A14 The BulleTin • Thursday, april 22, 2021 WORLD BRIEFING Firearms Continued from A1 “In this legislation we kind of mash them together,” House Republican Leader Christine Drazan of Canby, who sits on the committee, said during a pre- sentation Wednesday. Republicans were already dead set against House Bill 2510, which awaits a vote of the full House scheduled April 26. The House Health Care Committee ad- vanced it March 30 on a party-line vote. That bill would require the storage of firearms with trigger or cable locks, in a locked container or in a gun room. An offense is a Class C violation, which carries a maximum fine of $500, unless someone under age 18 obtains access, in which case it is a Class A violation with a maximum fine of $2,000. No jail time is imposed for violations. Its chief sponsor is Rep. Rachel Pru- sak, D-West Linn, who has advocated it on behalf of a constituent since her elec- tion in 2018. She said she would support it becoming part of a broader bill. “No one is under the illusion that enacting a safe storage law will stop all gun violence,” Prusak said. “Many re- sponsible gun owners already lock up their guns. The goal of this safe-storage firearms bill is to change the behavior of the portion of gun owners whose care- less actions lead to death and injury of others.” Dmitri Lovetsky/AP Supporters of of jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny clash with police in St. Petersburg, Russia, on Wednesday. Mass protests for Russian opposition leader lead to almost 1,500 reported arrests Police arrested nearly 1,500 people Wednesday during a day of demonstrations throughout Russia calling for freedom for imprisoned opposition leader Alexei Navalny, whose health reportedly is in severe decline after three weeks of hunger striking, according to a group that monitors political detentions. The largest of the protests took place in Moscow, where thousands marched through the center city. Some of the people arrested were seized before the pro- tests even began, including to top Navalny associates in Moscow. Navalny’s team called for the unsanctioned demonstrations after weekend reports that his health is deteriorating and his life was in danger. Turnout estimates varied widely: Moscow police said 6,000 people demonstrated in the capital, while an ob- server told Navalny’s YouTube channel that the crowd was about 60,000. Police kill 16-year-old shown on video with knife The fatal police shooting of Ma’Khia Bryant, a Black teenager seen on video charging at two people with a knife, came within minutes of Tuesday’s verdict in George Floyd’s killing — causing outrage by some over the use of lethal force by Columbus Police. Officials with the Columbus Division of Police re- leased footage of the shooting Tuesday night just hours after it happened, a departure from protocol as the force faces immense scrutiny from the public following a series of recent high-profile police killings that have led to clashes. The 16-year-old girl was identified by Franklin County Children Services, which said she was under the care of the agency at the time of her death. Biden pushes for momentum in climate fight President Joe Biden is convening a coalition of the willing, the unwilling, the desperate-for-help and the av- id-for-money for a global summit Thursday aimed at ral- lying the world's worst polluters to move faster against cli- mate change. Success for Biden in the virtual summit of 40 leaders will be making his expected promises — halv- ing coal and petroleum emissions at home and financing climate efforts abroad — believable enough to persuade other powers to make big changes of their own. Split view of changes The Rules Committee proposes to combine it with a narrower version of Senate Bill 554, which passed the Senate on a 16-7 vote March 25. All votes for it came from Democrats; one Democrat joined six Republicans against it, and the rest were excused or absent. The original bill would bar all fire- arms from state buildings, including the Capitol, and local governments would have the option of barring them from their own buildings. In essence, the ban would apply to the estimated 300,000 holders of concealed-hand- gun licenses, who are now exempt from weapons bans in public buildings. The proposed amendment would narrow the scope of the Senate bill. The proposed ban would apply to the Israel strikes targets in Syria after missile attack A missile launched from Syria struck southern Israel early Thursday, setting off air raid sirens near the coun- try’s top-secret nuclear reactor, the Israeli military said. In response, it said it attacked the missile launcher and air-defense systems in neighboring Syria. The incident, marking the most serious violence be- tween Israel and Syria in years, pointed to likely Iranian involvement. Iran, which maintains troops and proxies in Syria, has accused Israel of a series of attacks on its nu- clear facilities, including sabatoge at its Natanz nuclear fa- cility on April 11, and vowed revenge. — Bulletin wire reports C LASSIFIEDS Capitol, but not other state buildings. (State courts, which are often in build- ings maintained by counties, already ban weapons by orders on the presiding judges.) It would allow boards of the seven state universities, 17 community college districts and 197 school districts to bar firearms from their buildings, but not their grounds. Unlike the Senate-passed bill, cities, counties and special districts would not be allowed to bar firearms borne by concealed-handgun licensees. Sen. Ginny Burdick, a Democrat from Portland and a longtime supporter of firearms regulation, said the pro- posed change goes too far. “I’ve been in this process a long time, and I understand the necessity for com- promise,” she said at a Rules Commit- tee hearing. “But the amended version goes way too far in terms of weakening the bill.” Though the proposal would still bar firearms inside the Capitol, she said, ”in the climate we live in, state buildings need to be included.” She also said if school boards have discretion to bar firearms from their buildings, their grounds need to be in- cluded, “because sports activities can get pretty hot, as we all know, and they need to be covered.” As passed by the Senate, public side- walks and streets are excluded from reg- ulation. Sen. Floyd Prozanski, a Democrat from Eugene who leads the Senate Ju- diciary Committee, offered substitute language. “It only seems appropriate for us to give local control to school boards, community colleges and universities to make the determination what is best for them and their properties, not just their buildings,” he said. The House committee is considering other amendments, including one by Rep. Brian Clem, D-Salem, that would enable local governments to regulate firearms in public parks. He also pro- posed an amendment that would do away with state preemption of most local firearms ordinances — a law that dates to 1995 — but conceded it would go nowhere. e e pwong@pamplinmedia.com The Bulletin General Merchandise Employment Recreation & Sports 200 500 800 201 Free Items Horse manure, great quality. I load, you haul. 541-389-1430 204 Want to Buy or Rent Wanted $ Cash paid for vintage, fake, & fine jew- elry. Top $ paid for Gold & Silver. I buy in bulk. Honest Artist. 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OSU is an AA/EOE/ Vets/Disabled **FRITO LAY- NOW HIRING** Route Sales Repre- sentative in Bend,OR -$1,115.38 Weekly target-Health care, Retirement benefits, Education tuition reimbursement, Paid vacation and so much more! Apply at Fritolayem- ployment.com Not sure if this is the job for you? Call 503- 405-1741 for more information. CLASSIFIEDS SELL! Place your ad online BENDBULLETIN.COM Real Estate For Sale Garage Sale 23rd-25th 8am-5pm. 6650 NW 61st St Redmond. Day- bed, treadmill &much more! 700 Moving Sale! Tue-Sat 4/20-4/24 9:30-3:30 20244 Gaines Ct Bend Everything must go! Earth Cruiser FX For Sale! Overland vehicle for travel on or off road. Fully self contained less than 41K miles. Recently fully serviced. Located in Redmond OR $215K 541-526- 5164 Winnebago Sunstar 2018 32YE 7300 miles Very good condition 3000.00 Down & Take over Payments 5419076217 Legal Notices 1000 301 Garage Sales - General Moving Giveaway! Everything free! Sat. 4/24. 9-5. 2400 NE Hwy 20, Space 6. 801 Recreation Vehicles 719 Real Estate Wanted Wanted home in NW Bend. Cash buyer no commissions no hassles. Scott (206)227-4614 1001 Legal Notices & Public Notices Legal Notice NOTICE OF BUD- GET COMMITTEE MEETING A public meeting of the Budget Committee of the City of Bend and the Bend Urban Renewal Agency, Deschutes County, State of Oregon, to discuss the bud- get for the biennial budget period July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2023. This meeting will be convened on-line due to COVID-19 concerns. The public is invited to watch on-line at: www.ben- doregon.gov/counci- lagenda. To support Governor Brown’s order for social dis- tancing, the City of Bend Council will conduct this meet- ing virtually through Zoom. The meeting will take place on the 5th day of May, 2021 at 5:00 PM. The pur- pose of the meet- ing is to receive the Budget Message and to distribute the Proposed Budget document. Public 1001 Legal Notices & Public Notices comment on the budget document will be reserved for the budget meetings scheduled for May 11th and 12th . How- ever, a Public Hear- ing will be held at this May 5th meeting to hear and receive Proposed Uses of State Shared Rev- enue funds. Please refer to the agenda (available by 5 p.m. on April 30th at www. b e n d o re g o n . g o v / councilagenda) for instructions to call in to provide comment for the public hearing or send written com- ments to mhodnett@ bendoregon.gov by 4 p.m. on May 5th . The Proposed Budget will be available on the City’s website (Financial Reports | City of Bend (ben- doregon.gov) by 5:00 pm on May 5, 2021 and a copy of the document may be inspected after that time and date at the City of Bend Permit Center on the first floor of City Hall, 710 NW Wall Street, Bend, between the hours of 8:00 AM and 4:00 PM. Listed below are the times and place of additional scheduled Budget Committee meetings. These are public meetings at which any person may appear and dis- cuss the proposed programs with the Budget Committee. Please refer to the agenda (available by 5 p.m. on May 7th at www.bendoregon. g ov / c o u n c i l a g e n - da) for instructions to call in to provide comment for the public hearing or send written com- ments to mhodnett@ bendoregon.gov by 4 p.m. on May 11th . Dates: Tuesday, May 11, 2021 Time: 4:00 PM Wednesday, May 12, 2021 4:00 PM For additional infor- mation, please con- tact: Melissa Hod- nett, 541.693.2152, mhodnett@ben- doregon.gov, City of Bend, 710 NW Wall St., Bend, Oregon 97703. 1001 Legal Notices & Public Notices Legal Notice NOTICE TO INTER- ESTED PERSONS LINDA ELLIOTT has been appointed Per- sonal Representa- tive of the ESTATE OF JEFFERY DALE SNIDER, Deceased, by the Circuit Court, State of Oregon, Deschutes County, under Case Num- ber 21PB02532. All persons having a claim against the estate must present the claim within four months of the first publication date of this notice to Brin- ich & Bertalan, LLP, at 250 NW Franklin Ave, Ste 101, Bend, Oregon 97703, Attn: Lisa N. Bertalan, or they may be barred. Additional informa- tion may be obtained from the court re- cords, the Personal Representative or the following-named attorney for the Per- sonal Representa- tive. DATE OF FIRST PUB- LICATION: April 8, 2021. BRINICH & BERTA- LAN, LLP 250 NW FRANKLIN AVE, STE 101 BEND, OR 97703 541-382-4980 Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com 1001 Legal Notices & Public Notices Legal Notice NOTICE TO INTER- ESTED PERSONS KATHY MARIE KING has been appointed Personal Represen- tative of the ESTATE OF BEATRICE MAE KING, Deceased, by the Circuit Court, State of Oregon, Deschutes County, under Case Num- ber 21PB02724. All persons having a claim against the estate must present the claim within four months of the first publication date of this notice to Brin- ich & Bertalan, LLP, at 250 NW Franklin Ave, Ste 101, Bend, Oregon 97703, ATTN: Megan J. Horner, or they may be barred. Additional information may be obtained from the court records, the Personal Represen- tative or the follow- ing-named attorney for the Personal Representative. DATE OF FIRST PUB- LICATION: April 8, 2021. BRINICH & BERTA- LAN, LLP 250 NW FRANKLIN AVE, STE 101 BEND, OR 97703 541-382-4980 1001 Legal Notices & Public Notices Legal Notice The undersigned has been appointed ad- ministrator of the Estate of DANIEL GILBERT SAND- ERS, Deceased, by the Deschutes County Circuit Court of the State of Ore- gon, probate num- ber 21PB02982. All persons having claims against the estate are required to present the same with proper vouch- ers within four (4) months after the date of first publi- cation to the under- signed or they may be barred. Additional information may be obtained from the court records, the undersigned or the attorney. Date first published: April 22, 2021 /s/ Tracey Marker TRACEY MARKER, Administrator c/o Edward P. Fitch Attorney at Law Fitch & Neary, PC 210 SW 5th Street, Suite 2 Redmond OR 97756 Legal Notice The undersigned has been appointed personal represen- tative of the Estate of ALYCE SMYTH, Deceased, by the Subscribe to The Bulletin The Bulletin Deschutes Coun- To subscribe call 541-385-5800 call 541-385-5800 ty Circuit Court of or go to www.bendbulletin.com the State of Ore- gon, probate num- Legal Notice ber 21PB02001. Legal Notice The undersigned has All persons having The undersigned been appointed claims against the has been appoint- personal represen- estate are required ed personal rep- tative of the Estate to present the same resentative of the of Willa Lucille Esch with proper vouch- Estate of THELMA aka Billie L. Esch, ers within four (4) LAVENE MOXLEY, Deceased, by the months after the Deceased, by the Deschutes Coun- date of first publi- Deschutes Coun- ty Circuit Court of cation to the under- ty Circuit Court of the State of Ore- signed or they may the State of Ore- gon, probate num- be barred. Addition- gon, probate num- ber 21PB02022. al information may ber 21PB02840 All persons having be obtained from the All persons having claims against the court records, the claims against the estate are required undersigned or the estate are required to present the same attorney. to present the same with proper vouch- Date first published: with proper vouch- ers within four (4) April 15, 2021 ers within four (4) months after the Janice Smyth Person- months after the date of first publi- al Representative date of first publi- cation to the under- c/o Collin T. Edmonds cation to the under- signed or they may Attorney at Law signed or they may be barred. Addition- 915 SW Rimrock Way, be barred. Additional al information may Ste. 201 #106 information may be be obtained from the Redmond, OR 97756 obtained from the court records, the court records, the undersigned or the undersigned or the Public Notice attorney. attorney. Bright Wood Corpora- Date first published: Date first published: tion 335 NW Hess St April 8, 2021 /s/ Kar- April 15, 2021. Madras, OR 97741 rie G. Fielder KARIL A. MALLORY Petition number: Karrie G. Fielder, Per- GOT AN OLDER Personal Represen- 96811 sonal Represen- TRUCK, BOAT OR RV? tative Certification date: tative c/o Sean M. Donate it to c/o Steven D. Bryant 04/13/2021 Neary Attorney at Attorney at Law Impact date: Law Fitch & Neary, HERITAGE Bryant Emerson, LLP 02/17/2020 PC 210 SW 5th FOR THE BLIND. PO Box 457 Expiration date: Street, Suite 2 1-844-493-7877 Redmond OR 97756 Redmond OR 97756 02/17/2022 i f i 1001 Legal Notices & Public Notices Notice of Potential Trade Adjustment Assistance for Workers (TAA) Pro- gram Benefit Eligi- bility The Department of La- bor (DOL) certified Bright Wood Cor- poration - Madras Location, includ- ing leased work- ers from Express Services, Inc. and Seek Careers/Staff- ing, Inc. assigned to the Madras site location for the Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA) program. This certifi- cation is the result of Bright Wood Corpo- ration’s production of wood windows, door components, and lineal mouldings, being determined adversely affected by imports of wood mouldings and mill- work products from a foreign country and related to an ITC Decision. If you were laid off due to a lack of work on or after the impact date of 2/17/2020, you may be eligible for the following ben- efits and services under the TAA pro- gram: Re-Employment As- sistance Training (On-the-Job, Classroom, or Ap- prenticeship) Job Search Allowanc- es Relocation Allowances Additional Unemploy- ment Insurance ben- efits in the form of Trade Readjustment Allowances (TRA) Wage subsidy for workers 50 and older Health Coverage Tax Credit (HCTC) Please contact the Central Trade Act Unit (CTAU) at 1- 8 7 7- 6 3 9 - 7 7 0 0 , for instructions on getting benefits and services under the Trade Act program. You have many ways to find out more about the TAA pro- gram. TAA Videos and suc- cess stories: Visit the Oregon Employment department’s You- Tube channel and search for Trade. TAA web page. Visit employment.oregon. gov and type TAA in the search bar. http://www.oregon. g ov / E M P LOY / U n - employment/Pages/ Trade-Act.aspx. Visit our Facebook page and search for CentralTradeActUnit. Vi i h DOL b i 1001 Legal Notices & Public Notices Visit the DOL website at http://www.doleta. gov/tradeact. Unemployment In- surance Benefit Information – For more information on unemployment insurance benefits, or to file a claim vis- it us at http://www. employment.oregon. gov or contact us at 1-877-File4UI (1-877- 345-3484). * Important Deadlines to Receive Benefits and Services * To be eligible for TRA, you must be enrolled in training within 26 weeks after your most recent layoff from the adversely affected employer or 26 weeks after the Trade Act certi- fication, whichever is later. If you can’t get into approved training by these deadlines, a waiver of training may be available to you. The Trade Act pro- gram also offers other re-employment services that have deadlines attached. Job Search allowance – 365 days from the certification date or your most recent qualifying sepa- ration date. If you are in training that takes you beyond the above deadline, you have 182 days from the date you complete training to access this service. Relocation allowance – 425 days from the certification date or your most recent qualifying sepa- ration date. If you are in training that takes you beyond the above deadline, you have 182 days from the date you complete training to access this service. Subscribe to receive information on Trade Act and other topics by visiting https:// p u bl i c . g ov d e l i v- ery.com/accounts/ OREMPDEPT/sub- scriber/new You will need to enter your email address and click “submit”. Our team looks for- ward to serving you with any of your re-employment needs! Add your web address to your ad and readers on BendBulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.