SUNDAY • April 4, 2021 • Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $3 Bend flips the script on Summit PREP FOOTBALL • SPORTS, B1 Madras seeks funds for homeless services CENTRAL OREGON’S LARGEST DISTRICTS Schools are going back to classes full time. Now comes the hard part A sign reminds students to be safe at Juniper Elementary School as Bend-La Pine prepares for full five-day-a-week school in Bend on Thursday. Dean Guernsey/ Bulletin photos Year-round shelter serving wider region would be a first for the city BY KYLE SPURR The Bulletin Madras city officials are developing a plan to build a homeless services center that would provide a permanent, year-round lo- cation for those in need across the region. The center would be a first for the city. The only option for homeless people in Madras is a temporary warming shelter that closed last month and is on land that was sold and will be redeveloped into a Starbucks coffee shop. Rather than keep looking for temporary options, the city is working with the Jeffer- son County Faith Based Network to create the permanent shelter. City and county officials will meet Wednesday to discuss applying for a Community Development Block Grant that could award up to $1.5 million for a homeless services center in Madras. A location has not been identified for the center, but it will be in Madras and open to people across Jefferson County and the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs, ac- cording to the city. See Madras / A7 DESCHUTES River will rise as irrigation season begins For the first time since March 2020, all Bend-La Pine, Redmond students will return to 5 full days a week BY JACKSON HOGAN The Bulletin A fter more than a year of school being fully online or only partly in-person, thousands of students in Bend-La Pine and Redmond school districts will soon return to full-time, in-person classes five days a week. This change — which only became pos- sible after the Oregon Department of Edu- cation shrunk the mandatory 6-feet social distancing rule for students to 3 feet in late March — is good news to educators in Central Oregon’s two largest school dis- tricts. “I’ve got a great class — they’re super excited to be back,” said Carrie Price, a fourth grade teacher at Juniper Elementary School in northeast Bend. “This is what they need.” But transitioning the majority of students — grades 4-12 in Bend-La Pine, grades 6-12 in Redmond — from part-online to full- time classroom settings isn’t as simple as moving desks closer together. Completely shifting the logistics of school operations in the middle of the school year is difficult but worth it to get all students back full time, said Redmond Superinten- dent Charan Cline. “We know this is good for kids, and frankly it’s good for our staff,” Cline said. “It’s just that it takes time to make the switch.” In both school districts, younger students BY MICHAEL KOHN The Bulletin Carrie Price sets up her socially distanced classroom at Juniper Elementary on Thursday. Students are required to stay 3 feet away from one another in the classroom. As for going back to in-person classes? “I think the kids, some of them, have slipped into some patterns of school being somewhat optional on their home days,” Price said. “We just have to trigger those memories about how to be at school.” — grades K-3 in Bend-La Pine and all el- ementary students in Redmond — have attended school full time for more than a month after schools began to reopen ear- lier this year. In Bend-La Pine, students in grades 4-12 have attended in-person school twice a week, with the other three days learning entirely online. See Schools / A6 The irrigation season is underway in Central Oregon, and residents will start to notice more water flowing down the De- schutes River and in the canals the river and its reservoirs feed. The North Unit Irrigation District be- gan letting more water into the Deschutes River from Wickiup Reservoir on Tuesday . The amount of water has steadily increased from around 100 cubic feet per second to around 375 cubic feet per second. Conditions are being evaluated to deter- mine when flows can be brought up to 600 cubic feet per second, according to Kyle Gorman, region manager for the Oregon Water Resources Department. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is evaluating Oregon spotted frog activity to determine when it is safe to allow more water into the river, Gorman said. Pushing too much water down the river at once can damage spotted frog breeding habitat. TODAY’S WEATHER Clouds and sun High 62, Low 28 Page B6 INDEX Business/Life Classifieds Dear Abby C1-8 B5 C3 Editorial Horoscope Local/State A4 C3 A2, 5 Lottery Market Recap Mon. Comics B2 B4 C5-6 Obituaries Puzzles Sports A7 C4 B1-6 The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Vol. 119, No. 81, 26 pages, 4 sections SUN/THU See Deschutes / A5 U|xaIICGHy02330rzu Parade Magazine will return next week! Check next Sunday’s Bulletin for this popular insert. Parade publishes every Sunday except 4/4/21, 5/30/21, 7/4/21, 8/1/21, 9/5/21, 12/26/21