WEDNESDAY • March 10, 2021 • Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $1.50 A pandemic, a plan and a return to golf SPORTS PULLOUT, A7-10 Coronavirus | Easing state restrictions COVID-19 risk levels drop in all 3 counties Trends looking better in Oregon, governor says; new ratings take effect Friday BY GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau Central Oregon restaurants and other facilities should be able to ex- pand capacity starting Friday un- der new COVID-19 risk levels an- nounced Tuesday. Deschutes County will move from high to moderate risk, while Crook County goes from high to lower and Jefferson County drops from extreme to high. Under moderate risk, indoor din- ing, entertainment and recreational centers can go to 50% capacity or 100 people, whichever is smaller. Indoor gatherings can go up to eight people and outdoor gatherings to 10 people. Stores and malls can increase capacity of shoppers to 75%, however curbside pickup is still preferred. New COVID-19 risk levels for Or- egon’s 36 counties showed continued improvement in the latest two-week report, signaling more areas will be able expand business and dining oc- cupancy starting Friday, while allow- ing for more activities. “We are largely seeing case rates de- cline across the state, with the most counties in the lower-risk level since the framework was introduced in Novem- ber,” Gov. Kate Brown said in officially announcing the new levels on Tuesday. They will go into effect Friday. In all, 13 counties lowered their risk level ratings, while three showed worsening trends to move up a level. Only Coos and Douglas counties re- main on the extreme risk level, which once contained well over half of Ore- gon’s counties. Statewide, Oregon reported 4,615 cases between Feb. 26 and March 6. The statewide average was 108.9 cases per 100,000 residents and the positive test rate dropped to 3.2, indicating that numbers statewide should con- tinue to drop. COMING THURSDAY ONE YEAR OF COVID-19 » We asked Central Oregonians: How did the pandemic change your life? » Plus: Key moments and photos show how the coronavirus pandemic left a mark on our region See Risk / A4 ‘REDMOND FIVE’ MURDER CASE THE SHOW GOES ON State court strikes blow to Justin Link’s parole chances Sportsmen’s Show gears up for its first run in a COVID-19 world BY GARRETT ANDREWS The Bulletin BY BRENNA VISSER • The Bulletin T he Central Oregon Sportsmen’s Show at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center this weekend is one of the first major events the county has seen since the pandemic began a year ago. Trey Carskadon , who does marketing for O’Loughlin Trade Shows, which puts on the event, said the company is making several changes to the long-running annual event to make it as safe as possible in the COVID-19 era. “Our goal from the outset is to create a zero transmission environment,” Carskadon said Tuesday. Aside from masks and social-distancing re- quirements, the biggest change is a limit on the number of people who will be allowed into the show at any one time. The event is being held in four-hour shifts to manage the number of people in the facility at one time. For example, a ticketholder can only go to the show within that four-hour window. When that window closes, those patrons are filtered out and a new group can attend. Un- der state guidelines, the event could have more Justin Alan Link, a mem- ber of the the “Redmond Five,” who were responsible for the murder of a Tumalo woman in 2001, has been dealt a blow to his prospects for early release, with a recent ruling by the Oregon Su- preme Court. The court’s decision March 4 concerned Link the kinds of prison sen- tences lawmakers can mandate for minors. Link, who was 17 at the time of the murder, was tried and sentenced as an adult under Oregon’s Measure 11 statute, which in 2003 allowed the teenager to be sentenced to life without the possibility of parole. The supreme court over- turned an earlier appellate court decision and ruled that the Oregon Legislature did have the authority to impose lengthy sentences like the one Link received. Since he was given a “true” life sentence in 2003, Link’s case has wended a labyrinthine path through the justice sys- tem. Setup is underway for the Central Oregon Sportsmen’s Show at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center in Redmond, where booth and aisle dimensions have been modified along with plastic screens to help with COVID-19 safety. Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin than 4,600 people at once, but the company has lowered the threshold to 2,000 people, Carskadon said. See Show / A14 See Link / A14 BY PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau House Speaker Tina Kotek says she wants to see a legislative fast track for an extension of Oregon’s moratorium on residential foreclo- sures. An overall moratorium ended on Dec. 31. House Bill 2009, which the House Business and Labor Commit- TODAY’S WEATHER tee heard last week, would be retroac- tive to Dec. 31 and extend the mora- torium to Sept. 1. But the new version would apply only to a set number of residential properties — the bill pro- poses five, although an amendment would raise it to 10 — and commer- cial property would be excluded. Kotek, a Portland Democrat, is a chief sponsor of the bill along with A passing shower High 48, Low 31 Page A10 INDEX Business Classifieds Comics committee Chairman Paul Holvey, D-Eugene. Kotek said lawmakers should have passed the extension during the Legislature’s third special ses- sion on Dec. 21. The original mor- atorium, first imposed by an execu- tive order of Gov. Kate Brown, was passed in a special session June 26. See Moratorium / A4 A13 A16 A11-12 Dear Abby Editorial Horoscope A9 A6 A9 Local/State Lottery Nation/World A2-3 A8 A14 Pandemic delays more diverse curriculum for Bend-La Pine The goal: More viewpoints, and quicker to change BY JACKSON HOGAN The Bulletin Bend-La Pine Schools’ mission to use textbooks and learning materials with more diverse viewpoints was moving along in early 2020. English classes planned to add new authors, from outside the traditional, Obituaries Puzzles Sports A4 A12 A7-10 Eurocentric canon, by fall 2020. Elementary teachers were finding ways to integrate lessons on equity and diversity into pre-existing curriculum. High school social studies teachers were testing out new textbooks and materials to see which one could be ad- opted districtwide. But in March of that year, COVID-19 arrived in Central Oregon, closing schools and monopolizing the conversation. See Curriculum / A14 The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Vol. 119, No. 59, 16 pages, 1 section DAILY Oregon House wants fast track for foreclosure moratorium U|xaIICGHy02329lz[