Appeal tribune. (Silverton, Or.) 1999-current, July 19, 2017, Page 2A, Image 2

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    2A Wednesday, July 19, 2017 Appeal Tribune
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OBITUARY
Continued from Page 1A
Robert Nelson White
Dec. 18, 1928 — July 9, 2017
Robert (Bob) White, a resident of
Sublimity since 1991, died peacefully
in his sleep July 9, in hospice care in
Stayton.
Born in Portland on Dec. 18, 1928,
he attended Grant High School. He
graduated from the University of Ore-
gon, where he played basketball and
ran track. He was a member of Alpha Tau Omega
fraternity, and graduated with a BA in psychology
and sociology, and an MA in social work. As a lifelong
alumnus, he was an avid fan of the Oregon Ducks.
After college, Bob joined the Air Force, serving dur-
ing the Vietnam War, and rising to the rank of Major
before resigning his commission.
Bob then joined the Oregon State Department of
Human Services, where he focused his concern on
child welfare. In 1991, after a long professional life,
he married a former college classmate, Marjorie
Tate of Sublimity. He joined the Union Hill Grange
#728 and the Oregon Small Woodlands Association
(OSWA), spending much of his time on forest man-
agement as well as water and soil conservation. He
was a member also of Silverton Elks Lodge #2210,
B.P.O.E.
He is survived by his wife Marjorie, seven chil-
dren and stepchildren, and many grandchildren.
A private burial is planned at the Union Hill Cem-
etery. The family suggests that in lieu of flowers, a
donation be made in his memory to: Union Hill
Grange, c/o Mary Ann Scott, Grange Director, 17253
Silver Falls Hwy, SE, Sublimity, OR 97385.
Assisting the family is Virgil T. Golden Funeral
Service.
City Hall
Continued from Page 1A
planning process, Mathiesen said.
"This is a great time to get input from the commu-
nity,” she said. “Here in Mt. Angel, we have our own
unique feel.”
In the coming weeks, city staff will focus on how
to pay for a large project in a town with an annual
budget of just $8 million.
Asking voters to fund a municipal bond will al-
most certainly be the largest piece of the funding
puzzle, but there other options too. Private grants
and government programs may help; councilors
have shied away from the idea of leasing from a pri-
vate developer, Mathiesen said.
The highly publicized grant dollars from the State
of Oregon now flowing into schools and emergency
service buildings to make them earthquake safe are
only available for retrofits, not new construction.
To see LRS Architects’ two concept drawings for
new Mt. Angel City Hall facilities, log on to http://
www.ci.mt-angel.or.us/general/page/new-city-hall-
police-facility-being-considered and download the
attached files.
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You’ve Spent a
Lifetime Preparing
for Retirement.
Now What?
Member SIPC
LOCAL ADVISORS
Vin Searles
Jeff Davis
Keizer Area
Surrounding Area
Sheryl Resner Bridgette Justis
FINANCIAL ADVISOR FINANCIAL ADVISOR
FINANCIAL ADVISOR
FINANCIAL ADVISOR
Mission | 503-363-0445 Liberty | 503-581-8580 Keizer | 503-304-8641 Sublimity | 503-769-3180
Michael Wooters Garry Falor Mario Montiel
Tim Yount
FINANCIAL ADVISOR FINANCIAL ADVISOR
FINANCIAL ADVISOR
FINANCIAL ADVISOR
South | 503-362-5439 West | 503-588-5426 Keizer | 503-393-8166 Silverton | 503-873-2454
Caitlin Davis Chip Hutchings
Walt Walker
FINANCIAL ADVISOR FINANCIAL ADVISOR
West | 503-585-1464 Lancaster | 503-585-4689
FINANCIAL ADVISOR
Stayton | 503-769-4902
OR-0000392968
Tim Sparks
Kelly Denney
FINANCIAL ADVISOR
Commercial | 503-370-6159
FINANCIAL ADVISOR
Dallas | 503-623-2146
year,” she added.
Holowati said there are
currently about 15 to 18
students involved, follow-
ing an orientation earlier
this month.
There is always room
for more involvement,
students, businesses and
other contributors. Con-
tributions or donations
can be delivered at partic-
ipating locations around
town, or from 10 a.m. to 2
pm. Monday through Fri-
day at Silverton Together,
ferent sort, Metal Mulisha
riders Justin Homan and
Sean Nielson will take to
the sky performing dare-
devil aerial maneuvers
following the roundup
competitions.
“When we added moto-
cross, we thought it was a
good fit with the rodeo as
they're both very adrena-
line driven,” Stampede
Director of Promotions
Corky Justis said. “It's
crazy. The cowboys think
the motorcycle guys are
nuts and the motorcycle
guys think the same thing
about the cowboys.
“We love working with
Justin,” she added. “He in-
teracts really well with
the kids, who adore him.
He is very family oriented
and that's what our event
is about.”
Homan is a two-time X
Games
Champion,
a
bronze medalist, and 14-
time finalist.
“I've been doing this
classified as “significant
hazard potential,” “low
hazard potential,” or “un-
determined.”
In February, following
the crisis at Oroville Dam
in California, the States-
man Journal reported
that 24 high hazard poten-
tial dams in Oregon don’t
have emergency action
plans.
In April, Rep. Rick
Lewis, R-Silverton, intro-
duced HB 3427, which re-
quires 17 of those – the
ones regulated by the
state – to develop emer-
gency action plans by
next fall.
The bill, which now is
awaiting
Gov.
Kate
Brown’s signature, also
requires managers of
those dams to conduct pe-
riodic emergency re-
sponse exercises.
And it requires the
Oregon Water Resources
Department to conduct
yearly inspections of high
hazard potential dams.
The Legislature awarded
the department an extra
$122,224 per year to add a
second permanent in-
spector position.
Three of the high haz-
ard potential dams that
don’t have emergency ac-
tion plans are among sev-
en the state deems to be in
“unsatisfactory” condi-
tion. They are Johnson
Creek Reservoir in Crook
County; Ferry Creek Dam
in Curry Count; and Crow-
ley Reservoir in Malheur
County.
OWRD inspects those
dams more closely and
could declare them un-
safe if repairs aren’t
made, Enright said.
Two dams in Newport
also are on the “unsatis-
421 S. Water St.
For information, con-
tact Holowati at 503-873-
0405,
janh@waveca-
ble.com or visit www.sil-
vertontogether.org.
If you go
What: 21st Annual Santiam
Canyon Stampede
Continued from Page 1A
Continued from Page 1A
www.edwardjones.com
APPEAL TRIBUNE FILE
Volunteers with the 2012 Apple Tree School Supplies Drive carry boxes of donated school
supplies to principals’ cars. The drive has been helping Silver Falls School District students for 17
years.
Stampede
Dams
To develop a retirement
income strategy that
works for you, contact
your Edward Jones
financial advisor.
Salem Area
Some of those are the
usual fare: pencils, pens,
note pads and the like. But
there are also more
unique or non-traditional
needs.
“Like this year Robert
Frost is seeking 100 mini
earphones that the stu-
dents can use while they
are on computers,” Holo-
wati provided as an exam-
ple.
While ST and its part-
ners host the posters and
stations, Apple Tree is
largely a drive for stu-
dents by students.
“The
Apple
Tree
School Supplies Drive is
unique in the fact that the
bulk of the workers and
leaders are composed of
students in grades 5-12,”
Holowati noted. “Stu-
dents are given the oppor-
tunity to take different
leadership positions, such
as inventory and public
relations within the drive;
in doing so, the participat-
ing children learn many
different skills that have
real-life applications.
“These students take
the needs of close to a
thousand different chil-
dren upon themselves in
the hope that it will im-
prove the children’s abili-
ty to learn at their full po-
tential during the school
When: 5:30 p.m.- 1 a.m.,
Friday and Saturday, July 21 -
July 22. Events and times are
the same on both days.
Where: Sublimity Harvest
Festival Grounds, 11880
Sublimity Rd. SE, Sublimity
GARY DAYTON / SPECIAL TO THE STAYTON MAIL
Dodging the bull is a challenging task at the Santiam Canyon
Stampede.
for 20 years,” Homan
said. “It's a lot of hard
work and practice and it's
very methodical. It's like
gymnastics – you have to
learn to do a somersault
before you started flip-
ping around in the air.
“It's pretty exciting for
an audience to see it in
real life. It's much differ-
ent than on TV. We really
are 40 feet in the air doing
spins and things and trav-
el 75 to 80 feet ramp to
factory” list. Although
they do have emergency
response plans, residents
know that if they fail,
flooding could wipe out
much of the town and
leave residents without a
drinking-water source.
Salem has been work-
ing to develop an emer-
gency action plan for
Franzen Reservoir since
the state reclassified it as
a high hazard potential
dam, city spokesman
Mike Gotterba said.
That reclassification
happened in February
2015, following a dam
breach inundation analy-
sis, Diana Enright, OWRD
spokeswoman, said.
Sawyer, the Turner city
administrator, said he was
not aware of the change in
classification.
Salem has not conduct-
ed any emergency re-
sponse exercises at Fran-
zen Reservoir, Gotterba
said. But the city has done
water-related exercises
that show the city’s drink-
ing water system could
continue to operate if the
reservoir failed.
OWRD inspected Fran-
zen Reservoir in October
2016 and found it to be
well maintained with no
major issues, Enright
said.
But Sawyer worries
about the looming 9.0
magnitude-plus Cascadia
Subduction Zone Earth-
quake, which Oregon offi-
cials say has a 40 percent
chance of happening in
the next 50 years.
“If the reservoir failed
because of an earthquake,
there are some houses
that will be inundated
with water and be dam-
aged,” Sawyer said. “I
don’t know how I’m going
to warn those people.”
tloew@statesmanjour-
nal.com, 503-399-6779 or
follow at Twitter.com/Tra-
cy_Loew
ramp.”
Once the arena events
have finished, spectators
21 and over can join the
Stampede After Party and
enjoy the music of Travis
Tagle.
To refresh the next
morning,
a
Cowboy
Breakfast will be served
from 7 a.m. to noon, Satur-
day and Sunday, at the
Sublimity Fire Station, 115
NW Parker St. Cost is $5
for adults 13 – 54, $3 ages 4
– 12 and 55+, under 4 free.
Proceeds will benefit the
Volunteer
Firefighters
Association.
Pulling all of these ele-
ments together, the Stam-
pede Board is quite
pleased with the recep-
Cost: Adults $13 in advance,
$17 at the door; ages 5-12 $9
in advance, $13 at the door;
kids 4 and under free.
Advance purchase tickets are
available on the event
website, www.scsrodeo.com.
Other: For further
information, visit
http://www.scsrodeo.com,
phone 503-769-2799 or email
stampede@wvi.com. Wear
royal blue on Friday for
Diabetes Awareness Night to
join Santiam Hospital in
bringing awareness to the
disease.
tion the event has gotten.
“We've been growing
year to year,” Justis said.
“During last year's anni-
versary, we had a chance
to reflect on how far we've
come and the support
we've gotten. We're re-en-
ergized and really excited
about this year and the fu-
ture.”
P.O. Box 13009
Salem, OR 97309
Address
P.O. Box 13009
Salem, OR 97309
Phone
503-873-8385
Fax
503-399-6706
Email
sanews@salem.gannett.com
Web site
www.SilvertonAppeal.com
Staff
President
Ryan Kedzierski
503-399-6648
rkedzierski@gannett.com
Advertising
Terri McArthur
503-399-6630
tmcarthur@Salem.gannett.com
Deadlines
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Obituaries: 11 a.m. Friday
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