A4 The BulleTin • Friday, april 23, 2021 Three bills honoring veterans headed to House for final vote Oregon Capital Bureau An Oregon House com- mittee approved a trio of bills Thursday that honor military veterans. Retired Army Lt. Col. Dick Tobiason of the Bend Heroes Foundation testified in the vir- tual hearing in support of the bills. “We appreciate your work,” Rep. Paul Evans, D-Monmouth, chair of the House Committee on Veterans and Emergency Management, told Tobiason. The bills have all passed the Senate and after the House committee approval go to the House floor for final passage, then to Gov. Kate Brown to sign into law. Senate Bill 790 approves naming the Oregon portion of U.S. Highway 30 as the Oregon Veterans Memorial Highway. The highway runs from Astoria to Portland, then west through Hermiston, Pendleton, La Grande and Baker City before leaving the state near Ontario on the Idaho border. Senate Bill 319 would dedi- cate an area in the State Capitol State Park for a Vietnam War memorial to be paid for and built using funds from a non- profit corporation. Senate Bill 441 modifies the criteria for erecting roadside memorial signs for deceased veterans to include former pris- oners of war and missing in action previously unaccounted for, but whose remains have been discovered in recent years. Llerandi Douglass School board Continued from A1 The virtual forum was hosted by local nonpartisan or- ganizations City Club of Cen- tral Oregon and the League of Women Voters of Deschutes County. It was recorded Tues- day evening and posted on City Club’s website Thursday. When the candidates were asked how they would use fed- eral COVID-19 money to help the district, the candidates of- fered many options. LeGrand said the funds should be used to help with the transition out of distance learning, by improving school ventilation systems and buy- ing more personal protective equipment. He also said new posi- tions created with funding — whether those are new federal funds or state money from the voter-passed Student Suc- cess Act — should come with enough staff to help them achieve their goals. “Don’t load it down on one person,” LeGrand said. “If you have a director of diversity, don’t give that person (all the) responsibility with no staff.” Douglass said the school board plans to use a lot of the federal money to fund sum- mer programs to help stu- dents who struggled with on- line schooling. But the federal funds Bend-La Pine has re- ceived so far — about $8 mil- lion, she said — won’t make a huge impact, she said. “It’s great, and we’ll use it wisely, (but) it is not nearly enough to make up for a year of lost learning,” Douglass said. Llerandi — who is also the finance coordinator for edu- cation nonprofits Better To- gether and Early Learning Hub of Central Oregon — agreed that the $8 million will be used up quickly. But she’s skilled in working with tight budgets, she said. “As a single parent, my added layer of experience hav- ing to work on shoestring bud- gets counts for more than you can imagine,” Llerandi said. Llerandi wasn’t the only candidate to say life and ca- reer experience would benefit Bend-La Pine Schools. Olson touted her de- cades-long career in the ed- ucation world, from being an educational consultant for companies like Pearson to serving as an elementary school principal and adminis- trator in multiple school dis- LeGrand tricts, including Salem-Keizer. “I have seen lots of questions and lots of solutions,” she said. As the lone incumbent, serv- ing on the board since 2017, Douglass said she would pro- vide stability as the COVID-19 pandemic continues and a new superintendent, Steve Cook, takes charge in July. “I’m really uniquely qual- ified to continue to provide strong and consistent, but also transformative, leadership at this time,” she said. Raised by a single parent in a small North Carolina town, LeGrand used his military ca- reer to pay for college. Now, as a college and career success coach at Central Oregon Com- munity College, he works hard to help other young adults re- alize their goals, and can do the same at Bend-La Pine, he said. “I’m a small town kid who understood that hard work is going to get you somewhere,” LeGrand said. “Now, I can hand my experiences over to some student, or many stu- dents, who need that knowl- edge.” All four candidates also agreed that if elected, they likely wouldn’t mandate school staff to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. “I believe in fact-based evi- dence. I believe in the science,” Llerandi said. “But I also be- lieve it is the responsibility of Olson each household parent to make that decision.” The candidates’ four oppo- nents, who did not participate in the forum, were briefly men- tioned at the virtual event. When asked what differen- tiates the candidates from their opponents, both Douglass and Llerandi pointed out that their challengers — Maria Lo- pez-Dauenhauer and Jon Haff- ner, respectively — seemed to be primarily focused on re- opening schools. Bend-La Pine Schools began bringing back students in-per- son in late January. “Being a one-issue can- didate is not healthy for a board any time, especially not now, in the middle of a crisis, and with a new superinten- dent,” Douglass said of Lo- pez-Dauenhauer. LeGrand noted that he hadn’t seen his opponent, Wendy Imel, engaged in the Bend community, and wel- comed her to join him. LeG- rand is a board member of The Father’s Group, a Bend educa- tional nonprofit led by Black fathers. “We’re all fighting hard for change, so let’s do it together,” LeGrand said. Olson said she did not know much about her opponent, Gregg Henton. e e Reporter: 541-617-7854, jhogan@bendbulletin.com We hear you. We’re dedicated to helping you! Contact your local DISH Authorized Retailer today! Juniper Satellite 410 3474 410 3474 (541) 410-3474 410 3474 410 3474 635 SW Highland Ave., Redmond, OR junipersatellite.com Attention Parents of 2021 Grads! Help make some memories! The Bulletin is publishing a special Class of 2021 Graduation section on May 30 to celebrate graduating Central Oregon high school students. Enter a congratulatory message or a short biography along with a photo for just $25. Your messages will be grouped together by school and published in full color. Call The Bulletin Advertising Dept. for more information. 541-385-5809 Advertising deadline: Monday, May 17 Skyline Continued from A1 At least half of those units will be reserved for those who make 80% of the area median income or less — meaning about $52,070 or less, accord- ing to U.S. Census data. Skyline Village will be lo- cated just northeast of Red- mond’s current city limits, between NE 13th Street, NE 17th Street, NE Kingwood Avenue and NE Negus Way. The development will feature a variety of housing types, from town homes to three- story apartment buildings to cottage housing — which are single-family houses spaced closely together. In late 2019, Deschutes County agreed to donate the 40 acres needed for Skyline Village to the city of Red- mond. At the April 13 Redmond City Council meeting, coun- cilors unanimously approved a bundle of four applications meant to move the develop- ment of Skyline Village for- ward. The City Council first voted to rezone the 40 acres for mixed-use and residential use. Previously, it was zoned for exclusive farm use. Then, the council agreed to add the 40 acres to Red- mond’s urban growth bound- J&J Continued from A1 Until the investigation is complete, which health offi- cials predict will take a week or more, it’s not certain that her death is related to the vac- cine, the agency said. Federal and state agencies paused the J&J vaccine rollout on April 13 due to concerns about blood clots. “For most people that re- ceived the (J&J) vaccine, we are nearing the end of that time of where they need to be monitoring for symp- toms,” Sharief said. The CDC warned that if people have symptoms within three weeks ary. This makes it easier for the city to annex the land, which should happen later in 2021, said John Roberts, dep- uty city manager. The council also parti- tioned the 40 acres, to sep- arate it from the larger sur- rounding parcel. This was a requirement of the county’s land donation, according to city documents. Finally, the City Council approved a master develop- ment plan for Skyline Village. This dictates what parts of the 40 acres will be used for spe- cific purposes, Roberts said. The council’s next two steps are to wait until De- schutes County amends its comprehensive land use plan to accommodate Skyline Vil- lage, and to hire a master de- veloper, Roberts said. The county is expected to make that move soon, and the city hopes to solicit a developer starting early this summer, he said. But even if everything goes perfectly smoothly, construc- tion won’t start until early summer 2022, Roberts said. And even that might be a stretch. “I’d say early next summer … but that’s an ambitious timeline,” he said. Katherine Austin, a Bend- based architect who sits on Bend’s affordable housing committee, said the slow timeline for Skyline Village isn’t surprising. That’s mostly due to the difficulty in find- ing the necessary funding, so the housing can actually be affordable. “What people have to re- alize, it’s going to take a long time for this to actually de- velop,” Austin said. “It’s a huge project, and there’s only so much subsidy available for affordable housing in one year.” Austin also had concerns about Skyline Village being located far away from cen- tral Redmond. Although she acknowledged there likely wasn’t a better place to put it, putting affordable housing deep in the sprawl isn’t the best solution, she said. “When you put affordable housing out on the periphery, it requires people to own cars to have people get to jobs, get food,” Austin said. “The more somebody needs a car, the less affordable the housing is.” Still, Austin acknowledged that Central Oregon badly needs more affordable hous- ing. “I think it’s a very helpful thing,” she said of Skyline Vil- lage. “The preference would be more in-town, but this is the next best thing.” after receiving the vaccine they should contact their health care provider. Federal officials already were examining six reports of the unusual clots, including a death, out of more 8 million Americans given the one- dose vaccination so far. The CDC also told Texas health authorities Thursday that a woman in that state was hospitalized with possi- ble blood clots associated with J&J vaccine recipients. A government advisory committee on vaccines is ex- pected to meet Friday and could make a recommenda- tion soon after on whether and how to resume use of the J&J vaccine. Sharief said whether Ore- gon resumes distribution of the J&J vaccine will be a “re- flection” of the committee’s decision. “We have the utmost confi- dence that it would be a deci- sion made with thorough in- vestigation and consideration of the potential benefits and risks, in relation to each other, as we go through this pan- demic,” Sharief said. Oregon health officials also announced 989 new or pre- sumptive COVID-19 cases Wednesday, continuing the troubling upward trajectory seen across the state in recent weeks. e e Reporter: 541-617-7854, jhogan@bendbulletin.com