The BulleTin • SaTurday, June 12, 2021 A7 Museum Continued from A1 Rosengarth regularly offered tours of the house prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. She re- cently partnered with the Bend Park & Recreation District and Deschutes Historical Society to turn the house into a museum. “I’m not going to be around to tell the stories forever,” Rosengarth said. Historical society volun- teers organized more than 800 items in the house, and the park district created interpre- tive panels. The project is ex- pected to be completed by the fall, when the public will be in- vited into the house. “That’s the whole purpose of it, to let people know about what life was like here,” Rosen- garth said. “It keeps my family alive.” Julie Brown, the Bend Park & Recreation District spokes- person, oversees the project with Community Engagement Supervisor Kim Johnson, and said the plans for a museum will build upon Rosengarth’s work to maintain the house. “What we wanted to do was be able to capture and broaden a little bit of that history,” Brown said. “And be able to have more museum quality in- formation and panels and take good care of the items that are in the house.” The idea for a museum started in August 2019, when Portland State University grad- uate student Liza Schade was hired as a park district intern and tasked with creating an in- ventory of items in the house. While she was working, Schade noticed people were interested in the house and wanted to learn more about it. “She had the doors of the house open for air flow, and every day she had park users pop their heads in to ask what was going on,” Brown said. The public interest led to the park district and historical Submitted The interior of the Hollinshead-Matson Historic House at Hollinshead Park. museum raising about $12,000 from a grant and in-kind dona- tions to complete the work. Kelly Cannon-Miller, direc- tor of the Deschutes Historical Museum, said many residents today might not realize how important farming was in the region in the early 20th cen- tury. The house shows how people lived without electricity and other modern comforts, Cannon-Miller said. “It’s a fantastic way for us to tell the story of agriculture and the role farming and ranching played in the history of De- schutes County, something that has slowly been disappearing,” Cannon-Miller said. “Most residents don’t realize how im- portant it was to our economy well into the 1970s and 1980s.” The house has been a labor of love for Rosengarth. The building connects Rosengarth to her childhood. It reminds her of her father, who moved from Kansas during the Great Depression to start a new life in Oregon on the property that is now Hollinshead Park. Rosengarth is reminded of her history every time she shares it with school groups and other interested visitors. “It was like ‘Little House on the Prairie’ in my mind,” Rosengarth said. “We were way out in the country.” Reporter: 541-617-7820, kspurr@bendbulletin.com e Changes to Measure 11 prison sentences appear dead this session NOELLE CROMBIE The Oregonian Efforts to undo Oregon’s manda- tory minimum sentencing law have fizzled, according to a key lawmaker who has pushed for years to roll back the longstanding policy. Sen. Floyd Prozanski, a Democrat from Eugene, said Thursday that the bill he sponsored, Senate Bill 401, is marooned in the Senate Rules Com- mittee, where it seems likely to die. Prozanski sought to replace manda- tory minimum sentences for most vi- olent crimes with a system that would give judges more discretion over sen- tences. He blamed the Oregon District At- torneys Association for failing to work with him on a potential compromise. “I don’t see it us moving it forward,” he said. “I don’t have the 20 votes” needed to pass it out of the Senate. He said a neutral position from the prosecutors group would have gone a long way toward swaying some law- makers. He said he went to the district at- torneys association several weeks ago with a compromise that would remove only second-degree robbery and second-degree assault from the list of crimes that trigger mandatory minimum sentences. The rest of the law would remain the same, he said. But he and prosecutors still could not reach an agreement. “It’s never good enough” for the as- sociation, he said. Marion County District Attorney Paige Clarkson, president of the pros- ecutors association, said in response that any changes “must be carried out in a deliberate and thoughtful man- ner that does not increase uncertainty about any unintended consequences of those changes.” She called Prozanski’s final pro- posal removing second-degree assault and second-degree robbery “rushed.” “A crime victim and survivor should be able to have faith that any proposed changes will only result in the intended outcome and by not rushing this complex conversation we decrease the chances for those unintended consequences harming crime victims and survivors,” she said. Prozanski went into the session hoping discussions on changing Measure 11 would be front and cen- ter. Four bills were submitted for consideration, but eventually SB 401 emerged as the focus of those talks. On Thursday, he said he was disap- pointed the debate went nowhere. “It’s frustrating that I don’t get the Public hearing unlikely on Oregon independent redistricting proposal HILLARY BORRUD The Oregonian Supporters of a proposal to hand Oregon’s redistrict- ing process to an independent commission hoped lawmakers would consider and take input on the plan during the five- month legislative session. With less than three weeks left, it appears lawmakers will go home without holding a single public hearing on the commission proposal, House Joint Resolution 7. Dismayed supporters in- cluding good government groups, businesses and NAACP branches pleaded in a letter Wednesday to House Democratic and Republican leaders for those lawmakers to schedule a hearing. “Oregonians deserve the op- portunity to provide their opin- ions directly to their elected representatives on the well-sup- ported alternative to the cur- rent redistricting process,” they wrote. “Our polling showed that 83% of Democrats, 70% of Independents and 62% of Re- Plantae Continued from A1 His estranged wife and a former employee had accused him in 2019 of various offenses while the three were in a live-in polyamorous relationship. Anderson, 34, remains ac- cused of four criminal charges in Deschutes County Circuit Court. He denies ever abus- ing his ex-wife, whom he says abandoned their businesses and left him to deal with her debts. District Attorney John Hum- mel expects the stripped-down criminal case to go to trial in late summer. “As to why there’s fewer charges now, it was just through the constant process of re-as- sessing the case and digging deeper,” Hummel said. “We’re at the point where we feel he’s facing the appropriate charges.” Anderson’s attorney, Per Ol- son, said previous coverage of the case severely damaged his client’s reputation, which he is still attempting to rebuild. “Andrew feels very strongly that when this case first came up two years ago, he was un- fairly crucified in the newspa- per,” Olson said. “Four counts remain, and we’re going to trial on those four counts in August. He maintains his innocence and looks forward to trying this case.” Andrew Anderson and Joc- elyn Anderson wed in 2015 in Jamaica, according to filings from their lengthy and complex divorce case, which is ongoing. Jocelyn Anderson and her at- torneys did not return calls left Friday. publicans in Oregon support reforming our redistricting process to create an indepen- dent citizens’ commission that would draw our legislative and congressional districts.” A top Democrat in the House on Wednesday listed numerous objections to the plan and said the status quo system of lawmakers redraw- ing their own electoral lines and congressional districts ev- ery 10 years is fairer and more accountable to voters. “The most representative body is a 90-person Legisla- ture, elected and accountable to the people, rather than a hastily convened 15-20 per- son commission,” Majority Leader Barbara Smith Warner, D-Portland, said in an emailed statement. She pointed out that House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Portland, gave Republi- cans equal membership on the House committee working on redistricting plans for the next decade. The Legislature faces a September deadline to com- plete that work. Andrew J. Anderson works at his Alfalfa Valley Can- nabis Farm in October 2018. fice moved to strike the major- ity of the allegations from An- drew Anderson’s indictment, including all of the allegations by White. He remains charged in allegations by his wife: fourth-degree assault, menac- ing, second-degree kidnapping — for allegations he took his ex-wife places against her will — and coercion, for allegedly threatening to harm the fam- ily dog. Bulletin file e Together the couple soon started several businesses in a vertically integrated marijuana operation. Jocelyn Anderson oversaw Plantae’s retail side and managed its marketing efforts, while Andrew Anderson man- aged operations at their pot farm on Johnson Ranch Road in Alfalfa. The venture was profitable, court records show. In 2017, Plantae’s retail locations in Bend and Madras brought in a combined $1.7 million. In 2018, those locations generated $2.4 million. And retail made up just 38% of Plantae’s total revenue. Other sources include marijuana farming, manufac- turing, real estate rental and ATM fees. For an 18-month period, Plantae general manager Kris- ten White lived with the couple in a polyamorous relationship. In July 2017, Jocelyn Ander- son moved back to her home- town near Chico, California. In dueling divorce motions, she claims she fled her husband’s abuse, while he claims she aban- doned him and their business. He filed for divorce in Au- gust 2017. She responded several weeks later with a counter-claim. In May 2019, as the divorce case proceeded, a grand jury in Deschutes County indicted Andrew Anderson on 20 crim- inal counts related to allega- tions levied by Jocelyn Ander- son and White. In August 2019, Andrew Anderson was ordered to pay his wife $8,000 per month in spousal support. After five months of nonpayment, plus interest, he owed her $50,000. In June of 2020, a Deschutes County judge signed an order granting Jocelyn Anderson ownership and exclusive use of the businesses she founded with her husband. In April, Plantae sent a press release announcing Joc- elyn Anderson was now 100% owner of the company. “This marks a new chapter in the story of Plantae, and I can’t wait to see what the future holds,” said Anderson. “My number one priority for Plan- tae is to show appreciation and support to the Plantae team. Happy employees make for happy customers, and we have lots of perks lined up for both.” In May, the Deschutes County District Attorney’s of- Reporter: 541-383-0325, gandrews@bendbulletin.com courtesy of having honest deliberation and discussion,” he said. All along, prosecutors have been the most forceful opponents of chang- ing the law. They argue that Measure 11 ensures courts treat violent criminals in a con- sistent and fair manner. They say the state’s mandatory minimum sentences for crimes such as rape — eight years and four months — are reasonable, hold offenders accountable and keep communities safe. Prozanski and others who want to do away with mandatory minimums say the policy is outdated, inflexible and overly harsh. Hermiston couple on hook for illegally selling crab East Oregonian HERMISTON — A Herm- iston couple has been sen- tenced to pay $1,200 in res- titution after illegally selling recreationally caught crab on the commercial market in Hermiston, according to a press release from Oregon State Police. Gerald and Shawna Wil- son of Hermiston also will pay $100 each to the Turn In Poachers Line fund, and they are prohibited from obtaining a fishing or shellfish license for three years. OSP Fish and Wildlife troopers began an investiga- tion after receiving a call on the TIP Line reporting crab advertised for sale on Face- book. Investigators followed up on the lead and discov- ered the couple selling live or cooked crab through social media, the release said. The couple listed the crab as free of charge, but with a suggested donation of $11 per pound to skirt marine fisheries laws that prohibit people from selling their personal limits of crab and other marine life on the com- mercial market, according to law enforcement. At least 11 people purchased the crab through Facebook or other social media. 541.480.8130 louie@louiehoffman.com “Catch My Drift” Louie Hoffman, CCIM Principal Broker, Licensed in Oregon SRES, Senior Real Estate Specialist Proudly Serving Central Oregon Real Estate Communities for 29 Years %(1'_5('021'