The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, June 18, 2021, Page 8, Image 8

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    A8 The BulleTin • Friday, June 18, 2021
Tram
Continued from A7
One thing that tram riders
often wonder is how supplies
reach the summit, particularly
the Summit Grill. Outside are
two large propane tanks that
would hardly fit in a cabin.
Lockhart said there is a road-
way up the back side of Mount
Howard that comes up near
Ferguson Ridge. Large items
can be brought up that way.
Most supplies, however, are
brought up on the tram via a
“boxcar” — an open, yellow car.
A road accessible only by
all-terrain vehicle provides ac-
cess to each of the towers that
carry the cable.
Improvements made
Most of the improvements
made by the current owners
have been about maintenance,
Lockhart said.
“Over the past three years,
we’ve done some extensive re-
modeling,” he said, replacing
parts where needed.
“We started a very aggressive
maintenance program. We’ve
taken every assembly off,”
Lockhart said, and had a ma-
chine shop in Enterprise refur-
bish parts during the offseason.
They also have made some
additions to the attraction.
When they bought it, there was
only the terminal at the sum-
mit. Riders would go up, hike
around, enjoy the view and
ride back down. But the cur-
rent owners poured a concrete
slab, added a patio and the
Summit Grill.
Improvements considered
The owners also are consid-
ering additions they can create.
Already the tram does some
catering to skiers.
“We take people up in the
spring and they hike over to
East Peak and do a mountain-
eering-type of skiing,” Lock-
hart said.
In the 1990s, they consid-
ered adding ski runs down
the back of Mount Howard
that would end near Ferguson
Ridge Ski Area.
Lockhart hopes to be able
to add interpretive tours of the
mountaintop, including the his-
tory of the moraines, if they
can find the right person to
do the interpreting.
That could be happening
soon,” he said. “But that’s a
special person we’d have to
find.”
There also has been dis-
cussion of campsites in the
area, but those would de-
pend on the markets, the
economy and what the U.S.
Forest Service says of the
ideas, since two-thirds of
the tram is on its land.
The future?
Lockhart has hopes for
the future of the tram.
“There’s things we would
like to see happen,” he said.
“There’s a possibility some-
one besides me could think
(more) about winter sports.”
But for now, they just
want to keep improving
what’s there.
“We’ve been going 50
years and we’d like to add a
few more things,” he said.
“We don’t know what the
life of the lift is, so we’ll have
to see.”
Dams
Continued from A7
Getting to this point has taken
decades of work, and overcom-
ing a number of setbacks that
threatened to derail the plan.
The four dams were origi-
nally built between 1911 and
1962, with a total generating
capacity of 169 megawatts. Ef-
forts to remove the dams be-
gan in 2010 as part of the orig-
inal Klamath Hydroelectric
Settlement Agreement.
At the time, the agreement
was tied to another agreement,
the Klamath Basin Restoration
Agreement, which would have
funded a multitude of projects
to provide greater irrigation
water security for basin farm-
ers and ranchers.
Congress, however, failed
to implement the agreements
prior to the Jan. 1, 2016, dead-
line, despite consensus from
federal, state, county, tribal and
agricultural partners.
Instead, an amended ver-
sion of the Klamath Hydro-
electric Settlement Agreement
went forward in 2016 while
OBITUARY
Virus
Continued from A7
If you’re fully vaccinated,
feel free to say so
Kathryn Lundeen, owner
of Culver City, California, gift
shop Lundeen’s, she said she
wishes customers would be
willing to tell her and her em-
ployees if they are vaccinated.
“It would make everyone
more comfortable,” she said. “I
have to trust that people are go-
ing to wear their mask if they’re
not vaccinated, but I don’t know
if that’s really going to happen.”
Remember that workers
have gone through a lot
Wil Thuston, who works in
retail operations at Disneyland,
feels bittersweet as restrictions
are lifted.
“I’ve been cussed out and
spat on for asking customers
to wear masks, so it’s a relief to
not police them anymore. But
now there’s no way to know
whether or not they’re vacci-
nated.” And he doesn’t expect
everyone to stay six feet apart
forever, but he’d at least like
people to remain more spa-
tially aware.
As a result of the anxiety
and frustrations brought on by
dealing with angry customers,
he’s looking into job opportu-
nities that would let him work
remotely. “The desperation
level for me to get out of my
job now has amplified to where
I submit an application mul-
tiple times a day,” he said. “I
spend every single break and
lunch at work job hunting.”
Darcey May, the general
manager of Things From An-
other World, a comic store at
Universal CityWalk, said that
after seeing so many custom-
ers aggressively flout pandemic
rules in recent weeks, it might
be hard now for her to trust
that barefaced customers are
fully vaccinated.
What would May like to see
from customers? “Just a little
more concern for employees
and their safety.”
Joan Rinker
January 1937 - June 2021
Joan Rinker, age 84, of Bend,
passed away June 12, 2021 in
her home.
Joan was born in January
1937
in
Johnstown,
Pennsylvania. She att ended
nursing school in Johnstown
and had a long professional
career as an RN. She married
her husband, Harold, in 1962.
Joan was acti vely involved
with her church. She loved quilti ng, craft s, and hosti ng
gatherings for her friends.
Joan is survived by her four children (Mark, Martha,
Matt hew, and John) and four siblings (Walter, Larry,
Janet, and her twin sister, Jean). She was preceded in
death by her parents, twin siblings (Jimmy and Jayne),
and husband.
the Klamath Basin Restoration
Agreement was left behind.
The split triggered frustrations
among farmers and ranchers.
This year is especially painful,
as extreme drought prompted
the Bureau of Reclamation to
shut off water to most of the
Klamath Project in May.
“If that other settlement
was in place right now, our
farmers in the Klamath Basin
would have well over 300,000
acre-feet of water, instead of no
Leslie Doyle Bolton
of Sisters, OR
September 19, 1933 - June
11, 2021
Arrangements:
Autumn Funerals -
Redmond is honored to
serve the family. 541-504-
9485. Condolences may be
conveyed to the family at
www.autumnfunerals.net
Services:
A private service will be
held at a later date.
Contributions may be
made to:
Rotary Club of Sisters,
PO Box 1286, Sisters, OR
97759 or Partners In Care,
2075 NE Wyatt Court,
Bend, OR 97701
Thelma Ann
Goodspeed
of Prineville, OR
Dec 30, 1932 - June 12,
2021
Arrangements:
Autumn Funerals of Red-
mond is honored to serve
the family. 541-504-9485
Memories and condolenc-
es may be expressed to
the family on our website
at www.autumnfunerals.net
Services:
A private service will be
held at a later date.
Contributions may be
made to:
Partners In Care hospice,
2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend,
OR 97701.
water,” said Dan Keppen, ex-
ecutive director of the Family
Farm Alliance. “To see one of
the agreements go forward and
make progress … that’s sort of
a hard thing to see. We got left
holding the bag on that.”
Regardless, more fish in the
river and improved water qual-
ity is ultimately good for every-
one, said Meurer.
“From our perspective, this
can only help solve problems
in the basin,” he said.
Marian Harriet
Chambers
of Culver, OR
February 15, 1933 - June
11, 2021
Arrangements:
Autumn Funerals -
Redmond is honored to
serve the family. 541-504-
9485. Condolences may be
conveyed to the family at
www.autumnfunerals.net
Services:
A private service at a later
date.
Contributions may be
made to:
St. Charles Hospice
63031 Layton Ave.
Bend, OR 97701
Patricia Belle Perkins
of Redmond, OR
May 27, 1939 - June 14,
2021
Arrangements:
Arrangements Entrusted
To: Redmond Memorial
Chapel www.redmondme-
morial.com ; 541.548.3219
Services:
Private Family Services
Contributions may be
made to:
St. Charles Foundation
OBITUARY
DEADLINE
Call to ask about
our deadlines
541-385-5809
Monday - Friday,
10am - 3pm.
John C. Shepler
of Bend, OR
Sept 17, 1945 - June 13,
2021
Arrangements:
Autumn Funerals, Bend
541-318-0842 www.au-
tumnfunerals.net
Services:
Private services will be
held at a later date
No death notices or
obituaries are published
Mondays.
Email:
obits@bendbulletin.com
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