THURSDAY • March 25, 2021 Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $3 SPRING BREAK IN OUR BACKYARD Central Oregon’s source inment news for events, arts & enterta listen p.3 eat p.12 Rememberi ng Five Pint Mary’ s Michael Holmes Family-owned Deschutes Junction watch p.19 Whittle reviews ‘Operation Varsity Blues’ PLUS: Where to find BOOKS TRUCKS MARCH 25-31 2021 FOOD BREWERIES bendbulletin.com/go & more Swap trips for staycations to avoid coronavirus risk while still having SAFE SPRING BREAKS Gift the Gift of Wine Club Anchor Club • Gold Club Silver Club • Vine Club We’re in this together Please visit s.com to sign up FaithHopeandCharityEvent gifts & Curbside Pick Up, Corporate local delivery available ALSO INSIDE: SPORTS PULLOUT, A5-8 Spring is in the air; so is the coronavirus. GO! has ideas for Oregon staycations » Plus: Spring break movies to remind you how to party COVID-19 in Oregon | Status report 1 million vaccines, but variants loom State hits an inoculation milestone, but new virus strains and vaccine deliveries present new challenges BY GARY A. WARNER • Oregon Capital Bureau The appearance in Oregon of a more contagious and virulent variant of the COVID-19 virus is con- cerning for health officials racing to vaccinate up to 3 million more Oregonians, after the state hit the 1 mil- lion vaccine mark on Wednesday. “Today marks an important milestone in our state — this would not have been possible without the ded- ication of our vaccinators around Oregon,” said OHA Director Pat Allen. Allen’s report to lawmakers Wednesday included good news: 1 million shots of vaccine since Decem- ber, and the long, steep fall in infections and deaths since the winter. OHA’s risk level report for counties has only two rated as extreme risk: Coos and Curry. Twenty of 36 counties in the state have received per- mission to start giving vaccines to the next group of eligible Oregonians, which includes people age 45 and above with underlying medical conditions, pregnant women over aged 16 and several other groups. But Oregon’s program is also experiencing head- aches, hiccups and hints of some troubling signs. Allen told a legislative committee that Oregon had been told that supplies of the one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine are delayed, with the date of addi- tional shipment unknown. See Oregon / A13 Les Schwab Amphitheater renovations continue, include larger performance area Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin Employees with Sunburst Fabrications weld steel beams for the new stage at Les Schwab Amphitheater on March 18. R 1,840 square feet. Improvements in accessibility will include a full where the first phase of the project will improve the stage Americans with Disabilities Act compliant pathway. Work on the first in the hopes of attracting a wider variety of performers. phase began in December and is expected to be complete by June. The stage will be larger, with a height of 62 feet and an additional Additional phases of the renovation are expected to last into 2023. New, less expensive position will focus more on branch campuses BY JACKSON HOGAN The Bulletin Central Oregon Com- munity College let go of its second-highest paid admin- istrator, Matt McCoy, and eliminated his position last week — partially to save the college at least $65,000 an- nually. COCC President Lau- rie Chesley also wants to streamline the adminis- trative department where McCoy supervised a wide swath of the college as vice president of administration. McCoy’s position will be re- placed with one that over- sees COCC’s three branch campuses in Redmond, Ma- dras and Prineville, along the college’s online learning program and the College Now program, Chesley said. “Having a position whose unadulterated focus is on meeting the needs of our outlying communities is an important strategic de- cision,” Chesley told The Bulletin. McCoy, whose title was vice president of adminis- tration, had many duties. These included overseeing the branch campuses and campus services — which includes maintenance and custodial work — and working with the state Leg- islature. All of these duties will be split among existing COCC administrators, with the exception of the branch campuses, which the new hire will handle, Chesley told COCC staff in a March email. Although finances weren’t the only reason for elimi- nating McCoy’s position last week, they do play a role in the decision, Chesley said. McCoy’s annual salary was $171,250, and the range for the new administrative posi- tion will be between $90,783 and $106,883, according to Jenn Kovitz, COCC spokes- person. COCC has also laid off or furloughed employees and implemented a hiring freeze during the COVID-19 pandemic in other depart- ments, so it was only fair to do the same for the admin- istrative department, Ches- ley said. SETTING THE STAGE enovation continues at the Les Schwab Amphitheater, COCC lets go of one of its top-paid employees See COCC / A13 Sheriff increases parking enforcement at Smith Rock BY KYLE SPURR The Bulletin As visitation doubled at Smith Rock State Park in recent years, the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office has decided to increase enforcement of overflow parking along the county TODAY’S WEATHER roads outside the park. Anyone parked on Smith Rock Way, Wilcox Road and 17th Street could be fined $115. Last year, park and county officials and nearby property owners part- nered to install signs that read “NO PARKING ON SHOULDER.” But up to 200 visitors each day keep parking along the roads. Some people leave their cars and walk a mile to the park. Early showers High 47, Low 25 Page A12 INDEX Business Classifieds Comics A11-12 A13 A9-10 To help enforce the parking rules, the sheriff’s office plans to patrol the area more often to make sure people are complying, said Sgt. Jayson Janes. The sheriff’s office began receiving complaints last week and deputies is- sued eight citations on Sunday. “We are hoping to educate people now before the warmer weather arrives,” Janes said. “The county has done a good job with the signs, so we are letting peo- Dear Abby Editorial Events A7 A8 GO! Horoscope Local/State Lottery A7 A2-4 A6 Obituaries Puzzles Sports ple know about the signs and that we will be enforcing the no parking.” Matt Davey, Smith Rock State Park manager, said visitation has doubled since 2012, around the time Travel Oregon launched “The 7 Wonders of Oregon” campaign, which included Smith Rock. The park recorded 851,144 visits in 2019, nearly double the 483,448 in 2012, according to park data. The A4 A10 A5-7 park closed for two months in 2020 due to COVID-19 and still recorded 727,656 visits. “The parking in the park wasn’t de- signed for that exponential growth,” Davey said. “We can’t just instantly ac- commodate that.” Davey said the park is addressing the parking problems in its master plan, which hasn’t been updated since 1991. See Smith Rock / A4 The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Vol. 119, No. 72, 38 pages, 2 sections SUN/THU Those parking illegally now subject to $115 fine U|xaIICGHy02330rzu