The nugget. (Sisters, Or.) 1994-current, November 13, 2019, Image 1

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    The Nugget
Vol. XLII No. 46
P OSTAL CUSTOMER
News and Opinion
from Sisters, Oregon
www.NuggetNews.com
Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Schools focus on honor for veterans
By T. Lee Brown
Correspondent
On the Friday before the
holiday weekend, veterans
were honored at an assem-
bly presented by Sisters
Elementary  School  (SES). 
The respectful, educational,
and emotionally moving
assembly was professional in
its presentation and sincere in
its gratitude.
<I9ve  never  been  more 
honored as a veteran than
here,= David Vaux said of
Sisters.
He moved here a little
over a year ago, shortly
before the SES Veterans
Assembly  of  that  year.  He 
enjoyed it greatly.
<And then I spent three
hours crying,= he said.
SES Principal Joan
Warburg  thanked  service 
members for giving of their
lives and time.
<We  don9t  take  that 
lightly,= she said.
Then  the  school9s  music 
teacher, Sara Miller, took
the stage, leading students,
veterans, and others in the
audience in the Pledge of
Allegiance and singing the
<Star Spangled Banner.=
PRE-SORTED STANDARD
ECRWSS
U.S. POSTAGE PAID
Sisters, OR
Permit No. 15
Smoldering
burn piles
ignite
small fire
By T. Lee Brown
Correspondent
PHOTO BY JERRY BALDOCK
Sisters Elementary School staff and students welcomed veterans for a special celebration on November 8.
A slideshow celebrated
veterans who are related
to SES students, with pho-
tos submitted by fami-
lies.  Andres  Nieto,  Andy 
Levesque, William Dixon III, 
Brian Hale, Reese Miller and
many others: each service
member9s photo was shown, 
along with information about
their service and which stu-
dents they were related to.
Kids sang, <We are proud 
of our veterans 4 proud of
you all. You are patriots and 
heroes who answered the
call.= As  they  sang,  <Thank 
you, thank you,= fourth-grade
leadership students turned
and sang to the seated veter-
ans, and also used the sign
language for <thanks.=
See VETERANS on page 28
A neighbor in the
Crossroads subdivision a few
miles west of Sisters noticed
smoke rising from debris near
a house on Graham Court last
Sunday morning. As the fire 
began to consume a fence, he
reported the fire to Tim Craig,
deputy chief of Sisters-Camp
Sherman Fire District. 
Two fire trucks and a
smaller emergency vehicle
could be seen at the site, along
with  at  least  four  personnel. 
They subdued the fire with
apparent ease. 
<In this case I wasn9t wor-
ried about evacuating the
neighborhood or anything;
there  wasn9t  a  wind  up  4 
but  that9s  not  to  say  a  small 
fire can9t take out one or two 
houses,= said Craig.
See FIRE on page 30
Sisters Fire crew travels Two Outlaws are state champions
across the pond
By Charlie Kanzig
Correspondent
By Ceili Cornelius
Correspondent
Sisters-Camp Sherman
RFPD EMT firefighters Pat
Burke and Damon Frutos just
returned from an exchange
program with Hampshire
County Fire and Rescue in
southern England.
Hampshire County is one
of the most densely popu-
lated  areas  in  the  world. 
This urban landscape and
area were new for Burke and
Frutos because they were
both trained and work in
rural environments. 
Burke, engineer medic
with SCSRFPD, went on
the exchange for the experi-
ence and to learn more about
rescue and firefighting. The 
Inside...
exchange program started
in 2015 as a way to share
cross-organizational knowl-
edge.  The  exchange  with 
the two departments started
with a conversation between
the Hampshire Fire Chief
and Station Manager David
Hodge and Sisters Fire Chief
Roger Johnson at a confer-
ence in Portland five years
ago.  They  found  the  con-
versations they were having
about the different types of
firefighting in different areas
to  be  very  beneficial.  They 
thought it would be inter-
esting to actually have the
two sets of fire lines do an
exchange. 
The program is in its
See EXCHANGE on page 22
The OSAA Cross Country
State Championships turned
out to be historic for Sisters
High School runners Ella
Thorsett and John Peckham
4 and for the boys9 team. 
Before the day was done
the Outlaws had two indi-
vidual champions and a sec-
ond-place team trophy for the
boys team. 
No Outlaws runner had
ever claimed the individ-
ual title in cross-country,
but freshman Ella Thorsett
changed that with a record-
PHOTO BY CHARLIE KANZIG
breaking run in a blistering Ella Thorsett turned in a blistering time to earn the Outlaws first individual
time of 17:43.
state title in cross country.
About an hour later, John
Peckham became the second could happen that we end up
Peckham entered the meet
Outlaw to complete the feat.  with two individual champi- as the favorite, but Thorsett9s 
<Amazing,= said Coach ons, but the way they did it
Josh  Nordell.  <We  knew  it  was truly amazing.=
See CHAMPS on page 20
Letters/Weather ................ 2 Sisters Naturalist ............... 6 Announcements ................12 At Your Service.............15-19 Classifieds ..................26-28
Meetings ........................... 3 Your Story Matters ........... 10 Entertainment ..................13 Crossword ....................... 25 Real Estate .................29-32