds, have benefited from tax cuts that cost coun- ties at least $3 billion over the past three decades. Half of the 18 counties in Oregon’s tim- ber-dominant region lost more money from tax cuts on pri- vate forests than from the oft- blamed reduction of logging on federal lands stemming from environmental protections for the northern spotted owl. The investigation also docu- mented how the state-funded Oregon Forest Resources Insti- tute, which has an annual bud- Partly sunny High 45, Low 26 Page B6 INDEX get of $4 million, worked to dis- credit climate research deemed harmful to the timber industry and appeared to skirt legal con- straints against lobbying. By law, the organization is prohib- ited from attempting to influ- ence policy. Its role is to educate residents about forestry. In response, Gov. Kate Brown requested an audit of the institute, and a group of citizens proposed a ballot ini- tiative to restore timber taxes. Now, lawmakers are weighing additional actions. “We as a state must be able Business/Life Classifieds Dear Abby C1-8 B5 C3 Editorial Horoscope Local/State A4 C3 A2-3 to assure, to the greatest extent possible, that we maintain an unbiased, balanced and fair taxation system,” said Brad Witt, a state representative who leads Oregon’s House Commit- tee on Agriculture and Natural Resources. The committee will be the first stop for many of the bills proposed during the legislative session that ends in June. A former mill worker and officer for labor unions in Ore- gon, Witt has been a supporter of the timber industry. Lottery Market Recap Mon. Comics See Timber / A5 B2 B4 C5-6 Obituaries Puzzles Sports A5 C4 B1-3 Leah Nash/The New York Times, file Clear-cut forests are visible along U.S. Highway 30 near Portland. The Bulletin ù An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Vol. 119, No. 33, 24 pages, 3 sections SUN/THU BY ROB DAVIS The Oregonian U|xaIICGHy02330rzu