THURSDAY • May 13, 2021 Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $3 Baseball: Redmond upsets Bend High SPORTS PULLOUT, A5-8 ts, source for even Central Oregon’s ment news arts & entertain eat p.12 listen p.3 Feast your eyes on a new food truck Bend folk musician Chadd takes a risk 21 MAY 13-19 20 om/go bendbulletin.c watch p.18 Makenzie Whittle reviews ‘Nobody’ « GO! GETS READY FOR PLUS: Where to find LIVE MUSIC FOOD TRUCKS BREWERIES & more Jefferson County becomes 2nd Amendment sanctuary SUMMER EVENTS (CAUTIOUSLY) CAUTION PROCEED WITH We check in with venues as virus restrictions are set to ease h entertainment GO! checks in wit son approaches COVID-19 rules, mer sea sum Amid evolving the as gon l Ore venues in Centra Plus: Fun cautionary tales from the movies (such as: Stop cloning dinosaurs!) Preparing to reopen Deschutes County works to meet new mandates Commissioners said the action is intended to publicly state their position Businesses are on track to fully reopen May 21, but a health official pushing for more vaccinations worries about mixed messages from the state; owner complains of ‘arbitrary’ rules BY SUZANNE ROIG The Bulletin W hile Deschutes County is ahead of many other Ore- gon counties for vaccinating a large swath of the commu- nity, a health official expressed concern Wednesday that new guidelines outlined by Gov. Kate Brown are sending a mes- sage that the pandemic is al- most over. On Tuesday, Brown said that by May 21 counties that can show 65% of residents 16 and older have started the vaccina- tion process and have a plan to reach underserved members of the community will have re- strictions removed. “I believe it’s a low bar, and it’s something we can achieve immediately, but it might send the wrong message that the job is done,” Nahad Sadr-Azodi, De- schutes County Health Services Deschutes director of pub- County’s lic health, said vaccination at the Deschutes rate for ages County Com- 16 and up. mission meeting More Wednesday. “To numbers interrupt the on A2 transmission of the virus, we anticipate that we will need a higher vaccination rate across our community groups.” Deschutes County has vacci- nated 61% of the 16 and older population with at least one dose and 49.1% of the same population are fully vaccinated, according to Oregon Health Authority data. What the new guidelines mean has Zydeco co-owner Cheri Helt scratching her head. The physical-distancing re- quirement that has been a cor- nerstone of the governor’s busi- ness restrictions is what affects Helt’s ability to seat 144 people or far fewer, but that will re- main in effect. “It’s been interesting as a restaurateur to have these arbi- trary, tightly numbered guide- lines,” Helt said. “Twenty-five, 50, 75 or 100%, none of these numbers matter if you have to keep everyone 6 feet away. Bend High wants to name new building after Bob Maxwell BY JACKSON HOGAN The Bulletin Bend’s most famous veteran may get a school building named in his honor — and it would be right on top of where he taught auto repair classes. Chris Reese, principal of Bend High School, unveiled his school’s plan to name its new building the Robert D. Maxwell Center during Tuesday night’s Bend-La Pine School Board meeting. But naming the new building after Maxwell will de- pend on the school board granting an exception to its rule that schools or school buildings can only be named after people who have been dead for at least five years. Maxwell — who died in May 2019 at the age of 98 — was not only a former teacher at Bend High, but he also received the Medal of Honor in 1945 for risking his life to save fellow American soldiers during World War II. At the time of his death, he was the oldest living Medal of Honor recipient. As 23-year-old Army technician fifth grade, Maxwell jumped on a German grenade in Sep- tember 1944. His action was credited with saving the lives of four American soldiers, including a battalion commander. LEFT: A reader board announces the reopening of the Sisters Movie House, which has been closed since March 2020. ABOVE: Drew Kaza, the theater co- owner, opens the front doors. “We’ve had so many false starts, we’re super ex- cited to be having a date that is kind of now etched in stone,” Kaza said. It will be the last of Central Oregon’s movie theaters to begin showing films on the big screen again. Story on Page 16 in today’s magazine. Dean Guernsey/Bulletin photos Warm, some sun High 78, Low 51 Page A12 Editorial Events Horoscope Local/State A8 GO! A7 A2-3 SUN/THU We use recycled newsprint U|xaIICGHy02330rzu Lottery Obituaries Puzzles Sports A6 A4 A10 A5-7 The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper Vol. 117, No. 329, 38 pages, 2 sections Correction In an article headlined ”Gates shut on rural road popular with bikers, hikers,” which appeared Wednesday, May 12, on Page A1, the road number in the final paragraph was described by Phil Chang as incorrect. The right number is 4606. The Bulletin regrets the error. Bentz backs Cheney’s ouster from GOP leadership BY GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau INDEX A11-12 A14 A9-10 A7 See Maxwell / A14 IN GO! » One last movie house is reopening See Reopening / A14 Business Classifieds Comics Dear Abby The Jefferson County Commission approved a resolu- tion Wednesday to make the county a Second Amend- ment sanctuary, a symbolic gesture to support the gun rights of residents. Commissioners said the action is intended to publicly state their position and assure residents the county will not put any resources toward efforts to restrict Second Amendment rights. The goal was not to bypass any ex- isting gun laws, Commissioner Wayne Fording said. The Second Amendment protects the right of U.S. citi- zens to own and carry firearms. “This is a statement,” Fording said. “I personally don’t see where it gives me the right to break any existing laws, whether they be state or federal. I think it’s just a state- ment from your board.” Prior to the unanimous vote Wednesday, the resolu- tion drew public comment from 11 people. Six were in favor and five were opposed. Those against the resolution worried it was a stepping stone to change local laws, similar to an ordinance that passed in Columbia County that prevents county offi- cials from enforcing firearm regulations, such as back- ground checks and registration. See Amendment / A4 61% TODAY’S WEATHER BY KYLE SPURR The Bulletin Oregon’s lone Republican in Congress said his party’s House caucus will be better focused now that it has removed an outspoken critic of former President Donald Trump from its leadership. U.S. Rep. Cliff Bentz, R-On- tario, declined to respond to a di- rect question of whether he voted Wednesday to remove U.S. Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., as the GOP House Conference chair. But in a statement after the cau- cus meeting where a voice vote re- moved Cheney, Bentz praised the result as positive for Republicans in the narrow 219 -212 minority in the House. “If we are to win back the House in 2022, the Republican Caucus must be unified, and we must focus on the real problems the country is facing,” Bentz said in a statement. It was a reversal of Bentz’s ear- lier stance backing Cheney follow- ing her vote to impeach Trump for “incitement to insurrection” by en- couraging the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol that left five dead. A longtime Republican state law- maker from Ontario, Bentz was elected in November 2020 to rep- resent Oregon’s 2nd Congressio- nal District, which takes in most of Eastern, Central and parts of South- western Oregon. See GOP / A14 Rep. Cliff Bentz, Oregon’s sole Republican congressman, says the removal of Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., from House Republican leadership is a positive step for the party.