Appeal tribune. (Silverton, Or.) 1999-current, January 12, 2022, Image 1

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    WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12, 2022 | SILVERTONAPPEAL.COM
PART OF THE USA TODAY NETWORK
Home prices in Mid-Valley still rising
10 most expensive homes
sold in Marion and Polk
counties in 2021
Bill Poehler
Salem Statesman Journal
USA TODAY NETWORK
Home prices in the Mid-Valley have
been going up for years.
The median sales price for homes in
Marion County this year is $390,300,
according to the Willamette Valley Mul-
tiple Listing Service. In the Willamette
Valley, home prices are averaging
$435,414 this year, up 10.5% from
$370,536 in 2020 and up 66% from
$291,018 in 2017.
Not every home in Marion County
that is sold is average. Some sell for far
more.
These are the 10 residential proper-
ties that have sold for the most money in
Marion and Polk counties in 2021 (ex-
cluding farms) and what they sold for,
according to records from the Marion
County and Polk County tax assessor
offices:
MARION COUNTY
$2,700,000
The 6,726-square-foot house at
17300 North Santiam Highway outside
Stayton was built in 2016 with a creek
running through the property and a
stone’s throw from the North Santiam
River. With four bedrooms and four
bathrooms, it’s on 30.2 acres with a
3,900-square-foot barn. The main
house features a kitchen with a break-
fast bar, a butler’s pantry and granite
countertops. The upper level includes a
family room, and there is a covered patio
with an outdoor kitchen, hot tub and fire
pit out back. The property includes a
Christmas tree lot, if the owner wants to
use it as such. It was sold Sept. 3.
$2,300,000
Located not far from Corban Univer-
sity, the 13,519-square-foot house at
5203 54th Court in Salem features sev-
en bedrooms and eight bathrooms, and
plenty of room for parking with seven
attached garages. Each bedroom has its
See HOMES, Page 4A
2 Silverton
events
scheduled to
honor MLK Day
Bill Poehler
Salem Statesman Journal
USA TODAY NETWORK
‘Stunning view’
This new view of North Falls will
be opened by the completion of a
new trail on the north side of
Silver Falls State Park.
Two events will be held in conjunction with the
Martin Luther King Jr. Day holiday in Silverton Jan.
17.
A vigil will be held from 2:30-3:30 p.m. at Towne
Square Park to honor King's legacy. It will include
greeting traffic with signs of quotes of his speeches. It
is being put on by Silverton People for Peace.
For more information about the vigil, contact Rob-
ert Sisk at (503) 873-5307 or email robertjsisk@ya-
hoo.com.
At 6 p.m. Jan. 17, a MLK Observance
will be held via Zoom. Labor organizer
and racial and social justice activist
Ahjamu Umi will give a keynote ad-
dress titled “Does American Identity =
White Supremacy?”
Umi is a novelist and nonfiction
Umi
writer who has conducted anti-racism
workshops for more than 10 years.
KBOO 90.7 FM, an independent radio station in
Portland, will air a version of Umi’s address. The
event is being sponsored by Silverton Grange, Silver-
ton People for Peace and KBOO.
Registration is free and available at silvertongran-
ge.org. For more information, contact (503) 873-5307.
New Silver Falls trail looking for volunteers
Zach Urness Salem Statesman Journal | USA TODAY NETWORK
S
ilver Falls State Park rangers are looking for volunteers to help complete a new trail
with a “stunning view” of North Falls. h Volunteers can help spread gravel, cut
vegetation and feel like they’ve helped bring a new trail to life at work parties being
held monthly at Oregon’s largest state park. h An event planned for Martin Luther
King Day has already filled up its 20 volunteers needed, but people can now sign up for the
next work party on February 21 (President’s Day).
CROWN Act
explicitly
prohibits hair
discrimination
Dianne Lugo Salem Statesman Journal
Work parties will be scheduled monthly across
2022 and sign-ups for each event will be posted
here: https://stateparks.oregon.gov/index.cfm?
do=things-to-do.events.
Volunteers must be at least 14 years old, be able
to work with hand tools and travel up to one-half
mile on gravel and uneven surfaces.
“Hand tools and other equipment will be pro-
vided,” park officials said in a news release.
“Please bring your own lunch, gloves, and wear
clothes suitable for the weather conditions.”
The trail in question is part of the redevelop-
ment on the park’s north side, at the former group
campsite near the nature play area that will in-
clude a new parking lot, restroom and the hiking
trail.
The trail will travel 0.6 miles on wheelchair-ac-
cessible terrain to a viewpoint of North Falls.
“The really cool part is the trail being ADA ac-
cessible to an incredible view of North Falls — it’s
a perfect shot where you can see the creek coming
down and then dropping over the waterfall,” Sil-
ver Falls interim park manager Chris Gilliand
said.
Beyond that, the trail will drop through forest
to the normal North Falls Trailhead, on trail that’s
not accessible for wheelchairs, on a route totaling
1.1 miles one-way.
Park officials hope to have a soft opening for
the trail in June, but the rest of the redevelop-
ment probably won’t be ready until autumn 2022.
Gilliand noted that the Salem Area Trail Alli-
ance and Trailkeepers of Oregon have already
been helping on the trail.
While the volunteer day is mostly geared to-
ward adults, supervised kids can come as well,
Gilliand said.
USA TODAY NETWORK
An artistic rendering of a new viewpoint as part
of a new trail on the north side of Silver Falls
State Park. PHOTOS COURTESY OF SILVER FALLS STATE PARK
For more information, call (503) 873-8681. On-
line registration is available at: bit.ly/silverfall-
sworkday
Zach Urness has been an outdoors reporter in
Oregon for 15 years and is host of the Explore Ore-
gon Podcast. To support his work, subscribe to the
Statesman Journal. Urness is the author of “Best
Hikes with Kids: Oregon” and “Hiking Southern
Oregon.” He can be reached at zurness@States-
manJournal.com or (503) 399-6801. Find him on
Twitter at @ZachsORoutdoors.
Oregon joined a number of states in 2021 passing
legislation that prohibits race-based hair discrimina-
tion in schools and the workplace. That bill has now
gone into effect.
House Bill 2935, known as the CROWN Act, stands
for “creating a respectful and open world for natural
hair” and enacts policies first introduced and passed
in California in 2019.
Oregon’s version amends existing laws against
discrimination based on race to include characteris-
tics like hair texture and “protective hairstyles” such
as braids, locs, bantu knots and twists. The new law
allows anyone who believes they have experienced
hair discrimination to file a written or verbal com-
plaint against their workplace or school.
“It is an act of self-love for the Black community to
be able to show up at work and school in public paces
as ourselves,” one of the bill’s chief sponsors, Rep. Ja-
nelle Bynum, D-Clackamas,, said after the bill was
passed. “It’s time for people to be able to express
themselves unapologetically.”
A total of 14 states have passed the CROWN Act or
legislation inspired by it according to the CROWN Co-
alition, a group of national organizations founded by
Dove, National Urban League, Color of Change and
See CROWN, Page 4A
Vol. 141, No. 4
Online at SilvertonAppeal.com
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