WEDNESDAY • April 7, 2021 • Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $1.50 SPORTS PULLOUT, A5-8 Area police agencies ready body cam rollout BY GARRETT ANDREWS The Bulletin The region’s two largest police agencies have settled on vendors for body-worn cameras, which could be in use countywide by the start of summer. The Bend Police Department has selected body cam manufacturer Axon Enterprises, which has offered the city a $1.03 million purchasing agreement for body cameras, associ- ated hardware and software, training and five years of cloud storage space. A Bend Police captain and the department’s business manager will present a budget request to ap- prove the purchase at Wednesday night’s Bend City Council meeting. If approved, all Bend Police officers could be wearing Body 3 cameras by early summer, depending on Axon’s availability, according to Lt. Juli Mc- Conkey. In February, the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office announced it would use Safe Fleet-Coban camera systems. The county is contracted to spend $818,000 on its project, which includes in-car cameras as well as body cams, through 2023. A sheriff ’s spokesman said the office expects Focus X1 cameras to be issued to all patrol deputies by May 3. The office will outfit patrol cars with Focus H1 camera systems in phases. The Bend Police Department is not adding in-car cameras this round, though McConkey said the department hopes to in the future. Both Bend Police and the sheriff’s office fast-tracked plans to add them after nationwide calls for police ac- countability following the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis last May. COVID-19 | Deschutes County Higher risk level brings restrictions Oregon will open vaccines to all, 16 and older, April 19 BY GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau Deschutes County’s COVID-19 risk level rating will go from mod- erate to high starting Friday, forcing renewed restrictions on restaurants and businesses, according to an an- nouncement from Gov. Kate Brown on Tuesday. Crook and Jefferson counties will remain at the lower level, the least re- strictive of the state ratings. Facing a “fourth wave” of COVID-19, Oregon will drop eligi- bility restrictions for COVID-19 vac- cinations April 19, up to two weeks earlier than planned. President Joe Biden directed Tues- day morning that states should open inoculation appointments to every- one age 16 and older. Oregon had previously planned to drop all eligibility restrictions by May 1, with some counties possibly offer- ing appointments as early as April 26. Brown said Oregon would drop limits on April 19, but until then, it would continue to prioritize vacci- nations for people with underlying medical conditions, essential work- ers and communities underserved during the pandemic. “We are locked in a race between vaccine distribution and the rapid spread of COVID-19 variants,” Brown said. The move comes as infections and hospitalizations have started to rise after a long decline since January. The state has reported over 400 cases per day in the past week and has seen rising numbers of hospital- izations, despite having fully vacci- nated over 777,000 of the state’s esti- mated 2.8 million adult residents. See Risk / A4 ‘Parklet’ success invites continuation Program has allowed more outdoor dining in downtown Bend through pandemic See Police / A4 State seeks feedback for Pilot Butte 20-year plan Becky Seim, left, and Kelly Johnson, both of Bend, sit in an outdoor dining area called a parklet at Sidelines Sports Bar and Grill on NW Wall Street in Bend. BY KYLE SPURR The Bulletin State parks officials are offering the public one last chance to comment on a new master plan for Bend’s Pilot Butte State Scenic Viewpoint before it is approved in June. Pilot Butte’s master plan hasn’t been updated in more than 25 years, when Bend’s population was about 30,000. Since then, Bend has grown to more than 100,000 residents. The park has transformed from a recre- ation area on the edge of the city to a popular location in the middle of sev- eral neighborhoods. The Oregon Parks and Recreation Department has received a lot of pub- lic comment about park use and de- sired improvements at the butte. Now the department wants to hear from the public one more time. Chris Havel, a spokesman for the state parks department, said the de- partment used the previous public feedback to create a draft plan that was approved last year. Before final approval in June, the public can still offer input on the pro- cess, Havel said. BY BRENNA VISSER • The Bulletin B Dean Guernsey/Bulletin photos Bos Taurus and 900 Wall restaurants have tented seating areas on NW Minnesota Avenue. eing able to set up out- door seating in parking spaces in downtown Bend began a positive ripple effect at Deschutes Brewery. When the city of Bend developed its “parklet” pro- gram last summer to help businesses with COVID-19 capacity restrictions stay afloat, Deschutes Brewery was able to add seven tables, which seat six people each, in front of the restaurant where cars normally park on Bond Street, said Tim Casinelli, general manager of the brew- ery’s downtown restaurant. Those seven tables al- lowed him to expand the restaurant’s capacity by 50%, which in turn meant the business was able to employ two more people that other- wise wouldn’t have had jobs. “It’s been very impactful,” Casinelli said. “It’s been able to help keep us doing what we like to do.” Now, nearly a year after the program began, the city is considering extending the pilot parklet program — which was initially designed not to be permanent, but to help businesses through the pandemic — for the next year. Parklets are like side- walk extensions that are built out into parking lanes or spaces to provide people with more space and ameni- ties, like outdoor dining. See Parklet / A12 TODAY’S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 63, Low 34 Page A12 INDEX Business Classifieds Comics A11 A13-14 A9-10 Dear Abby Editorial Horoscope A7 A8 A7 Local/State A2-3 Lottery A6 Nation/World A4, 12 Obituaries Puzzles Sports A4 A10 A5-7 The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Vol. 119, No. 83, 14 pages, 1 section DAILY See Pilot Butte / A4 U|xaIICGHy02329lz[