Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • $1.50 Tuesday • June 22, 2021 BEND’S MEL LAWRENCE REACHES OLYMPIC FINALS TRACK AND FIELD TRIALS • SPORTS PULLOUT, A5-8 WILDFIRE SEASON Fire threatens houses in Warm Springs Expedited land use plan gets support Oregon House backs request by Bend to fast-track approval process for housing site By GaRy a. WaRNeR Oregon Capital Bureau In a move with possible statewide implications, the House on Monday voted to fast-track a Bend affordable housing plan by allowing the city to skip much of the time-consuming land use approval process in state law. House Bill 3318 was ap- proved 42-16. By the after- noon, the bill had been sent to the Senate Rules Com- mittee. No hearing date has been set as yet. With the Legislature ex- pected to adjourn by Friday, the bill would need to move extraordinarily swiftly to a vote that would send it to Gov. Kate Brown. “The fact that it is already in Senate Rules has to make me think it is being seri- ously considered,” said Erik Kancler, lobbyist for the city of Bend. “It is late, but it has a chance.” HB 3318 would allow Bend to bring a 260-acre parcel near Stevens Road into its urban growth boundary to be developed as up to 800 units of afford- able housing. The other half of the large parcel of land, roughly 380 acres, is already within the boundary and was sold by the Department of State Lands to a devel- oper. The tract sits east of SE 27th Street. The bill is co-spon- sored by Rep. Jason Kropf, D-Bend, and Rep. Jack Zika, R-Redmond. They argued on Monday that state action was necessary to alleviate an affordable housing crisis. See Land / A4 HOMELESS CAMPS IN BEND By dyLaN JeFFeRIes The Bulletin The S-503 Fire on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation grew from roughly 4,300 to 6,200 acres Sunday night and was zero percent contained Monday morning, according to fire officials. Firefighters arrived with engines and aerial support on Sunday and were able to hold the north side of the fire, which was the main area of concern as the fire spread northeast toward residences in the community of Pine Grove in Wasco County, ac- cording to a release from the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs. Evacuation notices were lowered Sunday for residents of Pine Grove from a Level 3 “go now” to a Level 2 “get ready.” Structures and infrastruc- ture in Pine Grove, as well as on the Warm Springs reserva- tion, remain at risk. See Warm springs / A4 Three RV fires burn in one day outside La Pine danielle McGovern sits Thursday with her dog Kalohe at their camp on emerson avenue in Bend, where an official notice to vacate is duct taped to her tent in the background. Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin On Sunday, three separate wildfires started by burning RVs were reported at dispersed campsites on public land out- side La Pine. Firefighters from multiple agencies were able to access the fires before any could become the next state conflagration, but as fire season kicks off in Oregon, Mike Supkis, chief of La Pine Rural Fire Protection District, notes this time they were lucky. “It really is concerning that in the course of two years we’ve had six fires, three of them ma- jor fires that really ran, right next to this community,” Sup- kis said. See La Pine / A4 An editorial headlined “How should Bend’s school district teach controversial subjects?” which appeared Sunday, June 20, on Page A4, incorrectly stated the middle school where the book “Ghost Boys” was read. It was High Desert Middle School. The Bulletin regrets the error. TODAY’S WEATHER fter living on the outskirts of Bend for roughly seven years, Danielle McGovern decided recently to make camp in town on Emerson Avenue so she could be closer to services. But on Wednesday, the 51-year-old will be one of dozens who will be removed by the city of Bend, which is citing safety and public health concerns as reasons for clos- ing the street and clearing the camp. Per state law, the city has a plan to store what is deemed as personal property in a secure storage location for 30 days for people to retrieve. Past cleanups at area camps show that few campers ever retrieve their belongings McGovern considers herself a mini- malist, and hopes to be able to move as much as she can back to a forested area off China Hat Road in Bend. She has learned to live with fewer attachments be- cause the constant threat of losing it all is always in the background of her day-to- day life. Previous moves have shown her that despite her efforts to live with few posses- sions, she usually loses about half of her belongings each time because of the chal- lenges around moving it. “I won’t take things because I’m scared to lose them,” she said outside her tent last week. “I can’t have anything sentimental.” See Cleanups/ A4 U.S. OLYMPIC TRACK AND FIELD TRIALS | 1,500 METERS Bend’s Mehra finishes 11th to miss out on Tokyo Bulletin staff report Correction By BReNNa VIsseR The Bulletin EUGENE — Bend’s Rebecca Mehra came up short in her bid for a spot on the U.S. Olympic team. Mehra finished 11th in the women’s 1,500-meter final on Monday at the U.S. Olympic Track & Field Trials at Eu- gene’s Hayward Field. The top three finishers in the race qualified for the To- kyo Games. Mehra, 26, and a mem- ber of the Littlewing Athletic team in Bend, finished with Thunderstorm High 88, Low 59 Page a13 INDEX Business Classifieds Comics a time of 4 minutes, 8.47 sec- onds. Her personal best in the event is 4:06.28. Elle Purrier St. Pierre won the race in an Olympic trials- record time of 3:58.03 to claim the national title and punch her ticket to Tokyo. Cory McGee was second in 4:00.67 and Heather Ma- cLean third in 4:02.09, both also securing spots in the Olympics. Mehra, who moved to Bend in 2018 and works part time for Bend Mayor A11, 13 A14 A9-10 Dear Abby Editorial Horoscope A7 A8 A7 Kid Scoop Local/State Lottery Sally Russell, made her way through the first round and the semifinals to earn one of 13 spots in the 1,500 final. Although she did not qual- ify for the Olympics in the 1,500, Mehra is not done at the Olympic trials. The Stan- ford graduate is also qualified in the 800, which starts with first-round heats on Thurs- day evening. Two of Mehra’s teammates from Bend are also entered in the 800: Sadi Henderson and Angel Piccirillo. A12 A2-3 A6 Obituaries Puzzles Sports A4 A10 A5-7 Bend’s Re- becca Mehra, second from left, competes in the women’s 1,500-meter semifinal sat- urday night at the u.s. Olym- pic Track & Field Trials at Hayward Field in eugene. Christopher Pietsch/The Register-Guard The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper We use recycled newsprint Vol. 117, No. 329, 14 pages, 1 section DAILY By GaRReTT aNdReWs The Bulletin LEFT A BEHIND U|xaIICGHy02329lz[