The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, June 03, 2021, Page 14, Image 14

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    A14 The BulleTin • Thursday, June 3, 2021
OREGON LEGISLATURE
happening
in Salem
| More
coverage
on Al,
OREGON
LEGISLATURE | What's
| What’s
happening
in Salem
| More
coverage
on A13
A1, A13
Advocates
hopeful
climate bill
can pass
‘With this bill ...
we can learn from another
time and dedicate
to changing the future’
Associated Press
Oregon a step closer to making Juneteenth a holiday
BY PETER WONG
Oregon Capital Bureau
Oregon is one step closer to
observing the proclamation of
the end of slavery in the United
States as a state holiday.
The Senate voted 28-0 on
Tuesday to make June 19 Ore-
gon’s 10th official state holiday
starting in 2022.
Most states have given it of-
ficial recognition, but few have
made it a legal holiday.
It’s popularly known as “June-
teenth,” which commemorates
June 19, 1865, when the news
of the Emancipation Procla-
mation was brought to Galves-
ton, Texas. Two months earlier,
Confederate forces under Gen.
Robert E. Lee surrendered to the
Union Army led by Gen. U.S.
Grant at Appomattox Court-
house in McLean, Virginia, end-
ing the Civil War.
“That is basic historic infor-
mation, but it does not do really
justice to the emotions involved
here,” Sen. Lew Frederick, a
Democrat from Portland and
one of three Black senators, said
in presenting the bill. “Some-
times a picture is needed.”
State Sen. Lew Frederick today.
Pamplin Media Group
but joined the Union Army as
a boy as it marched into Mis-
sissippi. Frederick said his fore-
bears were likely slaves owned
by Jefferson Davis, a Mississippi
plantation owner who was pres-
ident of the Confederacy, and
also a former U.S. secretary of
war and U.S. senator.
But when the photo was
taken in 1954, Johnson, then
103, is standing next to one of
his daughters — Frederick’s
grandmother — Frederick’s par-
ents, and Frederick’s sister Carla.
Lew, then only 3, was in front.
(His brother David was born a
few months later.) It was before
a processional at Southern Uni-
versity, a historically Black col-
lege in Louisiana, where Freder-
ick’s father was a young biology
professor.
“It was a proud day for him,”
Frederick recalled. He paused
and his voice cracked, “A family
going from slaves in Mississippi
to university biology professor.”
When the Civil War ended
and Blacks learned they were
free — the 1863 Emancipa-
Four photos, four generations
Frederick proceeded to do
just that in four family photos —
enlarged for the presentation —
that cover four generations and
tell much of the story of Black
America from the Civil War to
today.
The first depicted his
great-grandfather, Robert John-
son, who was born into slavery,
tion Proclamation by President
Abraham Lincoln had freed
slaves in the 11 states of the
Confederacy — Frederick said
his forebears had two reactions.
“The family stories say joy
was the first emotion, next,
skepticism,” he said. “Active and
often deadly reactions followed
against freed African Americans
by whites fearful they might be
treated the way they had treated
their former slaves. But hope
stood at the center of a possible
future for my family.”
The second photo depicts his
grandparents in Hayti, Missouri,
where they were sharecroppers
and teachers, plus his father,
four siblings and a neighbor.
Frederick said they left Missis-
sippi because of restrictions on
teaching Black children to read.
“They moved to Missouri,
where they could get books,” he
said. “Of course, the books were
the books that had been thrown
out by the white schools, but
they were books. The hope con-
tinues to this day, and so does
the skepticism. The two dance
together in our time.”
The third photo depicts Fred-
erick as a boy marching with his
mother, his sister and others in
Atlanta, most likely in the 1960s.
He is holding a sign protest-
ing the jailing of Ashton Jones,
a white Quaker minister who
was a close associate of the Rev.
Martin Luther King Jr., the civil
rights leader.
The fourth photo is more
recent. It depicts Michelle
Obama with Frederick’s par-
Courtesy photo/Frederick family
Lew Frederick as a child (bottom, front) is surrounded by his mother,
father, baby sister, grandmother and great-grandfather in Louisiana in
1954. His great-grandfather Robert Johnson, a former slave emanci-
pated by Abraham Lincoln, sent eight children to college and watched
them graduate. His grandmother started what was to become the Mis-
souri Head Start and his father was a noted botanist.
ents in 2015, when she became
the second presidential spouse
— and the spouse of the first
Black president — to speak at
a commencement ceremony at
Tuskegee University, another
historically Black college in Al-
abama. The first was Eleanor
Roosevelt back in 1941, when it
was Tuskegee Institute, and she
flew with what became the Tus-
kegee Airmen. Frederick’s father
was present at both ceremonies,
74 years apart.
Frederick, a communications
consultant and a former re-
porter, said that photo hangs in
his parents’ bedroom today.
“It’s what keeps me going,” he
said. “That sense of hope keeps
the community going as well,
despite the fact there are folks
who want to return to the deep
Confederacy in whatever way
they can.”
A year ago, after the murder
of George Floyd, the city of Port-
land and Multnomah County
declared June 19 a holiday. Gov.
Kate Brown said then she would
seek to make June 19 a legal hol-
iday; HB 2168 was introduced at
her request.
“With this bill, this proclama-
tion, we can learn from another
time and dedicate to changing
the future in real time without
waiting for the news of equality
to arrive on horseback,” Freder-
ick said. “I recognize the efforts
to resisting the arc of history
bending toward justice will al-
ways be there. But this new hol-
iday recognizes that the people
of Oregon, despite our past, can
take the veil of ignorance away
and each year celebrate hope on
Juneteenth. It is a marker to read
and remember.”
e e
pwong@pamplinmedia.com
SALEM — Oregon would
adopt one of the country’s
most ambitious timelines for
eliminating carbon dioxide
emissions from its power
grid under a bill being con-
sidered by the Legislature
this year.
House Bill 2021 — a
product of negotiations be-
tween the state’s largest util-
ities, environmental justice
groups, renewable energy
boosters and more — ad-
vanced out of one House
committee late last month. It
must now navigate the state
budgeting process before fi-
nal votes in the House and
Senate.
The bill sets a timetable by
which Oregon’s two major
power companies, Portland
General Electric and Pacific
Power, must eliminate emis-
sions associated with the
electricity they provide. Five
“electricity service suppli-
ers” in the state also would
face regulation, though their
emissions are tiny compared
to the big utilities.
At least 17 other states
and the District of Colum-
bia have already adopted
similar goals, according to
the Clean Energy States Al-
liance.
But advocates say Ore-
gon’s plan stands out in both
approach and timeline. The
bill requires PGE and Pacific
Power to submit plans to re-
duce emissions by 80% from
a baseline amount by 2030,
90% by 2035, and com-
pletely eliminate emissions
by 2040.
That end date is notably
ambitious. It’s a nearer dead-
line than nearly every other
state that has adopted a clean
power plan, including Wash-
ington and California.
The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com
General
Merchandise
2ÜD
207
Holiday Bazaar
& Craft Shows
Patchwork Antiques
Summer Sale
Fri. 06/4 9am-6pm,
Sat. 06/05 9am-6pm &
Sun., 06/06 9am-3pm.
797 C Ave.,
Terrebonne 97760
Rustic finds, antiques &
vintage, signs, plants,
furniture, yard art,
baked goods, honey
& much more!
541-419-8637
210
Pets & Supplies
Bicycles & Accessories
Garage Sales - General
Shimano 3spd Auto Grt
Cond
K2 T9 Ladies $350.00
OBO
5412796537
Large gun safe, air
compressor, chainsaw,
horse feeders, fencing,
more antiques. Fri-Sat
8-4 4575 NW Pershall
Way, Redmond
\j*n —
—
Building Materials
Have Gravel Will Travel
Abbas Construction
Top Soil/Excavation
Rock Products
541-548-6812
282 |-
Communlty
YOU NEED STUFF
HAULED? I NEED
TO HAUL STUFF!
CALL THE WORKIN’
MAN. SPECIALIZ­
ING IN PROPERTY
CLEANUP AND
ITEM REMOVAL.
(541)610-2926
Garage
Sales
AKC Chocolate Lab
Puppies, 4 males
available. Dewclaws
removed, 1 st shots,
dewormed and micro­
chipped. Available June
4th. S1000. Call/Text
541-419-9770 or 425-
492-6408.
GOT AN OLDER
TRUCK, BOAT OR RV?
Donate it to
HERITAGE
FOR THE BLIND.
1-844-493-7877
Free kittens. 2 black and
white & 1 tiger. 4 weeks
old. Will be ready to go
June 13th. Happy &
healthy. Free play yard
for small dogs or cats.
541-241-7141
222
Coins & Stamps
Private collector buying
postage stamp albums
& collections, world­
wide and U.S. 573-286-
4343 (local, cell phone)
3f0
301 |-
Garage Sales - General
ESTATE SALE: Fur­
niture, Collectables,
Household items,
Clothing. Everything
must go. Fri & Sat
8AM -3PM. 1515
NW Fir Ave #67
Redmond
Garage sale June 5-6,
8-4. At 63207 Black
Powder Ln. Bend. All
must go: antiques,
power tools, collectibles/
housewares, camping/
fishing gear, clothes
and more.
Estate Sale June
4th-5th 8-3. 23465
Bear Creek Rd, Bend
household, camping,
quilting supplies, tools,
yard art, misc. Cash &
Cards accepted!
Mary and Trudy, 12th
annual Stampin Up craft
garage sale, Follow
signs off of hwy 126
and Gist Rd. 6/4-6Z5,
9-3pm.
Garage Sale Sat 6/5
9-3. Canoe, bbq, jacks,
tools & more. 2415 NW
Aubrey Rd. Bend
Garage Sale Fri-Sun
9am-4pm 52805 Way
Side Loop, La Pine
Employment Opportunities
Exciting outdoor job
fighting forest fires
includes adventure,
travel, new friend­
ships that will last
a lifetime, and don't
forget the $$$ OT
Apply www.patrick-
fire.net or in person
1199 NE Hemlock,
Redmond EOE
The Mitchell School
District has the follow­
ing openings for the
2021-2022 school year
beginning in August:
• Middle School Teacher
• Social Studies/PE/
Health Teacher
• Head Cook
• CDL Certified Bus
Drivers
• Substitutes for teach­
ers and other staff
Contact 541-462-3311
504
for more information or
Employment Opportunities go to our employment
page at
http://www.mitchell.k12.
Distribution worker
or.us/employment
Opportunity to work
part-time (20-25
hours per week) in
our packaging and
distributing depart­
ment at The Bulletin
in Bend, Ore. Hours
are typically evening
hours, with Sunday
and/or Thursday
off. Duties include
using machines to
place inserts into the
newspaper, labeling
newspapers and
moving the papers
from the press. Must
be able to regularly
lift 40# in a fast
paced environment.
Mechanical aptitude
helpful and the abil­
ity to work well with
others is required.
Pre-employment
drug test required.
To apply, please go
here: https://www.
applicantpro.com/
openings/eomedia-
group/jobs/1799776-
490973
Recreation
& Sports
804
Motorhomes. 5th Wheels,
Travel Trailers
2017 Thor Four Winds
Class C. 28 feet, 35k
miles. Ford E-450 gas
engine. Walkaround
bed, 2 TVs, excellent
condition. Sleeps up to
8. $72k OBO. 541-788-
0231.
813
Utility Trailers
24-foot flat-bed Goose­
neck trailer. 12 tons.
$5000. 541-480-1353.
1001
Legal Notices &
Public Notices
713
Legal Notice
LEGAL NOTICE TO
INTERESTED PER­
SONS: Jason M.
Burger has been
View lot on Awbrey
appointed
Person­
Butte, with topo,
al
Representative
eng. & plans- .26
of the Estate of
acres 1843 NW Iowa
Linda Ann Burger,
$429,000(541)410-
Deceased, by the
3386
Deschutes
Coun­
ty Circuit, State of
River lot Spring River,
Oregon, Case No.
dock, well, power, sep­
21PB04170. All per­
tic approval. $395,000
sons having claims
(541)410-3386
against the estate
must
submit
the
Call The Bulletin At
claims, with vouch­
541 - 385-5809
ers attached, to the
Place Your Ad or E-Mail
Personal Represen­
tative at C/O McCord
At: www.bendbulletin.com
Lots & Acreage
for Sale
1001
1001
1001
Legal Notices &
Public Notices
Legal Notices &
Public Notices
Legal Notices &
Public Notices
Legal Notices &
Public Notices
& Hemphill, LLC, 65
NW Greeley Ave.,
Bend, OR 97703,
within four months
after May 27, 2021,
which is the date
of first publication
of this notice, or
the claims may be
barred.
Additional
information may be
obtained from the
court, the Personal
Representative,
or
the attorney for the
Personal Represen­
tative: Michael B.
McCord.
Oregon, Deschutes
County, Case No.
21PB03935.
All
persons
having
claims against the
estate are required
to present them, with
vouchers
attached,
to the PR at 204 SE
Miller Ave, Bend,
OR 97702, within
four months after the
date of June 3, 2021,
the first publication
of this notice, or the
claim may be barred.
Additional informa­
tion may be obtained
from the records of
the court, the PR,
or the lawyer for the
PR, Patricia Nelson.
21PB04511. All per­
sons having claims
against the estate
are
required
to
present them, with
vouchers
attached,
to the PR at 204 SE
Miller Ave, Bend,
OR 97702, within
four months after the
date of June 3,2021,
the first publication
of this notice, or the
claim may be barred.
Additional informa­
tion may be obtained
from the records of
the court, the PR,
or the lawyer for the
PR, Patricia Nelson.
Legal Notice
The undersigned has
been appointed per­
sonal
representa­
tive of the Estate of
JAMES
EDWARD
WOODS, Deceased,
by the Deschutes
County Circuit Court
of the State of Ore­
gon, probate num­
ber
21PB04173.
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. Addition­
al information may
be obtained from the
court records, the
undersigned or the
attorney.
Date first published:
May 27, 2021 /s/
Kimberly Jean Taylor
Kimberly Jean Taylor,
Personal Represen­
tative do Edward
P. Fitch Attorney at
Law Fitch & Neary,
PC 210 SW 5th
Street, Suite 2 Red­
mond OR 97756
Legal Notice
NOTICE TO INTER­
ESTED PERSONS
Margo Mangel has
been
appointed
Personal Represen­
tative (PR) of the
estate of Cather­
ine Ann Sigler, de­
ceased, by the Cir­
cuit Court, State of
Legal Notice
NOTICE TO INTER­
ESTED PERSONS
Catherine Swift has
been
appointed
Personal
Repre­
sentative (PR) of
the estate of Bert
H. Swift, deceased,
by
the
Circuit
Court, State of Or­
egon,
Deschutes
County, Case No.
21PB04056. All per­
sons having claims
against the estate
are
required
to
present them, with
vouchers
attached,
to the PR at 204 SE
Miller Ave, Bend,
OR 97702, within
four months after the
date of June 3,2021,
the first publication
of this notice, or the
claim may be barred.
Additional informa­
tion may be obtained
from the records of
the court, the PR,
or the lawyer for the
PR, Patricia Nelson.
Legal Notice
NOTICE TO INTER­
ESTED PERSONS
Deberah Court has
been
appointed
Personal
Repre­
sentative (PR) of
the estate of Daniel
Morris Komaiko, de­
ceased, by the Cir­
cuit Court, State of
Oregon, Deschutes
County, Case No.
Legal Notice
PURSUANT TO ORS
CHAPTER 87 No­
tice is hereby giv­
en that the follow­
ing vehicle will be
sold, for cash to
the
highest
bid­
der, on 06/16/2021.
The sale will be
held at 10:00am by
DALE THE MOBILE
MECHANIC
1097
NE 11TH #8 RED­
MOND, OR 1987
BOUNDER
28FT
MH VIN= 1GBK-
P37W6H3331
812
Amount
due
on
lien $3405.00 Re­
puted
owner(s)
THEODORE
ED­
WARD MILLER
Public Notice
NOTICE OF BUDGET
COMMITTEE
MEETING
A public meeting of the
Budget
Committee
of the Terrebonne
Domestic
Water
District,
Deschutes
County, State of Or­
egon, to discuss the
budget for the fiscal
year July 1, 2021 to
June 30, 2022, will
be held via Zoom
meeting. The meet­
ings will take place
on Tuesday, June
8th, 2021 at 6:00 pm
and Tuesday, June
15th, 2021 at 6:00
pm.
June
8th
meet­
ing
link-
https://
us02web.zoom.us/
j/85139882174?p-
wd=WmtXY 1 RFZ-
Vp3aGdFL1dLWHF-
3NG9IZz09
June
15th meet­
ing
link- https://
us02web.zoom.us/
j/84232235598?p-
wd=VU40ZjByRzZ-
wR2pBSUxFa3R-
EYINNZz09
The purpose of the
meeting is to receive
the budget message
and to receive com­
ment from the public
on the budget. This
is a public meeting
where deliberation of
the Budget Commit­
tee will take place.
Any person may ap­
pear at the meeting
and discuss the pro­
posed programs with
the Budget Commit­
tee. A copy of the
budget
document
may be inspected or
obtained on or after
May 31th, 2021 at
District Office, be­
tween the hours of
8:00 am and 5:00
pm.
Just bought a new boat?
Sell your old one in the
classifieds! Ask about our
Super Seller rates!
541-385-5809
Where
buyers
meet
Tlwt Bulinili f* 1
Llassiiieds
W U M I w - i MI mi II i 'I m JVIIM
in print and online
To place your ad, visit
www.bondbull0ttn.coni
or call 541-385-5809