WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 2016 APPEAL TRIBUNE ● 3A City plans for more downtown appeal Christena Brooks Special to the Appeal Tribune You run in to Mt. Angel to pick up a few things at Bochsler True Value Hardware. On the way to your car, you notice the Glockenspiel is playing. The sun is shining, so you walk down the street to watch the hand-carved figures do their clock- work routine. Below the song and dance, the restaurant looks so quaint that you go in for a fondue. And be- fore driving away, you stop at Mt. Angel Sausage Company and pick up a package of Fire Haus Brats, extra spicy, to take home. This kind of charm- ing small town experience is what city planners hope to replicate more often by updating the city’s devel- opment code to require downtown businesses to be “pedestrian friendly” when they build or remod- el. Paid for by the state, a two-year-long overhaul of Mt. Angel’s development code is nearly halfway done. The $23,000 Trans- portation Management Growth grant has funded the hiring of Angelo Plan- ning, of Portland, to, among other things, mod- ify, harmonize and create new code for the city’s downtown and residential areas. Making Mt. Angel more accessible to people on foot is only one of many goals, which include blending the city’s park- ing district with its down- town, fixing residential code conflicts and im- proving connectivity for pedestrians and bicy- clists. “You already have your Bavarian theme, so you don’t need a lot of the design elements that a lot of other cities need,” Se- rah Breakstone, an Ange- lo senior planner, told city councilors at their March 7 meeting. “I’ve tried to keep the design standards simple and sort of focus on the things that make the biggest difference.” For downtown, things this could mean requiring new businesses to locate right up to the sidewalk, offer a primary entrance out front, include win- dows liberally, screen rooftop equipment, and offer weather protection to passersby. “The proposed code says 75 percent of a build- ing’s frontage has to be set to the sidewalk,” Breaks- tone said. “Having a build- ing set way back can be a deterrent to pedestrians.” The code changes are a year away from becoming law in Mt. Angel, as the process won’t wrap up un- til 2017. In the coming months, Breakstone will continue writing new code and bringing it back to the planning commis- sion and city council for APPEAL TRIBUNE FILE The Glockenspiel restaurant is a Mt. Angel icon. The city is considering changes to its code which may affect downtown businesses and require them to be pedestrian friendly when they build or remodel. direction. Adoption will require a council vote. “There will be multiple iterations I present be- fore there’s something I’ll present for actual adop- tion,” she said. As an example of the give-and-take that will oc- cur all year, Breakstone is reconsidering her propos- al to require awnings at new businesses, after hearing councilor Don Fleck, former fire chief, explain how he instigated their removal because they’d become safety haz- ards. To City Manager Ei- leen Stein, even more im- portant than downtown design standards is the harmonization of the city’s code. Some code language is unclear and even contradictory, she said. That’s the result of many years of uncoordi- nated updates, a common problem in cities with no budget for large-scale code overhaul. “The city’s infill re- quirements, for example, touch two or three areas of the code, and there are conflicting provisions,” she said. “It’s confusing for applicants when, in one section is says this, but in another section, it says that. This is some- thing we’ve needed for a very long time.” No grant for Pudding River Watershed Christena Brooks Special to the Appeal Tribune APPEAL TRIBUNE FILE As the Pudding River meanders across the Willamette Valley floor, it collects polluted runoff from farms, homes and cities. The Pudding River Ba- sin has been in the spot- light recently as a group of leaders from Silverton, Mt. Angel and the sur- rounding areas collabo- rated to seek a chunk of a $750,000 state grant. But the local collabora- tion was too new to con- vince the Oregon Water Resources Congress to award funds for the study of the water needs of those who live and work along the 62-mile Pudding River and its tributaries. “The relatively untest- ed nature of collaborative planning in this basin may not make it a good fit dur- ing the pilot phase,” read the OWRC report. “I’m disappointed that we did not receive the grant,” said Mt. Angel City Manger Eileen Stein. “We had a great opportu- nity, and I was hoping we could pull it all together.” State lauds summer reading successes Christena Brooks Special to the Appeal Tribune The Oregon State Li- brary honored Mt. Angel Library for its 2015 sum- mer reading program, naming it as one of the state’s top five “outstand- ing projects.” Eighty-two percent of the youth who signed up for the library’s summer program achieved their reading goals, as com- pared with the state aver- age of 33 percent, said Ka- tie Anderson, youth ser- vices consultant for the state library. Mt. Angel’s success rate can be attributed to li- brary staff, which “made changes to the summer reading program to in- crease adult engagement and encourage families to participate together be- cause parents are a child’s first and most influential teacher,” she said. Mt. Angel Library di- rector Carrie Alexandria Caster and youth services librarian Stephanie Laing received the award be- fore the City Council on March 7. CHRISTENA BROOKS/SPECIAL TO THE APPEAL TRIBUNE Mt. Angel Library director Carrie Alexandria Caster and youth services librarian Stephanie Laing received an award before the City Council on March 7 for the library’s reading program. We Are Here to Help Answer All Your Questions! Who do I call fi rst? When a death is unexpected and a person is not on hospice, nor in a licensed care facility, your fi rst phone call may be to the funeral home. However, the police must be notifi ed fi rst. Often the funeral home will call and notify the police for you. Once police are notifi ed, they will come to the place of death and assess things. They will also contact EMT to come and certify the time and that a death has occurred. Afterward, the police may phone the nearest funeral home to assist in transportation of the individual. In certain cases, the medical examiner’s deputy may also be requested at the scene to determine if an autopsy may be required. In other cases, an autopsy may not be necessary. 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