The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, June 09, 2021, Page 12, Image 12

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    A12 The BulleTin • Wednesday, June 9, 2021
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2021
TODAY
THURSDAY
TONIGHT
HIGH
58°
LOW
38°
A thunderstorm on the
prowl this afternoon
Mostly cloudy
ALMANAC
Yesterday Normal
Record
59°
70° 95° in 2015
45°
41° 25° in 1916
PRECIPITATION
24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday
0.06"
Record
0.91" in 1929
Month to date (normal)
0.14" (0.25")
Year to date (normal)
2.29" (5.27")
Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.
29.97"
SUN, MOON AND PLANETS
Rise/Set
Today
Thu.
Sun
5:22am/8:47pm 5:22am/8:48pm
Moon
4:51am/8:28pm 5:26am/9:27pm
Mercury 5:46am/8:41pm 5:41am/8:33pm
Venus
6:43am/10:18pm 6:45am/10:20pm
Mars
8:23am/11:31pm 8:22am/11:29pm
Jupiter 12:52am/11:27am 12:49am/11:23am
Saturn 12:04am/9:49am 12:00am/9:45am
Uranus
3:29am/5:39pm 3:26am/5:36pm
New
First
Full
Last
Jun 10
Jun 17
Jun 24
Jul 1
Tonight's sky: New moon (Thursday at 3:54
a.m.).
Source: Jim Todd, OMSI
UV INDEX TODAY
10 a.m.
Noon
2 p.m.
4 p.m.
2
4
4
2
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
Low
Weeds
Low
Source: Oregon Allergy Associates
SUNDAY
80°
53°
Mostly cloudy with a brief
shower or two
Pleasant and warmer with
sunny intervals
EAST: Partly
sunny, breezy and cool
Wednesday with a
shower in a few spots
during the afternoon.
83°
54°
Partly sunny and very
warm
Astoria
62/48
Hood
River
NATIONAL WEATHER
As of 7 a.m. yesterday
Reservoir
Acre feet
Capacity
Crane Prairie
47488
86%
Wickiup
58032
29%
Crescent Lake
24623
28%
Ochoco Reservoir
9110
21%
Prineville
76652
52%
River fl ow
Station
Cu.ft./sec.
Deschutes R. below Crane Prairie
116
Deschutes R. below Wickiup
1260
Deschutes R. below Bend
131
Deschutes R. at Benham Falls
1570
Little Deschutes near La Pine
97
Crescent Ck. below Crescent Lake
16
Crooked R. above Prineville Res.
2
Crooked R. below Prineville Res.
277
Crooked R. near Terrebonne
49
Ochoco Ck. below Ochoco Res.
12
-0s
0s
10s
20s
30s
40s
50s
60s
70s
80s
90s
100s
110s
NATIONAL
EXTREMES
YESTERDAY (for the
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: USDA Forest Service
Senate report details
broad failures around
Jan. 6 insurrection
BY MARY CLARE JALONICK
The Associated Press
A Senate investigation of the
Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S.
Capitol found a broad intelli-
gence breakdown across multi-
ple agencies, along with wide-
spread law enforcement and
military failures that led to the
violent attack.
There were clear warnings
and tips that supporters of for-
mer President Donald Trump,
including right-wing extrem-
ist groups, were planning to
“storm the Capitol” with weap-
ons and possibly infiltrate the
tunnel system underneath the
building. But that intelligence
never made it up to top lead-
ership.
The result was chaos. A
Senate report released Tues-
day details how officers on the
front lines suffered chemical
burns, brain injuries and bro-
ken bones, among other inju-
ries, after fighting the attack-
ers, who quickly overwhelmed
them and broke into the build-
ing. Officers told the Senate
investigators they were left
with no leadership or direction
when command systems broke
down.
The Senate report is the first
— and could be the last — bi-
partisan review of how hun-
dreds of Trump supporters
were able to push violently past
security lines and break into the
Capitol that day, interrupting
the certification of Joe Biden’s
presidential election victory.
The failures detailed in the re-
port highlighted how, almost
20 years after the Sept. 11 at-
tacks, U.S. intelligence agencies
are still beset by a fundamental
issue: a failure of imagination.
The report recommends
immediate changes to give the
Capitol Police chief more au-
thority, to provide better plan-
ning and equipment for law
enforcement and to streamline
intelligence gathering among
federal agencies.
But as a bipartisan effort,
the report does not delve into
the root causes of the attack,
including Trump’s role as he
called for his supporters to
“fight like hell” to overturn his
election defeat that day. It does
not call the attack an insurrec-
tion, even though it was. And
it comes two weeks after Re-
publicans blocked a bipartisan,
independent commission that
would investigate the insurrec-
tion more broadly.
“This report is important
in the fact that it allows us to
make some immediate im-
provements to the security
situation here in the Capitol,”
said Democratic Sen. Gary Pe-
ters of Michigan, the chair of
the Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs Com-
mittee, which conducted the
probe along with the Senate
Rules Committee. “But it does
not answer some of the bigger
questions that we need to face,
quite frankly, as a country and
as a democracy.”
Sunshine
Yesterday
City
Hi/Lo/Prec.
Abilene
92/66/0.48
Akron
84/69/0.18
Albany
85/70/0.20
Albuquerque
92/64/0.00
Anchorage
58/51/0.00
Atlanta
87/72/0.49
Atlantic City
86/69/0.01
Austin
90/77/Tr
Baltimore
91/76/Tr
Billings
82/58/Tr
Birmingham
85/70/0.38
Bismarck
83/69/0.19
Boise
81/54/0.00
Boston
95/75/Tr
Bridgeport, CT 86/70/0.11
Buffalo
81/70/0.32
Burlington, VT
88/75/Tr
Caribou, ME
92/72/0.00
Charleston, SC 88/74/Tr
Charlotte
87/71/0.01
Chattanooga
88/74/0.00
Cheyenne
86/53/0.00
Chicago
91/71/0.01
Cincinnati
80/69/0.02
Cleveland
85/69/0.43
Colorado Springs 89/55/Tr
Columbia, MO
84/66/0.00
Columbia, SC
81/72/0.48
Columbus, GA
90/71/0.06
Columbus, OH
86/69/0.00
Concord, NH
93/69/0.40
Corpus Christi
90/79/0.00
Dallas
89/73/Tr
Dayton
85/70/Tr
Denver
93/52/0.00
Des Moines
90/67/0.00
Detroit
86/70/0.37
Duluth
85/67/0.00
El Paso
98/79/0.00
Fairbanks
62/50/0.02
Fargo
89/68/0.99
Flagstaff
74/36/Tr
Grand Rapids
87/65/0.00
Green Bay
92/69/Tr
Greensboro
84/69/0.09
Harrisburg
90/75/0.55
Hartford, CT
92/71/0.54
Helena
73/54/0.01
Honolulu
87/74/0.15
Houston
93/81/0.01
Huntsville
86/69/0.63
Indianapolis
81/69/0.31
Jackson, MS
91/71/1.23
Jacksonville
89/72/0.00
Today
Hi/Lo/W
97/76/pc
82/69/t
86/59/t
92/63/s
57/50/c
87/72/t
79/69/t
93/73/pc
89/71/t
89/59/c
85/72/t
95/63/t
78/47/pc
88/65/t
84/69/t
85/63/t
86/57/pc
76/48/c
87/74/t
88/71/t
84/72/t
86/58/s
85/66/t
77/69/t
80/67/t
89/61/s
86/71/t
89/72/t
90/71/pc
78/69/t
89/55/t
90/76/pc
92/76/pc
78/69/t
90/62/s
89/71/pc
85/69/t
73/58/c
102/73/pc
71/53/c
97/66/pc
77/44/pc
87/65/t
88/66/pc
88/69/t
89/71/t
89/65/t
79/53/pc
87/76/s
93/77/pc
82/71/t
79/70/t
88/74/t
91/70/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
74/54/pc
83/67/pc
62/56/pc
107/77/pc
88/79/t
81/66/t
83/73/s
79/60/pc
63/51/sh
82/60/pc
63/57/sh
92/77/s
101/74/s
61/47/c
89/78/pc
68/56/pc
65/57/pc
73/57/t
70/45/s
89/81/t
78/63/s
82/71/s
56/41/sh
68/63/pc
83/60/s
76/60/pc
96/63/s
89/81/t
Thursday
Hi/Lo/W
100/76/pc
81/69/t
81/55/pc
95/65/pc
60/50/c
85/71/t
73/62/t
92/74/pc
84/65/t
88/49/t
83/71/t
96/62/t
64/50/sh
74/56/pc
78/59/pc
84/62/sh
77/54/s
65/42/pc
89/75/t
88/71/t
82/72/t
88/48/s
85/67/t
81/70/t
80/67/t
92/58/s
88/71/t
91/71/t
89/71/s
81/69/t
81/47/pc
91/75/pc
93/76/pc
81/70/t
95/52/s
92/70/pc
84/66/t
88/54/c
104/73/pc
68/50/c
93/68/c
76/38/pc
86/65/t
90/66/pc
83/69/t
83/62/t
85/53/pc
66/42/sh
86/74/pc
92/76/pc
81/70/t
82/69/t
88/73/t
90/70/t
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
Yesterday
Hi/Lo/Prec.
67/46/0.00
89/68/0.17
86/68/Tr
94/70/0.00
83/68/1.40
92/63/Tr
74/68/2.75
75/62/0.00
85/72/0.16
91/68/0.06
75/69/0.77
88/78/0.02
86/72/0.00
96/77/0.00
85/72/0.13
91/80/0.00
90/78/0.49
93/76/2.19
91/76/0.00
85/66/0.00
92/69/Tr
94/75/0.00
96/64/0.00
88/68/0.00
88/74/0.44
99/75/0.00
84/70/0.03
92/75/0.00
89/68/0.00
88/71/Tr
98/65/0.00
75/55/0.00
91/73/0.00
84/69/0.16
74/51/0.00
80/70/0.10
90/73/0.00
90/77/Tr
72/63/0.00
67/55/0.00
68/51/0.00
90/49/0.00
89/73/0.02
69/49/0.00
95/71/0.00
72/48/0.00
81/68/0.10
94/77/0.00
97/69/0.00
88/68/0.00
88/76/0.01
86/65/0.00
71/48/0.00
97/67/0.00
Today
Hi/Lo/W
66/49/pc
89/71/pc
85/66/t
95/68/s
78/69/t
93/70/pc
85/73/t
77/59/s
80/72/t
89/67/t
81/73/t
89/78/s
78/62/t
94/75/pc
80/71/t
88/77/t
87/71/t
90/73/t
89/73/t
92/73/pc
92/72/pc
92/73/s
97/66/s
86/69/t
89/72/t
102/77/s
79/67/t
83/59/t
88/66/t
88/72/t
91/64/pc
68/40/pc
89/71/t
83/59/t
73/47/s
87/73/t
93/63/s
94/74/pc
71/60/s
65/54/pc
66/50/s
91/55/s
89/72/t
66/48/pc
95/72/pc
67/49/c
85/69/t
92/77/s
102/68/pc
89/74/t
88/74/t
90/73/t
74/46/c
100/69/pc
Thursday
Hi/Lo/W
59/48/c
92/73/t
86/64/t
88/68/s
80/69/t
96/74/pc
86/72/t
77/60/s
83/72/t
89/67/t
82/73/t
89/78/s
79/65/t
96/76/pc
83/71/t
91/75/pc
79/61/pc
81/61/pc
85/72/t
92/73/pc
95/74/pc
94/75/s
97/69/s
88/69/t
82/62/t
101/73/pc
79/67/t
76/52/pc
79/54/pc
86/71/t
92/54/t
70/46/pc
84/70/t
79/57/pc
77/52/s
89/74/t
71/48/s
93/75/pc
71/60/pc
68/54/s
70/50/s
92/55/pc
92/73/t
65/52/pc
98/71/pc
69/48/pc
86/72/t
92/78/t
101/68/pc
91/76/pc
83/68/t
93/75/pc
73/50/pc
98/64/pc
109/86/0.00
85/56/0.05
84/73/0.00
72/57/0.05
74/52/0.00
86/77/0.00
104/86/0.00
88/66/0.00
72/57/0.07
88/72/0.01
79/55/0.00
79/71/0.04
75/61/0.02
70/36/0.00
66/61/0.02
77/57/0.00
80/64/0.00
86/69/0.00
88/79/0.00
68/55/0.39
70/53/0.19
91/75/0.00
81/66/0.00
84/68/0.02
79/70/0.24
63/46/0.00
82/50/0.00
78/54/0.00
109/86/pc
77/56/t
86/57/pc
66/58/t
72/56/pc
86/76/s
106/86/pc
89/67/s
73/49/pc
85/55/pc
81/60/pc
77/70/t
79/61/t
65/43/pc
72/62/pc
72/51/s
87/67/pc
87/76/c
87/78/t
69/53/t
56/46/sh
94/79/pc
85/77/s
84/67/s
85/64/t
63/49/pc
81/60/t
77/55/pc
113/83/pc
73/55/t
74/58/pc
63/57/sh
73/54/c
86/76/s
103/83/pc
89/68/s
75/56/t
77/57/s
78/61/pc
79/70/pc
81/62/t
66/43/pc
68/61/t
81/55/s
85/67/pc
83/74/r
87/78/t
73/54/pc
52/46/r
95/80/t
86/75/s
82/67/pc
79/59/s
63/52/pc
79/59/pc
78/56/pc
INTERNATIONAL
48 contiguous states)
National high: 107°
at Presidio, TX
National low: 25°
at Bodie State Park, CA
Precipitation: 5.47"
at Batesville, MS
FIRE INDEX
Low
Moderate
Low
Moderate
Low
Variable cloudiness
NATIONAL
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
61/43/0.00 62/48/pc 62/50/pc
La Grande
69/48/0.00 63/46/c 68/45/pc
Portland
67/53/0.01 69/50/pc 69/53/pc
Baker City
73/42/0.00 66/44/c 65/42/pc
La Pine
57/40/0.03 58/33/t
63/40/c
Prineville
61/45/0.00 65/38/t
63/40/pc
Brookings
58/42/0.00 56/46/pc 59/50/pc
Medford
69/50/Tr
68/47/pc 72/53/c
Redmond
62/47/0.03 63/36/t
68/42/c
Burns
73/44/0.00 66/42/c 65/41/pc
Newport
59/43/Tr
57/46/pc 58/49/c
Roseburg
66/50/0.16 69/46/pc 72/51/c
Eugene
66/41/0.02 69/45/pc 70/49/c
North Bend
62/50/0.02 62/48/pc 63/52/c
Salem
69/49/0.03 69/47/pc 71/50/pc
Klamath Falls
61/44/0.00 61/36/t
65/41/pc
Ontario
83/58/0.00 79/52/c 68/48/pc
Sisters
56/42/0.02 60/39/sh 66/41/c
Lakeview
66/42/0.00 62/36/pc 63/31/pc
Pendleton
72/41/0.00 69/49/c 71/46/pc
The Dalles
74/51/0.00 75/53/pc 73/52/c
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
-10s
75°
44°
TRAVEL WEATHER
Umatilla
76/51
Rufus
Hermiston
70/52
75/52
74/54
Arlington
Hillsboro Portland
Meacham Lostine
74/51
68/44 69/50
63/44
Wasco
64/43 Enterprise
Pendleton
The Dalles
CENTRAL: Clouds and Tillamook
63/41
70/51
69/49
Sandy
75/53
McMinnville
61/47
sun, breezy and cool
Joseph
Heppner
La
Grande
66/48
Maupin
Government
67/42
Wednesday. A brief
63/46
63/42
Camp
69/48 Condon 66/45
Union
afternoon shower can- Lincoln City
64/42
55/40
66/46
Salem
57/47
Spray
not be ruled out.
Granite
Warm Springs
69/47
Madras
68/42
Albany
57/39
Newport
Baker City
66/40
66/40
Mitchell
57/46
66/45
66/44
WEST: Cool Wednes-
Camp Sherman
61/40
Redmond
Corvallis
John
Yachats
Unity
day with clouds and
60/41
63/36
65/43
Day
Prineville
56/47
64/42
sun; a couple of
Ontario
Sisters
65/38
Paulina
67/43
79/52
showers. Partly sunny Florence
Eugene 60/39
Bend Brothers 63/37
Vale
and a little warmer
60/49
69/45
58/38
59/36
Sunriver
78/52
Thursday.
Nyssa
57/36
Hampton
Cottage
La Pine
78/52
Juntura
Oakridge
Grove
58/33
61/37
OREGON EXTREMES Coos Bay
Burns
73/47
64/42
69/44
Fort
Rock
61/46
66/42
Riley
YESTERDAY
Crescent
60/34
64/41
High: 83°
54/32
Bandon
Roseburg
Christmas Valley
Jordan Valley
at Ontario
Beaver
Frenchglen
Silver
60/48
69/46
60/35
69/40
Low: 31°
Marsh
Lake
68/40
Port Orford
55/31
60/35
at Crater Lake
Grants
Burns Junction
Paisley
59/50
Pass
73/47
Chiloquin
62/37
72/45
Rome
Medford
58/35
Gold Beach
68/47
75/48
54/45
Klamath
Fields
Ashland
McDermitt
Lakeview
Falls
Brookings
71/42
62/46
61/36
70/41
56/46
62/36
Seaside
62/48
Cannon Beach
60/48
TUESDAY
82°
52°
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
541-683-1577
WATER REPORT
Bend
Redmond/Madras
Sisters
Prineville
La Pine/Gilchrist
MONDAY
OREGON WEATHER
TEMPERATURE
Grasses
High
SATURDAY
65°
42°
67°
41°
Partly cloudy
Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m. yest.
High
Low
FRIDAY
COVID-19
Continued from A1
Most Oregon residents
have been inoculated with the
Pfizer or Moderna vaccines,
which are administered in two
shots separated by about one
month. Those receiving the
Johnson & Johnson vaccine
receive just one shot.
Deschutes, Multnomah,
Washington, Benton, Lincoln
and Hood River have all sur-
passed the 65% threshold.
Lane County is at 64%.
Clackamas, Polk, Tillamook
and Clatsop are above 60%.
The four lowest county vac-
cination rates are Lake, Mal-
heur, Umatilla and Gilliam,
with each having administered
one shot to 39% or less of res-
idents.
Brown has said when
70% of all eligible state resi-
Skyline
Continued from A1
“When we became aware
that some of the staff would
be leaving at the end of the
school year, (the principals)
approached us about unify-
ing those schools,” Legace
said.
Most of the Skyline stu-
dents have chosen to trans-
fer to Realms. Enrollment at
Realms for next school year
will increase from about 150
to 240. At least 40 more spots
are still open.
“It’s an adjustment, but we
are feeling like it’s really going
to enrich the educational op-
portunities for the students at
both schools,” Legace said.
Legace said combining the
schools is a natural fit be-
dents have at least one shot
of vaccine, she’ll lift nearly
all restrictions on businesses,
schools, events and restau-
rants.
Late Tuesday, Brown touted
that 67.1% of eligible adult Or-
egonians had received at least
a shot.
“We need 97,168 more peo-
ple to get their shot,” she wrote
on Twitter.
Like many states, Oregon is
offering prizes for those inoc-
ulated. One person will receive
$1 million, while one person
in each of the 36 counties will
get $10,000. The state is also
offering five $100,000 Oregon
College Savings Plan scholar-
ships to vaccinated youths.
The drawing will take place
June 28, with winners an-
nounced the following week.
Anyone in the state’s vacci-
nation registration system by
75/54/0.00
82/68/0.00
60/52/0.00
104/80/0.00
93/82/0.21
86/64/0.10
81/68/0.00
80/58/0.08
63/52/0.19
82/57/0.03
61/55/0.00
99/77/0.00
93/68/0.00
59/39/0.00
88/77/0.31
66/54/0.00
66/48/0.00
72/59/0.02
67/45/0.00
88/80/0.39
77/65/0.00
80/59/0.00
54/38/0.00
68/62/0.00
82/55/0.00
75/54/0.00
95/61/0.00
86/77/0.10
75/57/pc
83/66/t
65/53/c
103/75/pc
87/79/t
86/62/pc
83/71/s
80/61/pc
66/51/sh
80/57/t
66/45/pc
92/74/s
98/73/s
55/41/sh
89/78/c
72/56/c
70/57/c
77/58/t
70/45/s
89/81/t
79/64/t
83/67/s
60/44/pc
67/63/c
80/59/s
75/59/pc
96/63/s
90/81/t
County risk categories effective through June 17
LOWER RISK (21)
•
•
•
•
Baker
Benton
Clatsop
Coos (Moved from
Moderate)
• Curry
• Deschutes
• Gilliam
• Grant
• Hood River
• Lake
• Lane (Moved from
Moderate)
• Lincoln
• Morrow
•
•
•
•
•
•
Multnomah
Sherman
Tillamook
Union
Wallowa
Wasco (Moved
from Moderate)
• Washington
• Wheeler
MODERATE RISK
(4)
• Harney (Moved
from Lower)
• Josephine (Moved
from High)
midnight on June 27 is eligible.
The next set of risk-level
revisions will be announced
“They have a similar mission and values. They share the
facility, equipment, staff and most importantly they have
really similar educational beliefs and practices. They both
offer creative, out-of-school educational opportunities.”
— Katie Legace, Bend-La Pine Schools’
executive director of high school programs
cause both are considered ex-
peditionary learning schools,
where the curriculum takes
students outside of the class-
room to tackle real world
problems, like poverty and
homelessness.
“They have a similar mis-
sion and values,” Legace
said. “They share the facility,
equipment, staff and most
importantly they have really
similar educational beliefs
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
and practices. They both of-
fer creative, out-of-school ed-
ucational opportunities.”
Both schools were devel-
oped to offer local students
more options for their educa-
tion and more environments
to learn rather than the larger
traditional high schools in
Bend. Four years later, both
schools are celebrating their
first graduating classes this
week.
• Polk
• Yamhill (Moved
from High)
HIGH RISK (11)
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Clackamas
Columbia
Crook
Douglas
Jackson
Jefferson
Klamath
Linn
Malheur
Marion
Umatilla
June 15 and will be in effect
from June 18 to June 24.
e
gwarner@eomediagroup.com
“Skyline was a high school
that came out of this idea of
trying to find different ways
to provide education for stu-
dents, knowing students are
unique individuals and one
size doesn’t fit all,” Legace
said.
Realms High School was
created as students graduated
from Realms Middle School
in Bend. Eventually, Bend-La
Pine Schools would like to
have both Realms schools on
the same campus.
But for now, the school
district wants to use the re-
sources it has to support the
Realms schools, Legace said.
“We are always trying to
show we are good stewards of
public resources,” Legace said.
e
Reporter: 541-617-7820,
kspurr@bendbulletin.com