STATE MyEagleNews.com Wednesday, April 6, 2022 A7 Zone change sought for farmland By BRENNA VISSER The Bulletin TERREBONNE — Roughly 700 acres of land in north Deschutes County has the potential to be rezoned from farmland to rural housing. In April, a public hearings offi cer will evaluate an appli- cation to rezone the land, which sits north of state Highway 126 adjacent to Lower Bridge Way and Coyner Avenue. The prop- erty is surrounded by farmland, federal land and some nonfarm dwellings in rural subdivisions, according to Haleigh King, a county associate planner. It’s unclear what the plans are for the land, other than a request to change the zoning on all 710 acres to rural residen- tial housing, which allows for no more than one dwelling per 10 acres. But the application has already drawn opposition from surrounding neighbors, farm- ers and Central Oregon Land- Watch, a land use advocacy group. “This is an irreplaceable Map courtesy Deschutes County Roughly 700 acres of land zoned for farming near Terrebonne could be rezoned for rural residential use. resource we have,” said Ed Stabb, who has farmed the land south of the property for roughly 22 years. “It’s chang- ing the historical character of Deschutes County.” The applicant, 710 Proper- ties LLC, is registered to Rob- ert Turner and Charles Thomas III, according to the Oregon Secretary of State’s Offi ce busi- ness registry. Both have Sisters addresses listed. Mark Stockamp, a represen- tative for the applicant, declined an interview to answer why the applicant was pursuing a zone change for the land. “We appreciate the interest in this process and are excited to share more about the proj- ect soon,” Stockamp said in an emailed statement. A request to rezone this amount of land at once is “rare but not unprecedented” in Deschutes County, said Peter Gutowsky, the county’s com- munity development director. The next largest example hap- pened in 2018 and 2011, when the Department of State Lands parcel referred to as Stevens Ranch was rezoned in two parts to make up 640 acres. But some people have raised concerns about the impact a zone change could have on the environment on and around the land. While not offi cially adopted yet by the county, the 700-acre tract is recognized as mule deer winter migration habitat, said Andrew Walch, a district wildlife biologist with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. “Certainly those larger tracts of land provide more space and less disturbance for wildlife, and ODFW and wildlife advo- cates certainly are concerned every time these large zon- ing changes happen and divide land,” Walch told The Bulletin. Ben Gordon, the executive director of LandWatch, said the organization is strongly opposed to the potential rezon- ing. He argued it will be hard for the applicant to prove this land is no good for agricultural pur- poses when there are ranching operations next door. “Because the surround- ing lands are being actively ranched, we stand with the farmers and ranchers in that community trying to make a livelihood,” Gordon said. “We see this suburban development as a very incompatible use.” For farmers and ranch- ers in the area, a chief concern is water. Billy Buchanan is a rancher who has raised Wagyu and Angus cattle south of the property for the past eight years. Buchanan prides himself on providing locally sourced beef to businesses in Central Oregon. He is worried about what building potentially 70 homes on 10-acre lots will do to an aquifer that he relies on for his farming operations. Several neighbors have already had to drill wells deeper amid a long- standing drought. “It does directly aff ect us,” Buchanan said. Buchanan also argues the land has agricultural worth regardless of irrigation. The land could be used for hay stor- age, for example, or to give cat- tle more room to roam to keep them from getting too fat on irrigated pasture. “If it can be farmable, I feel you should keep those residen- tial areas in other residential areas,” he said. According to Deschutes County records, the applicant argues other than a small por- tion around a residence, the land is not irrigated, which makes agricultural practices diffi cult. A soil study shows that 71% of the soil that is deemed generally unsuitable for farming, accord- ing to county records. The applicant says the land has not been historically farmed, at least in the last 20 years, according to county staff . A public hearing on this potential zone change has been scheduled for April 19. Politicians pulled left and right in Oregon primary fi ghts By GARY A. WARNER Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — As Oregon’s political campaigns head into the fi nal stretch before the May 17 primary, candidates on the left and right are work- ing for votes among their ideo- logical base in order to win the closed primaries. With only party members able to vote in partisan primary races, the turnout is usually about half of the general election. Republicans are seeking votes of Republican activists who won’t skip the primary, while Democrats go after the progressive wing of their party who turn out in large numbers for primaries. It’s also a time when lesser-known candidates can make a splash and draw the attention of the party faith- ful. That’s been the story in recent days in political action around the state. Baker City mayor speaks at a right-wing rally in Salem Baker City Mayor Kerry McQuisten, a Republican can- didate for governor, appeared at the Reawaken America rally of radical conservatives on Friday, April 1, near the Capitol in the Salem suburb of Keizer. The event was spon- sored by The River Church in Salem, a church active in con- servative politics, and held at Volcano Stadium, a former minor league baseball park near Interstate 5. Originally scheduled to be held in Bend, the event was canceled due to ques- tions involving the enforce- ment of COVID-19 restric- tions at the Deschutes County fairgrounds. The Salem Statesman-Jour- nal reported Friday that stores at Keizer Station mall next to the ballpark decided to close Friday and Saturday because of the rally and expected counterprotests. Thielman McLeod-Skinner Keizer is the latest stop on a national tour focusing on debunked claims that the 2020 election was “stolen” from former President Donald Trump, and COVID-19 con- spiracy theories. Photos on Twitter showed McQuisten with Morrow County Sheriff Ken Matlack and former Gen. Michael Flynn, who was pardoned by Trump of charges he lied about contacts with Rus- sian agents while working at the White House. Flynn has also appeared in a video tak- ing “the QAnon Oath” of the far-right political conspir- acy group, which ends with “Where we go one, we go all.” McQuisten has made an energetic bid to break through the crowded Republican fi eld for governor, which includes former House Minority Leader Christine Drazan, Sandy Mayor Bill Pulliam and 2016 GOP nominee for gover- nor Bud Pierce of Salem. McQuisten was recently endorsed by The Northwest Observer, a popular conserva- tive political blog in Oregon. Other GOP candidates taking a hard right on campaign trail Marc Thielman, a Repub- lican candidate for gover- nor who appeared with Sen- ate candidate Darin Harbick and Deschutes County Com- missioner Patti Adair with a QAnon-supporting pastor at a Bend church last week, gained notice while he was superintendent of the Alsea School District near Corval- lis for refusing to enforce state COVID-19 mandates. He resigned in February. He’s the subject of a $3.7 mil- lion lawsuit against the district by the princi- pal of Alsea Schrader Elementary School, who alleges a hos- tile work environment, sex- ual harassment, gender dis- crimination and whistleblower retaliation. Willamette Week reports Thielman is scheduled to speak on April 15 at a fund- raiser for Dan Tooze, a Republican candidate for House District 40 in the Ore- gon City area. Tooze is a self-described member of the Proud Boys, a group involved in riots in downtown Port- land, the Oregon Capitol and the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Tooze has not said he was at any of those incidents. Reed Christensen, an elec- trical engineer from Hills- boro, faces federal charges for allegedly assaulting law enforcement offi cers while attempting to enter the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. Christensen has made his arrest the cen- terpiece of his campaign for governor, saying he was try- ing to oppose “tyranny” by taking part in the riot’s attempt to stop the count of electoral votes that Joe Biden won the presidential election. Jo Rae Perkins, a can- didate for the U.S. Senate seat held by U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Oregon, has also taken the QAnon pledge. She was the GOP nominee for the U.S. Senate in 2020, losing to incumbent U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Oregon. Insurgent Democrat beats incumbent in nod for Congress Jamie McLeod-Skin- ner has been endorsed in the Democratic primary for the 5th Congressional District by Our Revolution, a nationwide St. Charles changes visitor policy Bulletin staff report BEND — As of Monday, April 4, St. Charles Health Sys- tem is making a number of vis- itor policy changes related to COVID-19 in its hospitals. Visitors to the hospitals will no longer be required to show proof of vaccination, but masks will still be mandatory. New signs will be posted at hospital entrances encouraging certain visitors to leave the building, including people with respi- ratory symptoms, those with a pending COVID-19 test, or those who have been in contact with a person suspected of hav- ing COVID-19 in the past 14 days, St. Charles Health Sys- tem said Thursday in a news release. Visitor screening will not apply to those seeking med- ical treatment or COVID-19 testing. Another policy change will allow patients who have COVID-19 two visitors at a time. They may come and go Ryan Brennecke/Bulletin fi le network of activists that grew out of the presidential cam- paigns of Sen. Bernie Sand- ers, I-Vt. McLeod-Skinner, who lives in Crooked River Ranch in Central Oregon, is running in the May 17 primary against U.S. Rep. Kurt Schrader, D-Canby. Schrader fi rst won election to Congress in 2008. But the district was sig- nifi cantly redrawn in redis- tricting for 2022, shifting to the east, including a portion that crosses the Cascades to take in the northern parts of Deschutes County. The district includes less than half of Schrader’s cur- rent constituents. McLeod-Skinner has cam- paigned on the theme that Schrader has been a speed bump on President Biden’s Build Back Better legisla- tion of aid for recovery from the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. “A proud progressive Democrat, Jamie has focused her career on rebuilding com- munities and protecting our natural resources,” the group said in its endorsement state- ment, released Monday. “Her mom, a schoolteacher, taught her to ‘always leave a place better than you found it.’” Schrader, the most mod- erate of Oregon’s four Dem- ocratic members of the U.S. House, has said he supports the party’s position in most matters, but is not in lock- step with House leadership. He was one of the few Dem- ocrats to oppose the nomi- nation of U.S. Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., when she sought to return to the House speakership when Democrats won a majority of seats in 2018. The winner of the Dem- ocratic primary will face a Republican challenger from a primary slate that includes Bend entrepreneur Jimmy Crumpacker, former Happy Valley Mayor Lori Chavez- DeRemer and Wilsonville physician John DiPaola. Our Revolution says it is “organizing a down-ballot bench of progressive candi- dates from city halls to the halls of Congress.” In Oregon, the group helped elect school board candidates in Portland, Cor- vallis, Salem-Keizer and Centennial. In areas east of the Cas- cades, it worked to elect Mar- cus LeGrand and Janet Sarai Llerandi to the Bend-La Pine School Board. The Retreat The Retreat is Hiring! is Hiring! $20/hour up to $40/hour. 40 jobs available Example Job Openings • Rangers • Servers Openings • Housekeepers • Line Cook • Dishwasher • Grounds Keepers • Customer Service • Massage Therapists • Carpenter • Landscapers • Mechanics • Human Resources An entrance to St. Charles Bend, seen in September 2020. from the hospital as needed. There will be an exception related to patients in the emer- gency department, where only one visitor will be allowed. In some cases, visitors may be required to wear additional personal protective equipment for their safety. “Two years ago, we insti- tuted visitor restrictions to keep our caregivers and patients safe,” said Debbie Robinson, the chief nursing offi cer at St. Charles Bend. “We’re in a dif- ferent place now. The number of COVID-19 cases and hospi- talizations are low in our com- munity, and we have vaccines and many eff ective treatments available.” Door screeners will con- tinue to be posted at hospital entrances through April 8 to help educate the community as the transition unfolds, the health system added. On Thursday, St. Charles Bend reported eight patients with COVID-19, none of whom was in the ICU. St. Charles Health System operates hospitals in Bend, Red- mond, Prineville and Madras. For information call Molly or Sean: 541-573-5150 or email jobs@silvies.us