Appeal tribune. (Silverton, Or.) 1999-current, June 01, 2022, Page 6, Image 6

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    2B
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WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 2022
|
APPEAL TRIBUNE
Snow
Continued from Page 1B
hills, Coast Range and Oregon Coast — are open. But
it’s always a roll of the dice in the higher-elevations in
late May, said Heather Isben with Mount Hood Nation-
al Forest.
Historically, it was common for snowpack to linger
deep into Oregon’s summer. But recent warm and dry
springs have led to camping opening much sooner
than in the past.
“We look at a mix of public expectations and aver-
age weather patterns for opening campgrounds,” Is-
ben said. “Every year we do our best to pick a good pro-
jected open date — we don’t plan to open in March, for
example. But sometimes we have delays like this year,
because you need time to do all the things a camp-
ground needs from repairs to hiring staff.”
Closed campsites
Deschutes National Forest
Bend-Fort Rock Ranger District
Cultus Lake Campground (under assessment – may
open if annual hazard tree removal can be completed
by 5/27)
Elk Lake Campground
Lava Lake Campground
Little Cultus Campground
Little Fawn Campground
Little Lava Lake Campground
Mallard Marsh Campground
Point Campground
Quinn Meadow Horse Camp
Soda Creek Campground
South Campground (Hosmer Lake)
Crescent Ranger District
Contorta Flat Campground
Contorta Point Group Camp
Crescent Lake Campground (under assessment –
may open if annual hazard tree removal can be com-
pleted by 5/27)
Princess Creek Campground
Simax Group Camp
Spring Campground
Trapper Creek Campground
Whitefish Horse Camp
Windy Group Camp
Sisters Ranger District
Three Creek Meadow Campground and Horse
Camp
Whispering Pines Horse Camp
Mount Hood National Forest
Frog Lake Campground
Trillium Campground
FORM OR-ED-1
Late season snow has kept some campgrounds closed including some near Mount Hood.
ZACH URNESS / STATESMAN JOURNAL
Still Creek Campground
Zach Urness has been an outdoors reporter in Ore-
gon for 15 years and is host of the Explore Oregon Pod-
cast. To support his work, subscribe to the Statesman
Miller
NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING
A public meeting of the Mt Angel School District Board will be held on June 16, 2022 at 6:30 pm at 590 E College St Mt Angel,
Oregon. The purpose of this meeting is to discuss the budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2022 as approved by the Mt
Angel School District Budget Committee. A summary of the budget is presented below. A copy of the budget may be inspected or
obtained at 730 E Marquam St Mt Angel, OR between the hours of 8 a.m., and 4 p.m.,or online at www.masd91.org .This budget
is for an annual budget period. This budget was prepared on a basis of accounting that is the same as the preceding year. If
different, the major changes and their effect on the budget are:
Contact: Kristi Brackinreed
Telephone: 503-845-2345
Continued from Page 1B
Email: kristi.brackinreed@masd91.org
FINANCIAL SUMMARY - RESOURCES
TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS
Actual Amount
2020-2021
Adopted Budget
This Year 2021-2022
Approved Budget
Next Year 2022-2023
1. Beginning Fund Balance.......................................................
1,857,712
1,390,965
1,660,443
2. Current Year Property Taxes, other than Local Option Taxes..
2,146,947
2,220,107
2,254,969
3. Current Year Local Option Property Taxes..............................
0
0
0
4. Other Revenue from Local Sources.......................................
309,569
662,798
607,078
5. Revenue from Intermediate Sources.....................................
38,109
45,300
6,500
6. Revenue from State Sources................................................
7,632,543
8,597,022
8,051,958
7. Revenue from Federal Sources.............................................
1,023,851
833,190
1,519,432
8. Interfund Transfers...............................................................
316,489
198,527
178,424
9. All Other Budget Resources..................................................
0
500
500
10. Total Resources..................................................................
13,325,220
13,948,409
14,279,304
FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS BY OBJECT CLASSIFICATION
11.Salaries..............................................................................
4,854,618
4,904,451
12. Other Associated Payroll Costs...........................................
3,283,388
3,403,216
13. Purchased Services...........................................................
919,134
1,327,117
14. Supplies & Materials.........................................................
697,632
1,360,433
15.Capital Outlay.....................................................................
24,487
41,404
16. Other Objects (except debt service & interfund transfers)...
1,139,428.07
288,482
17.Debt Service*......................................................................
923,895.37
943,899
18.Interfund Transfers*.............................................................
316,489
196,615
19.Operating Contingency........................................................
0
1,057,736
20. Unappropriated Ending Fund Balance & Reserves..............
0
425,056
21.Total Requirements.............................................................
12,159,071
13,948,409
5,115,624
3,730,618
1,223,910
1,062,703
46,404
465,051
996,308
175,531
1,035,817
427,338
14,279,304
FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS AND FULL-TIME EQUIVALENT EMPLOYEES (FTE) BY FUNCTION
Function
FTE for Function
1000 Instruction
5,860,017
6,366,846
6,813,166
FTE
52.15
46.52
48.74
2000 Support Services
3,838,818
4,466,433
4,313,581
FTE
26.54
24.92
25.92
3000 Enterprise & Community Service
469,852
498,824
524,563
FTE
4.25
4.28
4.31
4000 Facility Acquisition & Construction
0
0
0
FTE
0
0
0
5000 Other Uses
358,86
35,886
63,295
5100 Debt Service*
1,638,009
908,013
933,013
5200 Interfund Transfers*
316,489
189,615
168,531
6000 Contingency
0.00
1,057,736
1,035,817
7000 Unappropriated Ending Fund Balance
0
425,056
427,338
Total Requirements
12,159,071
13,948,409
14,279,304
Total FTE
91.915
75.72
78.965
* Not included in total 5000 Other Uses. To be appropriated separately from other 5000 expenditures.
PROPERTY TAX LEVIES
Rate or Amount
Imposed
Permanent Rate Levy ............(Rate Limit 4.6268 Per $1000)
4.6268
Local Option Levy....................................................................
Levy for General Obligation Bonds
931526
Rate or Amount
Imposed
4.6268
Rate or Amount
Approved
4.6268
923287
928829
STATEMENT OF INDEBTEDNESS
Estimated Debt
Outstanding on July 1
General Obligation Bonds..........................................................
6,491,038
Other Bonds..............................................................................
1,585,000
Other Borrowings......................................................................
25,476
Total........................................................................................
8,101,514
Long Term Debt
Estimated Debt Authorized,
but not Incurred on July 1
Actually, this is my
fifth or sixth attempt at
writing a last column dur-
ing the course of two
weeks.
I’ve done drafts of “ca-
reer in review,” “high-
lights and lowlights,” and
other roundup-style for-
mats.
I finally came to the
conclusion that those
who have read me over
the decades know all
about it, warts and all.
And those who haven’t
read the articles and col-
umns won’t have a clue
what I’m yammering
about.
Doing the math, and
deducting a year for the
time between retirement
1.0 on Oct. 30, 2015, and
return to part-time active
duty in 2016, it adds up to
about 1,300 weekly out-
door columns.
The late Hall of Famer
Ted “the Splendid Splin-
ter” Williams once said
that “baseball is the only
field of endeavor where a
man can succeed three
times out of 10 and be
considered a good per-
former.”
I’m hoping that forgiv-
ing readers will give me
the same leeway.
An ink-stained wretch
All-in-all, it’s been a
pretty sweet ride.
My dad used to say
that the best thing about
teaching is the job was
different every day.
That analogy applies
in spades to being among
what used to be referred
Journal. Urness is the author of “Best Hikes with Kids:
Oregon” and “Hiking Southern Oregon.” He can be
reached at zurness@StatesmanJournal.com or (503)
399-6801. Find him on Twitter at @ZachsORoutdoors.
to as the “ink-stained
wretches” of the press
corps.
The ink stains are gone
in the digital age, as are
the darkrooms, enlargers
and chemical baths for
film.
But the people, both in
the press corps and
among the public, remain
largely the same.
The former are still a
dedicated cadre of truth-
tellers and fact-checkers.
The largest humiliation
coming when you have to
write a correction or, god
help you, a retraction.
Like being a scientist,
which was my first ambi-
tion in college, the truth
matters above all else for
print journalists.
Truth be told, the
greatest joy in my career
as a column-writer was
making someone famous,
however briefly.
There have been times
when a laminated article
in a frame about a big
fish, an accomplishment,
or even a restaurant re-
view, is displayed on the
wall of a sporting goods
store, a home, or a hot dog
emporium with my byline
on it.
All treasured McNug-
gets of a personal history.
When it comes to a
reason for being, it
doesn’t get better than
that.
When starting out at a
small weekly – we used to
say, tongue in cheek, that
we “published weakly” –
there was a mantra
among the three-person
writing staff: “Why the
hell would anyone want
to read this?”
Making it personal,
making it interesting,
simply making it worth
OR-GCI0891437-01
FORM UR-1
NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING
A public meeting of the Silverton Urban Renewal Agency will be held on June 20, 2022 at 6:30 pm located at Silverton High School Library-1456 Pine Street and using the Zoom web conference platform per House Bill 2560 and City of Silverton Resolution
22-06. The purpose of this meeting is to discuss the budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2022 as approved by the Silverton Urban Renewal Agency Budget Committee. Any person may attend the meeting. Written comments are encouraged to be
submitted by mail, City drop box or email to finance@silverton.or.us. Written comments will need to be received by the City no later than 3:00 PM on June 20, 2022. Additional meeting information will be available on the City’s website at www.silverton.or.us. A
summary of the budget is presented below. A copy of the budget may be inspected or obtained online at: www.silverton.or.us. This budget is for an annual budget period. This budget was prepared on a basis of accounting that is the same as used the
preceding year.
Contact: Kathleen Zaragoza
Telephone: 503-873-5321
Email: kzaragoza@silverton.or.us
TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS
FINANCIAL SUMMARY - RESOURCES
Actual Amount
2020-2021
Beginning Fund Balance/Net Working Capital
All Other Resources Except Division of Tax & Special Levy
Revenue from Division of Tax
Total Resources
Materials and Services
OR-GCI0891106-01
Capital Outlay
Contingencies
Unappropriated Ending Fund Balance
Total Requirements
LONG TERM DEBT
Other Borrowings
Total
Adopted Budget
Approved Budget
This Year 2021-2022
Next Year 2022-2023
1,645,485
51,988
807,633
2,505,106
FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS BY OBJECT CLASSIFICATION
3,803
481,410
2,019,893
2,505,106
STATEMENT OF INDEBTEDNESS
Estimated Debt Outstanding
July 1, 2022
$0
$0
2,273,348
32,696
778,187
3,084,231
1,129,297
20,725
951,070
2,101,092
15,600
16,000
2,668,631
400,000
1,770,092
315,000
3,084,231
2,101,092
Estimated Debt Authorized, But
Not Incurred on July 1
$0
$0
reading became the cre-
do.
And that’s always
been the goal.
Like the Splendid
Splinter, the hope is that
the columns and the arti-
cles measured up a good
portion of the time.
Everyone has a story to
tell.
And if you dig hard
enough, almost all of
them are worth telling if
you do it in a compelling
way.
Column No. 1
If I may be allowed a
digression, I’d like to tell
you about the first out-
door column that I ever
wrote at that little weekly
in Southern California al-
most a half-century ago.
It was a story about a
motley group of retirees
who gathered most days
to tell lies and fish, mostly
in vain, for halibut off the
Goleta Pier.
The central character
in the piece was Louie, a
retired railroad worker
from Louisiana, which he
called Looooz-E-anna in
his shoofly pie-thick
Southern drawl.
Thinking back, he also
referred to the fish that he
was pursuing as “hali-
buth.”
I digress.
Post-retirement, Louie
had been coaxed to move
to Goleta by his son who
worked at the University
of California at Santa Bar-
bara.
Reader reviews about
the inaugural column
were mixed.
Crickets from the
readers, and near tears of
gratitude from Louie for
the acknowledgment that
his life and experiences
were a story worth telling.
That intimate, per-
sonal Studs Terkel-like
experience of telling ev-
eryman’s story has kept
me hooked on doing it
ever since.
Thanks, Louie.
And thanks to you all
for the memories.
As I said, it’s been a
sweet ride.
THOUGHT FOR THE
WEEK: Live your life as if
someone is going to write
about it, and your mother
gets to edit the draft.
Contact Henry via
email
at
HenryMil-
lerSJ@gmail.com