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About The nugget. (Sisters, Or.) 1994-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 12, 2018)
The Nugget Vol. XLI No. 50 P OSTAL CUSTOMER News and Opinion from Sisters, Oregon www.NuggetNews.com Council will hear plans for wildfire protection The impact of wildfire on forest communities has been on grim display in recent years. Last month, a fire almost entirely destroyed the city of Paradise, California. For the past year, a team of wildfire experts and plan- ners has been working to develop strategies for Sisters to address the challenges of a community surrounded by forest and vulnerable to fire. On Wednesday, December 12, the Sisters City Council will hear the final recommen- dations from the Community Wednesday, December 12, 2018 Here we go a-caroling! Comment invited on vision action plan PHOTO BY SUE ANDERSON Chorale Director Connie Gunterman, and Elementary School music teacher Sara Miller’s 3rd-graders join in singing a rendition of “Jingle Bells” at Sunday’s Chorale performance, “Christmas Joy” at the Sisters Community Church. See story, page 4. See WILDFIRE on page 23 PRE-SORTED STANDARD ECRWSS U.S. POSTAGE PAID Sisters, OR Permit No. 15 Sisters Country Horizons has published the draft of its Vision Action Plan on the community initiativeʼs web- site and is accepting public comments on the document through the end of December. The draft Vision Action Plan can be found at www. sistershorizons.org. The Horizons projectʼs Vision Action Team — 32 citizens representing a broad cross section of Sisters Country — developed the community-based plan. It includes 20 strategies, along See VISION PLAN on page 23 New apartment project Car accelerates into Sisters store underway in Sisters By Sue Stafford Correspondent Twenty-two new two-bed- room, two-bath, market-rate apartments called Cowboy Court are under construc- tion at 154 W. Adams Ave. in Sisters, in between the existing Mountain High Apartments and the Sisters Art Works building. Designed by Mayes Architecture and Planning, they are being built by Empire Construction and Development, a Bend com- pany headed by Kevin Spencer. When completed, the one-acre parcel of land will hold two two-story buildings, one with 12 apart- ments and the other with 10. Two of the ground-floor apartments are fully com- pliant with Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) guidelines and all the other ground-floor apartments are adaptable, meaning they have things like extra blocking Inside... for the installation of grab bars. There are four different unit layouts, including the ADA apartments. They each have carpet and vinyl floor coverings, washers and dry- ers, dishwashers, and patios or decks with outside storage closets. Some units will have a kitchen pantry and built- in desk. In most units, one bathroom will have a shower and the other a tub/shower combination. On site will be 29 parking spaces, 11 of which will be in two carports. There will be 11 on-street pull-in parking spaces in front of the apart- ment complex. The projected comple- tion date for the apart- ments is summer 2019. The rents do not qualify as offi- cially “affordable,” but they will also not be high-end, according to the developer. The owner of the project is Cowboy Court LLC of Corvallis. A 91-year-old driver mis- took his accelerator for his brake while pulling into a parking space at Town Square in Sisters on Saturday. His car leaped into the entrance of Common Threads, doing extensive damage. There were, however, no injuries. Responding sheriff ʼs deputies arrived on the scene to find a silver 2012 Subaru Outback driven by a 91-year- old Sisters man had driven over the parking lot curb and through the entrance of the store adjacent to Rainwater Café. The store was open and an employee was present. An investigation deter- mined that the driver was attempting to park in front of the clothing store when he mistook the accelerator for the brake pedal. The Subaru drove over the curb and into the store, causing substantial damage to the building and the storeʼs inventory. Sisters-Camp Sherman Fire District personnel arrived to assess the driver and the building. No citations have been issued. PHOTO COURTESY DESCHUTES COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE A 91-year-old driver mistook the accelerator for the brake and ran into Common Threads on Saturday. There were no injuries. Letters/Weather ................ 2 Sisters Naturalist ............... 5 Announcements ................12 Obituaries ....................... 18 Classifieds ..................26-28 Meetings ........................... 3 Bunkhouse Chronicle ......... 9 Entertainment ..................13 Crossword ....................... 25 Real Estate .................29-32