Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $1.50 Monday • March 22, 2021 SOUTHWEST BEND 2 bodies discovered; suspect in custody Detectives investigating incident at Romaine Village trailer park By GaRRETT andREWS The Bulletin A suspect is in custody after two bodies were discovered in a manufactured home in southwest Bend on Sunday. At 12:28 p.m., Bend Police officers were called to “suspicious circumstances” at a unit in Romaine Village in the 60000 block of Granite Drive, accord- ing to Bend Police spokeswoman Lt. Juli-Ann Mc- Conkey. Inside, they discovered the bodies of two people and through interviews developed a person of inter- est. That person was arrested later in the afternoon, McConkey said. Police have not publicly identified the dead peo- ple or the suspect. As of 4 p.m., the streets outside Romaine Village were closed to traffic and the regional major crimes team called in to investigate. “This is definitely an active investigation and we’ll be working through the night,” McConkey said. e Reporter: 541-383-0325, gandrews@bendbulletin.com COVID-19 Contact tracing apps pit privacy against utility Oregon may release one soon; other states struggle to make theirs effective By LIndSEy Van nESS Stateline.org The digital contact tracing effort in Virginia is 2 million phones strong. Roughly a quarter of the adult population has downloaded the state’s COVIDWISE app or opted in on their iPhones to receive exposure notifications. Almost 26,000 times, a notification has been sent to let someone know they were likely ex- posed to a person with COVID-19. But that’s the bulk of the information the state health department can glean. The system doesn’t track user locations, so of- ficials don’t know where exposures happened, ac- cording to Jeff Stover, an executive adviser to the commissioner of Virginia’s Department of Health. Officials can’t follow up on notifications to see whether exposed residents are isolating. WINDING UP for the season Photo by Ryan BREnnECKE • The Bulletin Brad Edmunds, of Bend, tries to control his kite as a gust of wind blows through while practicing flying at Riverbend Park on Saturday. “I’m on spring break this week, so if the winds are up I will be out practicing to get ready for the upcoming (kiteboarding) season,” he said. See Tracing / A4 2020 was the year of clean air — then came all the smoke By HannaH doRMIdo, JoHn MUySKEnS and BonnIE BERKoWITZ The Washington Post Eric Risberg/AP file The San Francisco skyline is barely visible due to smoke from wildfires that were burning across California in September. TODAY’S WEATHER Rain, some snow High 48, Low 23 Page a10 INDEX Comics Dear Abby Horoscope A7-8 A4 A4 Kid Scoop Local/State Nation Wildfires that charred millions of acres in the West wiped out the country’s pandemic-related clean air gains in 2020, according to a report released this month. Because pandemic restrictions limited travel and other activities, fine-particle pollution from the burning of fossil fuels dropped A9 A2-3 A3 Puzzles Sports Weather A8 A5-6 A10 13% between March and July compared to the previous year and dipped again in November and December, said Lauri Myl- lyvirta, lead analyst at the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, who collaborated on IQAir’s annual World Air Quality Report. But the 2020 historic wildfire season more than made up the difference. Overall, the U.S. av- erage for the deadliest type of air pollution rose nearly 7% over 2019 because of smoke from fall fires, primarily those in Califor- nia, Oregon and Washington. Fine-particle pollution refers to bits that are 2.5 microns in di- ameter or smaller, or less than one-20th the diameter of a hu- man hair. These particles are tiny enough to penetrate deep into lungs and enter the bloodstream, where they can trigger asthma attacks and other lung and heart problems and may cause cancer. See air quality / A10 The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Monday E-Edition, 10 pages, 1 section DAILY Fires wiped out pandemic-related environmental gains U|xaIICGHy02329lz[