SATURDAY • May 22, 2021 • Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $1.50 COMING SUNDAY: THE BULLETIN’S GOLF GUIDE Prineville Railway restores track for new business Virus COVID-19 in Central Oregon remains a threat At St. Charles, the number of patients needing a ventilator is about as high as during a surge in December, January BY SUZANNE ROIG The Bulletin Crews move rail cars Thursday onto a section of the repaired track near Lamonta Road in Prineville. Ryan Brennecke/ Bulletin photos Crews finished restoration this week on $200,000 in repairs BY KYLE SPURR • The Bulletin to allow access for a new industrial business park that will need railcar deliveries. The railway is partnering with Prineville Campus, a development company that is transforming the old Woodgrain Manufacturing site into a space for industrial businesses. The city and company invested about $200,000 in repairs to the track from Lamonta Road to the Prineville Campus on the corner of N. Main Street and Peters Road. City-hired crews finished the work this week and the section is expected to open to train cars by June 1. The crews replaced 1,200 rail ties, re- surfaced the track with gravel and replaced the gates and arms at one of the crossings. Railway Manager Matt Wiederholt said the upgrades will allow the track to accommodate a variety of freight, such as lumber and ethanol. “The track will be in a condition that we won’t have any kind of weight restrictions or commodity restrictions,” Wiederholt said. “It’s going to be a great op- portunity for Prineville Campus because they won’t have any restrictions on what goes in there.” Charles Bauman, the chief operating officer for Prineville Campus, said his partners Bill Parris, Rutger Parris and Trygve Duryea negotiated with the city railroad over the past year to bring rail traffic to the old mill site. Railroad tracks lead from the former Woodgrain Manufacturing site and cross N. Main Street in Prineville. See Railway / A4 See COVID-19 / A7 COVID-19 | School relief With a COVID-19 shot, you also get a shot at $1M Survey finds Oregonians are split Participants divided on how to spend virus relief money BY JACKSON HOGAN The Bulletin Politically, Oregon has a clear divide between its ur- ban and rural residents. This is particularly true in Central TODAY’S WEATHER Oregon, where Bend is a dark blue splotch in a sea of red. A statewide survey con- ducted in early May shows Oregonians have a similar ur- ban/rural split on how school districts should spend mil- lions of COVID-19 relief dol- lars from three aid packages passed by U.S. Congress since the spring of 2020. There are also divides in Sun and clouds High 60, Low 40 Page A8 INDEX what young and elderly Ore- gonians prioritize for educa- tion funding. The survey was conducted by the nonprofit, nonparti- san polling organization Ore- gon Values and Beliefs Center from May 4-10, according to a press release from the group. When asked if state and lo- cal school leaders should em- phasize spending COVID-19 Business Classifieds Comics A5-6 B7-8 B5-6 Dear Abby Editorial Horoscope A7 B4 A7 COVID-19 — a strategy meant to address the dramatically de- creasing numbers of residents inoculated each day. All residents 18 and older who’ve received at least one shot of COVID-19 vaccine by June 27 will be entered into the “Take Your Shot Oregon” lottery, which will be held on June 28. Lottery prizes are intended to boost state vaccination rate relief dollars to help low-in- come students and students of color, 54% of all respon- dents answered “yes,” com- pared to 28% who said “no” and 18% who were unde- cided. About 60% of urban and suburban Oregonians each answered “yes,” compared to only 42% of rural residents. BY AIMEE GREEN The Oregonian Gov. Kate Brown announced Friday lottery prizes ranging from $10,000 to $1 million for Oregonians vaccinated against See Prize / A4 See Relief / A7 Local/State Lottery Obituaries A2-3, 7 B2 A6 Puzzles Sports B6 B1-3 The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Vol. 117, No. 329, 16 pages, 2 sections U|xaIICGHy02329lz[ HOME & GARDEN SECTION INSPIRING IDEAS FOR HOME IMPROVEMENT Our biannual Home & Garden sections highlight ideas and suggestions from experts on landscaping, gardening, home projects and decorating ideas. In The Bulletin Sunday, May 23. DAILY P rineville Railway, the oldest city-owned rail line in the nation, is reopening a dormant 3,800-foot section of track On the first day Deschutes County moved into the lower risk category, opening up bars and restaurants to more people, St. Charles Bend reported a surge of younger patients coming in sicker with COVID-19. May is turning out to be the third most deadliest month for COVID-19 since the start of the pandemic, coming in behind the winter surge that occurred in December and January, said Mike Johnson, St. Charles Health System senior data scientist. “I don’t know one “What we see county official or one worker who here is different hospital isn’t horrified by going from what we’re down to low risk,” said Dr. Cynthia Maree, St. seeing in the rest Charles Health System medical director of in- of the nation. fection prevention ser- We’re not out of vices. a real scary real- the woods yet.’” ity “It’s for us. We don’t feel like we’re past this even — Lisa Goodman, though the rest of the St. Charles nation feels that way. Health System We’re in the middle of spokeswoman a surge, and we’re wor- ried about more people getting sick.” The hospital reported it has 13.6% of the state’s hospitalized patients for COVID-19, yet Central Oregon only represents 5.9% of the state’s overall population. On Friday, there were 41 COVID-19 patients, of which nine were in the intensive care unit with eight people on a ventilator, according to the St. Charles Bend website. Statewide the Oregon Health Authority reported 285 people were hospitalized for COVID-19.