THURSDAY • March 18, 2021 Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $3 GET YOUR BRACKETS WOMEN IN ARTS & MUSIC IC Men’s tourney • Today, A6 Women’s • Sunday Central Oregon ’s source for eve nts, watch p.18 ‘Raya and the Last Dragon’ full of heart Chinese soups add warmth to late winte r MARCH 18-2 4 2021 INSIDE THIS EDITION OF GO! » SPORTS PULLOUT, A5-8 arts & entertainm ent news eat p.12 bendbulletin.com /go see p.10 Bend teen wraps up documentary work PLUS: Where to find BOOKS FOOD TRUCKS BREWERIES & more In celebration of WOMEN Stories inside cele brate female art ists, musicians and Gift the Gift of Anchor Club • Silver Club • Wine Club Gold Club Vine Club We’re in this together more Please visit FaithHopeand CharityEvent s.com to sign up Curbside Pick Up, Corporate gifts & local delivery available COVID-19 FACEBOOK | EXPANSION PLANS ANNOUNCED Oregon must open vaccine eligibility to all by May 1 Prineville site soon to be largest data center in U.S. BY GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau All adults in Oregon will be eligible for COVID-19 vacci- nations as of May 1 under a binding order from the Biden administration. Appearing before the House Subcommittee on COVID-19, Oregon Health Authority Director Pat Allen said the policy U-turn was tied to future supplies of the federally controlled vaccine. “So it’s first come, first serve, as of May 1?” asked Rep. Ced- ric Hayden, R-Roseburg, vice chair of the committee. “Yep, yep,” Allen said. Allen first discussed Ore- gon’s new direction under the Biden order during an inter- view Wednesday on Oregon Public Broadcasting’s “Think Out Loud” radio program. Biden had first announced his intention to give eligibility to all adults during a national television address March 11. BY SUZANNE ROIG The Bulletin Social media giant Facebook announced Thursday that it will add two new buildings to its campus in Prineville that will make it the largest data center in the United States. The two new buildings will add 900,000-square-feet to the campus, expand- ing the 11-building campus to 4.6-million- square-feet or the equivalent to nearly 80 football fields. Construction is poised to See Vaccines / A14 begin next month and should be complete by 2024. Two other buildings that were an- nounced in June, will be completed in 2023. Its investment in the Prineville center is about $2 billion, the company said. Facebook opened the first data center in 2011 and employs as many as 1,000 peo- ple. The campus is located in a city with a population of 10,000. Prineville Mayor Jason Beebe called the expansion “great news” and said he be- lieves it will help attract other businesses to the community. “This latest investment into their site in Prineville is a continuation of the great partner they are for the City and the com- munity,” Beebe told The Bulletin. “The technical jobs that come with expansions like these are great, but there is not as much focus on the jobs that are created from the trade industries.” See Facebook / A4 REDMOND SNEAK PEEK: LARKSPUR COMMUNITY CENTER Marijuana suspected in deadly hit-and-run BY GARRETT ANDREWS The Bulletin A Redmond man is facing a homicide charge for allegedly being high on marijuana when po- lice say he struck and killed a 90-year-old pe- destrian last year. Witnesses say Anthony Rubaldino Vasquez, 20, stopped his GMC Yukon after hitting Leroy Eugene Hall while traveling about 35 mph through Red- mond, then shouted a few panicked statements and drove away, according to court documents. Vasquez was pulled over and ar- rested about 25 minutes later. A marijuana dab oil pen was allegedly found in his pocket and seized as evidence. He was scheduled to enter a plea to a charge of criminally negligent ho- micide Thursday in De- schutes County Circuit Court, but a continuance was granted by the judge. The incident took place at 6:50 p.m. Nov. 20 in the 1200 block of NW Sixth Street in Redmond. A 911 caller reported a red SUV had struck a pe- destrian and driven away. The first officer on scene, Zach Moore of the Redmond Police Depart- ment, saw Hall laying motionless in the middle lane and checked for a pulse but found none. A witness reported that Hall had been at- tempting to cross traffic with a heavy limp, court records state. The newly expanded Larkspur Community Center, featuring a state-of-the-art fitness center and indoor swimming pool, will open April 5 after a year and a half of construction. We got a look inside. Photos by RYAN BRENNECKE • The Bulletin AT TOP: The indoor track and workout area on Wednesday. LEFT: The reception area. SEE MORE PHOTOS ON A13 In a story about cars crashing through a fence of a southwest Bend homeowner that appeared Wednesday, March 17, on Page A1, the name of Murphy Road was misspelled in a headline. The Bulletin regrets the error. TODAY’S WEATHER Survey: Nearly half of Oregon pessimistic about future BY ZANE SPARLING Oregon Capital Bureau A growing share of Oregonians think the state is headed down the wrong track, if not at risk of derailing completely, ac- cording to polling data from the Oregon Values and Beliefs Center. Some 44% of Beaver State residents are pessimistic about Oregon’s future, while Cloudy and breezy High 58, Low 36 Page A12 INDEX only 35% are optimistic and the remain- ing 21% are unsure. Those results show a flip-flop from summer 2020, when 43% believed the state was headed in the right direction. “As a whole, the government is infuriating,” Melissa Aspell, one of the poll’s respondents, said in a phone interview. “There’s a lot of frustration Business Classifieds Comics A11-12 A14 A9-10 Dear Abby Editorial Events A7 A8 GO! Horoscope Local/State Lottery A7 A2-3 A6 with how Gov. (Kate) Brown runs things. And then clean up Portland, for God’s sake!” Aspell, a 39-year-old Bend resident, said she was concerned about the over- growth of “cookie-cutter homes” in her neighborhood and the misallocation of government resources, but noted that lo- cal parks are well maintained and she has Obituaries Puzzles Sports A4 A10 A5-7 been able to receive a COVID-19 vacci- nation. “(Some people) are pretty sure it’s full of nanobots or something, but conspiracy theories aside, I had a considerably bad reaction to the second one,” she said. “But I feel that was something my body needed to go through.” See Survey / A4 The Bulletin ù An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Vol. 119, No. 66, 38 pages, 2 sections SUN/THU Correction See Hit-and-run / A4 U|xaIICGHy02330rzu