A8 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2021 EDITORIALS & OPINIONS Heidi Wright Gerry O’Brien Richard Coe AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Publisher Editor Editorial Page Editor Bend’s code needs some changes for homeless shelters T he rules for homeless shelters in Bend need to change. You could sit all day in front of your house in Bend. Your neighbors might wonder about you and might ask what is going on. But there’s nothing illegal about it. If a homeless person did that in front of a homeless shelter in Bend, it’s against city code. In fact, in Bend even loitering in front of a homeless shelter is prohibited by code. There’s some other curious wording in the code for homeless shelters in Bend. At a homeless shelter in Bend, there “must be a competent adult present for every 25 persons utilizing the facility.” So the peo- ple utilizing the facility are not competent? Couldn’t that be phrased better? There are reasons for restrictions. They were designed to minimize concerns about impacts of homeless shelters. But at Monday’s meeting of the Bend Planning Commission, committee members chal- lenged city officials to take a new look at them. Bend Planning Commission Vice Chair Whitney Swander and Scott Win- ters, the chair, deserve credit for raising many of the concerns. It was Winters who made the point about the contrast in what most people can do in front of their homes. City staff’s answer Monday was: Changes like that are going to have to wait. The city is trying to move swiftly on some changes. It is making some code changes to allow the city’s plan to essen- tially buy a hotel on Third Street and turn it into a homeless shelter. It’s competing for funding and it wants the path cleared quickly to ensure it doesn’t miss out. Jon Skidmore, the city’s chief operating offi- cer, said the other changes may be more controversial and would require more of a community conversation. So for now, the city’s plan is to get rid of the requirement that there must be 1,000 feet of separation between temporary housing. And the asked for changes would also allow temporary housing, including warming and permanent homeless shel- ters “as an outright use in commercial zones and in the section of the Bend Cen- tral District that is west of Third Street. The Bend Central District sits east of U.S. Highway 97 and west of Fourth Street and is centered on Third Street.” That quote is from Brenna Visser’s article about the meeting, which includes more detail. Left unanswered in the meeting, though, was why only those areas for shel- ters in Bend? And what about those other concerns in the code? Bend residents deserve answers. Skid- more said many issues will be raised in a discussion with the Bend City Coun- cil, perhaps on March 3. If you are curi- ous about the city’s policy for homeless shelters that meeting should be an im- portant one. Bend plans to allow areas for homeless to park M any people who are homeless have jobs. They have cars. They don’t have any place to park safely and with easy access to bathrooms and trash disposal. Bend wants to do something about that and is creating a safe parking pro- gram. It was actually discussed at the same meeting of the Bend Planning Commission that we wrote about in to- day’s other editorial. But we didn’t want the parking plan to get lost in it. The proposal has two components: overnight camping and transitional overnight parking. In overnight camping, up to three ve- hicles would be able to park on proper- ties owned or leased. It would be open to a broad variety of organizations — religious, nonprofit, business or pub- lic entity. The overnight camping must provide access to sanitation, including a bathroom, hand-washing and trash disposal. The transitional overnight parking would allow up to six vehicles. And the city may allow more than six vehicles on property owned or leased by a public en- tity. There would be a requirement about “who can stay, how long and what hours of the day.” Supervision would be re- quired. The city would require a permit, likely annual. There must also be a plan for supervision, sanitation, a neighbor- hood meeting and a contact person. We should note that transitional over- night parking is currently allowed in Bend under COVID-19 emergency or- ders. This plan would allow that to con- tinue. The city has two locations where a similar type of parking is happening now. A member of city staff said the city could not disclose the locations because of medical privacy regulations. We de- cided to test that by making a public records request for any associated per- mits. The city had not responded as of our deadline. There certainly seems to be a public interest in knowing where in a community the city authorizes tempo- rary housing. If you have any thoughts about the city’s future parking program, you should contact the Bend City Council at council@bendoregon.gov or write us a letter to the editor. Editorials reflect the views of The Bulletin’s editorial board, Publisher Heidi Wright, Editor Gerry O’Brien and Editorial Page Editor Richard Coe. They are written by Richard Coe. My Nickel’s Worth Seniors can wait I just finished the recent article on senior COVID-19 vaccinations. I am a senior waiting for my vacci- nations, but all I can say is “call me an ambulance.” The ME generation has gotten old and now must be first once again. Most seniors have the op- portunity to stay isolated to a great degree and living in Bend, where there are many opportunities to recreate without contact with oth- ers, I think that the prioritization of people such as teachers and first responders, who do not have that option, is a sound one. My advice to my genera- tion: Be patient and be grateful. You will get your vaccine soon enough. A couple of more weeks, or even a month is not long in the scheme of things. It is frus- trating to not be able to see fam- ily members not in your pan- demic pod. Find something to do for someone else and the time will pass quickly. — Heather Stout, Bend Confidence in vaccine distribution Communities across Ore- gon, and the country, are ask- ing themselves what is necessary to recover from the pandemic — economically, mentally and physically. Elected officials must support our constituents through these tough times and bolster the industries helping us fight off COVID-19. Oregon is vaccinating high- risk front-line workers, long-term care facility residents, teachers and seniors. This is a good start, but we need more, and more quickly. The vaccine rollout is a volatile situation and everchang- ing process. There are gaps, and I thank everyone sharing ideas, voicing concerns and creating op- portunities for improvement. In order to gain that herd immunity that we have all been waiting for, we must not let up. We must do more. This is a massive, unprece- dented undertaking, and it is going to take every bit of coordi- nation between the government and our health care industry. I encourage my fellow elected of- ficials, Gov. Kate Brown’s ad- ministration and the federal government to strengthen their communications with those helping to get Oregonians the vaccine, including manufactur- ers, distributors and clinicians. These critical partners share our commitment to vaccinating the population, and they have infra- structure for delivering and ad- ministering. Health care distributors have sent more than 1 million vaccines to our state, and around 836,000 have been administered by medi- cal providers as of late February. I am hopeful and confident, that if we work together, the health care distribution industry and medical teams will be able to deliver and administer vaccine as quickly and safely as possible throughout all of Oregon. — Patti Adair is a Deschutes County commissioner. cluding Patriot Prayer militia members, gathered outside the Oregon Capitol in Salem. They pounded on doors and broke windows. They harassed journal- ists and assaulted Oregon State Police officers. During this chaos, lawmakers were in session, work- ing to pass legislation that would help our businesses survive the COVID-19 pandemic. Instead of working with his colleagues to support the people of Oregon, Republican state Rep. Mike Ne- arman did something incredibly destructive. He let the mob in. Security camera footage ob- tained by The Oregonian shows Rep. Nearman opening a locked door and letting violent men with guns inside. In doing so, he put his congressional colleagues in danger, he put law enforcement in danger and he put the regu- lar Oregonians who make sure our government does its job in danger. Nearman’s behavior was reckless, irresponsible and pos- sibly criminal. Can you imagine working in a school and open- ing the door for an armed mob? Or being a bank employee who waves a would-be bank robber inside? At the most fundamen- tal level, we are called to care for our fellow humans, to do unto others as we would have them do unto us. By his actions, Nearman invited violence into his place of work and into our place of gov- ernment. I don’t care what your political leanings are. We should have zero tolerance for violence. Nearman should be expelled from the Legislature. — Amber Keyser, Bend Expel Nearman On Dec. 21, a large crowd of armed right-wing protesters, in- Letters policy Guest columns How to submit We welcome your letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250 words and include the writer’s signature, phone number and address for verification. We edit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject poetry, per- sonal attacks, form letters, letters sub- mitted elsewhere and those appropri- ate for other sections of The Bulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or guest column every 30 days. Your submissions should be between 550 and 650 words; they must be signed; and they must include the writer’s phone number and address for verification. We edit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject those submitted elsewhere. Locally submitted columns alternate with national columnists and commentaries. Writers are limited to one letter or guest column every 30 days. Please address your submission to either My Nickel’s Worth or Guest Col- umn and mail, fax or email it to The Bulletin. Email submissions are pre- ferred. Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel’s Worth/Guest Col- umn P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804 ‘Parking reform’ is a hidden ploy to turn Bend into California BY CHAD BUELOW I am writing in response to the col- umn by City Councilor Melanie Kebler calling for “parking re- form.” I’m a liberal Democrat and Ke- bler voter but now question whether our new “blue wave” city councilors, with post-graduate degrees but nota- bly less private sector experience than their predecessors, are capable of tack- ling the pressing issues facing Bend. Having fled California because well-meaning, well-educated, progres- sive politicians like Kebler failed to address out-of-control traffic, housing costs and homelessness, I feel com- pelled to sound the alarm — be very afraid when your elected leaders do things to make life worse for constitu- ents and local businesses in pursuit of abstract social justice goals, as Kebler is doing here. For those who had trouble deci- phering the progressive euphemisms and jargon in Kebler’s column, I’ll translate what she means by “park- ing reform:” Kebler wants to improve traffic by making it harder to use a car — in the hope that if driving becomes too difficult, people will drive less and traffic will magically disappear. To accomplish this, Kebler would implement paid parking or remove parking altogether in popular ar- eas, such as downtown Bend. Ke- bler would also eliminate minimum parking requirements for new de- velopments and let the “market” de- cide how much is appropriate. Kebler would then use parking revenue to create slush funds (“parking bene- fit districts”) to finance pet projects (“other great things.”) To those skeptical of Kebler’s claim that by making people’s lives worse she will actually make them better, she assures us that “it can be hard to see the bigger picture” — the implication being that she can. I disagree — and here is how I see the “bigger picture”: GUEST COLUMN First, if Kebler wants a “sustain- able,” “equitable,” “connected” future for Bend, then im- porting her short- sighted anti-car Buelow mindset from Port- land is the wrong answer. I’ve lived in and traveled to many places where car ownership is unnecessary. I’m shocked this needs to be said, but Bend is not one of those places. The city requires things like min- imum parking precisely because the “market” is incapable of doing so. With an acute housing shortage, someone will live in whatever devel- opers are allowed to build. Apartment residents won’t give up cars because they don’t have parking — they’ll just park in the surrounding neigh- borhood. Downtown businesses like Dudley’s Bookshop or Smith Rock Records, already threatened by Ama- zon, will lose business when custom- ers choose free shipping over paid parking. Kebler presumably opposes fos- sil fuels, not cars. Well, in the “bigger picture” the future is electric — and the city should want Bend residents zipping around town in zero emission vehicles charged with locally gener- ated solar power. If Kebler gets her way, though, only homeowners with chargers could own an electric vehi- cle — which hardly seems “equita- ble.” The city should ensure all future residents can own an EV by putting charging stations on public property and incentivizing builders to do so on private property — in both apart- ments and single-family homes. Second, if Kebler wants to lower housing costs, she should get to work expanding the urban growth bound- ary to increase the supply of buildable land. This will have a far greater impact on housing affordability than waiv- ing code requirements that protect the quality of life of all Bend residents. Lastly, Kebler’s proposal is a slap in the face to the overwhelming major- ity of her constituents who approved the transportation bond. Bend voters clearly want the city to invest in ve- hicular transport – not impede it. We even provided a funding source and a “to do” list to prevent future elected officials like Kebler from overriding the will of the voters with their own pet policy prerogatives. I’ve tried to heed the advice of long time residents to not turn my new home into my old one — unfortunately, it seems that Bend natives like Kebler are hellbent on turning Bend into Cal- ifornia on their own. For Bend’s sake, let’s hope she doesn’t get her way. e e Chad Buelow lives in Bend.