VOL VOL. 132 132, NO. NO 10 • Your Locall N News ews Delivered D elli vered d Your Y ourr Way: W ay: In I n Print. P riintt Online. O nlli ne On O n the t h e Go! G o!! Bundle home & auto to save $$. for The Sentinel WEATHER Y F O T BES SO UT H L A N E CO See page A11 to nominate your favoriate businesses Lane County progresses to ‘Moderate Risk’ status, Douglas still ‘Extreme’ By Chantelle Meyer (541) 942-0555 INATE US M NT S entinel Est. 1889 NO C ottage G rove THURSDAY EDITION | MARCH 11, 2021 | $1.00 U S ERVING THE COMMUNITIES OF C OTTAGE G ROVE , C RESWELL , D ORENA , D RAIN , E LKTON , L ORANE AND Y ONCALLA This past Tuesday (March 9), Or- egon Gov. Kate Brown announced updates to county risk levels under the state’s public health framework to reduce transmission and protect Oregonians from COVID-19. The framework uses four differ- ent risk levels for counties based on COVID-19 spread — extreme risk, high risk, moderate risk and lower risk — and assigns health and safe- Partly sunny skies with a high of 57 and a low tonight of 30. Full forecast on A5 ty measures for each level. Effective tomorrow (March 12) through March 25, there will only be two counties — Douglas and Coos — remaining in the “extreme risk” level, nine at “high risk,” 12 at “moderate risk” and 13 at “lower risk.” Lane County shifts down to moderate risk after just two weeks at high risk, along with four other counties. “We are largely seeing case rates decline across the state, with the most counties in the lower risk lev- el since the framework was intro- duced in November,” said Brown. “This should serve as a reminder that when we follow the health and safety measures we know work against this virus, we can tru- ly make a difference in infection spread.” Additional restrictions are lift- ed as counties reach fewer cases of community spread of COVID-19. On Friday, this will mean: • Eating and drinking establish- ments: indoor dining is allowed with 50 percent capacity; indoor tables can have a maximum of six people; outdoor dining can have a maximum of eight people • Entertainment establishments: indoor capacity can have 50 per- cent capacity up to 100 people • Indoor recreation and fitness: indoor capacity can have 50 per- cent or up to 100 people; indoor full-contact sports still prohibited. See MODERATE 8A Savage appointed to Ward 1 seat by city council Standout student art BETTY KAISER By Damien Sherwood dsherwood@cgsentinel. com Cook’s Corner A5 SPORTS Lady Lions sweep Falcons B1 • RECORDS Obituaries Official releases A2 • LORANE NEWS A5 • CLASSIFIEDS Listings and public notices B5-B6 FOLLOW U S FOR THE LATEST NEWS : /CGSentinel @CGSentinel A rtistic submissions from local youths are on display this month at the Opal Center downtown in the first annual Crafty Mercantile/Opal Center Student Art Contest. Local student artists ages 5 to 18 participated by creating and submitting original artwork. Local artists Paula Goodbar, Thi Nguyen and Alex Ihnat judged a total of 58 entries. Prizes included art supplies, gift certificates and art classes. (See “Art” on page A8 for a list of winners) PHOTOS BY DAMIEN SHERWOOD/COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL City mulls over street construction issue By Damien Sherwood dsherwood@cgsentinel. com The Cottage Grove City Council groped for answers during its regu- lar session Monday night regarding a construction mistake within the Safe Routes to School project that may cost the city as much as $58,365. The issue was brought to the attention of city staff two weeks ago by Wildish Construction when it be- came apparent that the gutters and entrances to three corners of the inter- section at South Eighth Street and Taylor Avenue handicap ramps were low- er than the adjacent street elevation. At certain points, the road was measured to be more than eight inches off. Mayor Jeff Gowing ex- pressed his astonishment at the magnitude of the mistake during the meet- ing. “I can’t believe the guys See STREET 6A In a 5-1 vote on Mon- day night, the Cottage Grove City Council ap- pointed Chalice Savage to the council’s Ward 1 seat. The position has been vacant for more than a month due to the resigna- tion on Feb. 5 of former Councilor Jake Boone, who stepped down to pursue the newly-created position of Assistant to the City Manager. “That was a tough pan- el to decide from because we had six really good candidates,” said Mayor Jeff Gowing. Councilors inter- viewed the six applicants for the Ward 1 position before the council’s reg- ular session on Monday night. Other applicants included Ward 1 res- idents Scott Borgioli, Duane Taddei, Jennifer Crosby, Donn Rust and Billy Reed. The six-member council asked applicants questions on an array of topics including familiar- ity with city code, com- munication with other Ward 1 residents, ideas for civic engagement and what applicants believed were the city’s main challenges. As a guard against unfair advantage, candi- dates were asked not to listen in on others’ inter- views. During her interview, Savage said she hoped to bring her communication See SAVAGE 9A Cleanup event to target Umpqua Forest destinations 541- 942-3325 ph • 541-942-3328 fax P.O. Box 35, Cottage Grove, OR 97424 By Damien Sherwood dsherwood@cgsentinel.com Lovers of the outdoors will get a chance this weekend participate in an effort to clean up and maintain the natural beauty of their local countryside. On March 13 and 14, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on both days, volun- teers are heading into the wilder- ness under the banner of the “TAZ Cleanup” to pick up and haul out garbage from beloved natural des- tinations. The project has been organized by Phillip Miller, who hosts an out- door travel Youtube channel called + 100% Contactless Service & Fully Insured Honest. Dependable. Authentic • Complete lawn care packages • Trimming, weeding & mulching • Custom/one-time service options PO Box 341, Cottage Grove, Oregon 541-731-8528 prasadalandscapes.com “The Adventure Zombie,” or TAZ for short. Miller aims to raise awareness and clean up the outdoors with the event. “I’m not in it for the publicity,” he said. “It’s not about my Youtube channel. It’s about going out there and picking up trash and doing the right thing.” The cleanup will focus on spots in the Umpqua National Forest including Brice Creek, Bohemia Mountain, Spirit/Moon/Pinard Falls areas and other trails. The idea for the event formed See TAZ 11A