$1.00 S entinel C ottage G rove PERSONAL | COMMERCIAL BENEFITS | SURETY (541) 942-0555 PayneWest.com/Cottage-Grove SPORTS Cottage Grove volleyball wins league. B1 Est. 1889 WED 78º/46º Serving the communities of Cottage Grove, Creswell, Dorena, Drain, Elkton, Lorane and Yoncalla. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2018 The pros and cons of STAR Voting FACEBOOK.COM/CGSENTINEL • TWITTER.COM/CGSENTINEL For a complete six- day forecast please see page A5. CGSENTINEL.COM Community eff ort leads to new wheelchair for local kindergartener By Caitlyn May By Jared Anderson cmay@cgsentinel.com For The Sentinel Hallie Roberts believes that STAR (Score Th en Automatic Runoff ) Voting will rev- olutionize the way people vote in Lane County, and throughout the entire coun- try. “People are aware of the problems with our voting methods,” Roberts said. “We end up with results that are not really what the people wanted. If we can implement a system that will lead us to more broadly favored candidates winning, I think our political process will be reinvigorated and people will be inspired to be a part of the process once they see it’s working more smoothly.” Roberts is the campaign manager for STAR Voting, which was created by politi- cal scientist Alan Zundel and Mark Frohn- mayer, a Eugene entrepreneur and creator of the organization Equal Vote Coalition. Th ey successfully placed measure 20-290 on the November ballot which, “Amends Charter, adopts Score Th en Automatic Runoff voting for elections.” If passed, they hope it will both change how county offi cer elections are held, and how Lane County residents would vote for those candidates. Roberts said the system has the potential See STAR 7A Breast Cancer Awareness Month: In their own words CGHS students repaired a wheelchair for six-year-old Harrison Elementary student with myotonic muscular dystrophy By Zach Silva zsilva@cgsentinel.com Soon it will be common to see a fi retruck roaming the halls of Har- rison Elementary School. What has the appearance of a toy car is, in reality, a newly refurbished wheelchair for six-year-old Ethan who has myotonic muscular dys- trophy, a muscle disease that also impact his lungs and heart. Th e wheelchair allows him to learn the joystick controls so that when he is older he will be able operate a pow- er chair. “He wasn’t supposed to live and he wasn’t supposed to talk and he wasn’t supposed to do any of the things he is doing now. So it’s like a milestone, everything is a mile- stone,” said Ethan’s mother Tara Jones. On Th ursday aft ernoon, in front of his kindergarten classmates on a sun-soaked day, Ethan re-ceived his newly refurbished wheelchair that was fi xed up by a group of Cot- tage Grove High School seniors and delivered by South Lane County ZACH SILVA/COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL Six-year-old Ethan tries out his newly refurbished wheelchair to the delight of his kindergarten classmates. The chair was constructed with the held of Cottage Grove High School students and will help Ethan learn to use his wheelchair. Fire and Rescue. With excited kin- was moving around in it was very learn the controls of getting around. dergarten-ers, who got to tour the surprising and very exciting,” said Th e device, which stays at school, fi retruck, looking on, Ethan got the Jones. For Jones, the fi retruck holds was used outside because there was fi rst chance to drive around in his importance and is a reminder of her no room inside the old Harrison new wheelchair. father and grandfather, who have and soon, it began to break down. “It was super exciting that he both passed away, who were both “Every day when we’d lift it up liked it because he didn’t like it last fi refi ghters. and bring it in and out, the year. I was like, do you want in it Last year, Ethan’s doctor ordered See STUDENT 11A and he said yeah. And the way he the specialized chair to help him Cottage Grove City Council candidates talk issues By Caitlyn May cmay@cgsentinel.com COURTESY PHOTO Cancer survivor Coleen Bollinger Coleen Bollinger started getting mam- mograms when she was 30. So, when she went in for her routine exam at 47, she expected another clean test. It’d been just a year since her last By Caitlyn May exam, she had 16 cmay@cgsentinel.com cancer-free screen- ings under her belt and while she had a family history of breast cancer, it seemed too far away to be a real contributing factor. But when she got a call at work, the disease was suddenly much closer. “So, I got the call from my doctor and I was at work and my husband was out of town and he said, ‘I hate to do this over the phone but I want you to know right away,’ and it’s like the whole world went gray,” she said. “Once he said cancer, I heard noth- ing else, that was it. I went outside to have a cigarette and I was just stunned. I never expected, he never expected, it was out of See WORDS 10A With just 20 days until ballots are due in the Nov. 6 general elec- tion, the race for Cottage Grove City Council has already staged what may be the greatest oppor- tunity for voters to hear from the candidates on the issues currently facing the city. On Tuesday, Oct. 9, six of the candidates took part in a forum By Zach Silva zsilva@cgsentinel.com Th e interim period has been ex- tended. South Lane School District in- terim superintendent Dr. Larry Sullivan will be working under the title of interim for one more year aft er a vote from the school board unanimously approved this deci- sion at Monday night’s special ses- sion meeting. Last May, Sullivan’s one-year contract was approved by the board and he offi cially began work on July 1. With the board passing an action item on Monday, Sullivan will now be in this position until June of 2020. “My idea of transition changed throughout this whole process. I originally framed it as I’m going to help them get through a year and sort of have some stability and some support and now it really is COMMUNITY Aquatic Center update CG City Council agrees to help fund therapy pool PAGE A6 INDEX Cottage Grove Police Department's new dis- patcher has old ties to The Grove. ning unopposed for Ward 1. homeless population by county us- Th e night was kick-started by ing volunteers and short question- what is arguably the hottest top- naires, revealed that the number of homeless had increased and a large majority of those individ- uals lived in Lane County. Th e county was recorded as having the second-highest homeless rate, ics in the city: aff ordable hous- fourth largest chronically homeless ing and homelessness. Last year’s population and the second-largest point-in-time count, an informa- homeless veteran population tion gathering tool utilized yearly See CANDIDATES 6A that conducts a count of the state’s Superintendent extends stay for another year COMMUNITY New Dispatcher hosted by the Chamber of Com- merce’s legislative committee and spoke on issues ranging from homelessness to the communi- ty pool. Th ree of the city’s wards were represented at the forum with Jill Hermansen and Can- dace Lamb-Solsbee challenging sitting councilor Garland Burback for Ward 3, Ashley Rigel taking on current at-large councilor Mike Fleck and Jake Boone who is run- moving that transition to really moving forward and setting that foundation for the future rather than just taking a year and wait- ing for the next superintendent to come,” said Sullivan. “Set a stronger foundation for the future. I think transition is the foundation for the future.” In the next year, the board will be fi nalizing the allocation of funds from the 2016 bond measure in ad- dition to deciding whether Latham Calendar ...................................... B12 Channel Guide ............................... B5 Classifieds ...................................... B7 Obituaries ...................................... A2 Opinion ......................................... A4 Sports ............................................ B1 Elementary School will remain open long-term. “Any district would have any diffi culty just dealing with those two things – with the closure dis- cussion and maintaining a school or a bond – that’s hard enough as it is besides going through a tran- sition in leadership,” said Sullivan. “So it allows for more stability and we can walk through it rather than try to run through it.” See BOARD 11A cgnews@cgsentinel.com (541) 942-3325 ph • (541) 942-3328 fax P.O. 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