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About The nugget. (Sisters, Or.) 1994-current | View Entire Issue (July 21, 2021)
The Nugget Vol. XLIV No. 29 P OSTAL CUSTOMER News and Opinion from Sisters, Oregon www.NuggetNews.com PRE-SORTED STANDARD ECRWSS U.S. POSTAGE PAID Sisters, OR Permit No. 15 Wednesday, July 21, 2021 Community steps up in fire response Sisters community grapples with bullying By T. Lee Brown Correspondent Fire companies came from all over the Pacific Northwest, some from as far away as Whidbey Island and Chelan, Washington. Now that the Grandview Fire is contained, some personnel are leaving to return home and wait for the next assignment. The high school commons While school is on its annual summer hiatus, folks in Sisters continue to discuss larger social issues relevant both inside and outside the schools. The Nugget previ- ously spoke with Sisters School District superintendent Curt Scholl about issues spe- cific to equity and racism. The conversation con- tinues, discussing bullying and how community mem- bers can get involved (see <Responding effectively to bullying,= page 3). <We want to make sure that all of our kids have a voice and that we9re sup- porting them along the way,= Scholl said. If a child or adult witnesses See COMMUNITY on page 15 See BULLYING on page 14 About 40 adults and children gathered at Sisters High School last Friday morning to paint signs of gratitude to those who worked the Grandview Fire. PHOTO BY JERRY BALDOCK By Sue Stafford Correspondent For a week, the sky over Sisters has been crisscrossed by helicopters towing buck- ets of water and tanker planes carrying fire retardant to slow the Grandview Fire and keep it from spreading through Squaw Creek Canyon Estates and vicinity and into Sisters. All the efforts by 55 fire companies and seven agen- cies, amounting to 822 per- sonnel at the peak of the fire, were successful in stopping the blaze at 6,032 acres, as of July 19. Not one structure or life was lost. The spirit of cooperation and generosity was apparent in Sisters Country in response to the fire and the efforts of Local trekkers pass halfway mark of PCT By Charlie Kanzig Correspondent Melissa Stolasz and her daughter Sasha set out April 12 from the California/ Mexico border with the inten- tion to through-hike the entire 2,650 mile Pacific Crest Trail (PCT) with an eye to finish by August 27 in order to get back in time for both to return to school. Melissa teaches science and math at Ridgeview High School and Sasha is a senior- to-be at Sisters High. At the end of June they passed the halfway mark and took a break in Shasta, California for a resupply. While on the rest day the pair took a few minutes to check in with The Nugget. Melissa feels that the journey has gone very well so far, but dealing with the Inside... recent heat wave encompass- ing the west, the hikers made the decision to skip a three- day section in order to move northward toward the Trinity Alps to escape the triple-digit temperatures. <We couldn9t afford to sit and wait for the tempera- tures to cool, so at this point our plan is to come back to this area over Labor Day and finish this section so we can truly complete the entire trail,= said Melissa. Adjusting to conditions, circumstances, and personal needs is the name of the game on the PCT. A big adjustment came early in the trip when Brittany Terra, a cousin of Melissa9s husband Jeff, who had started out with Melissa and Sasha, decided to head home to Rhode Island 12 days into the venture. See TREKKERS on page 9 Letters/Weather ............... 2 Meetings .......................... 3 those who fought it. As with previous fires, the Sisters Rodeo grounds hosted the fire camp, where per- sonnel slept and ate. Sisters High School opened their air-conditioned gymnasium for sleeping during the day for those on the night crews. While there, they could avail themselves of showers in the locker room. Drought worsens across county By Bill Bartlett Correspondent U.S. Drought Monitor Oregon It does not take a hydrolo- gist to know that Sisters is in the midst of a drought. By the numbers, 100 percent of Deschutes County is affected by the drought 4 all 157,733 persons. June was the 38th dri- est for that month in 127 years and the eighth-driest year to date since records began in 1894. On the Palmer Drought Severity index Sisters was at 93 4 <severe.= It is expected to reach a level of between 95 and 98 within four weeks 4 identified as <extreme.= Roughly a quarter of Deschutes County is already at the <D4 Exceptional Drought= level, the highest ranking on the Drought Monitor scale produced by University of Nebraska at Lincoln, the GRAPHIC CREATED BY DEBORAH BATHKE, NATIONAL DROUGHT MITIGATION CENTER nation9s definitive source. Deschutes County is all in drought, ranging from “moderate drought” at The accompanying graphic the western edge, to “exceptional drought” across a wide swath of the tells the story convincingly. region. Data generated July 6, 2021. The Drought Monitor focuses on broad- scale conditions. Local conditions may vary. See DROUGHT on page 8 Announcements ...............10 Entertainment ................. 11 Water Safety Fun ..............18 Crossword .......................19 Classifieds ................. 20-22 Real Estate ................ 22-24