PAGE A2, KEIZERTIMES, APRIL 24, 2015 presented by DRIVE A LITTLE – SAVE A BUNCH! 3893 COMMERCIAL ST SE • SALEM MORE INFO AT NORTHERNLIGHTSTHEATREPUB.COM UFC 186 Johnson vs. Horiguchi Lights, Comedy, Laughs! Saturday, May 9th MARK YAFFEE & RICHIE HOLIDAY will perform at 7pm and 9pm. Admission is only $10. Ages 21 & over only. Reserved seating for this show. Purchase tickets at box offi ce or at our website. FREE ADMISSION SATURDAY, APR 25TH —–———— 21 & OVER —————— Live Fights at 5 pm – Tickets $12 All Ages Replay at 10:15 pm – Tix $8 Reserved Seats Available Now Online Buy One Admission, Get One FREE Valid Sunday – Thursday, Expires 5/22/15. Cannot be combined with other off ers. Today in History President John Adams approves legislation establishing the Library of Congress. — April 24, 1800 Food 4 Thought “All modern American literature comes from one book by Mark Twain called Huckleberry Finn.” — Ernest Hemingway The Month Ahead Through Saturday, May 2 The Country Wife paints a frank picture of rakish hero who goes to any length to engage in scandalous liaisons with the wives of courtly colleagues. Willamette University, 900 State Street, go to willamette.edu/cla/theater for tickets information. For more information email tht-tix@willamette.edu or (503)370-6221. Through Saturday, May 9 All My Sons by Arthur Miller, at Pentacle Theatre through Saturday, May 9. For tickets and schedule visit pentacletheatre. org. Friday, April 24 Mid-Valley Literacy Center’s Spotlight on Literacy fundraiser at the Kroc Center, 1865 Bill Frey Drive. Tickets $40. Call 503-463- 1488. 6 p.m. Saturday, April 25 Cavalleria Rusticana/Pagliacci starts at 9:55 a.m. at Regal Santiam Stadium 11, 365 Lancaster Drive SE. Directed by Sir David McVicar. Tickets are available at the door, $22 for seniors and $26 for general. (503) 983-6030. Saturday, April 25 – Sunday, April 26 28th annual Oregon Ag Fest, Oregon State Fairgrounds. Large variety of activities and displays. Hours are 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. on Saturday, 10 a.m. -5 p.m. Sunday. Admission is $9. Free parking. For complete schedule visit oragfest.com. Monday, April 27 Keizer Young Life Taste of Keizer fundraiser. Dinner and oral auction. Tickets: $25 or $200 to host a table. Purchase at www. keizer.younglife.org. Tuesday, April 28 Keizer Public Arts Commission, 6 p.m. in council chambers at Keizer Civic Center. Free admission day at Hallie Ford Museum of Art, 700 State Street. Candidates spar for a sparse crowd By CRAIG MURPHY Of the Keizertimes No matter audience size, candidates take advantage of candidate forums. Such was the case April 16 as eight candidates for various races came to the Greater Gub- ser Neighborhood Association meeting. The number of candi- dates dwarfed the audience size. Richard Stevenson and Col- leen Busch are competing for the Salem-Keizer Transit Board subdistrict No. 2 seat currently held by Brad Coy. Incumbent Chuck Lee and challenger Tim Moles, running for the Salem-Keizer School Board Zone 6 seat, met. Betty Hart and Jim Taylor, running for Keizer Fire District Position 5, were both present as were Chet Patterson and James Mul- hern, who are competing for Position 3 on the KFD board. Mulhern has been with the Marion County Fire District for 21 years. “I’m running because I saw the disconnect with the MCFD and the KFD,” Mulhern said. “I was there when we shared per- sonnel, co-existed and worked together to keep the com- munity safe. Since then prob- lems have arose and lines were drawn. This year we have a new (MCFD) chief, a couple of new board members and an oppor- tunity to come together for the citizens and save money.” Patterson has been involved with the KFD since retiring as an accountant. “I have 25 years of strategic planning and fi nancial plan- ning,” Patterson said. “Getting involved goes back to my fi rst time in the city council and then again in the 1990s. I was on the citizens advisory com- mittee (for the KFD). I helped put together plans for the levy election that passed last year. “The most critical thing is what to do with fi re equip- ment,” he added. “They are an aging fl eet that needs a lot of attention. There’s a tremendous amount of work for the next board members to take care of the needs. My fi nancial back- ground brings a lot to the board. We have mutual aid agreements with MCFD. I think the rela- tionship is working, but maybe there is work to be done.” Betty Hart’s husband was on the KFD board for years until health issues led him to retire. “I helped hire the fi re chief,” Hart said of KFD chief Jeff Cowan. “I have a background in management. I have good background and experience in listening to people and getting collaborative efforts.” Taylor pointed to his 12 years on the Keizer City Council and would like to see a change. “We work better with the Marion County Fire District now, but it was a root canal,” Taylor said of the battle be- tween the two districts several years ago. “We got MCFD more involved in the city. I would like to see the Keizer Fire District get along better with Marion County. There’s still some stuff on our end that needs to stop.” Lee is running for a third school board term. “I love to represent Keizer,” Lee said. “For eight years we’ve done some great things. Gradu- ation rates have improved, test scores have improved yet we still cut $140 million out of the budget. We laid off 500 teach- ers, yet we have more kids now. We have the second largest school district in the state, with 60 percent of our kids in pov- erty. This is the year we’re being mandated to start full-day kin- dergarten.” Moles gave kudos to Lee for the work he’s doing to start the new Career and Technical Edu- cation Center (CTEC) this fall. “I believe that the commu- nity provides their treasure and their blood to the schools, to re- turn them tenfold,” Moles said. “That has not been met. That gap can be fi lled by teaching basic principles of how to get a job. When I taught high school auto shop, I taught them how to get jobs. Kids today can’t walk and chew gum at the same time. Our state’s last in education. There’s nothing to be proud of for any of us.” Busch noted her husband, Bob, has been a volunteer with the KFD for 25 years. “I bring listening and prob- lem solving skills,” Busch said. “I see transit in our area as be- ing important to bring people to businesses and events and schools. The transit district is working on Moving Forward phase 2 with weekend and eve- ning service coming back and asking how we want to pay for it, property tax or payroll tax. I’m in favor of a property tax.” Stevenson previously did public service in New Jersey. “I got involved after the cut- ting of the Saturday service,” Stevenson said. “That piqued my interest, plus the Court- house Square mess. It’s my busi- ness to study. I was appointed to an advisory committee in 2012 with the sole purpose of bring- ing back Saturday service. I think it’s doable. The payroll tax is the way to go. It’s more eq- uitable and a lower tax rate per person. If you do the property levy, fi ve years from now you’ll have to ask again. A payroll tax is permanent, so you’ll never have to worry about it not be- ing there again.” Hart noted following an ambulance one day and seeing smoke come out of it. “All of the equipment is aging,” she said. “Some of the newest equipment is 10 years old. There is a plan for bring- ing new equipment online. You have to replace the most critical pieces fi rst. They have done a good job with that.” Patterson noted there’s a 20- year plan to replace equipment. “You can’t do it all on Day 1,” he said. “At least one aid car will start at the KFD offi ce, but can’t get started again on the site (of an incident). There’s a great plan in place.” Taylor disagrees with fi re- fi ghters going to medical calls. “Why take the expensive equipment?” he asked. “Get an SUV so you leave someone at the station. The trucks are $500,000; there’s no reason to put the extra miles on them.” Mulhern said now is a great time to get new equipment. “It’s good to have a plan with scheduled apparatus replace- ment,” he said. “Now is a good time to do the bond levy. Keizer has a good format with what they have.” Regulations for vet clinics clarifi ed By CRAIG MURPHY Of the Keizertimes Veterinarian regulations in Keizer have been clarifi ed. Members of the Keizer Plan- ning Commission approved the revised regulations dur- ing their April 8 meeting. The regulations are being sent to the Keizer City Council for fi nal approval. After an hour of discussion – in addition to time spent on the issue in February – commission- ers unanimously adopted the following wording for veteri- narians: “All operations shall be conducted within completely enclosed and soundproof build- ings and any overnight stays be limited to short-term care that is incidental to the practice of veterinary medicine.” Commissioners also decid- ed a subsection B to city code 2.414 (Veterinary Services) be left alone, while a proposed new subsection C was cut, with most of that wording being added to the fi rst subsection. Outside runs can only be operated from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. The decision came in re- sponse to a request from Dr. Leanne West Eggert, owner of Creekside Veterinary Clinic and husband Jonathan Eggert, the practice manager. The Eggerts purchased the clinic at 5456 River Road North in 2011 and have seen the business grow. Due to the growth, the Eg- gerts are looking for a bigger fa- cility. They found four potential sites, all located in the Mixed Use (MU) zone, which as written now doesn’t allow the boarding of animals. As such, the Eggerts requested an update to regulations to allow their ser- vice to be in a MU setting. Sam Litke, senior planner for Keizer, noted it was a “pretty straightforward” request. “The applicants want to keep boarding of animals for care,” Litke said. “These amend- ments would allow the use.” Nate Brown, director of Community Development for Keizer, emphasized a restriction. “The only way we are sug- gesting to you that overnight boarding can occur is in con- junction with vet use,” Brown said. Leanne Eggert liked the pro- posed amendments. “We are very much in sup- port of this text amendment,” she said. “It looks good to us. On our part, we will not be having any outdoor kennel at all. For us it won’t be an issue.” One of the key points of dis- cussion was what “short-term care” meant exactly, as in what time limit should be specifi ed. “I don’t know how you want to phrase short-term stay,” Egg- ert said. “We rarely have animals for more than a week, usually two or three days. Sometimes we’ll have an ill animal whose owner is going out of town. So far that has only been for geckos and rabbits. They are very qui- et.” Commissioner Jim Jacks noted the ambiguity with the term. “There was some question about short-term, if that meant a week or if it was two to three months,” Jacks said. Commissioner Hersch Sang- ster suggested staying away from a limit on the number of days. “I’m for limited short-term care,” Sangster said. “I’m fear- ful of limiting it to a number of days, since then we’re jumping into animal science.” Brown emphasized board- ing for non-veterinary purposes would be a different discussion. “That is a separate use,” he said. “That would have to be in a zone that allows veterinary and boarding. MU only allows for veterinarian use. If you want to board dogs and also do vet- erinarian service, it would have to be in a zone that allows for both boarding and veterinarian, which is not MU.” local weather sudoku Saturday, May 2 Fabric Fair, Salem Scottish Rite Center, 4090 Commercial St. S.E. Noon to 4 p.m. Large variety of fabric and notions for sale to benefi t charities. 503-409-2543. facebook.com/fabricfair. Artists’ reception, Keizer Art Association, in connection with May exhibit, Celebration of Flowers, 2-4 p.m. Keizer Heritage Center, 980 Chemawa Rd. N.E. Show at Enid Joy Mount Gallery runs through May 30. Gallery hours are 1-4 p.m, Thursdays and Fridays, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturdays. keizerarts.com. Free Comic Book Day at Tony’s Kingdom of Comics, 5420 River Road N, from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. on May 3. Sunday, May 3 Lemonade Day in Keizer and Salem. Hundreds of stands created by kids throughout the region will sell lemonade made from their own recipes. Teaches children about entrepreneurship. Monday, May 4 Keizer City Council meeting, 7 p.m. in council chambers at Keizer Civic Center. Tuesday, May 5 Keizer Budget Committee meeting, 6 p.m. at Keizer Civic Center. Community Build Task Force meeting, 6 p.m. at Keizer Civic Center. Thursday, May 7 Keizer Budget Committee meeting, 6 p.m. at Keizer Civic Center. Saturday, May 9 Moonlight Masquerade, St. Edward Catholic Church’s 10th annual auction/dinner. 6 p.m. $25 tickets include dinner and one drink. Masks are encouraged. For tickets visit sainteds. weshareonline.org. Keizer Art Association presents its annual fundraiser, The Mad Hatter Tea Party, 12:30-2:30 p.m. Keizer Heritage Center, 980 Chemawa Road N.E. Tea, light luncheon, tea hat contest and more. Tickets are $20, $200 for table of eight, available from any KAA board member. For more information visit keizerarts.com. looking back in the KT 5 YEARS AGO City park gets community garden Mike Whittam Park, near the Little League fi elds, is being transformed into a community garden this summer, the fi rst garden within a Keizer city park. Enter digits from 1-9 into the blank spaces. Every row must contain one of each digit. So must every column, as must every 3x3 square. 10 YEARS AGO Proposed meeting for Keizer Rapids Park draws crowd Crowd reaction ranged from totally opposed to just curious at a meeting this week to discuss plans for the Keizer Rapids Park project. 15 YEARS AGO Developer plans huge Keizer project A Medford development company wants to put in a blend of retail stores, business complexes and industry in Keizer along Interstate 5. 3893 COMMERCIAL ST SE KEIZERTIMES.COM Web Poll Results Have you ever brewed your own craft beer or other alcoholic beverage? The cities of Salem and Keizer are at loggerheads over the Willow Lake Wastewater Treatment Plan, leaving developers wondering if they will be able to build homes nearby. Jupiter Ascending (PG-13) Fri 4:15, 6:30, Sat 1:55, 10:00, Sun 2:55, 5:10, 7:55 The Duff (PG-13) Fri 6:45, Sat 12:30, 2:30, Sun 2:40 Black or White (PG-13) Sat 4:45, Sun 12:15 Into the Woods (PG) Fri 4:05, Sun 4:40 Run All Night (R) Fri 6:00, Sat 7:20, Sun 5:30 Fifty Shades of Grey (PG-13) Fri 8:15, Sat 4:25, 8:55, Sun 7:40 20 YEARS AGO Keizer, Salem battling over sewer plant lines THIS WEEK’S MOVIE TIMES 66% - No 34% - Yes Vote in a new poll every Thursday! GO TO KEIZERTIMES.COM Focus (R) Fri 8:45, Sat 6:50, Sun 7:00 Chappie (R) Fri 9:00 SpongeBob Movie (PG) Fri 4:00, Sat 1:00, 3:00, Sun 1:10, 3:10 Paddington (PG) Sat 12:00, Sun 12:45 FOR ALL SHOWTIMES GO TO NORTHERNLIGHTSTHEATREPUB.COM