$1.00 S entinel C ottage G rove PERSONAL | COMMERCIAL BENEFITS | SURETY (541) 942-0555 PayneWest.com/Cottage-Grove SPORTS Mel Gowing fi nds new success on the golf course. B1 Est. 1889 WED 61º/41º Serving the communities of Cottage Grove, Dorena, Drain, Elkton, Lorane and Yoncalla. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2018 FACEBOOK.COM/CGSENTINEL • TWITTER.COM/CGSENTINEL For a complete six- day forecast please see page A5. CGSENTINEL.COM Drain library re-opens thanks to grassroots eff ort By Caitlyn May cmay@cgsentinel.com Like all good things, the grand re-opening of the library in Drain kept people waiting. A car crash had waylaid the newly-elected-first-respond- er-mayor Justin Cobb, but the Friends of the Mildred Whip- ple Library had endured a failed ballot measure, a confus- ing maze of governmental red tape and a campaign to con- vince a traditionally anti-tax community to raise its own taxes. Nothing was going to stop them Saturday morning. In 2016, Douglas County residents voted down a bond measure that would have levied .44 cents per $1,000 of assessed value to fund the 11 libraries in the Douglas Library Sys- tem aft er the county voted to close the system due to a lack of funding. One by one, the libraries from Reedsport to Roseburg and Drain to Yoncalla shut their doors. Nearly two years later, all 11 have re-opened or are planning to open but only Drain, Reedsport and Rose- burg will have a stable funding source. CAITLYN MAY/COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL Community members celebrate the re-opening of the Mildred Whipple Library, which closed in 2017 following budget cuts in Douglas County. All three communities passed levies at a local lev- el to fund their libraries; in Drain, voters approved the same .44-cents-per-$1,000 of assessed value by more than 70 percent aft er a tireless cam- paign by the Friends of the Mil- dred Whipple Library, some of whom were elected to the library board during the same May, 2018 election that saw the levy pass. Anne Campbell was one of them. Campbell opened Saturday’s event by welcoming the more than 50 residents who braved the chilly November morning to watch the doors open again and wait in line for their new library cards. She reminded the crowd that the library had been in oper- ation for more than 80 years before being closed on April 1, 2016, that it moved from the Methodist Church to city hall See LIBRARY 8A Twin brothers celebrate Dorena searches for fi re protection 90 years in The Grove By Caitlyn May cmay@cgsentinel.com T he Yearous house is off the beaten path but not quite into the woods. It’s just to the side of Latham Ele- mentary School and sits very comfortably on the land that has been raising Yearous chil- dren since 1891, rooting them in the community. “Can’t forget the day I was born. A cool November aft er- noon,” Everett Yearous jokes. His wife reminds him to speak up so his twin brother, Gilbert can hear him without a signal boost from a granddaughter who sits close by ready to shout the words that slip through 90-year-old hearing. Everett and Gilbert were born a mile down the road from where they sat in Ever- ett’s living room fi ve days be- fore their 90th birthday. Th e household would soon fi ll with children and helpers readying for the celebration but in the lull, the twins recounted their childhood, growing up in Cot- tage Grove. In 1891, John and Amanda Hull moved to Oregon from Missouri, settling in Latham. Th ey raised their 10 children and buried John’s father—who served in the Civil War—in Fir Grove Cemetery. In 1910, their daughter Nora married Roscoe Yearous and on Nov. 18, 1928 they wel- comed the last of their six chil- dren, twin boys. While Gilbert can’t hear as well as Everett, he has a bit more to say. “Th ey ask me if I’ve lived my whole life on Hull Rd. and I say, not yet I haven’t,” he said. Th e brothers live within each oth- er’s sight and have seen Cottage Grove evolve from a timber town to a municipality their grandnephew Jeff Gowing pre- sides over as mayor. “Th ere was a dance at the armory every Saturday night,” Everett said, “Our father would park the old Model A and when we got out of the cowboy show, we’d go to the car and the blues were playing at the dance at the armory.” Th at was when the National Guard still owned the armory and before the store fronts changed, welcoming a rotation of new owners and entrepre- neurs; it was before a movie cost upward of 10 times what See TWINS 11A COMMUNITY By Caitlyn May cmay@cgsentinel.com Heather Buch spent election day with her family and election night be- ing cautiously optimistic aft er initial results showed her beating out Gary Williams for the East Lane Commis- sioner position. With just over 26,000 votes counted, Buch led 56.05 percent to 43.50 percent in a race against area native Gary Wil- liams, who arguably had a slight edge over Buch going into the race aft er serving as mayor of Cottage Grove for more than a decade and being appoint- ed to the county commission seat over DORENA Firefi ghters head to CA. Special recognition SLCFR sends fi refi ghters to help with California fi res Dorena Grange No. 835 receives Distinguished Grange award PAGE A3 PAGE A5 See DORENA 9A COURTESY PHOTO Dorena residents have begun exploring options, like this 1962 Ford fi re engine, to bring fi re protection to the area. Buch wins E. Lane Commish seat Four measures fall INDEX By Caitlyn May cmay@cgsentinel.com On Sept. 5 of this year, smoke fi lled the skies above Dorena, ris- ing to meet the helicopter armed with water that hovered above the fl ames. It was the second fi re in seven days to hit the Cottage Grove area and part of the broader string of fi res that enveloped the west coast, burning thousands of acres and forcing mandatory evacuations that required teams of local fi re personnel and equipment to pro- vide mutual aid to California fi re crews. And while South Lane Coun- ty Fire and Rescue (SLCFR) was dispatched to Dorena on Sept. 6 along with resources from North Douglas Fire EMS and the Gos- hen-Pleasant Hill Fire District, there wasn’t much they could do. “South Lane County Fire and Rescue, we cover from Dillard Road by Goshen, south to the Douglas County Line,” said SLC- FR Division Chief Joe Raade. “We cover west up to mile post eight, south out to London Road and to Razor Road going east. Up Dore- na, it’s basically the dam on the south side and to the north, it’s mile post fi ve or six. Th e fi res that Quality Vision Care for You Comprehensive family, medical eyecare and optical services We provide exams for Cataracts, Glaucoma, Diabetic and Lasik Serving Cottage Grove since 2006 Mon-Thurs 9M-5PM FRI 9AM-4PM 257 N. 8th St 541-942-5000 | www.PCVI.com Buch aft er former commissioner Faye Stewart stepped down to take a job with the City of Cottage Grove. “I was knocking doors very early on and getting the one-on-one interaction with everyone within our district and getting to know what their issues were,” Buch said aft er delivering a speech Tuesday night. Th e commission will now see its fi rst lean to the left in several years — an issue that crept into the non-partisan race with election material labeling Buch as working with “extremists.” “Th e issues that resonated when I short at ballot box By Caitlyn May cmay@cgsentinel.com Voters statewide had the chance to rule on fi ve measures last Tuesday ranging from aff ordable housing to abortion and their verdict was a resounding no with four of the fi ve measures failing to pass. Measure 102 (Passed): Local govern- ments will be permitted to use bonds to fi nance aff ordable housing projects with private companies aft er 56 percent of voters See BUCH 11A Calendar ...................................... B11 Channel Guide ............................... B6 Classifieds ...................................... B7 Obituaries ...................................... A2 Opinion ......................................... A4 Sports ............................................ B1 See MEASURES 8A cgnews@cgsentinel.com (541) 942-3325 ph • (541) 942-3328 fax P.O. Box 35, Cottage Grove, OR 97424 Corner of Sixth and Whiteaker, Cottage Grove _______________ VOLUME 130 • NUMBER 56 Rain Country Realty Inc. RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT Licensed in the State of Oregon RainCountryRealty.com • raincountryrealty@gmail.com 1320 Hwy 99 • 541-942-7246