Keizertimes. (Salem, Or.) 1979-current, April 14, 2017, Page PAGE A10, Image 10

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    PAGE A10, KEIZERTIMES, APRIL 14, 2017
DAYCARE,
continued from Page A1
“We want people to know
that this is not a move we
made lightly. We realize that
shutting down a daycare of
any size is an issue and this was
a larger one,” Woods said.
DHS case workers respond
to all complaints within three
days of receiving them.
In addition to sanitation
concerns, there were repeat-
ed violations of staffi ng rules.
Daycare sites are required to
have one staff member for
every four infants, every fi ve
toddlers, every 10 preschool-
ers and every 15 school age
kids. Citing just one exam-
ple of Iris Valley violations,
Woods said representatives of
DHS found one staff member
in a room with eight infants.
“It’s not like we were there
under cover of night, our staff
lets everyone know when they
are there,” said Richard Riggs,
legal administrator for the
ODE early learning division.
“It becomes a situation where
if this is happening while we
are there, what is happening
when we aren’t?”
Riggs noted that no action
is being taken against Williams
personally aside from the pro-
cess to revoke her license. Wil-
liams has obtained an attorney
and notifi ed DHS of her in-
tention to request a stay on
her revocation, Riggs said.
There is no timeline for
how long the proceedings
might take.
traffi c court
NO LICENSE
Eduardo Rangel Zapien,
$542; Everardo Flores, $235;
Raymundo Ordonez Sosa,
$260; Maria Denis Vazquez
Garcia, $542.
NO INSURANCE
Jeffrey Edmond Trump,
$500;
Jacqueline
Diaz
Gonzalez, $225; Everardo
Flores, $235; Jeremiah Keith
Severance, $277.
NO PROOF OF INSURANCE
Josue Estrada Ramirez,
$500; Sandra Lynn Gonzales,
$225.
DRIVING WHILE
SUSPENDED
Jeffrey Edmond Trump,
$1,058; Josue Estrada Ramirez,
$1,058; Hope Suzette Pelinga,
$1,058;
Marissa
Lavelle
Regalado, $1,058; Oscar
Alfredo Rivera Valdez, $435;
H. Gregory Lincoln, $435.
$500; Hannah Makala Michael
Waldner, $245; Neal Perry
Buenz, $235; Janet Ann Picha,
$235.
OTHER
Jeffrey Edmond Trump,
improper display of stickers,
$200; Teresa
Hernandez
Riveros, illegal stopping,
standing or parking,$110;
Hope Suzette Pelinga, unsafe
passing on right, $500; Hope
Suzette Pelinga, impeding
traffi c, $200; Kristian Lucas
Mann,
illegal
stopping,
standing or parking $242;
Carmen Francoise Mitchell,
fail to drive within a lane,
$235; Juan D. Leon Palafox,
prohibited
parking, $50;
Jeremiah Keith Severance,
fail to register vehicle, $110;
Raymundo Ordonez Sosa,
operation of vehicle without
required lights, $40.
Eclipse chalk festival looks unlikely
By ERIC A. HOWALD
Of the Keizertimes
The logistics of a chalk festival to coincide with the Keiz-
er eclipse event might get in the way of the Keizer Public Art
Commission pulling it off.
The idea received its most in-depth discussion to date at a
meeting of the KPAC Tuesday, March 21.
Members of the commission fl oated the idea of a public art
event in coordination with the eclipse festival as a fundraiser. Ini-
tial plans called for cordoning off a space within Keizer Rapids
Park during the eclipse festival and inviting artists in to create
sidewalk art within it.
However, discussions at the March meeting dug further into
the possible problems in fi nding a suitable space, ideas for what
might work and fi nding money to put it together. After complet-
ing the Keizer mural in September 2016, KPAC only has about
$500 for the rest of the fi scal year.
One of the ideas was getting glow-in-the-dark chalk for art-
ists to use that would glow when the eclipse passes over Keizer
on August 21. Commission chair Beth Melendy said she was
only able to fi nd one brand of glow-in-the-dark chalk and it
received terrible reviews online for a spendy item.
“We also don’t know if it will come off easily once the festival
is over,” Melendy said.
There was brief discussion of making the chalk using glow-
in-the-dark paint and plaster, but that was also a costly proposi-
tion.
Community Development Director Nate Brown said the
fi nding space in a park that will be overtaken by campers and
concert traffi c was also a troubling proposition.
“I really am concerned about the crowds and we won’t have
the ability to rope off the area,” Brown said.
One of the commission’s newest members Maritza Gonzales,
said that even if the festival wasn’t something that could be pulled
off in time for the eclipse, it was still something she wanted to
pursue.
“I still want to do it, and there are awesome artists doing the
STORM,
continued from Page A1
R&R Tree Service assisted
the city with cutting up the
massive trees.
“We responded to 14 other
locations and had to cut trees
off of sidewalks and streets in
nine locations,” Lawyer said.
“In addition to trees we picked
up about a dozen street and
stop signs from throughout
the city that blew down. Tem-
porary stop signs were placed
Submitted
Artwork, like the Green Woman piece above, from the collec-
tive High Fiber Diet will be on display in June and July. .
work out there,” Gonzalez said.
The 2018 Iris Festival was mentioned as one possibility.
In other business:
• Commissioners approved artwork from collective known as
High Fiber Diet that will be on display in the Keizer Civic Cen-
ter in June and July. The display, titled It’s Not Easy Being Green,
will feature mixed media art with an emphasis on recycled, re-
purposed and organic material.
• Artwork from the Salem-Keizer Education Foundation, pro-
duced by K-12 students and curated by teachers is on display
through the end of May.
on Friday at the intersections
that had stop signs down.”
Keizer Public Works em-
ployees were dispatched Mon-
day, April 10, to install new
posts where signs had blown
down.
Nearly a dozen trees were
blown over in Keizer parks.
Wallace House Park lost fi ve,
Keizer Rapids Parks lost three
and Mike Whittam Park lost
three. A large limb also fell
off a tree near the gazebo in
Chalmers Jones Park behind
the Keizer Civic Center.
SPEEDING
Jacob Arthur Blattner, $145;
Emily Ann Gonzales, $145;
Phillip Ryan Manuel, $135;
Madison Layne Stevens, $135;
Norma Guzman Torres, $135;
Jayde Mckenzie Bellshaw,
$145; Everardo Flores, $197;
Maria Pilar Hartung; $145.
FAILURE TO OBEY
TRAFFIC CONTROL
DEVICE
Josue
Estrada
Ramirez,
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CALL/TEXT TIPLINE 503.383.9201
WorshipDirectory
These Salem-Keizer
houses of worship
invite you to visit.
Call to list your church
in our Worship Directory:
(503) 390-1051
John Knox Presbyterian Church
JOIN US FOR
SUNDAY WORSHIP
452 Cummings Lane North • 393-0404
8:30 am • 10 am • 11:30 am • 6 pm
PEOPLESCHURCH
4500 LANCASTER DR NE | SALEM
503.304.4000 • www.peopleschurch.com
Celebration
Services
Saturday Evening
6:00 pm
Children’s Programs, Student and Adult Ministries
1755 Lockhaven Dr. NE Keizer
503-390-3900
www.dayspringfellowship.com
Sunday Morning
9:00 am
and
10:45 am
Father Gary L. Zerr, Pastor
Holy Saturday - April 15: 8:00 pm
Easter Sunday: 8:15 am & 10:30 am
La Misa en Español: 12:30 pm
Rev. Dr. John Neal, Pastor
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Education Hour - 9:15 a.m.
Nursery Care Available
www.keizerjkpres.org