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About Keizertimes. (Salem, Or.) 1979-current | View Entire Issue (March 20, 2020)
MARCH 20, 2020, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A9 Childcare benefi ts BIRDS, continued from Page A1 expanded during COVID emergency per month for a family of four) to 250 percent of the feder- al poverty level or 85 percent of the state median income, whichever is higher for the family size ($5,899 per month for a family of four). • Ensuring more certainty for providers. Childcare provid- ers are able to continue to re- ceive payments from DHS, even if children are unable to attend or if they have to temporary shut down during the state of emergency. Providers and parents/care- takers may contact the DHS Direct Pay Unit with questions Monday-Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at 1-800-699-9074. conversation about adding goats, bees, miniature horses and potbelly pigs into the realm of permitted animals. “There are a lot of options out there, but our goal with this was fi nite,” said Nate Brown, Keizer development director. Commissioner Jeffrey Watson questioned the logic of requiring animals to be kept in coops when a six-foot fence might suffi ce. Keizerite Matt Griffi th spoke in support of the changes and said he’s never seen anyone have a problem with a six-foot fence as the only barrier. “The larger problem in this area is predators,” he said. Keizer resident Erica Arcibal spoke in favor of permitting ducks. “Duck eggs are bigger and more nutritious and the keep up production through the winter,” Arcibal said. She added that duck coops have more of a horizontal profi le than the vertical profi le of chicken coops. Adding drakes in addition to hens isn’t the noise problem that roosters O c u ffic m ia ul l: at H iv um e b a ut n t is oll re o st n c or r ab eek le To support Oregon’s work- ing families dealing with the spread of COVID-19, the Or- egon Department of Human Service is making s and the Ear- ly Learning Division immediate changes to childcare benefi ts. The temporary changes are intended to help low-income, working families access child- care and help providers stay in business during the state of emergency. The changes are: • Eliminating co-pays for el- igible families. • Providing access to more families by increasing the in- come limit from 185 percent of the federal poverty level ($4,040 can become while offering protection for the females. Chris Duggan, another city resident, said chickens could be allowed to range in backyards if their wings were clipped, but predators like hawks and raccoons would remain a danger without a rooster. After public testimony, Watson seemed more convinced that mandating coop confi nement was unnecessary. “I think without it, the code is more diffi cult to enforce,” said Commissioner Mark Caillier. The recommendation, with the mandated confi nement, passed unanimously, but still needs to clear the city council’s dais before residents run afoul of the law. In other business: Commissioners approved a new four-foot standard to front yard fencing. For year’s residents have had trouble scrounging up fencing material meeting Keizer’s 3.5- foot maximum height. “What that means is we have a lot of illegal fencing all around the city, but this takes care of the problem,” said Shane Witham, Keizer senior planner. Sidewalk savings plan will have to wait – for now He suggested looking at By ERIC A. HOWALD known problem areas in terms Of the Keizertimes Members of the Keiz- of getting kids to and from er Traffi c Safety, Bikeways schools, and getting all resi- and Pedestrian Committee dents to public services, police planned to ask city offi cials and fi re services, food banks, health clinics to start sock- and transporta- ing away mon- tion hubs safely. ey each year to “We could help fi ll in Keiz- have everyone er’s numerous bring back a list and sometimes of the sidewalk enormous gaps gaps they know in sidewalks about and what throughout the problems might city. be solved by The plans adding them,” rapidly collided said Pat Fisher, with reality, but committee vice members of the chair. committee hav- — David Dempster M ov i n g en’t lost hope. quickly might “I met with also help the Tim Wood [Keizer fi nance director] and city get in line for upcoming Bill Lawyer [Keizer Public grant opportunities, said Jamie Works director] and the idea Davis, a newer member of the was fi ne, but it will have to committee. “I’ve been going through come from the street fund. This year, the street fund is some of the upcoming grant entirely dedicated to repav- deadlines and we need to have ing River Road,” said David our applications fi led by June Dempster, a member of the for most of them,” Davis said. committee. Hoping to seize on mo- mentum, Dempster then sug- gested that the committee draft a list of its top fi ve side- A YEAR’S WORTH OF walk priorities and submit it KEIZER NEWS to the city council. DELIVERED FOR ONLY “It will give a fi rm direc- tion to go in when looking for $35 set-asides in future budgets,” CALL 503-390-1051 Dempster said. “This year, the street fund is entirely dedicated to repaving River Road.” SUBSCRIBE Your locally owned and family operated collision repair business since 1958 ce re h lt ea l h ta en m e t COME BY: 142 Chemawa Rd N h w as n ha sp al ot, t's a eci l o w the ppr s n o O t tud ew p n a e d n e of bly. ts r to th e bi gg e st ch K e i LA ze r CLICK: keizertimes.com/store ba la vi nce p “ ron d m ev n erc I t ot ep be ent e o th r im tion liev . e ac os em pa t iv e emb ct t that th iti er he a a e s a llo th wa sin a t w e t erw ar d a e “I p t e h est m igh icid fo ean lev e s r e re wa ing ls o c r ea ter it is f t io con no n t t . a ” ct Ke i ze r E — n E v iro liz n ab m en et ta h Di l a Sa v n i sio d T gm n ec ill M h e O c u ffi c i m u al l a : H i t v e CALL: 503.390.1051 By N ew s t u d e n t I D s in c l u d e m en t a l h h e a l t r e s c e s o u r 3 EASY WAYS TO SUBSCRIBE p th itch e to f ru ran eve or t nn o ni he er la ng se s w te . 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