2A | WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 2022 | APPEAL TRIBUNE Address: P.O. Box 13009, Salem, OR 97309 Phone: 503-399-6773 Fax: 503-399-6706 Email: sanews@salem.gannett.com Web site: www.SilvertonAppeal.com Staff News Director Don Currie 503-399-6655 dcurrie@statesmanjournal.com Advertising Westsmb@gannett.com Deadlines 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 Gervais Middle School students sit spaced apart during lunch. The district is one of the first to use a pager-like device for contact tracing. ABIGAIL DOLLINS / STATESMAN JOURNAL Election 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. Classifieds: call 503-399-6789 Retail: call 503-399-6602 Legal: call 503-399-6789 Missed Delivery? Call: 800-452-2511 Hours: until 7 p.m. Wednesdays; until 3 p.m. other weekdays 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 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 To report delivery problems or subscribe, call 800-452-2511 Sublimity has a new ballot drop box in front of its city hall at 245 NW John- son Street. To Place an Ad Aurora municipal bond Published every Wednesday by the Statesman Journal, P.O. Box 13009, Salem, OR 97309. Continued from Page 1A vais, Aurora and Donald will decide in the election. Sublimity fluoride ballot measure The Sublimity City Council was hold- ing a work session to decide what goals they wanted to pursue in January 2020. A resident, Larry Etzel, asked if the council had discussed that the city puts fluoride in its drinking water. They hadn’t. Sublimity is one of 29 – Dallas, Inde- pendence, Keizer, Monmouth, Salem, Silverton and Turner among them – out of Oregon’s 241 incorporated cities that provides fluoride to its citizens through its drinking water. It equates to about 22% of the state’s population (902,000) who receive fluo- ride, according to the Oregon Health Au- thority. That ranks the state 48th among the United States. Fluoride, a naturally occurring min- eral, protects teeth from decay that can lead to cavities. Communities that add fluoride to their water decrease cavities in children by 15%, according to a study by the Community Preventive Services Task Force “And currently, we’re adding .6 parts per million is how much fluoride is in our water. Not a huge amount and there’s a very minimal amount that’s naturally occurring,” Sublimity Mayor Jim Kingsbury said. Etzel, 68, moved to the city from a family farm about eight years ago. He’s a retired pilot who is involved in commu- nity organizations, including one that teaches disabled people to ski. He said of the 74 water districts in Marion County, six have fluoride in the water. “My question is, what do these other 68 water districts know that we don’t?” Etzel said. “That’s kind of why I present- ed this to the city council, just to see if they would be interested in this.” According to the Fluoride Action Net- work, there have been 83 studies about the links between intelligence and fluo- ride and 74 have shown that elevated fluoride exposure is associated with re- duced IQ. “My goal in pursuing this is to get people to do a little bit of research so that they can make an informed deci- sion,” Etzel said. “You’re going to run into dental pro- fessionals who say this is absolutely necessary. My dentist tells me the same thing. It may help reduce cavities in kids. But what are the other effects of this? The studies that show the lower IQ’s in kids. Do I want them to put some- thing in my water that’s going to cause negative effects in kids?” Kingsbury said adding fluoride costs the city $5,000 per year. Sublimity uses well water for drink- ing water. It has four wells and adds flu- oride in each one, he said. The city has been adding fluoride into its drinking water since 1955, when it was a city with a population of about 400 people. Kingsbury said the city never asked its citizens in a ballot measure if they wanted it, though. The city asked it residents in its newsletter to tell it if they wanted fluo- ride in the water. There was a lot of feed- back. It was mixed. “Generally, you know when some- thing comes up, generally it’s pretty well either one side or another,” said Kings- bury, in his fourth year as mayor. “And this item was significantly different in the fact that there was a lot of people who were for and a lot of people against and it was something we couldn’t in good faith make a decision one way or another.” After nine months of input, the city decided to put it to the citizens as a bal- lot measure. Kingsbury said it’s important for the city to let the citizens decide whether they want fluoride or not. “Just from my own personal stand- point, I think that’s important,” he said. “I think it’s important for persons to make up their own mind about what they feel they want in their water. If there is a benefit to fluoride, if there isn’t a benefit to fluoride, if you could get flu- oride another way.” When the ice storms hit in February 2021, the shortcoming of Aurora’s wa- ter infrastructure was exposed. The city’s wells were idled when power was knocked out, and without emergency power sources like genera- tors, the city was within a day of run- ning out of water to supply to citizens. Other cities brought Aurora water, which kept it going until power was re- stored, but it’s trying to prevent that situation from happening again. The city is asking voters to approve a $7.1 million bond, paid for increasing property taxes by $2.90 per $1,000 of assessed value over the next 21 years to pay for large municipal improve- ments. It would pay for improvements to the water systems including a pump station on the north side of Mill Creek and emergency generators for the city’s wells. It also would pay for a new city hall, community center and library. That also would include an emergency management hub and shelter for use during extreme weather conditions. It would fund improvements to the city’s wastewater and stormwater sys- tems, including replacing tank liners and chemical storage facilities. Gervais school district bond The Gervais School District is one of two in the Willamette Valley that doesn’t have a bond to improve its fa- cilities. It has not passed a bond since 1990. The district received a $4 million grant from the state to fund improve- ments to facilities, but it only gets the money to spend if it passes a bond. The Gervais School District is ask- ing taxpayers to approve a $31 million bond for construction of new buildings and improvements and repairs on ex- isting buildings in the district. The bond is estimated to cost prop- erty tax owners $2.21 per $1,000 of as- sessed value. For the average home- owner in the district with a property valued at $210,000, it would cost them $37 per month. Gervais High School would receive $10.2 million in additions and up- grades to the existing building. It would also pay to construct new class- rooms, restrooms, a covered walkway and vestibule. The middle school would receive $18 million in renovations and up- grades, and add a new STEM class- room and a multipurpose building. It also would add parking and walkways. The elementary school would re- ceive $3 million in additions and up- grades to the existing building. It also would add a covered play area. In addition, the district’s sports fields would receive new lighting and bleachers, a concessions stand, and locker rooms. The district has received an $800,000 grant to pay for turf for the fields, and may use bond money to pay the rest of the $350,000 it needs to pay for the rest of that improvement. 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. Help your business thrive with a focus on retention Angela Oven Chemeketa Small Business Development Center Did you know that 57% of your employees are looking for a new job? It’s a startling statistic. Consider your own team. Rough- ly half of them are planning to leave when the right opportunity pre- sents itself. Did your throat just close a little bit? If you’ve seen the news this year, you know that there are more open jobs than employees to fill them. Waits at restaurants are longer than ever, customer patience is waning and the yelp reviews are pouring in. The public doesn’t like the new landscape that defines today’s workforce. Guess what? Neither do your em- ployees, according to the latest re- ports. Maybe you just lost somebody on your team and you’re facing the prospect of hiring. IF and that’s just IF you happen to get the right per- son hired, it will cost you about a third of their annual salary to train them, and there is a 33% chance they will leave in their first six months. These are the realities of hiring today. It isn’t fun! How do you fight back? You focus on retention. Let’s look at some ways you KEEP the great employees you have. Why do your employees stay with you? Is it money? Probably not. Today’s employees look at the money as a vehicle to fuel their life- styles. Work is a secondary priority to them, and it honestly should be. Work-life balance is more impor- tant than ever so rethink that man- datory overtime. Rethink the mind- set that your staff gets a paycheck so what else could they possibly ex- Sheds Continued from Page 1A Donald police levy Donald is asking voters to fund po- lice services with an operational levy. The city is asking voters to approve a $2.07 per $1,000 of assessed value increase in property taxes for the next five years. The taxes would raise $254,000 each year for five years and raise a total of $1,065,414.44. That money would be used to con- tract with the Marion County Sheriff ’s office to provide a police officer exclu- sively for the city. Cities in the county including Jefferson and Sublimity have similar arrangements with the county. Donald city manager Eric Under- wood said the city would contract for 40 hours per week for the deputy, though the specific hours the officer works have not been determined. Bill Poehler covers Marion County for the Statesman Journal. He can be reached at bpoehler@StatesmanJournal.com she was gifted a shed constructed by local volunteers and members of the Associated General Contractors Ore- gon-Columbia chapter. The shed is one of 65 given to peo- ple who lost their homes in the fire. The shed build project began in February 2021 with a local church in- tending to build 10 sheds. But as the need increased and more groups got involved, the effort flour- ished. So far 65 sheds have been built with the goal to reach 80 by the end of May. Work will restart later this year. Bill Smith, with Parker, Smith and Feek and AGC, said the building picked up after Blazer Industries donated warehouse space in Stayton to assem- ble and paint the structures. On Sat- urday, volunteers hammered, built and painted inside the warehouse. Smith said supply chain issues have meant that each shed, which once cost $1,400 to build, now costs $4,000. Funded by donations and volunteer work, the sheds are given to wildfire survivors. pect. They want to be part of some- thing. They want to feel like they are making a difference with the work they are doing. What motivates your team? Try asking them. A stay interview is a tool to take your team’s pulse. It is nothing more than a simple conversation about why your employee loves working for you, and maybe why they don’t. The benefits are tremendous, and it will be illuminating to you as an owner or a manager if done correctly. Here are some tips for successful stay inter- views: h Consider doing them off site. Lunch, coffee or a quick glass of wine after work are all great options that communicate a less formal conversa- tion. h Give them permission to be hon- est. If you want a truthful answer, they must trust you not to respond reactively. h Use a growth mindset. This isn’t the time to focus on “but this is how we’ve always done it.” h LISTEN. Read that again. Listen carefully. Take the time to hear what they say. h Commit to changing things to keep them happy and engaged. Hiring is a huge pain point for most owners and managers today. With a laser focus on employee retention, your teams become more stable, en- abling your business to thrive. Be proactive about finding ways to in- centivize them to stay with your com- pany. It gives you more time to focus on other areas of your business and develops a positive, healthy culture among your staff members. Angela Oven is a business adviser at the Chemeketa Small Business De- velopment Center. The Small Busi- ness Adviser column is produced by the center. Questions can be submit- ted to sbdc@chemeketa.edu or call (503) 399-5088. McGuire’s shed now rests where her husband’s garage and machine shop once was. She had it painted in the same mint green shade with bright green trim that she wants to paint her house. On her property, the sounds of cluck- ing chickens and the rushing river fill the air. Some of the trees are regrowing. Pots house the plants for her future gar- den. Her new home is being built to ac- commodate her many kids, grandkids and, as of recently, one great-grandkid. She said the shed has been vital for helping her re-establish her sense of ownership and peace at home. “It instills hope,” she said. The shed also keeps her belongings safe from would-be thieves who’ve tak- en to frequenting wildfire victims’ homes in the canyon. McGuire said she was grateful for the volunteers and said the need for the sheds remained in the community. “It’s a godsend,” she said. “I don’t know what I would have done without it.” For questions, comments and news tips, email reporter Whitney Wood- worth at wmwoodworth @statesmanjournal.com, call 503-910- 6616 or follow on Twitter @wmwood- worth