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About Appeal tribune. (Silverton, Or.) 1999-current | View Entire Issue (March 31, 2021)
2A | WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31, 2021 | APPEAL TRIBUNE Address: P.O. Box 13009, Salem, OR 97309 Classifieds: call 503-399-6789 Retail: call 503-399-6602 Legal: call 503-399-6789 Phone: 503-399-6773 Fax: 503-399-6706 Missed Delivery? Email: sanews@salem.gannett.com Call: 800-452-2511 Hours: until 7 p.m. Wednesdays; until 3 p.m. other weekdays Web site: www.SilvertonAppeal.com Staff News Director Don Currie 503-399-6655 dcurrie@statesmanjournal.com Advertising Westsmb@gannett.com To Subscribe Call: 800-452-2511 $21 per year for home delivery $22 per year for motor delivery $30.10 per year mail delivery in Oregon $38.13 per year mail delivery outside Oregon Deadlines Lyndsey Rosas-Ortiz maintains the deli counter at the Stop-N-Save on Thursday, March 4 in Scio. ABIGAIL DOLLINS / STATESMAN JOURNAL Doughnut doughnut from scratch. Since Maria Curiel and Jaswant Singh opened the new business in November, Rosas-Or- tiz has split her weeks between her reg- ular shifts in Scio and weekend shifts in Stayton. Because she doesn’t want to short- change the Scio store, she has certain flavors she’ll only offer there, and other options that are only available in Stay- ton. Does she plan to open a bakery? “Ev- erybody’s said that I need to, but no- body’s offered” to invest, she said. “I have a little bit of talent I just don’t have money to put behind it.” If she did open a place of her own, she would want to offer savory food in addition to doughnuts. “I’m a cook, but doughnuts are fun for me.” Continued from Page 1A store’s oven before decorating. “I met her about five years ago.” Young said, “I slowly started showing her stuff, but she is so talented, she has surpassed me. She constantly has new ideas all the time. She’s very open, so if you have ideas for a new flavor she’ll make it.” Rosas-Ortiz added from across the deli, “I’ll even name it after you!” Doughnuts with a purpose She originally began preparing the doughnuts at home under Oregon’s cot- tage food law, a supplement to her job to help pay for a family member’s med- ical treatments. “I worked both jobs all year to raise money and then I really, really, really got into this.” At The Donut Hole in Stayton, which is owned by the same family as the Scio Stop-N-Save, she is able to make the Public Notices Main Statesman Journal publication Suggested monthly rates: Monday-Sunday: $22, $20 with EZ Pay Monday-Saturday: $17.50, $16 with EZ Pay Wednesday-Sunday: $18, $16 with EZ Pay Monday-Friday: $17.50, $16 with EZ Pay Sunday and Wednesday: $14, $12 with EZ Pay Sunday only: $14, $12 with EZ Pay News: 4 p.m. Thursday Letters: 4 p.m. Thursday Obituaries: 11 a.m. Friday Display Advertising: 4 p.m. Wednesday Legals: 3 p.m. Wednesday Classifieds: 4 p.m. Friday News Tips The Appeal Tribune encourages suggestions for local stories. Email the newsroom, submit letters to the editor and send announcements to sanews@salem.gannett.com or call 503-399-6773. To report delivery problems or subscribe, call 800-452-2511 To Place an Ad Published every Wednesday by the Statesman Journal, P.O. Box 13009, Salem, OR 97309. USPS 469-860, Postmaster: Send address changes to Appeal Tribune, P.O. Box 13009, Salem, OR 97309. PERIODICALS POSTAGE PAID: Salem, OR and additional offices. Send letters to the editor and news releases to sanews@salem.gannett.com. Emily Teel is the Food & Drink Editor at the Statesman Journal. Contact her at eteel@statesmanjour nal.com, Facebook, or Twitter. See what she’s cooking and where she’s eating this week on Instagram: @emi ly_teel public notices/legals email: sjlegals@statesmanjournal.com or call: 503.399.6789 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF BUDGET COMMITTEE MEETING A public meeting of the Budget Committee of the Drakes Crossing RFPD, Marion, State of Oregon, to discuss the budget for the fiscal year July 1, 2021 to June 30, 2022, will be held at 19364 Powers Creek Loop Rd NE, Silverton, OR 97381. The meeting will take place on April 15, 2021 at 7:00pm. The purpose of the meeting is to receive the budget message and to receive comment from the public on the budget. This is a public meeting where deliberation of the Budget Committee will take place. Any per- son may appear at the meeting and discuss the proposed programs with the Budget Committee. A copy of the budget document may be inspect- ed or obtained on or after April 9, 2021 at Drakes Crossing RFPD, between the hours of 3:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. Budget Committee meeting information will be posted on the Drakes Crossing RFPD website: www.drakescrossingfire.com. Silverton Appeal March 31, 2021 PUBLIC POLICY NOTICES Public Notices are published by the Statesman Journal and available online at w w w .S ta te s m a n J o u r n a l.c o m . The Statesman Journal lobby is open Monday - Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. You can reach them by phone at 503-399-6789. In order to receive a quote for a public notice you must e-mail your copy to SJLegals@StatesmanJournal.com , and our Legal Clerk will return a proposal with cost, publication date(s), and a preview of the ad. LEGAL/PUBLIC NOTICE DEADLINES All Legals Deadline @ 1:00 p.m. on all days listed below: ***All Deadlines are subject to change when there is a Holiday. The Silverton Appeal Tribune is a one day a week (Wednesday) only publication • Wednesday publication deadlines the Wednesday prior LEGAL/PUBLIC NOTICE RATES Silverton Appeal Tribune: • Wednesdays only - $12.15/per inch/per time • Online Fee - $21.00 per time • Affidavit Fee - $10.00 per Affidavit requested SELL YOUR CAR FIND A HOME GET A JOB ADOPT A PET BUY A BOAT FIND A TREASURE Check out the classified ads everyday. PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Review Body: Plan- ning Commission Hearing Date & Time: April 13, 2021, 7:00 p.m. Hearing Location: Tel- econference meeting via Zoom with a tele- phone call in number. Due to HB 4212, the Planning Commission may hold public hear- ings by telephone, vid- eo, or through some other electronic or vir- tual means. The in- structions to listen to or virtually attend the meeting will be includ- ed in the Planning Commission meeting agenda which will be posted on the City’s website and outside of City Hall, 306 S Water Street, on April 6, 2021. This will include a hy- perlink to the meeting and a call in number to participate by tele- phone. Agenda Item #1: File Number CU-21-01. Conditional Use appli- cation to construct a 1,296 square foot ac- cessory structure at 1133 Oak Street. Ac- cessory structures larger than 800 square feet require Condition- al Use approval. Lo- cated on the north side of Oak Street east of Monitor Road at 1133 Oak Street; Marion County Assessor’s Map 061W26DD Tax Lot 01000. The application will be reviewed fol- lowing the criteria found in Silverton De- velopment Code sec- tion 4.4.400. Failure of an issue to be raised in a hearing, in person or by letter, or failure to provide enough detail to afford the decision maker an opportunity to respond precludes appeal to LUBA based on that is- sue. Additional infor- mation and/or review of this application, in- cluding all documents and evidence submit- ted, may be obtained at Silverton City Hall, 306 South Water Street by telephoning Jason Gottgetreu at (503) 874-2212. Copies of the staff report will be available seven (7) days prior to the pub- lic hearing and are available for review at no cost at City Hall by appointment, a copy can be provided on re- quest at a reasonable cost. Silverton Appeal March 31, 2021 Ethan Piaskowski (cq), left, and Dakota Becerra skate at the Judy Schmidt Memorial Skate Park in Silverton. The teens are part of a fundraising effort in honor of Jason Franz that is proposed for an adjacent area. GEOFF PARKS/ SPECIAL TO THE STATESMAN JOURNAL Skate park Continued from Page 1A money that he needed ($1.3 million and 10 years)” to make the existing park a reality, Becerra said. “He had to kind of nickel-and-dime his way to get all the way to it.” Franz, owner of Silverton’s Fall Line Sports, a skateboard and bicycle sales and repair shop, died in the fall of 2019. Efforts to begin fundraising for the ex- pansion, a goal of Franz’s, were stalled last year by the pandemic. Memories of Franz, however, inhabit the two skateboarders’ minds to this day and guide their paths forward in life. “He was just a nice guy who knew how to listen and was very empathetic and I decided I wanted to be like him in that way,” Piaskowski said. “I saw the passion and the drive in him, and when he died, I told myself, ‘I’ve got to do something,'” Becerra said. “So we all started talking about fund- raising to do a Phase II of the skate park” to honor him. “We had an impromptu vigil when he died, and heard story after story of Ja- son’s influence and his compassion and his ability to look past money if you needed help,” Roessler said. In thinking about what kinds of ad- ditions to the original park they want- ed, “We just thought, ‘What would Ja- son want?’” Roessler said. “The ideas for the additions came from these guys (Becerra and Piaskowski),” she said, “and they are the leaders, so whatever they say, Jason would have wanted us to follow their guidance. “We trusted the youth,” she said, “and what impressed me is that the ad- ditions weren’t for them, the experi- enced skateboarders, but were features for beginners, like for mentoring.” “The skate park is almost 10 years old, so we want to add other bowls and a line of six obstacles on the sides,” Be- cerra said. “We want to make a ditch that anyone can ride and can just drop down into it — beginners won’t be in- timidated and intermediate (boarders) will have a chance to try anything they want.” “Once a month or so there’s a kid An old photograph of Silverton business owner Jason Franz, who spearheaded the Judy Schmidt Memorial Skate Park project. Franz died in 2019. PHOTO COURTESY OF SUE ROESSLER who doesn’t want to drop in (to the bowls from 5 feet up),” Piaskowski said. “It’s just scary. You can’t do that with- out help at first and we just approach them and help them out. Twenty min- utes later they’re dropping in.” After engaging with Dreamland Ska- teparks of Lincoln City to build the ad- ditions for a price of $49,500, and add- ing money for the bench and plaque to come to a total of $60,000, the fund- raising began again in earnest last fall. “Everyone talked about getting the money to do what they (the skate- boarders) wanted to do” — a bench for the parents and an area for beginners, Roessler said. “We knew we wanted something that was more Jason-like and wanted to honor him.” Seventy individual and business do- nors wrote checks for the project and 87 donors gave through Facebook. “Jason Jars” for individual giving that were placed around the city gathered $2,598.26 — including four $100 bills. The Elizabeth Ashley Hoke Memorial Trust contributed around $2,000, and the Brenden Family Foundation put the effort “over the top” of the goal, Roess- ler said. A start date for beginning construc- tion is yet to be determined. Freelance writer/photographer Geoff Parks is based in Salem, Ore. E- mail: geoffparks@gmail.com; Phone: (503) 510-7392.