A4 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2021 Storm Continued from A1 “It seems kind of unusual now see- ing this winter weather coming late in the season,” Wister said. The winter storm is expected to bring wind gusts between 10 to 15 mph, strong enough to cause danger- ous conditions for travelers, Wister said. “It doesn’t take a lot of wind to cause drifting snow and poor visibility,” Wister said. In preparation of the storm, Bend city officials have identified “emer- gency snow zones,” where on-street parking has contributed to increas- ingly narrow and sometimes impass- able roads. City officials are asking residents in the snow zones to keep the streets clear of parked cars to allow more room for snow plows. A list of the snow zones can be found on the city’s website. Kacey Davey, spokesperson for the Oregon Department of Transporta- tion, said snow-plow crews are pre- paring for the storm and will be on the highways with sand and deicer. “The crews are ready and have been ready for this all winter long,” Davey said. “They will be out there.” Davey said the state transporta- tion department is also encourag- ing residents to prepare before trav- eling in the storm. Those who do not have to travel should stay home, and those who need to travel should have enough fuel, snacks and warm clothes, Davey said. Travelers can see the latest road conditions online at tripcheck.com. “We at ODOT are ready, and we want to make sure the public is ready too,” Davey said. Ski shops in Central Oregon are monitoring the forecast and hope the winter storm brings fresh powder to the local ski resorts. Kevin Slane, owner of Village Bike & Ski in Sunriver, said he is also look- ing forward to the snowfall in town. More snow in Sunriver means more chances for people to cross-country ski, he said. And more people buying and renting gear from his shop. “That’s huge when it snows down here,” Slane said. “ It opens up some of the cross-country ski opportunities.” e e Reporter: 541-617-7820, kspurr@bendbulletin.com Senate votes to pursue Trump impeachment trial BY SEUNG MIN KIM, MIKE DEBONIS, KAROUN DEMIRJIAN, TOM HAMBURGER The Washington Post WASHINGTON — The Senate voted along mostly partisan lines Tuesday to pursue Donald Trump’s sec- ond impeachment trial, after hours of arguments and the airing of a gripping documen- tary of the deadly Capitol riot that followed Trump’s inflam- matory rally on Jan. 6. Aided by the graphic 13-minute video that spliced violent images of the Capitol siege with Trump’s rhetoric, Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., and other impeachment man- agers delivered an impas- sioned account of the phys- ical and emotional trauma to lawmakers, police, staffers and local residents. They said there was no “January ex- ception” in the Constitution — meaning that a president couldn’t escape accountabil- ity through impeachment just because he had left office be- fore the trial. “If that’s not an impeach- able offense, then there is no such thing,” Raskin said of Trump’s behavior. Trump’s lawyers countered that the trial — the first pro- ceeding of its kind for an ex-president — would be un- constitutional because Trump was no longer in office, even if he was impeached by the House before leaving. One of the attorneys acknowledged that the former president lost the election, undercutting one baseless claim that Trump has spread since Nov. 3. The Senate swiftly voted 56 to 44 against Trump. The pro- ceedings will resume at noon Wednesday. The historic trial opens just one month after the senators Proclamation Continued from A1 But it ended up just being fo- cused more on history instead, Stanfield said. “You can say all day Black lives matter … but if you are ac- tively silencing and taking the work of Black women, do you really mean it?” Stanfield said Friday. The altered proclamation drove Luke Richter, the leader of the activist group Central Oregon Peacekeepers, to an- nounce his run for mayor next year, according to Richter’s Facebook page. Kerstin Arias, a former leader of the diversity project, characterized the changes as a “watered down” version of what Stanfield wrote. Instead of standing with Black Bend resi- dents, the city created a history forum, she said. “That’s not what we asked you. That’s not what you were supposed to be held account- able for. You were supposed to be held accountable for actually representing the BIPOC and the Black people in this com- munity that has been failed for many years,” Arias said, using an acronym for Black, Indig- enous and people of color. “It is hurtful to be played, in a sense. For still not being seen as enough and still not being seen as we matter.” On Monday, Councilor Gena Goodman-Campbell, who ed- ited the proclamation into the version that was read last week, said the issues surrounding the document are a product of un- fortunate miscommunication. After receiving Stanfield’s proclamation in the fall, Good- man-Campbell said the plan was to present it sometime in January. But the council sched- ule got full, and it was moved to February, a month that Good- man-Campbell realized was “Senators, this cannot be our future. This cannot be the future of America. We cannot have presidents inciting and mobilizing mob violence against our government and our institutions because they refuse to accept the will of the people under the Constitution of the United States.” — Rep. Jamie Raskin, an impeachment manager Jose Luis Magana/AP Billboard trucks park on the National Mall near the U.S. Capitol Tuesday during the impeachment trial of for- mer President Donald Trump in Washington. gathered in the same cham- ber to certify the results of the electoral college that gave President Joe Biden his win, only to be interrupted as a frightening mob overtook the Capitol in an unprecedented siege after Trump implored his supporters at a rally to fight on his behalf. The insurrectionists broke through metal barricades, smashed windows and as- saulted police officers to gain access to the citadel of U.S. democracy — prompting Vice President Mike Pence to be quickly ushered into safety and hundreds of law- makers and staffers to take cover from rampaging riot- ers. At least five people died, including Capitol Police offi- cer Brian Sicknick, who was memorialized under the Ro- tunda last week. Reminders of the riot per- sist, with tall steel fencing and barbed wire encircling the once-open Capitol grounds, now patrolled by National Guard troops. The House impeachment managers leaned on legal rul- ings, images and emotion, particularly Raskin’s recount- ing of his return to the cham- ber on Jan. 6 for the first time after burying his son. The former president’s defense lawyers addressed the crux of Tuesday’s debate — the con- stitutionality of the proceed- ings — only late in their pre- sentation. In a distinct appeal to a Re- publican Party that has long prided itself on its support of law enforcement, Raskin de- tailed the injuries sustained by 140 Capitol Police officers that day, such as brain dam- age, gouged eyes, heart attacks and mental trauma. At least two have died by suicide. “Senators, this cannot be our future. This cannot be the future of America,” Raskin said. “We cannot have presidents inciting and mobilizing mob violence against our govern- ment and our institutions be- cause they refuse to accept the will of the people under the Constitution of the United States.” The argument failed to sway 44 of the chamber’s 50 Republicans, with most fa- voring dismissing the case against Trump outright — a tally demonstrating the un- likelihood that 17 GOP sena- tors will choose to join Dem- ocrats to convict the former president. That vote was similar to Black History Month. So Goodman-Campbell pro- posed to Stanfield to change it to be a more educational piece about Black history. Emails ob- tained by The Bulletin show Stanfield calling the idea “won- derful,” saying that her docu- ment was a framework from which to work. But when Goodman-Camp- bell sent the edited copy to Stanfield, she never received it. Due to some internal conflict within the Central Oregon Di- versity Project group, Stanfield said she was locked out of her group’s email account the days before the proclamation was read. Goodman-Campbell said she didn’t realize she wasn’t re- ceiving emails, and didn’t have Stanfield’s phone number to call, though she recognized she could have found someone to try to call Stanfield for her. She felt bad that Stanfield was ex- cluded from the editing process and attending the meeting at which it was read. “It wasn’t my intention in the editing process to change it so drastically so she wouldn’t see the main ideas she wanted conveyed,” Goodman-Camp- bell said. She regrets changing the title of the proclamation from her original edit, which read “A res- olution honoring Black History Month and declaring that Black Lives Matter in Bend, Oregon,” to just “Honoring Black His- tory Month”. Goodman-Camp- bell said she only changed it to help fit words on a page and to make the heading make gram- matical sense. “I should have left it in the title and that was my mistake,” Goodman-Campbell said. Goodman-Campbell said she thought it was important to include history about Oregon’s previous racist policies and laws, such as laws preventing Black people from owning real estate or voting, to provide con- text to white people who likely weren’t taught this history in school. “But that’s what I thought was important,” said Good- man-Campbell, who is white. “I do feel badly that I missed what they felt was important in this. I definitely want to keep working with them to make sure we get it right next time.” Both Goodman-Campbell and Councilor Megan Perkins, who was involved in initial dis- cussions about the proclama- tion, said there were lessons learned about the situation, and emphasized the importance of committing to action, not just words, to make Bend a more equitable place. “This is a prime example of … the intention was good but the impact was harmful to members of the community that this proclamation was in- tended to support,” Perkins said Tuesday. “The best thing we can do now is show our com- mitment by action, rather than continuing to talk about proc- lamations.” Sandy Lee Fagen of The Dalles, OR March 25, 1946 - February 3, 2021 Arrangements: Arrangements are under the direction of Anderson’s Tribute Center. Celilo Chapel 204 E. 4th Street, The Dalles, Oregon 97508. Visit www.AndersonsTrib- uteCenter.com to leave a note of condolence for the family. Lynda Marguerite Stevens of Redmond, OR Central Oregon’s source for events, arts & entertainment Pick up Thursday’s Bulletin for weekly event coverage and calendars August 29, 1947 - February 2, 2021 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will be held at a later date. e e Reporter: 541-633-2160, bvisser@bendbulletin.com Nell Louise Higginbotham of Eugene, OR August 3, 1969 - January 18, 2021 Arrangements: Andreason’s and Buell Funeral Chapel, Spring- field, OR Services: Celebration of Life at a later date Contributions may be made to: Pete Moore Hospice House Eugene, Oregon one taken by the Senate last month, in which only five Re- publicans — Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Mitt Romney of Utah, Patrick Toomey of Pennsylva- nia and Ben Sasse of Nebraska — voted that an impeach- ment trial of a former presi- dent was constitutional. Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., joined them Tuesday in breaking with their party to allow the trial to proceed. Some GOP senators on Tuesday were compelled by legal arguments from the Democratic impeachment managers, as they invoked conservative legal luminaries such as former 10th Circuit Judge Michael McConnell and attorney Charles Cooper, who have argued in favor of the trial’s constitutionality. “Anyone that listened to those arguments would rec- ognize that the House man- agers are focused, organized. They relied both upon prec- edent, the Constitution and legal scholars. They made a compelling argument,” said Cassidy, who took diligent notes throughout the day. In contrast, Cassidy said, Trump’s team was “disorga- nized.” OBITUARY Robert "Bob" William Monson "Silver Eagle Bob" June 24, 1940 - January 31, 2021 Bob Monson, of Bend, passed away peacefully at his home on Jan. 31. He was 80. A Recita} on of the Rosary will be at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 10, followed by a funeral Mass at 10:30 a.m., at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, in Bend. Bob was born June 24, 1940, in Detroit, MI. to Edward and Mary Monson. He at ended Edsel Ford High School, in Dearborn, MI. with his older brother Ed and younger brother Tom. Bob graduated in January 1958. He promptly joined the Navy, signing up at age 17 with his father's permission. Av er the service, Bob returned to Dearborn, where he married Esther Flower on Sept. 29, 1962. They were wed at St. Christopher's Catholic Church in Detroit. In 1966, with their three-year-old son Lance, they moved to Kelso, WA. They later relocated across the Columbia River to Clatskanie, OR. where their son, Shawn was born in 1968. Bob worked in the trucking industry with LMT in Longview, WA. They welcomed their daughter, Shannon in 1972. The family moved to Bend in 1977 and then to Culver, where Bob and Esther purchased and operated Big Bob's Drive-In. Bob worked with Silver Eagle Trucking, where he earned the nickname "Silver Eagle Bob," peddling freight throughout Central Oregon. Bob loved the water, be it water skiing at Lake Billy Chinook or relaxing on a beach in Hawaii. He enjoyed watching the waves and was never far from them. Eventually moving back to Bend in the mid-1980s, Bob con} nued to enjoy the outdoors, mountain biking and hiking, whitewater rav ing and RVing. Bob re} red from the trucking industry, only to work alongside Esther at Bend Tax Service, another business the couple owned and operated, un} l they re} red together in 2005. Following their re} rement, they traveled and spent } me RV'ing and visi} ng friends and family along the way. Bob was a Knight of Columbus, as well as a member of the Elks, Moose and the American Legion. He was also a long-} me supporter of the Bend Christmas parade. Bob is survived by his wife of 58 years, Esther, of Bend; sons Lance (Stacy Nestle) and Shawn (Rachel) of Bend; daughter Shannon Gilman (Robert), of Bend; 7 grandchildren and 2 great-grandchildren; and numerous nieces and nephews in Michigan. Monday - Friday, 10am - 3pm Memorial contribu} ons in Bob's name may be made to Knights of Columbus, 1872 Fr. Luke Sheehan Council, 2450 NE 27th St., Bend, OR 97701. No death notices or obituaries are published Mondays. Niswonger-Reynolds is handling the arrangements. OBITUARY DEADLINE Call to ask about our deadlines 541-385-5809 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com