The BulleTin • Wednesday, May 5, 2021 A13 Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021 TODAY THURSDAY TONIGHT HIGH 85° LOW 46° The temperature tying the record from 1966 Not as warm; a passing afternoon shower ALMANAC Yesterday Normal Record 68° 61° 88° in 2017 43° 33° 18° in 1975 PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.57" in 1951 Month to date (normal) 0.03" (0.10") Year to date (normal) 1.40" (4.23") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30.15" SUN, MOON AND PLANETS Rise/Set Today Thu. Sun 5:51am/8:13pm 5:50am/8:15pm Moon 3:44am/2:14pm 4:08am/3:19pm Mercury 6:32am/9:52pm 6:33am/9:57pm Venus 6:22am/9:07pm 6:22am/9:09pm Mars 8:53am/12:32am 8:52am/12:30am Jupiter 3:02am/1:29pm 2:59am/1:26pm Saturn 2:21am/12:07pm 2:18am/12:03pm Uranus 5:42am/7:47pm 5:38am/7:43pm New First Full Last May 11 May 19 May 26 Jun 2 Tonight's sky: Eta Aquarid meteor shower peaks tonight. Source: Jim Todd, OMSI UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 8 8 3 The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index ™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. 0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme. POLLEN COUNT Trees Moderate Source: Oregon Allergy Associates SUNDAY 62° 34° Mostly cloudy and cooler Partly sunny MONDAY 64° 31° Weeds Absent EAST: Partly sunny and warmer Wednes- day. Continued warm Thursday with a mix of clouds and sun. Times of clouds and sun Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 59/49/Tr 71/49/c 57/44/r La Grande 65/47/0.00 76/53/pc 83/42/pc Portland 69/53/0.03 82/53/pc 67/47/r Baker City 64/42/Tr 73/40/pc 81/41/pc La Pine 67/39/0.00 79/41/pc 68/33/pc Prineville 66/45/0.00 87/44/pc 68/41/pc Brookings 72/45/Tr 58/48/c 55/44/sh Medford 77/52/0.00 90/51/pc 71/45/pc Redmond 69/43/Tr 85/43/pc 74/38/pc Roseburg 74/53/0.00 86/46/pc 66/45/sh Burns 68/45/0.00 76/40/pc 81/38/pc Newport 55/50/0.11 60/48/c 55/45/r Eugene 71/54/0.01 80/46/pc 63/45/r North Bend 59/53/Tr 63/49/pc 59/46/r Salem 70/51/0.03 80/49/pc 65/45/r Klamath Falls 69/33/0.00 81/41/pc 72/32/pc Ontario 75/55/0.00 79/46/pc 88/53/c Sisters 67/43/0.00 85/45/pc 70/37/r Lakeview 69/34/0.00 79/40/pc 76/35/s Pendleton 70/50/0.01 83/55/pc 80/44/pc The Dalles 77/52/0.00 82/51/pc 73/47/pc Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, Tr-trace, Yesterday data as of 5 p.m. yesterday NATIONAL WEATHER -10s WATER REPORT As of 7 a.m. yesterday Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie 47630 86% Wickiup 97819 49% Crescent Lake 22684 26% Ochoco Reservoir 11326 26% Prineville 89996 61% River fl ow Station Cu.ft./sec. Deschutes R. below Crane Prairie 80 Deschutes R. below Wickiup 1050 Deschutes R. below Bend 87 Deschutes R. at Benham Falls 1360 Little Deschutes near La Pine 127 Crescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 15 Crooked R. above Prineville Res. 128 Crooked R. below Prineville Res. 245 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 62 Ochoco Ck. below Ochoco Res. 9 NATIONAL Hood River 541-683-1577 -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the In inches as of 5 p.m. yesterday Base 59-93 0-0 0-146 0-0 16-38 T-storms Shown are today’s noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Rain Showers Snow Flurries Ice Warm Front Stationary Front Cold Front Source: OnTheSnow.com Rebuild Continued from A1 The bill sets a deadline of Sept. 30, 2025, for the start of reconstruction in these areas. It allows the square footage of replacement houses to be up to 10% more than the original. Structures do have to comply with building codes in effect in January 2008 or at the time of original construction, which- ever is later. Clem said the bill has an exception for reconstruction in federally designated flood- plains, where the Federal Emer- gency Management Agency can set requirements for prop- erty owners to take part in the national flood insurance pro- gram. It follows up House Bill 3272, which also cleared the House last week and went to the Sen- ate. Under it, people who lost their homes in the 2020 La- bor Day wildfires would get a minimum of two years under insurance policies to repair or rebuild, and other insurance protections. On a percentage basis, Clem said, more homeowners (25%) are in the building permit pro- cess in Detroit than in Para- dise, California, which was de- stroyed in 2018. However, the mid-2020 population estimate Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office A fire burns in Clackamas County the week of Sept. 9. for Detroit — which is east of Salem — was 205, the same as in the 2010 Census. Paradise counted 26,800 people in 2010; it was barely 10% of that total in a 2019 count taken six months after the fire. Nonconforming use reset Senate Bill 405, which goes to the governor, redefines what a nonconforming land use is. For example, a retail store can operate in an area that has be- come a residential neighbor- hood. Under current law, noncon- forming uses can continue in- Yesterday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 72/56/0.00 Akron 69/59/0.41 Albany 59/44/0.21 Albuquerque 72/43/0.00 Anchorage 49/40/0.02 Atlanta 78/64/1.35 Atlantic City 78/58/0.01 Austin 81/66/0.25 Baltimore 87/67/0.08 Billings 63/42/Tr Birmingham 81/72/3.95 Bismarck 63/22/0.00 Boise 70/43/0.00 Boston 55/48/0.68 Bridgeport, CT 64/51/1.14 Buffalo 68/47/0.07 Burlington, VT 57/44/0.01 Caribou, ME 63/30/0.00 Charleston, SC 87/66/0.60 Charlotte 83/64/0.37 Chattanooga 73/71/1.90 Cheyenne 55/31/0.15 Chicago 56/54/0.04 Cincinnati 73/60/1.07 Cleveland 72/57/0.01 Colorado Springs 57/38/Tr Columbia, MO 62/57/0.20 Columbia, SC 89/63/0.30 Columbus, GA 89/64/1.51 Columbus, OH 70/61/0.50 Concord, NH 61/46/0.09 Corpus Christi 88/76/Tr Dallas 77/63/Tr Dayton 68/63/1.03 Denver 61/37/0.06 Des Moines 63/45/0.00 Detroit 64/56/0.06 Duluth 55/37/Tr El Paso 80/52/0.00 Fairbanks 63/41/0.00 Fargo 56/26/0.00 Flagstaff 69/29/0.00 Grand Rapids 55/46/0.23 Green Bay 59/47/0.01 Greensboro 83/64/0.15 Harrisburg 85/57/0.12 Hartford, CT 61/51/0.79 Helena 64/46/0.00 Honolulu 85/71/0.08 Houston 88/74/0.78 Huntsville 75/64/3.26 Indianapolis 62/59/0.13 Jackson, MS 85/73/0.56 Jacksonville 93/68/0.00 Today Thursday Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 78/54/s 82/60/s 53/39/sh 58/41/pc 56/44/r 59/39/pc 82/52/s 82/59/s 48/36/pc 50/40/pc 77/55/t 73/52/s 68/53/t 62/54/s 79/54/s 84/58/s 78/47/t 66/48/s 60/40/pc 72/46/pc 75/51/c 74/50/s 56/31/c 69/35/pc 76/51/pc 86/50/pc 53/49/r 63/47/s 59/49/t 63/49/s 54/39/r 56/40/pc 57/45/r 57/36/pc 52/39/r 49/33/r 84/65/t 78/57/pc 83/54/t 72/50/pc 73/50/pc 72/49/pc 54/33/t 66/44/s 60/47/pc 56/42/sh 62/43/pc 65/40/t 52/39/sh 58/41/t 59/40/pc 72/48/s 68/49/s 64/42/sh 83/59/t 76/52/s 77/57/t 79/54/s 60/41/pc 62/41/c 53/45/r 61/36/pc 83/65/pc 83/65/s 76/57/s 81/58/s 61/42/pc 63/40/t 60/39/t 73/48/s 67/45/pc 63/45/c 57/40/pc 57/36/sh 55/33/c 54/34/pc 90/63/s 91/69/s 55/39/c 58/39/c 56/33/c 63/31/pc 75/38/s 77/39/s 58/40/pc 52/36/sh 59/40/pc 57/38/pc 81/50/t 68/47/pc 71/46/sh 65/45/pc 60/47/t 66/43/pc 67/41/pc 78/51/c 84/74/sh 82/72/c 83/62/s 86/61/s 71/48/c 72/48/s 61/43/pc 63/37/sh 75/55/c 78/53/s 89/69/pc 81/59/t Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Beirut Berlin Bogota Budapest Buenos Aires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary Cancun Dublin Edinburgh Geneva Harare Hong Kong Istanbul Jerusalem Johannesburg Lima Lisbon London Madrid Manila 49/38/sh 78/64/s 67/51/pc 104/73/pc 96/80/t 82/62/s 80/68/s 53/39/sh 66/50/sh 71/45/c 58/47/pc 81/64/s 103/73/s 58/38/c 88/79/s 50/29/sh 50/29/c 56/41/r 76/49/s 85/76/sh 71/54/pc 81/62/pc 69/48/s 69/64/s 72/56/s 54/38/sh 76/47/s 97/82/pc definitely — unless there is an interruption in that use, such as inactivity or abandonment of a property, for one year. The bill resets the one year to start once the governor lifts the state of emergency that caused the in- terruption. For the coronavirus pan- demic, Brown has imposed a state of emergency since March 2020 and renewed her order every 60 days. The latest order is scheduled to end June 28. “It provides a little bit of breathing room to ensure that owners of nonconform- ing properties have the time needed to gather resources and begin construction,” Rep. Pam Marsh, D-Ashland, said. “Affected landowners want nothing more than to be back in place. Rebuilding is a mara- thon, not a sprint.” Marsh and Rep. Jami Cate, R-Lebanon, are from wild- fire-ravaged areas. “We’ve heard testimony from people feeling that their only hope of meeting this require- ment is to choose a quicker option — whether that is pre- designed-building plans that don’t quite fit their needs, or manufactured homes — rather than risk waiting for stick-built structures,” Cate said. “Let’s give wildfire victims the time they need to navigate obstacles to rebuild their lives.” Marsh said a different sec- tion of the bill is intended to help organizations such as the Oregon Country Fair, which was unable in July 2020 to stage its three-day fair on its prop- erty in Veneta, about 15 miles west of Eugene. The fair has announced that its July 2021 event also will be virtual. The bill ensures that the fair can retain a nonconform- ing-use status for its property if it holds an event within one year after the governor lifts her COVID-19 emergency order. e e pwong@pamplinmedia.com 51/48/1.83 82/66/0.00 63/50/0.00 99/73/0.00 97/81/0.02 76/55/0.00 79/66/0.00 58/39/0.14 68/52/0.11 68/32/0.00 63/54/0.02 82/61/0.00 106/73/0.00 52/37/0.12 88/81/0.00 49/41/0.15 50/39/0.31 64/41/0.04 70/46/0.00 86/77/0.06 75/61/0.00 91/66/0.00 69/46/0.00 71/64/0.00 72/55/0.00 57/46/0.16 72/43/0.00 95/81/0.00 Continued from A1 “It just won’t be the same with the numbers, but it’ll still be a great celebration,” Crook said. Jefferson County is currently in high risk, according to the governor’s office. Everyone in attendance will also be socially distanced, and face masks will be required, Crook said. Madras High students voted to have one large ceremony, with fewer visitors, instead of dividing the senior class in half but allowing more visitors. “It wouldn’t be the same if it was split in half,” said Madras High senior Olivia Symons, 18, who will graduate with her twin brother, Grayson. “I don’t mind having limited family, be- cause the only people coming would be my two parents we live with.” Fellow Madras senior Seth Colton, 18, said he was excited to have a classic graduation. “It feels pretty good to ac- tually get to walk across the stage with the kids I’ve gone to school with, from kindergarten until now,” he said. “It’ll be our big last hurrah.” The four school districts in Deschutes and Crook coun- ties are also planning outdoor graduations — but they also all have backup plans in case COVID-19 counts continue to rise locally. The governor’s office lists Deschutes and Crook counties in extreme risk for COVID-19, one step higher than Jefferson County. Seniors at Bend-La Pine’s Yesterday Hi/Lo/Prec. 49/41/0.67 66/49/0.06 58/50/0.04 90/62/0.00 76/61/0.68 66/45/0.00 81/63/0.10 79/61/0.00 80/67/0.33 60/47/Tr 79/65/0.76 89/79/0.00 56/50/0.27 60/41/0.00 80/66/0.62 87/80/0.06 73/52/0.78 75/54/0.75 93/70/0.08 66/51/0.27 64/43/0.00 94/72/0.00 100/66/0.00 61/54/Tr 83/58/0.09 95/67/0.00 72/63/0.11 55/46/0.02 55/50/0.92 87/64/0.31 64/31/0.12 82/43/0.00 90/64/0.21 71/45/0.09 91/57/0.00 62/60/0.13 69/47/0.00 85/71/0.16 73/62/0.00 72/54/0.00 83/56/0.00 70/38/Tr 91/69/Tr 62/50/0.05 62/32/0.00 67/39/0.00 57/54/0.94 92/77/0.00 91/56/0.00 65/53/0.99 84/66/0.52 67/49/0.01 75/37/Tr 95/63/0.00 Today Thursday Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 56/41/c 59/42/sh 66/47/pc 64/42/pc 58/39/pc 52/35/sh 94/71/s 97/70/s 61/40/pc 63/39/c 65/42/pc 66/42/pc 73/52/s 77/49/pc 80/61/pc 77/59/pc 66/47/pc 67/45/sh 62/42/s 58/40/sh 72/53/s 74/50/pc 90/76/s 90/74/t 55/46/s 52/42/sh 55/37/pc 60/39/pc 69/48/pc 69/48/pc 77/69/t 83/64/pc 66/48/t 65/50/s 68/49/t 67/49/s 85/55/t 65/52/s 72/51/s 76/50/s 65/43/c 65/42/pc 93/73/t 91/69/t 100/70/s 100/69/s 64/48/pc 60/40/sh 74/50/t 66/48/s 99/71/s 100/72/s 55/37/sh 58/42/pc 48/44/r 60/41/pc 57/50/t 65/45/pc 85/53/t 71/50/pc 58/34/sh 65/39/pc 85/54/s 82/47/pc 83/49/t 68/45/pc 54/39/r 55/39/pc 92/53/s 83/50/pc 67/52/pc 65/44/sh 70/50/s 86/62/s 83/60/s 86/63/s 73/61/pc 71/61/pc 69/51/s 64/52/pc 80/51/s 71/50/pc 79/42/s 80/52/s 83/66/t 83/57/r 73/53/c 63/46/r 57/35/c 64/39/pc 71/49/pc 81/45/c 67/45/s 64/38/sh 90/77/pc 87/73/t 95/66/s 99/67/s 72/49/s 73/48/pc 77/49/t 66/48/s 65/45/pc 69/47/s 77/50/pc 80/40/pc 97/63/s 97/62/s four larger high schools — Bend, Mountain View, Summit and La Pine — will either have a large ceremony at their re- spective football stadiums, or a one-by-one individual diploma walk like 2020, said district spokesperson Alandra John- son. If Deschutes County is still in extreme risk on May 17, the district will go with the second plan, she said. Redmond and Ridgeview high schools have a similar plan, said spokesperson Sheila Miller. Both school districts tradi- tionally held graduations in- side the expo center at the De- schutes County fairgrounds, but state restrictions on indoor events prompted the schools to host events outdoors. Crook County High School will also cancel its plans for a ceremony at its football sta- dium if the county is still in ex- treme risk, said spokesperson Jason Carr. However, the COVID-19- safe ceremony of a graduate car parade through Prineville, which began last year, will be repeated regardless of the risk level, he said. “It proved to be really, really popular,” Carr said. “It’s some- thing that’s probably going to become a yearly tradition, re- gardless of COVID.” Sisters High School is also planning a ceremony at its football stadium. If case counts are too high by early June, then students will do a drive-in cer- emony at the Sisters Rodeo grounds like last year, said prin- cipal Joe Hosang. e e Reporter: 541-617-7854, jhogan@bendbulletin.com 51/36/sh 80/62/pc 68/53/s 104/71/pc 91/79/t 77/58/s 79/67/pc 53/41/c 64/50/c 60/49/pc 62/48/s 80/64/s 100/73/s 65/44/c 89/77/pc 52/31/pc 51/32/sh 55/47/r 77/49/s 84/76/c 70/56/s 78/60/pc 69/51/c 70/62/pc 72/56/s 52/39/c 79/50/s 96/82/pc Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow Nairobi Nassau New Delhi Osaka Oslo Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Sao Paulo Sapporo Seoul Shanghai Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei City Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw 100/74/0.00 85/58/0.04 55/48/0.04 45/41/0.17 75/61/0.26 86/77/0.00 105/81/0.00 74/50/0.24 46/36/0.13 55/43/0.07 57/48/0.25 79/70/0.00 65/45/0.15 64/41/0.00 81/61/0.00 58/41/0.12 63/50/1.04 75/67/0.49 90/79/0.00 50/36/0.07 58/56/0.97 88/73/0.38 88/67/0.00 75/57/0.00 50/46/0.08 59/48/0.03 70/37/0.02 59/36/0.09 105/76/s 75/55/t 56/42/r 56/47/c 75/59/pc 87/76/s 103/80/pc 68/55/r 42/32/r 55/38/r 57/43/sh 83/71/s 67/55/pc 70/43/s 80/61/s 58/48/sh 62/46/s 79/61/s 89/77/t 40/37/r 65/63/r 79/72/t 82/66/pc 72/64/c 54/37/pc 63/51/c 66/42/r 60/40/r 103/78/s 76/53/t 58/39/s 63/45/c 76/61/t 87/75/s 101/79/pc 76/57/s 47/30/sh 57/37/pc 54/43/r 84/72/s 68/55/s 77/43/s 83/61/t 69/50/s 69/53/s 73/62/pc 88/77/t 42/33/sh 71/64/sh 86/72/pc 80/66/pc 73/63/pc 55/39/c 61/45/r 59/45/sh 55/42/pc C LASSIFIEDS The Bulletin Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com General Merchandise 200 204 Want to Buy or Rent CASH for Wood dress- ers. Dead washers & dryers. 541-420-2218 Small/medium sized rototiller. Should run. 541-318-1233 207 Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows Quality craft consign- ers wanted for 45th Snowflake Boutique, Nov 5-6. Juries will be held on May 15, Aug 14, Sept 4, Oct 9, beginning at 9:30 am at Highland Baptist Church, Red- mond and Oct 18, 6:00 pm. info: http://www. snowflakeboutique.org; Jan 541-350-4888: Tina 541-447-1640 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Door-to-door selling with fast results! It’s the easiest way in the world to sell. Graduation City Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, WI Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa Fe Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfi eld, MO Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington, DC Wichita Yakima Yuma INTERNATIONAL 48 contiguous states) National high: 100° at Palm Springs, CA National low: 14° at Hazen, ND Precipitation: 6.22" at Alabaster, AL SKI REPORT Ski resort New snow Mt. Bachelor 0 Mt. Hood Meadows 0 Timberline Lodge 0 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 Sunny to partly cloudy TRAVEL WEATHER Umatilla 85/51 Rufus Hermiston 80/53 85/47 83/52 Arlington Hillsboro Portland Meacham Lostine 81/52 80/47 82/53 74/50 Wasco 74/50 Enterprise Pendleton The Dalles CENTRAL: Partly Tillamook 72/49 79/50 83/55 Sandy 82/51 McMinnville 71/46 sunny Wednesday; Joseph Heppner La Grande 83/50 Maupin Government 82/47 warm. Fair Wednesday 76/53 71/53 Camp 82/49 Condon 81/51 Union Lincoln City night. Mostly cloudy 75/47 71/46 75/49 Salem 64/49 Spray Thursday; a late-day Granite Warm Springs 80/49 Madras 82/47 Albany 67/49 shower. Newport Baker City 84/43 87/46 Mitchell 60/48 78/46 73/40 WEST: Partly sunny Camp Sherman 79/50 Redmond Corvallis John Unity and warm Wednesday. Yachats 83/45 85/43 75/45 Day Prineville 72/44 Fair Wednesday night. 62/48 Ontario Sisters 87/44 Paulina 75/51 79/46 Cloudy and cooler Florence Eugene 85/45 Bend Brothers 76/42 Vale Thursday; periods 64/49 80/46 85/46 77/42 Sunriver 79/46 of rain. Nyssa 82/43 Hampton Cottage La Pine 79/45 Juntura Oakridge Grove 79/41 76/42 OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay Burns 78/42 84/48 85/45 Fort Rock 64/46 76/40 Riley YESTERDAY Crescent 80/38 76/41 High: 77° 77/40 Bandon Roseburg Christmas Valley Jordan Valley at The Dalles Beaver Frenchglen Silver 60/48 86/46 79/42 73/47 Low: 28° Marsh Lake 76/48 Port Orford 77/39 80/43 at Odell Lake Grants Burns Junction Paisley 61/48 Pass 80/41 Chiloquin 82/47 91/48 Rome Medford 79/43 Gold Beach 90/51 81/41 56/49 Klamath Fields Ashland McDermitt Lakeview Falls Brookings 77/47 88/50 81/41 74/46 58/48 79/40 Seaside 74/50 Cannon Beach 72/50 70° 38° Mostly sunny Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. Astoria 71/49 TUESDAY 68° 35° OREGON WEATHER TEMPERATURE Grasses Absent SATURDAY 55° 30° 72° 36° Partly cloudy Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest. High Low FRIDAY The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809 210 Pets & Supplies AKC Welsh Pembroke Corgi Puppies, looking for their fur-ever homes. Girls and boys. Available now. $2,000 - $2,500 each, includes first puppy shot. Call Bill at 541-591-8585. Red and white, black and white, and tri-color. Chi-pom puppy, 1 boy, parents on site, $450. 541-389-0322 270 Lost & Found 270 Lost & Found CERTIFICATE OF POSTING STATE OF OREGON, City of Bend. In accordance with ORS 98.245 & 98.302 Disposition of unclaimed property; the Property & Evidence Unit for the City of Bend, Oregon Police Department, does certi- fy the posting of the Dis- position of Abandoned Property on the bulletin board of the Deschutes County Library East and West locations/City Hall and listed in the Bulletin Newspaper each month. DISPOSITION OF ABANDONED PROP- ERTY The Bend Police Department has in its physical possession the unclaimed personal property described below. If you have any interest in any of the unclaimed property, you must file a claim with the Bend Police De- partment within 30 days from the date of pub- lication of this notice, or you will lose your interest in that property. Sufficient description of the property to es- tablish with reasonable certainty that the person claiming the property is the owner must be presented. · Bicycles · Cellphones · Electronics/Computers · Jewelry · Miscellaneous person- al items · Tools Please contact: City of Bend Police Depart- ment Property & Evidence, 555 NE 15th St. Bend, OR 97701. 541.312.7945. 282 Community YOU NEED STUFF HAULED? I NEED TO HAUL STUFF! CALL THE WORKIN’ MAN. SPECIALIZ- ING IN PROPERTY CLEANUP AND ITEM REMOVAL. (541)610-2926 Dog Walker Wanted. 3 Lost iPad w/ gray cover. days a week 1/2 hour on Country Club Drive each time. $20 a day 4/28. Call 541-390-6486. 541-300-4934 282 Community Looking to find Jean Davis owner of El Dorado Ranch in 90’s. 541-389-1430 Garage Sales 300 301 Garage Sales - General Estate Sale: all items must go. Kitchen, patio, 2 beds, misc. 3727 SW 30th St. RDM. Fri, Sat, 9-4 Yard Sale Saturday 5/7 Only 9am-4pm. Tools, household, collectibles. 4551 SW Badger Ave Redmond Employment 500 504 Employment Opportunities A local growing trucking company is looking for a well rounded, experi- enced driver to fill the position of LEAD DRIV- ER. This candidate will need to possess excel- lent people skills, have a solid understanding of routine truck mainte- nance, and be self moti- vated. Good Customer Relations ability is a must, as our customers depend on our logistics for the success of their daily operations. This operation is based in Madras, Oregon. We have been in business for 30 years. You will be home every day, and be responsi- ble for the day to day operations of local and regional trucks and their drivers. As a manager, you will be compensated on a salary basis, exceeding normal drivers wages. Please email spirittrans- portation@gmail.com, or call 541-419-1125