S ERVING THE S ILVERTON A REA S INCE 1880 50 C ENTS ● A U NIQUE E DITION OF THE S TATESMAN J OURNAL V OL . 136, N O . 45 W EDNESDAY , O CTOBER 25, 2017 SILVERTONAPPEAL.COM SOLAR FARMS COMING TO AREA $1B development spree to benefit Marion, Polk counties Silverton voters to decide on 2 measures Residents to see gas-tax, pool levy on ballot this fall JUSTIN MUCH STAYTON MAIL The Cypress Creek Renewables solar energy farm is seen under construction near Silverton on Oct. 17. Five new solar farms are planned to be built in Marion and Polk counties. ANNA REED/STATESMAN JOURNAL JONATHAN BACH STATESMAN JOURNAL A national solar energy company is betting nearly $1 billion on an Oregon de- velopment spree, includ- ing five new solar farms in Marion and Polk coun- ties. Cypress Creek Renew- ables, a developer that sells electricity to utility companies and already operates seven solar sites in Oregon, is building farms near Salem, Silver- ton, Gervais, Turner and Grand Ronde. Cypress Creek, which operates in 15 states, has its largest group of farms in North Carolina, where more than 100 are either operating or under construction, company officials say. The Marion and Polk county farms will cover about 12 acres each, pro- ducing enough energy to power some 450 homes. They should be churning out electricity by year’s end or shortly afterward, company officials said. The farms will sell energy to Portland General Elec- tric, which will send it to its utility ratepayers. The Willamette Val- ley's population density is such "that solar's needed in this area as part of the renewable energy mix," said Cypress Creek spokeswoman Amy Berg Pickett. "So it's good to site solar where the energy is going to be used." Company officials say they try their best to hire local workers to build the farms and believe the pro- jects will create "hun- dreds of good-paying jobs" in Marion and Polk SPECIAL TO THE APPEAL TRIBUNE SILVERTON – What will happen to the 78-year- old section of the aban- doned building connect- ing the two halves of Sil- verton Middle School? Nothing for now. The old Silverton High School, built in 1939, was See VOTERS, Page 2A If approved, the five-year operating levy for the Silverton Pool calls for a $275,000 annual tax, $1,375,000 total, to pay for operations and maintenance. “We will not be blanketing the state with solar. No solar Silverton mulls smoking ban, nudity, Eugene Fields company will, because there's no avenue for that.” JUSTIN MUCH Aerial photo of a solar installation near Silverton. JEFF DAYTON/CYPRESS CREEK RENEWABLES BERG PICKETT, STAYTON MAIL REGARDING THE FUTURE OF SOLAR FARMS WITHIN THE STATE counties. In 2016, slightly more than 4,500 people worked in solar energy jobs in Oregon, up 50 percent from 2,999 in 2015, ac- cording to the Solar Foundation, a Washing- ton, D.C., nonprofit. Cypress Creek started working in Oregon in 2014. Six farms are gener- ating electricity in Mal- heur County and one in Deschutes County. At some of those sites, the company took advantage of a taxpayer-fueled ef- fort by state officials to in- crease renewable energy supplies. During the 2016 ses- sion, Oregon lawmakers approved the formation of a Solar Development Incentive program to stimulate solar energy construction. It works by paying companies half a cent each month for every kilowatt-hour of electric- ity they produce. Pay- ments expire after five years. Under the program, Business Oregon, the state's economic develop- ment agency, plans to pay Cypress Creek $2,035,225 for four of the solar pro- jects in Deschutes and Malheur counties. About $246,000 has already been paid. Otherwise, the agency isn't giving the company any loans or incentives, spokesman Nathan Bueh- ler said in an email. Cypress Creek is also taking advantage of fed- eral solar investment tax credits, which allow the company to deduct 30 per- cent from the amount it's invested in a solar pro- ject, according to the So- lar Energy Industries Association. In September, while writing to two U.S. congressmen chairing a subcommittee on energy and power, Cypress Creek Chief Executive Matt Mc- Govern said, "In Oregon we have 17 projects either See SOLAR, Page 2A Old Silverton H.S. stands for now CHRISTENA BROOKS Typical of off-year elections, this fall’s Mar- ion County Voter Pam- phlet is a thin publica- tion. But a glimpse inside shows that Silverton’s per-capita piece of the ballot is significant with two measures placed be- fore voters. Silverton voters will decide on a gas-tax and a pool levy. In a recent Ap- peal Tribune “Your Turn” opinion piece, Sil- verton Mayor Kyle Palmer said both mea- sures are important ones for the community, and he urged voters to consider them. If approved, the five- year operating levy for the Silverton Pool calls for a $275,000 annual tax, $1,375,000 total, to pay for operations and maintenance. It would replace 2013 levy that is scheduled to expire June 30, 2018. The estimated tax to property owners is $0.3659 per $1,000 as- sessed value; the tax bill for a home with an as- sessed value of $200,000 is estimated at $73.18 per year. The tax reve- nue would mirror that of the expiring 2013 mea- sure, which also levied $1,375,000 over five years. The backgrounds shows that operations and maintenance costs for the pool, built in 1939, are not covered by current municipal tax- es. In 2003 Silverton vot- ers passed a 10-year $1.2 million bond for pool im- provements. The expir- ing maintenance and op- erations bond followed, passed in 2012 and im- plemented in 2013. deemed seismically un- safe many years ago and now serves as storage space, sandwiched be- tween the two newer wings occupied by the middle school. Steel beams support the old brick building; they were installed dur- ing the $2.6 million reno- vation that created the Online at SilvertonAppeal.com NEWS UPDATES PHOTOS » Breaking news » Get updates from the Silverton area » Photo galleries middle school campus in 2016. These and firewalls were added to protect staff and students next- door, not to preserve the building itself in an earth- quake. Four years ago, tear- down costs were estimat- ed at $800,000, Supt. Andy Bellando said. Rising construction costs and the fact that much of the middle school’s infrastructure – such as its computer net- work and intercom sys- tems – runs through the old section convinced Lo- rin Stanley, maintenance and facilities director, to recommend letting the See SCHOOL, Page 2A INSIDE Contact Information..........2A Life in the Valley.................4A Public Notices ......................2A Sports......................................1B ©2017 Printed on recycled paper Several ongoing is- sues of note will be on the agenda at Silverton City Council’s next meeting, 7 p.m. Monday, Nov. 6, in the council chambers of the Silver- ton Community Center, 421 S. Water St. Among the anticipat- ed agenda items are the closing date for the sale of the Eugene Field School purchase, a code addressing public urina- tion, defecation and nu- dity, and a ban on smok- ing in the downtown core and city parks. The foundation for the staff work on those agenda items was large- ly established during the council’s Oct. 16 workshop meeting. Oth- er workshop topics in- cluded speeding radar, expansion of a utility as- sistance program updat- ing the city’s long-range financial plan. The council heard from Public Works Di- rector Christian Saxe about issues with the Eu- gene Field site and re- moval of hazardous ma- terials; asbestos and lead paint “in and on the structure” in addition to an underground heat- ing-oil tank, which must be removed with the sur- rounding soils. Saxe noted that abatement contractors’ initial estimates for the asbestos removal are in the $150,000 range and the storage tank in the neighborhood of $30,000. “Due to the excessive quantity and locality of lead paint…in the haz- See ISSUES, Page 2A