FRIDAY • March 5, 2021 • Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $1.50 STAY SAFE & INFORMED In a perilous avalanche season across the West ... EXPLORE » B1 Health care strike Hospital workers walk off the job at St. Charles Bend OSU plans return to in-person classes Campuses in Bend and Corvallis could be back to normal this fall BY JACKSON HOGAN The Bulletin After more than a year of half- empty dorms and primarily online classes, Oregon State University’s campuses in Bend and Corvallis could mostly return to normal this fall. “We’re planning towards, as much as possible, a traditional university experience,” said Christine Coffin, spokesperson for OSU-Cascades. On Thursday, OSU announced tentative plans to bring back many in-person classes and extracurricular activities at OSU-Cascades in Bend and the larger Corvallis campus when the fall term begins Sept. 22. OSU President F. King Alexan- der confirmed this tentative move in a letter to university faculty and staff Wednesday evening. President Joe Biden’s recent declaration that all American adults could be vaccinated by the end of May increased hope that OSU’s fall term could mostly return to normal, he wrote. See OSU / A6 County risk levels Photos by Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin Kaitlyn Carter, an echo tech, leads a chant during a strike at St. Charles in Bend on Thursday BY SUZANNE ROIG AND MICHAEL KOHN The Bulletin T echnologists, therapists and technicians walked the picket line Thursday at St. Charles Bend during the first strike at the hospital since 1980. St. Charles Bend officials said they floated a supposal, which is a what- if-kind-of-scenario, late Wednesday to the Oregon Federation of Nursing and Health Professionals. But the union, which represents 156 workers, rejected the hospital’s meeting offer. Union officials, however, said that the supposal wasn’t an offer at all. “They have not made an offer to return to the table. We uncondition- ally are willing to meet under any circumstances, any time, to like meet, bargain, and discuss these issues,” said Sam Potter, Oregon Federation of Nursing and Health Professionals external organizer. “Our folks are proud to be on the strike line, but this is not a decision that they wanted to make. They feel forced into this position by the hospi- tal,” Potter said. “It is a little disingen- uous for the hospital to characterize reaching out through a federal me- diator as an attempt to settle the con- tract when they won’t communicate with us directly.” See Strike / A6 Grace period given to avoid back and forth BY GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau Mindy Schiebler, Oregon Federation of Nursing and Health Profes- sionals board member, grips her sign during the strike . Counties that might fall back into the state’s most restrictive extreme risk level for COVID-19 spread will be given a two-week grace period on heightened restrictions, Gov. Kate Brown announced Thursday. Brown said the state’s low over- all infection rates and its steep trend downward since the winter holidays allowed for “a bit more time” for some state trouble spots. The state currently ranks 49th of the 50 states in new in- fections per 100,000 people — only Hawaii scores better. See Virus / A6 In a story headlined “Parking restrictions may become per- manent,” which pub- lished on Wednes- day, March 3 on Page A1, the price of the parking per- mit was incorrectly stated for residential permits. The correct price is $25 a year for a permit. The Bulle- tin regrets the error. TODAY’S WEATHER Bend veteran pushes for new memorial highway designation BY KEVIN HARDEN Oregon Capital Bureau Oregon’s long stretch of U.S. High- way 30, from Astoria to the Idaho border, could become the Oregon Veterans Memorial Highway. Senate Bill 790, introduced Feb. 24 by state Sen. Tim Knopp, a Bend Re- publican, would rename Oregon’s 477- mile section of the national highway. On Wednesday, the bill was referred to the Senate Committee on Veterans Breezy, cloudy High 62, Low 33 Page B5 INDEX and Emergency Preparedness. Retired U.S. Army Lt. Col. Dick Tobiason of the nonprofit Bend He- roes Foundation is the driving force behind SB 790. Tobiason, who served two tours during the Vietnam War as an Army aviator, and his one-man nonprofit operation led efforts on past legislation to rename eight Oregon highways to honor veterans. His legis- lative success rate is 100%. “I’ve never lost a vote in 12 years Business Classifieds Comics A7-8 B6 B7-8 Dear Abby A8 Editorial A5 Explore B1-2, 9-10 History Horoscope Local/State doing these highways,” Tobiason said. It’s simple math, he said. The Bend Heroes Foundation raises all the money needed to create 4-by-8-foot signs to be posted along the highway with the veterans designation, prob- ably more than $10,000 for Highway 30. It pays Oregon’s Department of Transportation to install them. Not a dime of taxpayer funds goes into the effort. Vietnam-era Army vet- eran Dick Tobiason during a Veterans Day assem- bly at Bend High School in 2018. Bulletin file See Highway / A6 A4 A8 A2 Obituaries Puzzles Sports A8 B8 B3-5 The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Vol. 119, No. 55, 18 pages, 2 sections DAILY Correction U|xaIICGHy02329lz[