Bend Construction Activity Steady Despite COVID-19

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Construction in Bend is showing little sign of slowing. Over a month has passed since the World Health Organization declared the COVID-19 outbreak a pandemic. Today, the City of Bend Community Development Department has not seen a significant change in construction activity, despite the changing economic climate.

“The construction industry is a significant contributor to the Bend economy, and the City is committed to maintaining operations throughout the duration of the pandemic,” said Russell Grayson, Community Development Department director. “We are closely watching projects and key economic indicators.” 

In Governor Kate Brown’s “Stay Home, Save Lives” order (Executive Order 20-12), Brown specifically exempted the construction industry, identifying it as an economic pillar to the state. 

City Hall is closed to the public, and more than 75 percent of Community Development Department employees are working in new remote environments. But the Building, Planning and Engineering Divisions are maintaining normal output. 

“In an average month, our Building Division will see around 400 building applications. In March, we received 393 applications and we project only a slight drop in that number for April,” said Grayson. Other divisions are seeing similar statistics. Engineering had even more applications in March than in an average month. 

Maintaining operations at the same level as before the pandemic has encouraged City staff to use innovative ways to meet applicant needs. 

“Our Inspections team has developed options for maintaining physical distancing for on-site inspections, including virtual options which allow staff to inspect structures off-site,” said Grayson.

Other divisions are using an electronic review process for applications, which was in place prior to the pandemic. For applicants requiring a more public process, such as hearings with Planning Commission and City Council, City staff identified an effective virtual platform they plan to implement in May that will continue to allow for public involvement and input. 

“If we can find innovative ways to keep projects moving without compromising the integrity of the City processes and standards, we will,” said Grayson. 

May is Building Safety Month, and this year, “safety” has some new considerations.

Governor Brown’s order encouraged contractors to incorporate COVID-19 safety planning and worksite-specific safety practices. The City recognizes that safe work environments ensure a healthy workforce, a healthy workforce means maintained output and maintained output will determine the health of our local economy as we recover from the COVID-19 pandemic.  

Accommodation Information for People with Disabilities  

To obtain this information in an alternate format such as Braille, large print, electronic formats, etc. please contact Anne Aurand at 541-388-5573 or aaurand@bendoregon.gov.

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