Investigators say shooting at NW Redmond home was an attempted murder/suicide

Barney Lerten

(Update: Added video)

REDMOND, Ore. (KTVZ) – Police have released the tragic details of an incident that brought numerous police to a northwest Redmond home late last week. Investigators have determined that a man shot his roommate in an attempted homicide, then fatally wounded himself.

Police responded to a 911 call late on the night of Thursday, Jan. 23 and found two people with gunshot wounds at a home in the 1000 block of Northwest Elm Avenue, Lt. April Huey said.

 “The investigation by RPD and the Central Oregon Major Incident Team determined the incident to be an attempted homicide of a roommate, followed by a self-inflicted gunshot wound,” Huey said in a news release.

The suspect in the shooting, a Redmond man, died on Saturday at St. Charles Bend, the lieutenant said.

Huey added, “RPD would like to thank Redmond Fire and Rescue, the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office, Bend Police Department, Oregon State Police, Oregon State Medical Examiner’s Office, Oregon State Crime Lab, and other MIT partners for responding and assisting with this investigation.”

Central Oregonians dealing with a mental health crisis can find resources to help at KTVZ’s Let’s Talk page.

Madras PD partners with Project ChildSafe, makes firearm safety kits available

Barney Lerten

MADRAS, Ore. (KTVZ) – The Madras Police Department, in partnership with Project ChildSafe, is offering free firearm safety kits to residents as part of a nationwide initiative to promote responsible gun ownership.

The safety kits, which include a cable-style gun lock, are available for pickup at the Madras Police Department during normal business hours, the department said in a news release Thursday.

Developed by the National Shooting Sports Foundation, Project ChildSafe is a firearms safety education program dedicated to reducing gun-related accidents through safe handling and storage practices. Since its launch in 2003, Project ChildSafe has distributed over 37 million firearm safety kits across the country.

“We encourage residents to take advantage of this opportunity to receive a Project ChildSafe safety kit, which includes both an educational safety curriculum and a cable-style gun lock,” said Madras Police Chief Tim Plummer. “The locks are designed to fit most handguns, rifles, and shotguns, helping ensure firearms are securely stored.”

By partnering with Project ChildSafe, the Madras Police Department joins a national effort to provide gun owners with the necessary tools to prevent unauthorized firearm access and enhance community safety. The program operates in all 50 states and five U.S. territories, distributing essential safety resources to law enforcement agencies and the public.

Project ChildSafe represents a critical step forward in promoting firearm safety education and ensuring that all gun owners understand their responsibility when handling and storing firearms.

About the National Shooting Sports Foundation

The National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF) is the trade association for the firearms industry, dedicated to promoting, protecting, and preserving hunting and shooting sports. Established in 1961, NSSF represents more than 12,000 manufacturers, distributors, firearms retailers, shooting ranges, sportsmen’s organizations, and publishers.

For more information about Project ChildSafe or to request a gun lock, visit www.projectchildsafe.org.

Shifting Seasons: A new series from our Local Alert Weather Meteorologists looking at the impacts of climate change in Central Oregon

Shannon Brady

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Our new KTVZ News series, “Shifting Seasons” will focus on the climate challenges impacting Central Oregon and the Pacific Northwest today, from wildfires to drought, water availability and more. 

We’ll explore how wildfires impact our lives and our landscape for decades. We’ll also dive into the growing issue of water supply and how the changing snowpack in the Cascades affects us.

And we’re not just talking about water shortages: Drought and heat are also affecting communities across the state, from farmers and ranchers to firefighters and Indigenous communities. We’ll hear from those on the front lines of Oregon’s climate shifts. 

We’ll also present both sides of the conversation, because it’s important to understand the full picture. In the end, we want you to understand why climate change is such a pressing issue and how it’s already impacting the world around us, and how it can impact your life moving forward.

Shifting Seasons is all about focusing on the climate changes that are happening here and now in the Pacific Northwest. These changes affect all of us, even if they’re not immediately visible. We’ll explore the concerns you might have about how climate change is affecting your community today and what might happen if we don’t act. 

Shifting Seasons will air monthly on KTVZ News.

Bend, other Oregon cities push lawmakers for infrastructure funding, more leeway to remove homeless camps

Oregon Capital Chronicle

City of Bend needs millions for two large sewer projects

By Julia Shumway, Oregon Capital Chronicle

SALEM, Ore. (KTVZ) — Oregon cities will push the state Legislature to give them more money for roads, water and sewers, more power to remove homeless camps and more flexibility to spend hotel tax revenue on basic services.

City officials from around Oregon laid out those goals during their biannual City Day at the Capitol earlier this week, though it was quickly overshadowed by an announcement, delayed by court orders, that the Trump administration planned to immediately cut funding relied on by states and cities. 

Some city priorities, including increased infrastructure spending, are shared by Democrats and Republicans in the Legislature. Others, including attempts to roll back a state law that limits cities’ ability to remove homeless camps, will be a tougher sell in Salem. 

Anti-homeless camp laws

Last June, the U.S. Supreme Court sided with the city of Grants Pass by upholding a city law that banned homeless people from using blankets, pillows or cardboard boxes to protect themselves from the elements while sleeping outside.

A panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals previously concluded that the ordinance amounted to cruel and unusual punishment for people who lack shelter and violated the Eighth Amendment, but the conservative majority on the U.S. Supreme Court rejected that ruling and said it was up to cities to regulate homelessness.

After that Supreme Court ruling, cities around the country passed new homeless camping bans or made their existing laws more restrictive. But Grants Pass and other cities in Oregon still needed to follow a state law, championed by Gov. Tina Kotek when she was speaker of the Oregon House in 2021, that limits their ability to ban sleeping outside.

Under that law, cities can only restrict people from “sitting, lying, sleeping or keeping warm and dry outdoors on public property that is open to the public” if those restrictions are “objectively reasonable as to time, place and manner with regards to persons experiencing homelessness.”

It also allows homeless people to sue cities over restrictions that aren’t objectively reasonable, as Disability Rights Oregon and the Oregon Law Center did on Thursday on behalf of five disabled homeless people in Grants Pass.

Since August, Grants Pass has allowed homeless people to stay in only two designated campsites, and earlier this month it closed the larger campsite and restricted hours at the other — leaving hundreds of people no option but to crowd into a site with space for 30 tents each night and pack up all their belongings by 7 a.m.

North Bend Mayor Jessica Engelke, president of the League of Oregon Cities, said the league wants to “clarify” the state law, but not criminalize homelessness. 

“Rather, we aim to address the critical concerns about clarity and consistency in the law,” she said. “‘Objectively reasonable’ is subject to varying interpretations by cities and localities, resulting in a patchwork of regulations that can lead to confusion for all community members, including those experiencing homelessness.” 

Alexandra Ring, the league’s lobbyist for housing and land use issues, said conversations are ongoing about how to define “objectively reasonable,” and how cities can regulate camping in areas including parks, flood plains and other environmentally sensitive areas.

They also want to tweak a requirement in state law that currently requires anyone who sues to give 90 days notice of a lawsuit to mandate that the person planning to file a suit tells the city what about its ordinance isn’t objectively reasonable so the city has a chance to fix the problem before a lawsuit is filed. 

Three bills — Senate Bill 593 from Sen. Mark Meek, D-Gladstone; Senate Bill 645  from Senate Minority Leader Daniel Bonham, R-The Dalles, and House Bill 2432 from several House Republicans — have been introduced to repeal the 2021 law but none has a hearing scheduled. Bonham announced those bills to scattered applause at the League of Oregon Cities forum. 

Infrastructure funding

Cities also will lobby for more funding for local infrastructure, especially water and wastewater improvements needed before new homes can be built within city limits. The Legislature last year approved close to $100 million for infrastructure improvements, but the list of projects that needed funding far exceeded that sum. 

Bend Mayor Melanie Kebler said her city needs to come up with $66 million for two really big sewer pipes — one in the southeast part of town and one in the city center. It’s more expensive to build underground infrastructure in Central Oregon than in other parts of the state because Bend sits on top of lava rock.

The city hopes to get some of that money from the state. Once the southeast sewer interceptor is done, Bend can move ahead with plans that would add more than 1,200 homes and 2,800 permanent jobs.

Other cities around the state have similar planned developments that have been on hold for years because of water and sewer needs. 

“The connection between infrastructure and housing cannot be overstated,” Kebler said. 

Gov. Tina Kotek and top Democratic legislators told city leaders that they’re also prioritizing infrastructure funding. 

“I know you have other infrastructure issues that are not directly related to housing and housing development, but we need to prioritize that as we all know more housing supply in our communities,” Kotek said. “So in my budget and with the Legislature, I’ll be working on a program to make sure we can continue to invest in infrastructure in your communities to build more housing, because we know how critical that is.” 

House Speaker Julie Fahey, D-Eugene, agreed that infrastructure funding, especially to spur housing construction, will be a priority for lawmakers. 

“We also know in cities like mine in Eugene, there is land within the (urban growth boundary) that could be developed for hundreds of units of housing, but the city lacked funding for infrastructure for water and wastewater,” she said. “I think that is critically important, and we’re going to continue that work this session.”

Hotel tax changes

More than 20 years ago, the Legislature passed a law requiring 70% of any new local lodging taxes be spent on tourism marketing — meaning if a city charges a 10% hotel tax and collects $10 from a $100 room stay, it needs to use $7 to attract more tourists and can spend the other $3 on other needs. 

That may have been necessary to grow tourism 20 years ago, Toledo Mayor Rod Cross said, but now the restriction hobbles city budgets. He said cities, especially tourism hubs on the coast, want more flexibility to use taxes from hotels and short-term rentals to blunt the impact of tourism on city services.

For instance, Newport’s permanent population is around 10,000, but it swells to 40,000 people in the summer and as high as 50,000 on summer weekends, he said. The city’s police department has 28 employees, which isn’t enough for the summer. 

“When you have a huge rush of tourists who come over into a community for a weekend, and that population doubles, or for some communities, quintuple, the numbers become overwhelming to a city’s infrastructure,” Cross said. “For some communities, roads wear out a lot faster. Water systems are strained. Tourists come to parks because they have children.”

He said allowing cities to use some of their tourism tax revenue to improve basic services will actually attract more tourists, who will want to return year after year to visit cities with good roads, parks and other amenities. 

“If local jurisdictions can better maintain and enhance necessary infrastructure and provide the services and amenities necessary to support tourism, in turn, it will make our communities even more desirable for visitors, and they will come back repeatedly,” Cross said. “Seems like a win for everyone involved.” 

After long dry spell, heavy snowfall returns to Cascades; Mt. Bachelor base again tops 100 inches

Barney Lerten

(Update: Adding video)

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — “Winter weather is back” at Mt. Bachelor, the resort reported Friday, with about 10 inches of snow falling in the past 24 hours, making for a big fresh-powder weekend ahead for skiers and snowboarders.

The resort reported four inches overnight and a half-foot more by late morning, Marketing Coordinator Gabe Stephens told KTVZ News.

“With this new snowfall, Mt. Bachelor’s base depth has returned to 100 inches, with mid-mountain snow depth measuring at 124 inches,” he said.

In fact, Mt. Bachelor was back in the Top 5 ski resorts in North America for deepest base depth.

For the most up-to-date snow reports, be sure to check out the Mountain Report.

Stephens said the storm is expected to deliver significant snowfall throughout the day, with the forecast calling for another 10-14 inches by Saturday morning and even more throughout the rest of the weekend.

As of noon, 9 of 12 lifts are spinning delivering pow turns across the mountain.

Deschutes County commissioners OK courthouse expansion budget hike after Patti Adair voices deep frustration

Barney Lerten

‘I don’t want to keep losing sleep over this project’

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) – Deschutes County commissioners this week approved a $2.9 million increase in the county courthouse expansion project’s budget, pushing the total to $46.8 million – but the 3-0 vote came after Commissioner Patti Adair expressed strong consternation about the rising price tag.

“It’s not my money, it’s not your money – it’s the people’s money,” the commissioner told project leaders at Wednesday’s meeting, pointing out that the initial project estimates were close to half where they stand now, at $27 million.

 “We in Deschutes County are not made of money,” Adair said. “I want to know this thing is humming along, and we stay within our budget for the rest of the time. I don’t think that’s too much to ask. I don’t want to keep losing sleep over this project.”

In an issue summary for the discussion (see below), project officials noted a variety of factors that came into play, from unforeseen site conditions and a longer-than-expected design and permitting phase to design revisions. The county’s Facilities Department has identified reserves in a campus improvements fund to cover the added costs.

(Courthouse expansion discussion begins at 1:36)

Colleague Tony DeBone even recalled a lower figure, $25 million but said, “I do have confidence in this” going forward. Commissioner Phil Chang said the rising costs were “hard to hear” but pointed out that “labor, materials all cost more.”

County officials noted that other large public projects in the area also have encountered costs higher than planned. But Adair said, “If we knew it was going to approach $50 million, maybe we’d have built something smaller.”

Still, Adair also acknowledged that even smaller, personal renovation projects can run into the same pitfalls, budget and otherwise: “Ask anyone who’s remodeled their house – it’s a nightmare.”

County Administrator Nick Lelack promised to return to the board with monthly updates and thanked those overseeing the project “for doing everything you can” to keep costs down.

Deschutes Courthouse expansion budget increaseDownload

Highway 58 reopens after crash west of Hwy. 97 junction; ODOT had urged using other routes

Barney Lerten

CHEMULT, Ore. (KTVZ) – A crash closed state Highway west of the junction with Highway 97 for a time Friday afternoon and evening, prompting ODOT to advise motorists to use an alternate route if possible.

ODOT’s TripCheck posted the alert at 3:20 p.m. of the crash, which occurred at milepost 83, three miles west of the intersection. An area road camera at Chemult showed snowy road conditions.

The highway reopened by evening.

The National Weather Service has issued a winter storm warning for the northern and central Oregon Cascades through 4 a.m. Sunday above 2,500 feet, predicting 8-14 inches of snow and up to two feet above 5,000 feet, with winds gusting as high as 45 mph.

Bend-La Pine Schools assure families about privacy policy, keep no records of students’ immigration status

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Bend-La Pine Schools provided KTVZ News with an email sent home to all students’ families due to numerous inquiries about its policies on dealing with immigration issues amid detentions happening nationwide.

Here is that message, in full:

Bend-La Pine Schools community,

During the transition our community and country are experiencing right now, we know you may be facing uncertainty. We are receiving many inquiries about what the changes mean for Bend-La Pine Schools. We are working with our state and federal partners to seek clarity and answers on the changes that apply to school districts.

We know transitions like these can have a real impact on your life. What impacts you matters to us. We all work and learn best when experiencing a sense of safety and belonging.

That’s why Bend-La Pine Schools remains committed to the well-being of our community. We believe this begins by honoring the dignity and value of each student, family, and staff member in our workplace and learning community.

As we navigate change together, here are continued commitments you can expect from us:

Employees will adhere to laws protecting the privacy of all students’ educational records, unless there is parent/guardian permission or legal authorization such as a court order releasing the information.

In accordance with legal authority, employees shall not ask about or maintain records pertaining to the immigration status of any student, or of the families of students or employees.

Employees shall not permit access to school property or to students for immigration enforcement, without parent/guardian permission or legal authorization such as a court order.

Bend-La Pine Schools does not currently, and will not in the future, tolerate any form of discrimination, harassment, intimidation, bullying, or related behavior. You have the right to engage with our schools without experiencing discrimination or harassment on the basis of sex, sexual orientation, gender, race, disability, family income, religion, national origin, or the many other important parts of your identity.

We remain committed to swift response to, and improved prevention of, violations of related laws and policies. See our complete list of policies for details.

Bend-La Pine Schools’ stance has not changed: Each and every member of our learning community is valuable and contributes to our mission of high-quality teaching and learning. We will continue working to ensure students and staff feel a sense of safety, dignity, and belonging while at school or work, so that each student achieves academic success, experiences wellness, and develops a passion, purpose, and plan for their future. Have questions? Want to learn more? Engage with us.

Bend-La Pine Schools

OSP reports a second Redmond resident has died following Highway 22 head-on crash in Linn County

Barney Lerten

(Update: Second Redmond resident has died)

MARION FORKS, Ore. (KTVZ) – A second Redmond resident has died following a head-on crash two weeks ago on state Highway 22 in Linn County, Oregon State Police reported Friday.

Troopers said earlier a preliminary investigation found that Theodore Kleinman, 79, was driving a red Cadillac heading east on Highway 22 near Minto Road around 11:35 a.m. on Friday, Jan. 17 when he left the road and his car struck a blue Ford F-150 pickup driven by Delores Ann Carroll, 76.

Both drivers were seriously injured and taken to an area hospital, OSP said. A passenger, Glenn Carroll, 51, of Redmond, was transported with non-life-threatening injuries.

Kleinman later died at the hospital, OSP said earlier. Troopers said in Friday’s update they learned Wednesday that Delores Ann Carroll had died of injuries received in the crash.

The crash affected highway traffic for about four hours during the on-scene investigation by OSP’s Collision Reconstruction Unit. OSP was assisted at the scene by the Turner, Gates and Idanha fire departments and ODOT.

What does preparation look like for C. Oregon officials as winter weather returns?

Isabella Warren

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ)– Winter alerts are in effect for much of Central Oregon throughout the weekend with a wintry mix expected in Bend and Redmond. Local officials say they are always prepared for when the winter weather hits.

Watch KTVZ News’ Isabella Warren’s report.