Forest Service fire crews conduct 20-acre prescribed burn SE of Sisters

Barney Lerten

(Update: Prescribed burn conducted)

SISTERS, Ore. (KTVZ) — After a favorable test burn, Sisters Ranger District firefighters on Friday were conducting up to 20 acres of prescribed burning 3 1/2 miles southeast of Sisters, just east of Forest Service Road 16.

Smoke may be visible from Sisters, Highway 20 and 126 and the surrounding area. Residents in Cloverdale, Plainview and along Harrington Loop Road were encouraged to keep doors and windows closed to minimize smoke impacts. Smoke impacts are most likely overnight and in the early morning hours.

Portions of Forest Service Roads 210 and 215 and Peterson Ridge Trail West were closed Friday during prescribed burning operations, as sections of the roads and trail are located within the burn unit. Signage was placed on the roads and trail to clearly mark which sections were closed. Smoke impacts are possible across FSR 100 during prescribed burning operations and Highway 20 overnight and in the early morning hours.

Firefighters implement understory prescribed burning to reduce wildfire risk to communities. Prescribed burning reintroduces and maintains fire within our fire-dependent ecosystem by removing concentrations of vegetation and restoring forest health while increasing public and firefighter safety.

Fire management officials work with Oregon Department of Forestry smoke specialists to plan prescribed burns. Prescribed burns are conducted when weather is most likely to move smoke up and away from our communities. While prescribed fire managers take significant preventive measures, it’s likely that communities may experience some smoke during or immediately after a prescribed burn.

What does this mean for you? 

During prescribed burns, smoke may settle in low-lying areas overnight and in the early morning hours.  

All residents are encouraged to close doors and windows at night to avoid smoke impacts. 

If available, use a portable air cleaner. Air cleaners work best running with doors and windows closed. You can also create a DIY air cleaner

If you have a central air system, use it to filter air. Use high-efficiency filters if possible. 

When driving in smoky areas, drivers should slow down, turn on headlights and turn air to recirculating. 

If you have heart or lung disease, asthma, or other chronic conditions, pay attention to how you feel and if symptoms of heart or lung disease worsen, consider contacting your health care professional. 

Go to centraloregonfire.org to learn more about smoke safety and prescribed burning in Central Oregon and visit When Smoke is in the Air for more smoke preparedness resources. 

For more information on prescribed burning in Central Oregon, visit centraloregonfire.org/ and for information specific to the Deschutes National Forest visit www.fs.usda.gov/deschutes. Follow us on X/Twitter @CentralORFire. Text “COFIRE” to 888-777 to receive wildfire and prescribed fire text alerts. 

Problem Solvers: SE Bend neighborhood pushing back against PacifiCorp’s proposed transmission line route

Matthew Draxton

‘Anywhere is better than this,’ homeowner says; utility says route not finalized

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — A southeast Bend neighborhood is pushing back against PacifiCorp’s proposed plan to build a transmission line from Prineville to Chiloquin that would potentially in part parallel their neighborhood. 

Several neighbors we spoke to are staunchly against the proposed power line, for multiple reasons.

Sundance neighborhood resident Jim Moran said, “Overall, it’s a crisis.”

A resident who wished to remain anonymous said, “It’s an infringement on us.”

Another resident, Brian Levering, said, “We think about it every day. We think about it when we wake up.”

A newer resident to the neighborhood, Kristen Boone, said, “All these people have moved out here to live in peace in this wonderful landscape. Putting power lines out here can’t be the answer.”

Longtime resident Gary Dalski said, “Anywhere is better than this.”

PacifiCorp is considering four possible routes for a new 180 mile transmission line between Powell Butte near Redmond to southern Klamath County.

Senior Communications Specialist Simon Gutierrez said, “Customer load demands in Oregon are steadily increasing, and they’re eventually going to surpass the capacity of our current transmission system in that area.”

“Adding an additional line at this voltage allows us to provide safe, reliable power with greater redundancy well into the future,” he added,

According to Gutierrez, the transmission line “will upgrade the existing transmission backbone and will allow the company to integrate new renewable energy sources in central and southern Oregon.”

Route B would run through southeast Bend parallel to the Sundance neighborhood, where residents like Janell Boone say it would disturb the essence of the area.

“These 180-foot-tall towers would be within 750 yards of our property line. This is where we access the BLM and the Deschutes National Forest on horseback, on our mountain bikes. We hike here daily, all of our neighborhood. We came here for this very reason.”

“Those towers are 16 to 18 stories high. That is taller than any structure in Central Oregon. These are massive. They’re absolutely going to loom over the landscape and loom over homeowners.”

Additional concerns include environmental impacts and access to public lands.

A resident of Bend since 1980, Cleme Rinehart, pointed to the neighborhood being on “a mule deer migration path that would be hugely disrupted. We’re on a bird migration pattern. We have lots of animals, from antler deer to foxes, you name it. All these would be terribly disrupted.”

In regards to public lands, Rinehart said, “I think we need to leave them (as) untouched as possible (for) future generations, for our kids and our grandkids.” Janelle Boone added, “Encroaching upon more of Central Oregon’s public lands needs to be avoided.”

Kristin Boone, the daughter of Janell Boone and a new homeowner in the neighborhood, added, “It’s BLM land, and a private company coming in and destroying that just doesn’t sit right with me at all.”

Aside from visual impacts, environmental concerns and accessibility, homeowners and residents of the rural Bend community are primarily concerned about increased fire risk with the installation of a transmission line and how that could impact already-increasing insurance rates.

A homeowner who wished to remain anonymous said, “We are already in a very high fire zone and pay high insurance premiums already. And this would increase the risk for fire.”

Rinehart added to this concern, saying, “If this goes down, it would be lucky if you’d be able to get insurance at all.”

Janell Boone expressed fear saying, “We’re nervous every, every summer. We’re all on watch. We’re cleaning up our properties. We’re doing everything we can to avoid fire risk.”

KTVZ spoke with two property owners who were part of the Sundance neighborhood during the 1996 Skeleton Fire.

Gary Dalski, a longtime Sundance resident who moved to rural southeast Bend in the ’80s, said his experiences with the Skeleton Fire that destroyed 19 homes in 1996 has him opposed to the proposed transmission line.

“Just being one of the original residents out here, it’s disappointing.”

Jerry Brown, another longtime resident, reflected on recovering from that fire: “I lost my house once in the Skeleton Fire. It took a long, long time to rebuild and establish again. Everything that was in our home was lost.”

Brown pondered over what it could mean for him if another fire were to happen in the area: “At this age, I’d have to go. I don’t think I could rebuild and start over. I’m too old for that.”

PacifiCorp argues wildfire risk is taken very seriously.

Gutierrez said, “It’s one of our top priorities to preserve the safety of the communities that we serve. And we do everything in our power through operational practices, situational awareness, constantly monitoring weather. We have a team of in-house meteorologists. So we are on the cutting edge of wildfire mitigation and prevention, and doing everything that we can to protect the communities that we serve.”

Homeowners and residents are also concerned their property values would go down due to visual impairments, fire risk and high insurance rates.

Jim Moran, a real estate broker and Sundance property owner for the last 20 years, estimates property values will “drop 30 to 40 percent because of this.” He argues it’s a property rights issue and explained the impact a drop in property value would have on the 200 residents.

New to the neighborhood, homeowner Kristin Boone added, “Home value is so important. We’re all trying to make it in this world and in this economy. So absolutely, it’s a concern for all of us.”

Moran continued, “A lot of these folks have had these properties for years, as most people have. They buy property for an investment, and to have this kind of impact is huge…it’s part of their retirement going forward…they want to pass this on to their families. It’s just not fair.”

Cleme Rinehart added to this, saying, “Home is the greatest investment that most families make in their lifetime. If you lose value in your home or if you lose your home, you pretty much lost the nest egg of your life. So it’s pretty significant for us.”

PacifiCorp emphasizes that no plans have been finalized.

Gutierrez highlighted this, saying, “We can look at each of those routes and adjust them in various directions, to try to mitigate any concerns that the customers have or part of the residents in the area might have.”

He added, “We’re out here in these communities. Our project planners are out there listening to concerns that folks have. We will be doing everything we can to minimize the impact on communities and ensure that this line goes in in the safest manner possible.”

Gutierrez said a more refined, finalized decision won’t come until late summer. Until then, their goal is to continue receiving feedback from the community.

He says, “Right now, we’re in the early planning stages of this project. We’re gathering information.”

PacifiCorp has hosted five public meetings in Bend, Prineville, Chiloquin and Klamath Falls, in addition to a virtual open house. They will be hosting two more open public forums as an opportunity for community members to give feedback and express their concerns.

The first will be held in Redmond next Wednesday, April 23 and the second on Wednesday, April 24th.

Bend Police scale back hunt for two men on the run from traffic stop, one possibly armed; say they likely left area

Barney Lerten

(Update: Adding video, police update, comments by resident)

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Bend Police alerted area residents late Thursday morning and began a large manhunt in northeast Bend for two men – one possibly armed – who ran from officers at a traffic stop. By late afternoon, they said the two likely had left the area.

Bend Police Communications Manager Sheila Miller said that around 10:33 a.m. Bend Police attempted a traffic stop on a silver Kia Rio in the area of Deschutes Market and Yeoman roads. Officers believed a person in the car, a 46-year-old Bend man, was associated with a weapons offense that took place on NE Bellevue Drive around 3:30 a.m.   

The driver, accompanied by a male passenger, did not stop for officers, instead driving into the Solis at Petrosa apartment complex at a high rate of speed, Miller said. The driver and passenger then ran southbound from the car. As of 1:30 p.m., they have not been taken into custody.  

The suspects in this incident are described as adult white men; Miller told KTVZ News it’s not yet clear who was driving at the time.

The weapons offense suspect has a shaved head and may be armed with a firearm. The other person, whom officers have not yet identified, reportedly was wearing a black flat-billed baseball cap.  

Miller said the Bend man faces these charges: Fleeing or Attempting to Elude Police Officer, Burglary I, Felon in Possession of a Firearm, Unlawful Use of a Weapon and Menacing.

In an updated Deschutes Alert to residents, sent just after 4 p.m., police said:

“Most law enforcement has left the area, general patrols will continue. Police believe the suspect is no longer in the area and there is no immediate danger to the public. If you see any suspicious activity, please call 911.”

Area resident Michael Chrisman told KTVZ News what he’d witnessed: “There was an armored carrier out here and about 20 police officers with a dog. There was a drone.”

Officers also went door to door, letting neighbors know what was happening and asking if they’d seen anything suspicious.

Chrisman was pleased by the big response he witnessed: “I’m glad that they were as attentive as they were, and was responsive as they were. So it’s good to know that we have an active police force to protect us.”

Around 11:20 a.m., Deschutes County 911 dispatchers put out two emergency alerts to people in a half-mile radius of the traffic stop, alerting them to the suspects, warning that one could be armed, and directing anyone who may see the pair to call 911 and not approach them.

Both Trinity Lutheran School and Eastmont School were alerted to the incident. Other nearby schools were not in session today.  

“The public should expect a continued large police presence in the NE Bend area as the investigation continues,” Miller said.

KTVZ News had crews on the scene, also livestreaming on the web, our KTVZ News app and KTVZ+.

At one point, officers were blocking off access to the trail along an irrigation canal, then shifted their search to a nearby neighborhood.

A 12:15 Deschutes Alert update said: “Confirmed sighting of suspects near Thornhill Lane and Amherst Place just north of Nasu Park Loop off Butler Market Road”

Here’s the full text of the initial Deschutes Alert, sent out at 11:21 a.m.

Bend Police in the area of Deschutes Market Rd and Butler Market Rd: Law Enforcement Activity

2025-04-17 11:21:38 PDT

Bend Police in the area of Deschutes Market Rd and Butler Market Rd: Law Enforcement activity in the area of Butler Mrket Rd & Deschutes Market Rd. Law enforcement is in the area of Deschutes Market Rd and Butler Market Rd looking for two suspects who fled on foot. One suspect is a white male adult with a shaved head. The second suspect is a white male adult with a black flat bill hat. The suspect with the shaved head is reported to be armed with a firearm. If you see subjects matching this description or any suspicious activity in the area, please do not approach and call 911 right away.

Summit High Assistant Principal Mary Thomas named to lead Realms Middle and High School

Barney Lerten

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ) — Mary Thomas has been selected as the next principal of Realms Middle and High School, beginning in the 2025-26 school year, Bend-La Pine Schools announced Thursday.

Thomas currently serves as assistant principal at Summit High School, a role she has held for six years, and previously served one year as interim principal at High Desert Middle School.

“We are thrilled to welcome Mary Thomas as the next leader of Realms,” Superintendent Steven Cook said. “Mary’s diverse experience — spanning large comprehensive high schools, alternative settings, and smaller private schools — makes her exceptionally well-suited to carry forward the school’s powerful Expeditionary Learning mission. Her leadership will help ensure that Realms continues to offer students transformative, hands-on learning experiences.”

Zach Harju, who stepped into the role of interim principal at Realms this year, will return to his role as assistant principal next year.

Thomas was a classroom teacher for middle and high school students for 17 years in Bend, Sisters, Indonesia and the Portland area. She also has 10 years of experience as an educator for outdoor schools in the Portland area. 

“My philosophy is to lead with kindness and listen to understand and support all voices,” Thomas said. “I am excited to join a passionate team of EL educators who put students first and create inspiring learning experiences. I look forward to collaborating with the entire Realms community to support a safe, welcoming and inviting environment for learning.”

Watch: Elk on the move in Sunriver

Barney Lerten

SUNRIVER, Ore. (KTVZ) — Viewer Paul Evenson often encounters elk on the move in Sunriver and shared with KTVZ News a video he took Tuesday evening.

“I call it the showdown at the OK Corral,” Evenson told us. “I was stuck for about 20 minutes near the river in Sunriver. It’s fun watching them jump the fence on the right of the screen.”

Ask the Mayor: Redmond’s Ed Fitch answers your questions, from airport parking to the latest on city developments

KTVZ – News Team

REDMOND, Ore. (KTVZ) — From airport parking fees to development plans and community concerns about the upcoming China Hat Road clearing in Bend, Redmond Mayor Ed Fitch talked Thursday with the KTVZ News at Sunrise team in our studio, answering viewers’ questions.

Fitch appears on KTVZ News at Sunrise in the 6:30 a.m. segment on the third Thursday of every month. Make sure to submit your questions for the mayor here for next month’s segment. You can remain anonymous if you wish.

You can also pose a question for Bend Mayor Melanie Kebler on this page – she joins us at Sunrise on the second Thursday of every month.

Customers dismayed to learn Bend Rite Aid on SE Third and Roosevelt Avenue closing soon

Triton Notary

BEND, Ore.– (KTVZ) – Today, people trying to fill their prescriptions at Bend’s Rite Aid got an unpleasant notice. The store is closing. Many customers were bit surprised by the news after noticing an increasing number of empty shelves inside the store.

In October of 2023, Rite Aid filed for bankruptcy, and last fall it had closed 1,300 locations. Customers of this Rite Aid also got a notice in the mail announcing its closure. Its final day is the 29th of April.

Sophia Bel told KTVZ News, “Well, it seems really inconvenient. That’s where they have my prescriptions, which I can’t find anywhere else, so it’s going to be really unfortunate. I don’t know where else I’m going to find certain prescriptions that I need, only because this Rite Aid typically has the ones that I need.”

Off-camera, one person told KTVZ News they’ve been shopping at this location for 40 years, long before it was a Rite Aid. Customers will have their prescriptions transferred to the nearby Fred Meyer pharmacy, unless they make other arrangements.

Road to the future: ODOT is launching second round of ‘High School to Highway’ paid training program

Barney Lerten

SALEM, Ore. (KTVZ) — The Oregon Department of Transportation is inviting high school seniors and recent graduates to apply for the second cohort of the High School to Highway trainee program, which offers hands-on, full-time paid training in roadway maintenance.

Starting in July, the program will provide valuable experience in construction and maintenance work with ODOT, while also providing a starting salary of $3,856 per month, with a raise after six months.

The opportunity is available in multiple locations across Oregon, including Bend, Roseburg, Seaside and The Dalles. Participants will work outdoors as part of a maintenance crew, learning alongside experienced mentors.

The program will allow participants to:

Work on a dedicated crew to repair and preserve roads, bridges, and other infrastructure.

Learn valuable skills in roadway maintenance and construction.

Gain hands-on experience while making Oregon’s roads safer.

Applications for the program are open through April 24. Interested candidates can apply by visiting www.ODOTJobs.com and searching for “H2H.”

Hiring Locations Include:

Arlington, Banks, Bates, Canyon City, Bend, Central Point, Condon, Gold Beach, Government Camp, Idleyld Park, Klamath Falls, La Grande, La Pine, Lakeview, Maupin, McKenzie Bridge, McMinnville, Mitchell, Ontario, Vale, Otis, Pendleton, Roseburg, Seaside, Ukiah, Sweet Home, and The Dalles.

Funded by Federal-aid State Core Program Funds for Training, Education and Workforce Development Title 23, United States Code, Section 504(e), this program is designed to introduce young adults to career opportunities in state government while providing them with the skills needed for roadway maintenance and construction. It’s a great opportunity for job seekers who are looking to start a career in road maintenance, no experience required.

For more information about the program, recruitment process, and how to apply, please visit the ODOT website at www.ODOTJobs.com.

‘So sad’: Deschutes Commissioner Phil Chang offers praise, but shares disappointment as sheriff is added to Brady list

Isabella Warren

(Update: Adding video)

BEND, Ore. (KTVZ)– Commissioner Phil Chang is sharing his disappointment as controversy continues to swirl around Deschutes County’s new Sheriff Kent van der Kamp.

“Sheriff van der Kamp has really done important things in these 100 days,” Chang told KTVZ News on Wednesday. “And that’s part of what makes all of this so sad for me. “

Chang says the first 100 days of the sheriff’s term have been successful: “Inspiring sheriff’s office personnel and raising morale, and improving fiscal responsibility and management. Reintegrating the sheriff’s office into the county.”

But this week, the community learned that van der Kamp has been placed on the county’s Brady list, meaning he is barred from giving testimony in future cases as an expert witness because of issues regarding his truthfulness.

District Attorney Steve Gunnels made the decision last week after determining the sheriff may have lied under oath multiple times, including two DUII cases.

Van der Kamp has denied the allegations and told KTVZ News Wednesday he is meeting with his legal team and will have more to share next week.     

Police expert Dr. Thomas Shea says public trust may never be the same: “He’s the sheriff. He’s getting accused of lying. How’s it going to impact the men and women who serve under him? No one’s going to trust them, too, or they’re going to have to deal with the consequences of his own untruthfulness.”

Some residents on social media are demanding that van der Kamp resign.

When asked if the sheriff could gain back public trust, Shea said: “You can’t.”

The Oregon Department of Public Safety Standards and Training is reviewing the reports submitted by the DA’s office, but a spokesman told KTVZ News they cannot specify when that report could be released.

Commissioner Chang says if the sheriff’s certification is revoked, commissioners will decide who takes over. “In the case that the sheriff can no longer serve or in the case that the sheriff resigns, our job will be to appoint someone to serve as sheriff until the next election.” 

Governor Kotek convenes Oregon business roundtable on tariffs and trade impacts, launches online survey

Barney Lerten

SALEM, Ore. (KTVZ) — Governor Tina Kotek convened Oregon businesses for a roundtable Wednesday to discuss the potential impacts of President Trump’s U.S. tariffs on all countries and territories that went into effect earlier this month, as well as a series of other tariffs his administration has threatened to enact.

Following the meeting, Governor Kotek and Business Oregon launched a survey to hear directly from Oregon businesses, according to a news release from her office, which continues in full below:

Governor Kotek stated: “Oregon has one of the most trade-dependent economies in the nation. What business owners need right now is stability and predictability. President Trump’s 10% minimum tariff was one of the most drastic trade decisions since 1930. Had these tariffs been in place on Oregon’s $28.2 billion in imported goods last year, companies in Oregon would have had an additional $7.4 billion tax bill to pay.

“Though little will be known about the impacts of the tariffs for several months, I want to raise awareness about the effect on Oregon businesses because business owners and families who are already struggling to make ends meet are forced to live with uncertainty while the price of everyday goods like groceries keep climbing.

“That’s why I brought together Oregon businesses from across sectors, the State Treasurer, the State Economist, and Business Oregon to discuss everything we know today, understand what the top concerns are, and how the state can be an ally in this fight. And I am eager to hear from more businesses, which is why Business Oregon is launching a survey. To our businesses –your success is Oregon’s success, and we are in this together.”

U.S. tariffs are taxes paid by companies in the U.S. when they purchase tariffed goods coming from outside the country. The new tariffs in place today, including a 145% tariff on goods from China and 25% on goods from Canada and Mexico, along with 10% for all other countries and territories, amount to the combined equivalent of a 26% sales tax on imported goods coming into Oregon. This new tax significantly increases the cost of inputs for Oregon manufacturers and can ultimately significantly increase costs for Oregonians.

In response, the Governor convened the following Oregon business executives Wednesday:

Trey Winthrop, CEO, Bob’s Red Mill

Todd Nelson, Co-owner, Bountiful Farms Nursery

Steve Gibbs, VP of Government Affairs, Columbia Distributing

Paul Durant, Owner and General Manager, Durant Vineyards & Olive Oil Mill

Dave Dillon, President, Food Northwest

Jeff Stone, Executive Director/CEO, Oregon Association of Nurseries

Nick Edwards, Vice President, Oregon International Port of Coos Bay Commission

Curtis Robinhold, Executive Director, Port of Portland 

Emma Mcilroy, CEO, Wildfang

Oregon State Treasurer Elizabeth Steiner said, “The administration’s tariffs are an unwanted and unnecessary tax that many Oregonians can’t afford. Too many Oregonians are reeling from seeing their college, retirement, and home buying savings eroded by this avoidable turmoil in the market. Too many businesses are seeing their supply chains disrupted, their plans frozen, and their bottom lines battered by tariffs no one outside the administration asked for. I urge the Trump Administration to change course and end these reckless trade wars once and for all.”

In addition to the Governor’s roundtable discussion today, Business Oregon is launching a brief survey to hear directly from Oregon companies regarding tariffs and global trade. Small- and medium-sized businesses currently engaged in global trade are encouraged to participate. Oregon Department of Agriculture Director Lisa Charpilloz Hanson also attended the roundtable and press conference.