The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, March 17, 2021, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    A2 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 2021
The
Bulletin
How to reach us
LOCAL, STATE & REGION
DESCHUTES COUNTY
CIRCULATION
Didn’t receive your paper?
Start or stop subscription?
541-385-5800
Deschutes County cases: 6,134 (15 new cases)
Deschutes County deaths: 70 (2 new deaths)
6 a.m.-noon Tuesday-Friday
7 a.m.-noon Saturday-Sunday
and holidays
Jefferson County cases: 1,994 (2 new cases)
Jefferson County deaths: 31 (1 new death)
PHONE HOURS
8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
ONLINE
120
(Jan. 1)
90
new
cases
110
*No data
available on
Jan. 31
due to state
computer
maintenence
50
new
cases
90
70
60
(Feb. 17)
50
(Nov. 14)
7-day
average
40
31 new cases
28 new cases
(Oct. 31)
30
16 new cases
(July 16)
(Sept. 19)
20
(May 20)
1st case
100
80
47 new cases
9 new cases
www.bendbulletin.com
130
(Dec. 4)
108 new cases
7 ways to help limit its spread: 1. Wash hands often with soap and water for
at least 20 seconds. 2. Avoid touching your face. 3. Avoid close contact with
sick people. 4. Stay home. 5. In public, stay 6 feet from others and wear a cloth
face covering or mask. 6. Cover a cough or sneeze with a tissue or cough into
your elbow. 7. Clean and disinfect frequently touched objects and surfaces.
COVID-19 patients hospitalized at St. Charles
Bend on Tuesday: 8 (1 in ICU)
541-382-1811
What is COVID-19? It’s an infection caused by a new coronavirus. Coronavi-
ruses are a group of viruses that can cause a range of symptoms. Some usually
cause mild illness. Some, like this one, can cause more severe symptoms and
can be fatal. Symptoms include fever, coughing and shortness of breath.
(Nov. 27)
Oregon cases: 160,050 (267 new cases)
Oregon deaths: 2,346 (22 new deaths)
GENERAL
INFORMATION
BULLETIN
GRAPHIC
129 new cases
COVID-19 data for Tuesday, March 16:
Crook County cases: 788 (2 new cases)
Crook County deaths: 18 (zero new deaths)
SOURCES: OREGON HEALTH AUTHORITY,
DESCHUTES COUNTY HEALTH SERVICES
New COVID-19 cases per day
10
(March 11)
EMAIL
bulletin@bendbulletin.com
March 2020
April
May
June
July
September
August
October
November
December
January 2021
February
March
AFTER HOURS
Newsroom ................................541-383-0348
Circulation ................................541-385-5800
NEWSROOM EMAIL
Business ........business@bendbulletin.com
City Desk .............news@bendbulletin.com
Features..................................................................
communitylife@bendbulletin.com
Sports ................. sports@bendbulletin.com
NEWSROOM FAX
541-385-5804
BY LIZZY ACKER
The Oregonian
OUR ADDRESS
Street .............. 320 SW Upper Terrace Drive
Suite 200
Bend, OR 97702
Mailing ........... P.O. Box 6020
Bend, OR 97708
B
ADMINISTRATION
Publisher
Heidi Wright ..............................541-383-0341
Editor
Gerry O’Brien .............................541-633-2166
DEPARTMENT HEADS
Advertising
Steve Rosen ................................541-383-0370
Circulation/Operations
Jeremy Feldman ......................541-617-7830
Finance
Anthony Georger ....................541-383-0324
Human Resources ................541-383-0340
TALK TO AN EDITOR
City Julie Johnson ...................541-383-0367
Business, Features, GO! Magazine
Jody Lawrence-Turner ............541-383-0308
Editorials Richard Coe ...........541-383-0353
News Tim Doran .......................541-383-0360
Photos .........................................541-383-0366
Sports ..........................................541-383-0359
TALK TO A REPORTER
Bend/Deschutes Government
Brenna Visser .............................541-633-2160
Business
Suzanne Roig ............................541-633-2117
Calendar .....................................541-383-0304
Crook County ..........................541-617-7829
Deschutes County ................541-617-7818
Education
Jackson Hogan ...........................541-617-7854
Fine Arts/Features
David Jasper .................................541-383-0349
General Assignment
Kyle Spurr ...................................541-617-7820
Health
Suzanne Roig ............................541-633-2117
Jefferson County ..................541-617-7829
La Pine ........................................541-383-0367
Music
Brian McElhiney .......................541-617-7814
Public Lands/Environment
Michael Kohn ............................541-617-7818
Public Safety
Garrett Andrews ......................541-383-0325
Redmond
Jackson Hogan ...........................541-617-7854
Salem/State Government .. 541-617-7829
Sisters .........................................541-383-0367
Sunriver .....................................541-383-0367
REDMOND BUREAU
Mailing address ..................P.O. Box 6020
Bend, OR 97708
Phone ......................................... 541-617-7829
CORRECTIONS
The Bulletin’s primary concern is that all
stories are accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call us at 541-383-0367.
TO SUBSCRIBE
Call us ......................541-385-5800
• Home delivery
and E-Edition ..........................$7 per week
• By mail .................................$9.50 per week
• E-Edition only ...................$4.50 per week
To sign up for our e-Editions, visit
www.bendbulletin.com to register.
TO PLACE AN AD
Classified ......................................541-385-5809
Advertising fax ..........................541-385-5802
Other information ....................541-382-1811
OBITUARIES
No death notices or obituaries are
published Mondays. When submitting,
please include your name, address
and contact number. Call to ask about
deadlines, Monday-Friday, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Phone ..........................................541-385-5809
Fax .................................................541-598-3150
Email .......................obits@bendbulletin.com
OTHER SERVICES
Back issues ................................541-385-5800
Photo reprints .........................541-383-0366
Apply for a job ........................541-383-0340
All Bulletin payments are accepted at the
drop box at City Hall or at The Bulletin,
P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. Check
payments may be converted to an
electronic funds transfer. The Bulletin,
USPS #552-520, is published daily by
Central Oregon Media Group, 320 SW
Upper Terrace Drive, Bend, OR 97702.
Periodicals postage paid at Bend, OR.
Postmaster: Send address changes to The
Bulletin circulation department, P.O. Box
6020, Bend, OR 97708. The Bulletin retains
ownership and copyright protection of
all staff-prepared news copy, advertising
copy and news or ad illustrations. They
may not be reproduced without explicit
prior approval.
ý
Brown sets board to oversee
magic mushroom program
Lottery results can now be found on
the second page of Sports.
Oregon’s first-in-the-nation pro-
gram to allow regulated, therapeu-
tic use of psilocybin got underway
Tuesday when Gov. Kate Brown
announced the members of the Or-
egon Psilocybin Advisory Board.
The board will create the frame-
work for the program outlined in
Measure 109, which Oregon voters
approved in November.
The board includes doctors, re-
searchers, therapists and fungi ex-
perts, among others and includes
Stephanie Barrs, of Bend, accord-
ing to a press release.
“Like many, I was initially skep-
tical when I first heard of Measure
109,” said Brown in the release.
“But if we can help people suffering
from PTSD, depression, trauma
and addiction — including veter-
ans, cancer patients, and others —
supervised psilocybin therapy is a
treatment worthy of further con-
sideration.”
The measure allowed for a two-
year implementation process that
will begin when the board meets
on March 31. According to the re-
lease, Brown’s recommended 2021-
23 budget includes $5.6 million for
Measure 109 implementation.
The board will be tasked with
creating a system that allows peo-
ple 21 and older who pass a screen-
ing the opportunity to experience
psychedelic mushrooms. That in-
A Missoula, Montana, man was
arrested on multiple charges after
he drove the wrong way on a curvy
section of Interstate 84 and collided
with an Oregon State Police trooper
who was trying to find the wrong-
way driver Friday .
Senior Trooper Andrew McClay
was evaluated at Saint Alphonsus
Medical Center-Baker City and re-
leased, according to an OSP press
release.
The driver, Logan Raye
Deuel-Clinkenbeard, 28, sustained
minor injuries and was treated at
the hospital. Deuel-Clinkenbeard
Redmond kindergarten registration opens
Parents of incoming kindergarteners living
in Redmond, Tumalo and Terrebonne can now
register their children online with the Redmond
School District for the 2021-22 school year.
Future students can be registered at www.red-
mondschools.org/kindergarten-registration, ac-
cording to a school district press release sent Tues-
day.
Required documents like the child’s birth certif-
icate, immunization records and proof of address
can be uploaded online during registration, the
release stated. If that isn’t possible, the local school
will contact parents on how to send hard copies of
that data.
Oregon Psilocybin Advisory Board
Public Health Director Designee:
Andre Ourso, OHA
State Health Officer Designee:
Dr. Tom Jeanne, OHA
Oregon Health Policy Board
Designee: Barb Hansen
State Employee with Public Health
Expertise: Ali Hamade, OHA
Local Health Officer: Dr. Sarah
Present, Clackamas City
Addictions Medicine Specialist:
Kevin Fitts, Portland
Licensed Psychologist:
Dr. Kimberley Golletz, Corvallis
Licensed Physician: Dr. Todd Korthius,
OHSU
cludes figuring out the licensing
process for storing and administer-
ing the substance, which remains
illegal on a national level.
Another measure that voters ap-
proved in November, Measure 110,
will decriminalize possession of
small amounts of drugs, including
psilocybin.
“For decades Black, Indigenous,
and Latinx people in Oregon and
the United States have suffered
disproportionate psychological
trauma as a result of the ‘War on
Drugs,’ a systemic phenomenon
that continues to directly and neg-
atively impact all determinants of
Licensed Naturopath: Mason Marks,
Portland
Mycologist: Jessie Uehling, Oregon
State University
Harm Reduction Specialist:
Angela Carter, Portland
Psychopharmacologic Specialist:
Dr. Atheir Abbas
Oregon Liquor Control Commission:
Nathan Rix
Oregon DOJ: David Hart
Chief Petitioner Designee: Tom Eckert
Public: Stephanie Barrs, Bend
Public: Dr. Rachel Knox, Portland
Bend council set to vote on budget goals
health in these communities,” said
Dr. Rachel Knox, co-founder for
the Cannabis Health Equity Move-
ment and chair of the Association
for Cannabis Health Equity and
Medicine, in the release.
“Ironically, this criminalized the
use of plant substances with nota-
ble industrial, medical, and spiri-
tual utility,” Knox said. “Psilocybin
has been used in the healing and
spiritual practices of Indigenous
communities for a long time. Much
of what we know about psilocybin
comes from Indigenous knowl-
edge, a fact that is too often over-
looked.”
Oregon State Police vehicle rams wrong-way driver
BY JAYSON JACOBY
Baker City Herald
LOCAL BRIEFING
is charged with second-degree at-
“rammed the vehicle to get it off the
tempted assault, reckless driving and roadway.”
reckless endangerment.
Both Deuel-Clinken-
The incident started just
beard’s car, and the OSP
before 2 p.m. when OSP
Ford SUV McClay was
dispatch received more
driving, sustained signifi-
than 35 calls to 911 about
cant damage from the col-
a car traveling west in the
lision .
freeway’s eastbound lanes
In a document filed on
near Huntington about 38
Monday in Baker County
Deuel-
miles east of Baker City.
Circuit Court in support of
Clinkenbeard
In his report, McClay
a motion seeking to release
wrote that he was traveling
Deuel-Clinkenbeard to ei-
east when the vehicle, a gray 2011
ther his father or on conditions set
Toyota Camry sedan, “was travel-
by the court, the father said that his
ing towards me at a very high rate of son has “severe mental health condi-
speed.”
tions for which we have been seek-
McClay wrote in his report that he ing treatment.”
After months of deliberation, the Bend City
Council will vote Wednesday on whether to adopt
a new set of goals that will inform how the city
designs its budget for the next two years.
The council has preliminarily decided upon
goals outlined in six categories. The city estimates
it has between $2 million to $3 million available,
outside of existing programs and funding, to
spend on addressing these goals, according to city
documents.
Roughly $500,000 would go toward making
city government more accessible, up to $250,000
would go toward environmental projects, about
$750,000 would go toward projects that address
safety, health, accountability and justice issues,
about $250,000 would go toward boosting eco-
nomic development and $50,000 would go toward
transportation and infrastructure.
The largest chunk of money, $1.2 million, is
allocated to go toward housing, which includes
homelessness issues.
After the council adopts these goals, the city
will create a budget that would begin in July and
last through 2023.
More information about what kinds of projects
or concepts fall under each category can be found
in the meeting agenda on the city’s website.
Crook County School Board member resigns
Crook County School Board member Walter
Wagner abruptly resigned from his seat after a six-
year term last week. And voters will choose his re-
placement in about two months.
The Crook County School Board decided Mon-
day night to fill Wagner’s term, which expires in
June 2023, based on results from the May 18 elec-
tion, rather than appointing a new member, ac-
cording to a school district press release.
Although the filing deadline for the May 18
election is Thursday, the Crook County Clerk’s
Office extended the deadline for Wagner’s seat
to March 24, the release stated. Two other Crook
County School Board seats are also being con-
tested.
To run for the seat, potential candidates must
live in Wagner’s zone, which encompasses Powell
Butte south of state Highway 126 and southwest
Prineville.
— Bulletin staff report
Private community fights fine for deaths of over 30,000 fish
BY EDWARD STRATTON
The Astorian
The Fishhawk Lake Reserve
and Community is fighting a
$439,200 penalty from the state
for allegedly killing more than
30,000 fish after draining the
reservoir in 2019.
The lake, considered state
waters, is held back by an
earthen dam built along Fish-
hawk Creek in the 1960s for a
private community on the bor-
der of Clatsop and Columbia
counties. A drainpipe through
the dam feeds into the creek
and eventually the Nehalem
River. The homeowners associ-
ation argues that the state man-
dated a repair of the drainpipe
and was kept informed of the
entire process.
A state investigation blamed
the draining for sucking fish
through the drainpipe and in-
creased turbidity downstream,
dumping sediment and de-
pleting the dissolved oxygen
in the water. State biologists
estimated that 30,391 fish were
killed, including 20,539 en-
dangered coho salmon, 4,047
steelhead trout, 5,346 cutthroat
trout and 459 trout of undeter-
mined species.
The state Department of En-
vironmental Quality fined the
homeowners association and
required a water quality man-
agement plan and a 10-year
schedule for becoming compli-
ant with environmental stan-
dards.
The state Department of
Fish and Wildlife is seeking
a separate claim against the
homeowners association for
the fish kill, but has not dis-
closed more information.
The homeowners associa-
tion hired law firms Schwabe,
Williamson & Wyatt and Hart
Wagner and called for a hear-
ing to contest the Department
Clatsop County via The Astorian
The Fishhawk Lake Reserve and Community denies that the drainage
of the lake caused a large die-off of fish in 2019.
of Environmental Quality’s
penalty. The lawyers argued
that instead of being reckless,
the association drained the
lake in response to pressure
from state agencies to repair
the drainpipe and avoid a total
failure of the dam in a major
flood.
The lawyers argued that the
association timed the draining
of the lake with the low-flow
period of Fishhawk Creek, ad-
hered to the state’s in-water
work period and installed cur-
tains downstream of the dam
to decrease turbidity. They
blamed the state for a lack of
follow-up regarding permitting
and other guidance, and said
the association “reasonably
believed the state’s silence to
be tacit approval of its plans to
proceed.”
The homeowners associa-
tion plans to begin construc-
tion this year of a new spillway
over one side of the dam and a
fish ladder tunneled through
the other.
County and state leaders and
agencies, including the Depart-
ment of Fish and Wildlife, have
backed the project. The associ-
ation is applying for state and
federal grants based on safety
and the project’s benefits to fish
passage.
“Beginning construction is
contingent upon permit and
approvals being issued on time
and resolution of the state’s
claims,” said Nicole Case, a
member of the homeowners
association.