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About The nugget. (Sisters, Or.) 1994-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 5, 2020)
A SISTERS COUNTRY E ins 8 ide D I S -1 IN GES 15 Valentine’s Day PA LOVE STORIES & GIFT IDEAS The Nugget Vol. XLIII No. 5 P OSTAL CUSTOMER News and Opinion from Sisters, Oregon www.NuggetNews.com Wednesday, February 5, 2020 Cub Scouts revel in Pinewood Derby By Chloe Gold Correspondent The racing action was hot Friday night at Sisters Community Church, as Cub Scout Den 139 and friends and family gathered in the fireside room for their annual Pinewood Derby and potluck. A few weeks prior, each scout had been tasked with designing and building their own derby car4with a few requirements. Each derby car had to weigh less than five ounces and be built mainly by the scout it belonged to. In reward for all their hard work, each scout received a medal, and could also win a trophy for best design or fastest car. The excitement from the scouts was evident as they played with their derby cars and their friends while watching the official timer, Steve Hunt, finish setting up his track system and timer in the church9s Fireside Room. Hunt said the four-lane ramp the scouts would use was about <33 feet, give or take a foot or two.= It wasn9t just the scouts who were PRE-SORTED STANDARD ECRWSS U.S. POSTAGE PAID Sisters, OR Permit No. 15 Project to require cutting trees By Jim Cornelius Editor in Chief The robust Cub Scout Pack 139 staged a lively Pinewood Derby in the Sisters Community Church Fireside Room. See SCOUTS on page 31 Some 500 trees will need to come down to clear an existing power-line corridor in Camp Sherman. A proposed project in the recreational area west of Sisters will establish a 20-foot- wide corridor and upgrade 131 poles along 13 miles of Central Electric Cooperative power line right-of-way across National Forest land. The project will, in part, mitigate against the dan- ger of the kind of fire that occurred in November 2018 in Paradise, California, when high winds caused PG&E power lines to malfunction, See TREE CUTTING on page 24 PHOTO BY JERRY BALDOCK Public hearing set on major project New planner in place at City Hall S i s t e r s c i t i z e n s c a n weigh in on a major devel- opment project slated for the west side of town on Thursday, February 20, at 5:30 p.m. at Sisters City Hall. The Sisters planning com- mission will hold a hearing on the master plan for up to 50 multi-family units cover- ing approximately 26,800 square feet of building area and approximately 26,800 square feet of commercial space and supporting infra- structure behind the cur- rent Three Winds Shopping Center. The proposed Dollar General store between McKinney Butte Road and Bi-Mart is not part of Nicole Mardell, the City9s new principal planner who joined the staff in December, became familiar with Sisters as a facilitator for the Sisters Country Horizons Vision Project while she was a mem- ber of the Deschutes County Project Management Team. <Through that process I found a deep appreciation for the community here, the history that led to the Sisters we see today, and the shared goals for the future,= Mardell said. <When the opportunity arose (to apply for the plan- ner position), it provided a great alignment of my goals: to work for a smaller city where a planner9s duties have a great deal of variety, while also working for a city that I Inside... this MPD. The site plan for that building and park- ing lot is part of a separate application. Public oral or written testimony is invited at the hearing at 520 E. Cascade Ave. A copy of the applica- tion, all documents and evi- dence submitted by or for the applicant, and the appli- cable criteria and standards can be reviewed at Sisters City Hall at no cost. Copies are available. Files associ- ated with the project can be viewed by visiting the Community Development Department9s project web page at www.ci.sisters.or.us/ community-development/ page/threewind-master-plan- mp-19-01. By Sue Stafford Correspondent care for deeply.= A g r a d u a t e o f t h e University of Minnesota with a Bachelor of Science in Urban Studies, Mardell previously worked for Deschutes County in long- range planning (policy) and current planning (develop- ment review). Prior to that, she worked for St. Louis Park, Minnesota, a suburb in the Twin Cities area, where she focused on safe routes to school, active transportation planning, and infill develop- PHOTO BY SUE STAFFORD ment projects. Mardell has always been Nicole Mardell is the most recent interested in interdisciplin- addition to the City of Sisters ary fields 4 areas where she planning staff. could understand a bit about a family friend told me about variety of other things with a the Urban Studies program at bigger picture in mind. the U of M, which was very <I was initially interested small but had a dedicated in working in the renew- able energy field until a See PLANNER on page 29 Letters/Weather ................ 2 Obituary ...........................11 Entertainment ..................13 Kids in Print ................ 22-23 Classifieds ..................26-28 Meetings ........................... 3 Announcements ................12 The Ranger’s Corner ......... 19 Crossword ....................... 25 Real Estate .................29-32