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About Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1909-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 3, 2016)
COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL August 3, 2016 11A R ALLY Continued from page 1A it the right of the school board to dic- tate what our children believe about fossil fuels?” “Those are 49,000 students that are go- ing to be impacted by this curriculum, that’s 49,000 future voters,” she added. Swanson also says that new legislation will ban any and all textbooks that oppose the idea of man-made global warming. “Any textbook that hints at the idea that man-made global warming is not valid, any disagreement with that idea at all, will be banned,” Swanson said. “The goal of education for sustainabil- ity is to change the cultural, religious, so- cial, economic and political structure of our nation,” she added by reading from her book “Training for Treason.” As the audience clapped and agreed, Swanson fi nished by explaining that “climate liter- acy is a front for the communist agenda.” photo by Sam Wright Doyel Shamley lectured on land use law at the third annual Rally Around the Flag Saturday. R OA Continued from page 1A Great Care in a Great Place. Right here in Cottage Grove. At PeaceHealth Cottage Grove Community Medical Center, we care for every body, every day, in every way that we can. personalized primary care digital imaging physical therapy laboratory services outpatient services emergency department open 24/7 began arguing over a rifl e scope. Police testifi ed that they recovered 27 shell casings from Roa’s weapon following the in- cident. Roa’s attorney told the jury in his opening statement that his client does not remem- ber fi ring at the offi cers, and Roa later claimed that he blacked out after feeling a sharp pain in his back, coming to only while the police dog was biting him. On Friday morning, Roa took several victims of theft-related charges from the shop. At the time, Roa pleaded “no contest” to two counts of Attempted Theft I related to a weapon and a silencer that were ordered by customers and for which he ac- cepted payment and failed to deliver the weapons. As a con- dition of a plea deal reached in that case, Roa was ordered not to use or possess fi rearms dur- ing his probation, over the ob- jection of his lawyer. “This development is nice for us as an electrical company because it allows us to build up our facilities,” he said. “And if we’re going to build up those fa- cilities, we defi nitely want them to use them.” The utility has already been at work installing the new equip- ment that Currier said should help minimize outages in the area around PakTech. Other preparations such as tree trim- ming and increasing the size of certain transformers has already been underway, and EPUD will work directly with PakTech to design the system that will serve the company directly, according to Currier. “The new revenue we receive from this customer will help spread the cost of improve- ments,” he said. “This has been a great example of a civic part- nership between a utility and a city government.” EPUD Continued from page 3A 1515 Village Drive, Cottage Grove PeaceHealth Medical Group 541-767-5200 PeaceHealth Cottage Grove Community Medical Center 541-767-5500 the stand in his own defense, saying he didn’t want Olson to think that he shot at him direct- ly. He also claimed that he was only fi ring rounds at his friend’s feet and did not intend to injure anyone. Roa operated the machine gun shop downtown for several years until it closed in 2011. In March of 2012, he received a six-day jail sentence and fi ve years’ probation and was or- dered in Cottage Grove Munici- pal Court to pay restitution to to accelerate our investments to improve our reliability and capacity,” he said. Kwikee, the company that manufactured stairs for rec- reational vehicles in Cottage Grove until it closed its opera- tions here in 2007, didn’t re- quire near as much electricity as PakTech will when they begin production here this fall, Cur- rier said. peacehealth.org/cottage-grove You Can Help Cottage Grove Kids! Get your LOCAL news How you want it... Volunteer as a Court Appointed Special Advocate In Print. Online. On the go! A rewarding, professional volunteer opportunity in 10-15 hours a month helping Cottage Grove foster children to stay safe and healthy. Cottage Grove training begins this fall, with applications due by August 11th. Visit www.casa-lane.org. A powerful voice for abused kids Cottage Grove Sentinel www.cgsentinel.com