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Give Guide a Great Success for Area Vets

Thanks to a number of local businesses, we were able to donate a bundle to COVO.

Thanks, y’all!
For the ninth consecutive year, the Source successfully coordinated with local businesses in an effort to give back to the community during the holiday season via our Give Guide. We handed this year’s beneficiary, Central Oregon Veteran’s Outreach, a check for $5,600—the most we’ve ever raised! COVO is a Bend nonprofit that distributes food, clothing and other necessities like dental work and disability services to homeless veterans.

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New Music Video From Laurel Brauns

Laurel Brauns’ new music video for her song Kaleidoscope Eyes.

Laurel Brauns, the indie-folk singer-songwriter who was long a mainstay in Bend’s music scene, may have since moved to Portland to further explore her music career, but she hasn’t forgotten about us here in Central Oregon.
In fact, she was around just a few weeks ago to shoot this music video, directed by Far From Earth Films’ Tim Cash, for her song “Kaleidoscope Eyes.

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Fish and Farmers Find Common Ground on the Crooked River

Restoration deal step in the right direction for Crooked River.

Its no secret that irrigation withdrawals have a major impact on stream flows in the Deschutes Basin. From Wickiup Reservoir in the pine forested Cascade foothills south of Bend to the Juniper dotted canyons outside Terrebonne, the rise and fall of the river is dictated less by snow and rain than the opening and closing of steel gates that meter out water to the legions of farmers on the High Desert.
Over the past decade, irrigators, conservation groups, cities and other stakeholders have made major strides in restoring some of the diminished flows. This past summer, flows in the middle Deschutes were as much as four times the summer average recorded for much of the 20th century when water-thirsty crops and inefficient irrigation methods left little for the river. Much of that restored flow has come as the result of piping projects that allow irrigators to leave some of their conserved water in the river without curtailing their own usage.

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Brothers and Others Avoid Postal Service’s Budget Ax

Post offices will remain open.

Almost two dozen rural post offices slated for closure by the United States Postal Service will remain open, including postal facilities in Brothers, Post, Paulina and Fort Rock.
Sen. Jeff Merkley announced late last week that the Postal Service has agreed that closing the facilities would place undue hardship on rural residents who rely on the post offices for personal and professional purposes.
The Source wrote this past year about how the proposed closing would impact people living around Brothers for whom the facility serves both as a means of communication and community. At the time, the postal service was mulling the closure of more than 3,600 post offices around the country, primarily in rural areas. More than 40 of those were located in Oregon.

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Board Kills Magnet Reform Effort

Admission rules upheld for local magnet schools.

If you live outside of the magnet school zones and want your child to attend one of the four alternative schools, be prepared to wait in line.
Last Tuesday, despite protest from a number of concerned parents and teachers over the past few months, the members of the Bend-La Pine school board chose to keep in place the current rules that determine how children are admitted to Amity Creek, Highland, Westside Village and east side magnet, Juniper Elementary School.
At the December 13 meeting, board member Beth Bagley made a motion to amend the magnet school zone policy, but her fellow board members failed to second the motion effectively killing any possibility of revising the magnet school admission policy.

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Name That Wolf: Finalists Announced in Wolf-Naming Contest

Oregon Wild has decided to give the wolf a new handle. It recently solicited names for the wanderlust wolf and ended up with more than 250 suggestions

When you tromp 700 miles in search of a mate and meal in Oregon, that’s good enough to gain international notoriety. Well, at least that’s been the experience of OR-7 the youngest member of Oregon’s famous—or infamous, depending on where you stand on wolf recovery—Imnaha wolf pack.

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