Smoke Signals long awaited convenience store will open in November Tribal considerations and county road designation have finally come together. MARCH 1, 2003 By Ron Karten By late November of this year, the Tribe will open a new 4,500 to 4,600 square foot convenience store and gas station. The project, expected to pro vide 12 new jobs, will be located on casino property -along Highway 18 where the valet parking lot is cur rently located. ..The facility will feature a quick serve restaurant, self-serve delicatessen-style foods, more than typical convenience-store fare and a 12-pump gas station. Diesel, propane and an air and water station will be available on site. "The Tribe's objective," said Larry Kovach, Finance Officer for the Tribe and general manager of the project, "is to provide a marriage of economic development and community develop ment and this is one piece of that." Adjacent to the store, the Tribe will construct new parking for both cars and recreational vehicles. An RV dump also is planned and a new loca tion for valet parking is currently be ing discussed. The project, which has been under consideration for more than five years, finally came together when Polk County legalized Murphy Road for public use. Following a public com ment period, the Tribe agreed to dedi cate an additional 20-foot strip to pro vide the minimum standard 40-foot right of way necessary for a public roadway. "It's been a long time in getting here ' but it will definitely benefit the com munity and the Tribe," said Tribal Council member Bob Haller. "Anything that starts to diversify the Tribe's economic base is a good endeavor," said Chris Leno, Deputy Director of Operations for the Tribe. It took "several iterations" to get to the point where we are now nearing completion of the preliminary design," said Eric Scott, the Tribe's Engineer, who is coordinating design and con struction of the project. Design considerations included the size and configuration of the structure, the number of pumps, the layout of the fuel services, as well as highway access and traffic circulation issues, according to Scott. The Tribal Council recently estab lished a new corporation - The Grand Ronde Food and Fuel Company - to run the facility. Traffic traveling east will have a simple off-ramp to the facility. The same divided ramp will be used to get back onto Highway 18 going east. Traffic going west to the coast will use the current cloverleaf under the high way to access the convenience store. According to Scott, within 10 years, the Oregon Department of Transpor tation is expected to build an inter change here. Early studies considered alterna tives to minimize impact to wetlands and considerations were made with re spect to anticipated future highway improvements. "The design of the convenience store will incorporate a stucco-type finish with similar geometric designs as that used on the casino," said Scott. Scott said PNE Corporation, with offices in Portland and Longview, Washington, will build the $2.5 to 3 million project. PNE, a design-build contractor specializing in gas station construction, has built hundreds across the northwest. Location, Location, Location The new Tribal convenience store and gas station will be built just east of Spirit Mountain Ca sino, where the valet park ing is now located. Target date for opening the new gas and food store is late Novem ber of this year. . 'WW.""". Civil engineer for the project is Westlake Consultants, based in Tigard. Other consultants include traffic engineers, environmental and wetlands scientists, archaeologists and soils engineers. Construction is set to start in mid summer with the facility operational by the end of the year. Like the casino, the convenience store and gas station will be open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. From the casino's point of view, "the addition of the convenience store means we can offer more to our customers' said Adam Henny, Director of Mar keting for the Casino. "I look forward to setting up some exciting offerings for our Coyote Club members and our casino guests." Tribal Council has assembled an 'owner's design team,' to "facilitate decisions regarding the physical de sign and operational aspects of the project," said Scott. The design team will include representatives from Spirit Mountain Gaming Corporation, the facilities staff, Tribal engineers, the finance office and legal support. Blockbuster Project Coming to a Sewer Near You, Soon The local systems are at capacity but timely planning and quality workmanship will keep it flowing. By Ron Karten The report titles have no punch and there is nothing glamorous about the finished product, but very little in the public domain is more important to our sense of security and calm than a smooth running sewer system. Yes, the Grand Ronde Sanitary District's Waste Water Facilities Plan is about to be released, and Smoke Signals has had an advance report. In a nutshell, it will conclude, according to Tribal Engineer Eric Scott, that lo cal facilities are at capacity and new projects are needed to keep the efflu ent flowing through the year 2027. The Plan will provide a detailed "needs analysis," said Scott, and a dis cussion of alternative possibilities to meet those needs. Among the infor mation the Plan will release are popu lation projections leading to flow cal culations, leading to hydraulic capac ity analysis (how big the pipes need to be), along with an assessment of cur rent and future regulatory require ments. Among the anticipated conclusions: immediate capacity improvements are needed on the Grand Ronde Road main line from the wastewater treatment plant to Highway 22, a total of nearly 8,000 feet. In conjunction with this project, the Tribe recently received an Indian Com munity Development Block Grant for the design and construction of the main line improvements. Specifically, County, the Grand Ronde Sanitation District and Indian Health Services. The first increased capacity of the main line by decreasing extraneous flows into the system through leaks and abandoned septic tanks. The work In a nutshell, it (Grand Ronde Sanitary District's Waste Water Facilities Plan) will conclude that local facilities are at capac ity and new projects are needed to keep the effluent flowing through the year 2027. the grant funds replacement of six-inch pipe with 532 feet of 15-inch pipe, 4,724 feet of 12-inch pipe, and 2,670 feet of 8-inch pipe. Scott will solicit bids from qualified engineers to prepare detailed designs starting last month. Selection of an engineer will take place in mid-March. Design will be completed by mid to late summer with construction beginning in 2004, said Scott. In conjunction with this project, the Tribe has recently completed two re lated projects in cooperation with the Tribal Housing Authority, Polk included backfilling several such tanks, and capping the laterals still connected to the system. The project also in cluded retrofitting active septic tanks which were deficient and repairing broken sewer laterals connecting them to the system. The second project involved repair ing pipes running under the South Yamhill and Rock Creek bridge cross ings. The pipes, which normally use gravity to carry sewage across the river to the treatment plant, had bent over time impeding the process. Re pairs solved the problem, said Scott. The Plan also will call for "signifi cant improvements" in the wastewa ter treatment plant, built in 1985, ac cording to Scott. Five proposed alternatives for treat ing waste in coming years will be pro posed costing anywhere from $3.2 to $6 million. They include lagoon, filter and biological treatment systems. Other necessary improvements will provide effluent disposal capabilities with an emphasis on reclamation and reuse. This part of the project which seeks to dispose of the treated waste water on land rather than di rectly into the South Yamhill is at tractive because it makes a significant amount of water available for second ary uses, including irrigation. The project has a potential $300,000 price tag, though the Tribe has received an offsetting grant to conduct soils evalu ations, identify possible sites and de velop re-use plans. Grand Ronde Sanitary District en gineer is Whitaker Engineering, Inc. based in Independence, Oregon. Ex cept the work already completed by the Tribe, all of these projects will be open for public discussion and input. a o t 3 O u Ol c