Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $1.50 TUESDAY • April 13, 2021 SPORTS PULLOUT, A5-8 ‘OUR TOWNS’ | DOCUMENTARY PREMIERES TODAY Bend plays a big role on HBO ‘Bend was a place that had a big setback and already found its way back’ BY KYLE SPURR • The Bulletin Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin Bryan Harvey, cinematographer, shoots footage for “Our Towns,” HBO’s new docu- mentary, at Bend Rock Gym before pandemic closures. Bend plays an important role in the new HBO documentary, “Our Towns,” which premieres Tuesday and features small cities that are bounc- ing back after adversity. Filmmakers Steven Ascher and Jeanne Jordan said Bend is an example of a place that successfully reinvented itself from an old mill town to a tour- ist destination. That recovery is something other towns in the film are in the midst of accom- plishing, the filmmakers said. “All of the other towns had some big set- backs and they are trying to find their way back, and Bend was a place that had a big set- back and already found its way back,” Ascher said. “That’s why we wanted to look at the benefits and costs of success.” “OUR TOWNS” | 6 p.m. Tuesday, HBO/HBO Max See Towns / A13 Deschutes County ACTIVE CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS IN CENTRAL OREGON Union leaders say teachers less nervous about classes post-vaccine As homicide cases take longer to resolve, a Bend widow struggles with a bombshell: CITATIONS, BUT NO CHARGES BY JACKSON HOGAN The Bulletin Two months ago, Central Oregon teachers began receiving COVID-19 vaccinations ahead of much of the general population. By now, just about every teacher in Deschutes County who wanted to be vaccinated has been . Because of this and other COVID-19 mitigation strategies in schools, the teachers’ union leader for Bend-La Pine Schools said most of her union’s members feel less nervous about re- turning full-time to in-person Percentage of K-12 classes this month. teachers who are “Everyone having access vaccinated in the to the vaccine if they want U.S., according to be vaccinated, it ensures to the American the educators’ safety,” said Federation of Sarah Barclay, president of Teachers the Bend Education Associ- ation. “There are a few peo- ple who still have concerns about the return to in-person, but the majority are excited.” It’s a similar story in the Redmond School Dis- trict, where Barry Branaugh — a board member of the Redmond Education Association — said he hasn’t heard many teachers express concerns about COVID-19 safety recently. “It’s not much of a factor anymore,” he said. Both Barclay and Branaugh said that local teachers are itching to see their students full time again after a couple months of part-online school. 80% See Teachers / A13 Black Bear Diner hit with $35,000 fine from OSHA Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin Stephanie Rodea holds a picture of her husband, Christopher, on her front porch in Bend on Monday. He was killed in a crash on the Bend Parkway in November. BY MICHAEL KOHN The Bulletin BY GARRETT ANDREWS • The Bulletin S tephanie Rodea, whose husband died in a six- car crash on the Bend Parkway in the fall, can’t believe that no one is responsible. Until Monday, as she waited for au- thorities to decide if there was enough evidence to charge someone in connec- tion with the Nov. 19 crash, the death of her husband was one of nine active homicide investigations in Deschutes County. But in a meeting with District Attorney John Hummel on Monday afternoon, Rodea was told that no one would be charged with the death of Christopher Rodea, who was 37 when a pickup truck slammed into his Ford van. Instead, traffic citations would be is- sued, Hummel told The Bulletin. “There’s no way everyone was doing what they were supposed to,” Stephanie Rodea said. “I could say, I can’t believe somebody could do this and get away with it. But then I’m just like, who cares if they get criminal charges? What is the point? It doesn’t change anything.” Homicide cases have been taking lon- ger to resolve in Central Oregon, in part because of the COVID-19 pandemic. “It adds to the grieving process,” Rodea said. “You want to close as many doors as you can and instead it just lingers.” But Hummel also cites a backlog The Black Bear Diner locations in Bend and Redmond were fined $35,000 for violating COVID-related restrictions, including allowing indoor dining when Deschutes County was in the extreme risk category due to high coronavi- rus caseloads. Both diners, which are under the same own- ership, “willfully” continue to potentially expose workers to the virus, despite a public health or- der of limited or zero indoor dining, according to a release from Oregon Occupational Safety and Health. Oregon OSHA has been actively pursuing businesses that ignored the lockdown restric- tions that limited restaurants, coffee shops and bars to takeout service only. Last month Kevista Coffee was fined $27,470 for similar violations by OSHA. Kathy Degree, the owner of the two Black Bear diners, has hired the services of Salem-based Kevin L. Mannix law firm to appeal the penalty. of cases at the state crime lab, explo- sive population growth in Deschutes County and a shortage of local judges. “It’s not necessarily that more homi- cides are occurring now, it’s that the lon- ger each one takes to resolve, the more you’ll have pending at any one time,” Hummel said. Nine is a high number for Deschutes County, with an estimated population of nearly 200,000, but it’s not the high point of Hummel’s nearly eight-year tenure. At one point in 2019, his of- fice was pursuing 11 homicide cases. A majority of homicides in Deschutes County over the last six years have been vehicular homicides, according to the district attorney’s office. See Charges / A4 TODAY’S WEATHER Plenty of sun High 53, Low 33 Page A13 INDEX Business Classifieds Comics A11 A14 A9-10 Dear Abby Editorial Horoscope A7 A8 A7 Kid Scoop Local/State Lottery A12 A2, 4 A6 Obituaries Puzzles Sports A4 A10 A5-7 The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Vol. 117, No. 329, 14 pages, 1 section DAILY See Diner / A13 U|xaIICGHy02329lz[