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About The nugget. (Sisters, Or.) 1994-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 5, 2018)
The Nugget Vol. XLI No. 49 News and Opinion from Sisters, Oregon www.NuggetNews.com Sisters man in early morning crash Council adopts short-term rental ordinances By Sue Stafford Correspondent PHOTO BY BRENDA JAROS Vision team produces draft of plan Correspondent Sisters City Council reviewed the draft of the Sisters Vision Action Plan as presented at their November 28 workshop by NXT Consultants Steven Ames and Ruth Williamson, with assis- tance from the four Vision Action Team (VAT) leaders. Many hours of work by 32 VAT community mem- bers have produced a docu- ment rich with possibilities for the future of Sisters. The Council will provide feed- back on what they saw and heard in the workshop. The draft plan is available on the Vision website at https://sis- tershorizons.org. for the next two weeks, allowing for feed- back from Sisters Country residents. The Vision Statement is supported by the Vision Plan, which consists of four focus areas, each with five strate- gies identified by the commu- nity and refined by the VAT. For each strategy there are a number of action plans to support implementation. The No City Council minds were changed over the two weeks since the first reading of the proposed ordinances dealing with short-term rent- als in Sisters. With a split vote of three in favor (Chuck Ryan, Andrea Blum and Nancy Connolly) and two against (Richard Six-month-old dog Chloe enjoyed Sisters’ first snowfall last Friday. See CRASH on page 29 By Sue Stafford PRE-SORTED STANDARD ECRWSS U.S. POSTAGE PAID Sisters, OR Permit No. 15 Wednesday, December 5, 2018 Time for the winter coat... A 21-year-old Sisters man was taken to the hospital after crashing into a tree on Highway 126 near Willow Lane in the early hours of November 30. The Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office reports that deputies and Sisters fire personnel were dispatched at 3:45 a.m., on Friday, November 30, to Highway 126 near Willow Lane just Inside... P OSTAL CUSTOMER teams also identified mile- stones to measure the prog- ress of the actions, as well as suggested partners to carry out the actions. Each mile- stone is tied to an implemen- tation timeline that ranges from less than a year to five- plus years. An example of how the plan is structured can be illus- trated by looking at one of the strategies for the focus area “Resilient Sisters.” One of the five strategies is to pursue establishment of a compre- hensive urgent care facility in Sisters, providing walk-in and related ambulatory care and medical services for a rapidly growing population and increasing number of tourists. The three actions to sup- port the urgent care strat- egy include a needs analysis to analyze the need for an urgent care facility, identify- ing and analyzing gaps and barriers such as availability and cost of real estate, and finally, completing steps nec- essary to close identified gaps See VISION on page 30 See RENTALS on page 28 Lost greyhound saved by community By Jodi Schneider Correspondent An epic effort ended hap- pily last month with the res- cue of a greyhound dog that was lost in Sisters for days. On Wednesday, November 14, Steve Baughman and his three-year-old greyhound Warley were traveling from Salem to Sunriver when they stopped at Village Green Park in Sisters around noon for a potty break. “Warley took care of busi- ness and then I went into the restroom after securing the leash to a storage locker han- dle,” Baughman said. “While in the restroom I heard a rat- tling noise and I immediately went out.” Warley had wiggled out from his harness and bolted. “After coming around the side of the building I spotted Warley two blocks away,” Baughman recalled. “I called his name multiple times run- ning after him, but lost sight of him.” After returning to Village Green Park to retrieve his Jeep, Baughman searched the streets in the area until dark without a sighting. Greyhound Pet Adoption PHOTO BY JEFF OMODT Steve and Kris Baughman are happy to have Warley back after a long ordeal. Northwest member Jeff Omodt and his wife, Winnie, have had considerable expe- rience with greyhounds, after having adopted 20 retired rac- ing greyhounds over the last 30 years. “Something may have startled Warley, a car horn or a noise, so much that he tugged out of his harness and leash and started to run,” said Omodt. Omodt noted that grey- hounds spend their first 18 months learning to run on a track and living in a crate with almost no human con- tact and no socialization. Warley, an ex-racer that Baughman and his fam- ily adopted from Oregon Greyhound Adoption in Portland two months earlier, was still in the process of adapting to his new world of sights and sounds. The next morning Baughman returned to Sisters with flyers that he posted and handed out. “I alerted the sher- iff’s department in Sisters that Warley was missing,” Baughman said. “I stopped at The Nugget Newspaper and reached out to them. I then placed Warley as a lost dog See WARLEY on page 29 Letters/Weather ................ 2 Announcements ............... 10 Holidays in Sisters ...... 12-20 Crossword ....................... 25 Classifieds ..................26-28 Meetings ........................... 3 Entertainment ..................11 Sisters Salutes ................ 23 Obituaries ....................... 25 Real Estate .................28-32