A2 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 21, 2021 The Bulletin How to reach us CIRCULATION Didn’t receive your paper? Start or stop subscription? 541-385-5800 PHONE HOURS 6 a.m.-noon Tuesday-Friday 7 a.m.-noon Saturday-Sunday and holidays GENERAL INFORMATION LOCAL, STATE & REGION DESCHUTES DESCHUTES COUNTY COUNTY L. New New COVID-19 COVID-19 cases cases per per day day COVID-19 data for Saturday, March 20: Deschutes County cases: 6,163 (4 new cases) Deschutes County deaths: 70 (zero new deaths) Crook County cases: 796 (2 new cases) Crook County deaths: 18 (zero new deaths) Jefferson County cases: 2,001 (1 new case) Jefferson County deaths: 31 (zero new deaths) Oregon cases: 161,320 (339 new cases) Oregon deaths: 2,362 (5 new deaths) BULLETIN GRAPHIC GRAPHIC 129 new cases 130 (Dec. 4) What is COVID-19? It’s an infection caused by a new coronavirus. Symptoms (including fever, coughing and shortness of breath) can be severe. While some cases are mild, the disease can be fatal. 108 new cases 120 (Jan. 1) 90 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. 110 *No data available on Jan. 31 due to state computer maintenence (Nov. 27) 100 90 80 50 new cases 70 60 (Feb. 17) 47 new cases 50 (Nov. 14) 541-382-1811 7-day average 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-Fri. 28 new cases (July 16) ONLINE 40 31 new cases (Oct. 31) 30 16 new cases (Sept. 19) 9 new cases www.bendbulletin.com SOURCES: OREGON HEALTH HEALTH AUTHORITY, AUTHORITY, SOURCES: OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY COUNTY HEALTH SERVICES SERVICES 20 (May 20) 1st case 10 (March 11) EMAIL bulletin@bendbulletin.com March 2020 April May June July August September October November December February January 2021 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 OUR ADDRESS Street .............. 320 SW Upper Terrace Drive Suite 200 Bend, OR 97702 Mailing ........... 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They may not be reproduced without explicit prior approval. Lottery results can now be found on the second page of Sports. Secretary of state hires constitutional law expert to help in redistricting case BY HILLARY BORRUD The Oregonian Oregon Secretary of State Shemia Fagan has taken the unusual step of hiring an ex- perienced lawyer with consti- tutional law expertise to help her win a court battle with leg- islative leaders over deadlines, data sets and powers to redraw legislative districts. P.K. Runkles-Pearson was a partner at long-established Portland firm Miller Nash Graham & Dunn before she was hired as the secretary of state’s in-house general counsel in February, accord- ing to her LinkedIn profile. Runkles-Pearson has expertise in state and federal constitu- tional law, according to her for- mer employer’s website. None of the prior three sec- retaries of state had a general counsel. Instead, they relied on the Oregon attorney gen- eral to represent them and could get input from other staffers who were lawyers. The attorney general supervises Runkles-Pearson’s work and Runkles-Pearson has been ap- pointed as a special assistant attorney general for work on the redistricting case, a spokes- person for Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum noted. Runkles-Pearson’s annual salary is $165,936, according to the secretary of state’s Pub- lic Information Officer Aaron Fiedler. He did not directly an- swer a question about why Fa- gan chose to hire an in-house attorney to work on redistrict- ing, rather than paying the De- partment of Justice to do the work, as is the norm. Now that Runkles-Pearson has been hired, Fagan’s admin- istration is working on figuring out what legal issues in addi- tion to redistricting the general counsel might tackle. “P.K. Runkles-Pearson was hired as the general counsel for the entire agency and has been working with all seven agency divisions to assess and serve their general counsel needs,” Fiedler wrote in an email. “In- cluded in agency needs are redistricting issues, in consul- tation with the Oregon Depart- ment of Justice.” Redistricting in Oregon Redrawing Oregon’s legisla- tive districts normally falls to the Legislature, and the state constitution requires the body to finish that work by July 1. That is usually not a problem, as federal law requires the Cen- sus Bureau to provide states with the necessary population data by April 1 and that has happened decade after decade. Only if the Legislature fails to agree on how to redraw state House and Senate district lines by the July 1 deadline does that task fall to the secretary of state. Under the state constitu- tion, that officer has until Aug. 15 to complete the task. But the pandemic and other factors complicated the collec- tion of the once-a-decade tally of the U.S. population in 2020. As a result, the Census Bureau has said it cannot get the re- quired population data to Ore- gon until Sept. 30. The secretary of state’s role is Kaylee Domzalski/OPB file Shemia Fagan, pictured on the Oregon Senate floor in 2020, became Oregon’s secretary of state this year. among the key issues at stake in the Legislature and secre- tary’s dispute over how Oregon should handle the conflict be- tween the state’s constitutional redistricting deadlines and pandemic-delayed timeline to receive census data. So are the questions of how well the dis- tricts will reflect the state’s cur- rent population and potential disruption to 2022 elections. Seeking an extension In a March 10 court filing, the Democratic leaders of the Legislature, Senate President Peter Courtney of Salem and House Speaker Tina Kotek of Portland, asked the Oregon Supreme Court to extend law- makers’ deadline to finish leg- islative redistricting until three months after the state receives census data. They also asked the court to order the secretary of state, who is also a Demo- crat, not to take up the task of legislative redistricting until at least three months after the census data is released – or roughly the last day of 2021. Candidates who run for of- fice in 2022 must file to run by March 8, and many begin lin- ing up financial and political support before that. “For Oregon, that delay — absent intervention by this court — creates a constitutional crisis,” the legislative leaders’ lawyers wrote. The legislators argued that redrawing legisla- tive districts without the new census data would violate the Equal Protection Clause and Voting Rights Act and noted the census “provides data on race and ethnicity in all the census blocks in Oregon neces- sary to ensure compliance with the federal Voting Rights Act.” The Legislature is repre- sented by lawyers from the national firm Markowitz Her- bold, who a legislative commit- tee hired last month. In the secretary of state’s re- sponse, her lawyers wrote that the unprecedented calamity of the last year and the related census delay would not justify the court ignoring Oregon’s constitutional redistricting deadlines. She insists the Leg- islature can complete the task by its July 1 deadline, using data that from Oregon’s feder- ally-designated census experts at Portland State University, which is not as accurate as what the Census Bureau plans to send at the end of September. “There is no dispute that final district lines should be evaluated in light of cen- sus data, and that the delay thus poses a significant chal- lenge for the Legislative As- sembly in drawing the map,” Runkles-Pearson and the attor- ney general’s staff wrote. “But it does not justify the extraor- dinary remedy that (the Leg- islature) seeks here: an order from this court rewriting the constitution and leaving state legislative district boundar- ies in limbo until July 1, 2022, and enjoining the secretary of state from carrying out her own constitutional duties in a timely manner.” Fagan asserted through her lawyers that Oregon officials could draw adequately accu- rate legislative districts based on yet-to-be-published data the Portland State University Population Research Center. “Even if all of that data is not yet compiled, there are several months to do so before the July 1 deadline,” lawyers wrote on behalf of the secretary of state. “And when the census data becomes available, it will be straightforward to compare it to the data the Legislative As- sembly used and determine if any corrections must be made to the map.” People who believe the new legislative districts are not fairly apportioned in light of the 2020 census data can file a “placeholder” protest in court by Aug. 1, Fagan’s lawyers wrote. STATE BRIEFING Oregon Tech faculty call for president to resign the Northwest Natural office, where demonstrators made speeches condemning the natural gas provider and per- formed a die-in protest on its lawn Friday. Two protesters, ages 19 and 21, were arrested for allegedly climbing over the North- west Natural fence and were charged with trespassing, ac- cording to Eugene Police. Northwest Natural did not return phone calls Friday. Most protesters arriving at the park knew they would be participating in a bike protest but had not been told their final destination until the protest was underway. The franchise agreement the city of Eugene maintains with the natural gas provider, allowing it to install infrastructure in public right of ways, is set to expire in May. The two entities have not agreed on provisions about carbon reduction as a provi- sion of an extension. The group, numbering more than 50 people and in- cluding small children and older adults, carried signs calling for a transition from fossil fuels . Eugene Police were called to the scene around 1:30 p.m. on a noise complaint, police spokeswoman Melinda Mc- Laughlin said . The crowd dispersed about 20 minutes after the two ar- rests, McLaughlin said. Climate protests were held across the globe Friday, in- cluding in Bend. The Oregon Institute of Technology’s faculty senate has called for university pres- ident Nagi Naganathan’s res- ignation, but school adminis- trators say he has no plans to leave his post. The senate approved the resolution last week, saying faculty had lost confidence in Naganathan’s leadership. “This is not knee-jerk,” Professor Don McDonnell said. “This is not COVID. This is not union negotia- tions.” McDonnell, who is a pro- fessor of medical imaging technology at the school, will present the resolution to Na- ganathan asking him to re- sign. If Naganathan declines, all full-time faculty will vote on whether they have confi- dence in Naganathan’s leader- ship this month. Chair of the Board of Trustees Jessica Gomez said Thursday that board mem- bers she has talked to are happy with the direction of the university and fully sup- port Naganathan’s leadership. She said that the resolution declaring no confidence stems from a labor dispute. Eugene youth protest targets natural gas provider; 2 arrested A youth-led protest against fossil fuels biked from Eu- gene’s Skinner Butte Park to — Bulletin wire reports 10. HE. PLAY in Central Oregon Look for Central Oregon events and add your own bendbulletin.com/events bendbulletin.com/events They They will will always always remember remember this this day. day It was was when when they they got It got their their first fi rst skin skin cancer NO SUNSCREEN. SUNSCREEN. cancer - - NO Did You Know? Know? 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