26 Wednesday, March 16, 2016 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon GORAYEB: Two councilors are out of town for a while Continued from page 1 The interviews of employ- ees at City Hall by the out- side investigator were com- pleted last week. The results of the interviews were given to each employee to review for accuracy. The investiga- tor had originally set a dead- line of March 16 for return of the interview documents from employees, after which a final ORDINANCE: Multiple amendments bogged down council review Continued from page 3 that a formula food establish- ment is one that meets quali- fications spelled out in the definition, and is substantially identical to 13 or more other establishments regardless of ownership or location. The current definition says, “three or more establishments.” In an effort to correspond to Federal food and drug defi- nitions, which state “20 or more establishments,” the fig- ure of 20 was adopted by staff and incorporated into the sug- gested text amendment. This report would be submitted to the City Council, the City attorney, and the City’s insur- ance carrier. At last week’s council workshop it was discovered that Councilor David Asson is scheduled to be out of town all this week and that Councilor Nancy Connolly is leaving March 17, for two weeks. To avoid the possibility of only three Council members being available to review the final report and make any necessary decisions, Coun- cil approved granting City employees work time last Friday to complete reviewing their statements. It was hoped that with receiving feedback by Friday, the investiga- tor would be able to prepare the final report in time for Wednesday’s executive ses- sion. That did not work out. Frye told The Nugget on Monday that the council may have to review the report, then conduct an executive session with a conference call with the absent councilors. Gorayeb was placed on paid administrative leave on February 25, after Mayor Chris Frye received the change prompted a great deal of discussion among Council members who decided to return to the “13 or more” figure. The longest discussion revolved around changes to garage setbacks and residen- tial building heights, which have ping-ponged back and forth from the Planning Commission to City Council to staff and back again. Because the five proposed text amendments were bun- dled into one package, Council could approve the ordinance as proposed, modify it, or continue the public hearing to a future date, which would delay implementation of all the changes, not just those for which Council needed more information or more delibera- tion time. Council chose to approve Ordinance 468 and its five separate parts, as amended with 13 or more formula food establishments, but indicated that the garage setback ques- tion should be re-referred to the Planning Commission to take another look. City Attorney Steve Bryant told Council they would have been correct in continuing the hearing if they wished. Davenport informed Council there is another ordi- nance with bundled amend- ments in the pipeline. Several Council members expressed a desire to consider each pro- posed change as a separate ordinance. complaints. Frye contacted Citycounty Insurance Services (CIS), the City’s insurance carrier that frequently deals with these kinds of issues; CIS provided a course of action. CIS will make no formal recommendation regarding the findings of the investigation, but will act in an advisory capacity, helping Council to understand and weigh possible consequences of any actions they decide to take. An award for art... photo by Jerry baldock The Sisters High School yearbook crew presented Hannah Tenneson with a scholarship check provided by Jerry Baldock of outlaws Photography for her cover for this year’s book. TODAY F L L A C R O E IN OR YOUR E C N A R U S N FREE I ! N O S I R A P COM COM 541-588-6245 257 S. Pine St., #101 | farmersagent.com/jrybka AUTO • HOME • LIFE • BUSINESS