Posted inNews

City County remain split on airport district: Joint meeting doesn’t produce any resolution

Summer is nearly over but city councilors and county commissioners saved a few fireworks for their Monday night work session where they clashed over a proposed urban renewal district around the Bend airport.
The urban renewal district, which would help subsidize infrastructure improvements at the airport, is something that the city badly wants to bolster its economic development efforts. However, the proposal requires the blessing of the county commission, and commissioners remain split over it. Earlier this month the commission tabled the discussion on the proposal indefinitely over its concerns about the impact on other taxing districts in the county, which would see their future revenues impacted by the urban renewal plan.
The Council and Commissioners debated heavily the budget for a proposed air traffic tower, emergency services and Urban Renewal Zone for the expanding businesses around the airport.
An economic debate erupted with council members squaring on the sides of both business and residences alike. At one point Commissioner Dennis Luke simply refused to discuss the topic.
Commissioner Mike Daley voiced his opinion in favor of the increased industrial base caused by a busy airport.
Advocates point out that the Bend Municipal Airport has grown drastically in the six years since its master plan was reviewed. Currently there are roughly 50,000 flights taking off from the airport a year.
"What I see at the Bend airport,"said Mr. Daley, "is a lot of really good jobs, a diversification of our economy."
Although his remarks brought a single loud applaud from a member of the attending public, the two governing bodies are sure to debate this topic for quite some time.

Posted inNews

A Fine Line

A revamp of state ethics laws has closed the door on lavish gifts and trips for lawmakers. However, it doesn’t prevent members of Crook County's staff and planning commission from accepting bar drinks on a resort developer's tab, local and state officials say.
Rumors had been swirling for months around the small community of Powell Butte about how the developer of Crossing Trails resort picked up two bar tabs for members of the planning commission during a period of time where the commission was weighing approval of the 500 home resort and golf course. In late August the chair of the planning commission, Bill Gowen, went on the record to state the several members of the commission had eaten and drank on a tab that was ultimately picked up by Crossing Trails developer Gene Gramzow.
Two of those commissioners ultimately recused themselves from the final decision on the resort, which passed by a 4-1 margin earlier this month.
But the episode has caused some to question the relationship between developers and local officials, who critics say have taken an overly accommodating approach to resorts that they say are chewing up farmland and changing the character of the rural community of Powell Butte near Prineville.
"Our first reaction was our jaws dropped," said Mollie Eder, a neighbor of the proposed resort who also authored a measure forcing the county to withdraw its underlying authority to establish resorts.
Under Oregon's new law, public officials can take up to $50 in gifts, including food and drinks, over the course of a calendar year without disclosing it publicly, said Ronald Bersin, executive director of Oregon's ethics commission.

Posted inOpinion

The Schools’ Corporate Sell-Out

America already has the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl, the FedEx Orange Bowl and the Allstate Sugar Bowl - not to mention the Konica Minolta Gator Bowl, the AT&T Cotton Bowl and the Chick-fil-A (formerly Peach) Bowl. So why shouldn't Bend-LaPine schools let businesses (for a price, of course) attach their names to athletic fields and other facilities?
Weird as it sounds, the school board actually is kicking that idea around.

Posted inOpinion

Fair and Balanced

I found Sunday's editorial by John Costa "Convention Coverage Was Fair" to be laughable. I believe every publication has the right to espouse their beliefs, but why hide behind a smokescreen of impartiality when it is abundantly clear the Bulletin has been a GOP mouthpiece since the current owners took over? The Bulletin continually whines about its supposed impartiality and yet, every election year the Bulletin posts a list of ballot recommendations.

Posted inOpinion

Going Fisties at Phil’s Trail

Well the inevitable happened this Saturday when two mountain bikers collided with one another and I had the opportunity to witness it all. One cyclist was climbing, having the right of way, the other blasting down the trail on a 6" travel bike. The descender did not yield to the climber perhaps thinking he had speed, weight and a buddy to roll over the single climber. Well when their aluminum steeds met at high speed they were going to stop. They both dismounted and the bikes were dropped where they were and out came the bravado fists a flying….wooo weee the downhiller went down with two quick jabs to the chin by the thin, fit, tattooed XC rider. The second downhiller was about to intervene then I stepped in to assist the XC rider. I have been riding the trail network around here for two years and the amount of bozo riders out here are mounting by the months. Hey you bozo riders, those movies like Seasons, The Collective and Roam are done by professional riders in sectioned off areas with film crews, zip lines, medical staff, in pristine country with no other RIDERS climbing etc.

Posted inCulture

Under Pressure: Atelier 6000 gets things rolling … literally.

Last Sunday afternoon, a group of 27 artists, art aficionados and
curious bystanders crowded into the parking lot of Atelier 6000 - a
small art studio/workshop in the Old Mill District whose name was
derived from the French word for "workshop"-to watch an enormous
steamroller run over wooden plates that the artists spent as many as
four weeks working on. With the very real chance that the steamroller
would crush the plates and leave nothing but a mess of paint, wood
splinters and carpet padding, the crowd anxiously waited for the
steamroller to back away from the printing surface. Owner Pat Clark
along with Bruce Emerson and artist Dawn Emerson approached the area,
pulled back the padding and lifted the large white sheets of paper from
the plate. Emerson's design, a horse, survived the steamroller's
crushing weight and the resulting print drew applause and "oohs" and
"aahs" from the crowd.

Clark, an emeritus professor from the
California State system on a "failed retirement" says she wanted to do
an event like this because it gave artists an opportunity to create
prints on a larger scale and showed the community another side of print
making.

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