Polk County Itemizer-Observer • April 15, 2015 5A Polk County News Corridor: Officials worried without Dallas schools food higher fines, speeds will increase program is growing Continued from Page 1A Pope said the county is pleased with the reduction in the number of crashes on the former corridor, but now fears a reversal in that trend. With the designation pulled, the signs alerting drivers of the safety corri- dor — and the increased fines for speeding — will be removed. “We’re frustrated that we didn’t have the opportunity to sit down as partners,” Pope said. “We don’t have anything in place now to sustain the success we’ve had. We all know the (dri- ving) speeds are going to go back up.” While the Highway 18 safety corridor has been taken off line, consideration for one on Highway 22 is on- going. The county, ODOT and the city of Salem are still working on re-establishing a corridor that would stretch approximately five miles from Oak Grove Road to the bridges across the Wi- llamette River. A longer safe- ty corridor running from Salem to Rickreall was de- commissioned in 2010 after crash rates fell. However, several serious and fatal crashes on the east end of the former corridor have spurred discussions of establishing a shorter corri- dor. The first step in the process is creating a com- mission of local stakehold- ers to investigate the need for one. “We need to establish a safety commission which would focus on that corri- dor,” Potter said. “We are try- ing to identify the right peo- ple.” Pope, who also is a mem- ber of Mid-Willamette Area Commission on Transporta- tion, said the process to es- tablish that group doesn’t have to be complicated. “We have those people al- ready lined up,” he said. “It doesn’t have to be a big, ex- pansive group to make the recommendation.” Potter said another con- cern is enforcement, espe- cially given the Polk County Sheriff’s Office’s limited pa- trol hours. He said a commitment to enhanced patrol on the cor- ridor is a requirement before a designation is made. “That is a hurdle that we are hoping to resolve,” Pot- ter said. Pope said patrol of the area doesn’t have to be limit- ed to Polk County deputies. “(Oregon) State Police and city police are also in- volved in enforcement,” he said. County: Hansen may request pay increase for county officials in May Continued from Page 1A Since the 2011-12 fiscal year, elected officials have received a cost-of-living increase once, in 2012-13. That year they were given a 1.5 percent increase, except for the sheriff, who received a 2 percent boost. “The recommendation for the salary adjustments is based upon the county’s ability to pay,” Hansen wrote in his re- port in May 2014, in which he recom- mended no increase. Hansen is preparing that survey and recommendation again for May. “We will be even further behind,” he said, nothing that some offices are as much as 18 percent behind now. However, this year, the county’s “ability to pay,” has improved, thanks to anticipated growth in the county’s general fund. In hopes of making up ground, Hansen will mostly likely ask the com- pensation board to increase elected offi- cial salaries when it meets May 20. Hansen said with non-elected employ- ees, the county tries to keep salaries within 4 percent of the average to re- main competitive He acknowledges the contradiction of asking voters to approve public safe- ty levy while increasing elected official salaries, but at the same time, believes it is time to level the playing field. “It more of an equity issue, a fair- ness issue with me,” Hansen said. “I think individuals should be treated with both.” POLICE REPORT Information for the police re- port comes from law enforce- ment agencies. Not all calls for service are included. The status of incidents repor ted may change after further investiga- tion. Individuals arrested or sus- pected of crimes are considered innocent until proven guilty. — DALLAS Arrests/Citations • Sarah Rose Anna Zellner, 31, of Salem in the 1300 block of Southeast Holman Avenue on April 7 on a failure to appear warrant out of Marion County. • Mark W. Borck, 55, of Willamina on Southwest Lev- ens Street on Thursday on charges of driving while sus- pended and failure to carry or present an operator’s license. • Loren T. Carlsen, 37, of Dal- las in the 800 block of South- east Monmouth Cutoff Road on Friday on charges of driving while suspended and failure to carry or present an operator’s license. • Misty G. Walker, 52, of Springfield in the 200 block of Southeast Dimick Street on Fri- day on two counts of misde- meanor driving while suspend- ed. INDEPENDENCE Arrests/Citations • Adam William Harper, 27, of Salem and Ernest Arthur Harp- er Jr., 28, a transient, were ar- rested on March 27 in connec- tion with a reported burglary at Mendi’s Pizza, 1695 Mon- mouth St. Adam Harper was charged with first-degree theft from a building, second-degree criminal mischief-criminal damage and second-degree burglary of a business. Ernest Harper was charged with sec- ond-degree burglary-criminal conspiracy and theft-criminal conspiracy. • Kathy Diane Dienhart, 53, of Monmouth at the corner of Monmouth Street and South 11th Street on April 6 for mis- demeanor driving while sus- pended or revoked. MONMOUTH Arrests/Citations • Daniel Dwight Davidson Jr., 48, of Monmouth in the 100 block of Knox Street South on March 30 for second-degree theft of motor vehicle parts or accessories. • Dylan Michael John Rardin, 20, of Independence in the 1400 block of North 16th Street on April 2 for contributing to the sexual delinquency of a minor. • Amanda Lee Taylor, 39, of Corvallis at the corner of Main Street East and Cartron Street South on April 3 for misde- meanor driving while suspend- ed or revoked. • David Calvin Howard Jr., 49, of Dallas at the corner of Falls City Highway and Whitman Street South on April 4 for mis- demeanor driving under the influence of intoxicants, misde- meanor driving while suspend- ed or revoked and reckless en- dangering. • Yanel Yanel Avila-Castro, 25, of Independence at the corner of Monmouth Avenue North and Church Street West on April 4 for misdemeanor driv- ing under the influence of in- toxicants and failure to per- form the duties of a driver when property is damaged. • Grant Emanuel Carmichael, 24, of Monmouth at the corner of Warren Street South and Clay Street East on April 4 for misdemeanor driving under the influence of intoxicants. • Branden Ray Juan Barroga, 20, of Monmouth in the 100 block of Main Street West on April 4 for prohibited exposure and minor in possession of al- cohol. • Christopher Paul Loehr, 29, of Dallas at Volunteer Hall, 144 Warren St. S., on April 4 on a bench warrant for failure to ap- pear. • Dallas Lee Roles, 25, a tran- sient, at Volunteer Hall, 144 Warren St. S., on April 4 on a bench warrant for failure to ap- pear. • Abdulqdoos Albokhamsin, 23, of Monmouth at Volunteer Hall, 144 Warren St. S., on April 4 on a bench warrant for failure to appear. • Patrick Kern Duffie, 23, of Monmouth in the 500 block of Catron Street North on April 5 for unlawful possession of less than one ounce of marijuana. • Antonio Ranjel Guijosa, 21, of Salem in the 100 block of Ed- wards Road South on April 6 for first-degree aggravated as- sault and violating a release agreement. • Wayne Douglas Davis, 39, of Salem at Volunteer Hall, 144 War- ren St. S., on April 8 on a bench warrant for failure to appear. Visit us online at www.polkio.com for Local News, Local Sports and Great Buys! It’s time to Explore POLK COUNTY Call Heidi, Rachel or Karen to reserve your space! 503-623-2373 1/8 pg........$103 • 1/4 pg........$195 1/2 pg........$298 • Extra Savings! Full pg........$360 All ads are in full color! Deadline is May 1st. Publishes on May 20th. Itemizer-Observer 147 SE Court Street, Dallas, Oregon 97338 By Jolene Guzman The Itemizer-Observer DALLAS — Dallas School District’s new food service program didn’t exactly hit the ground running, but now appears to be hitting its stride. Meal sales were weak to begin the year, but in December monthly sales began to outpace last year’s, and the trend appears to be holding. “We started a little bit slow, but the staff has really ramped it up and really have done an outstanding job,” said Tami Montague, Dallas’ business manager. In May 2014, the district approved a contract with Central School District to share a food services director and create a program similar to what Central had established. The goal behind the switch was to improve the quality of food served to students and increase participation in the program. Montague and Mike Vetter, food service director, provid- ed the Dallas School Board with an update on the program Monday. It appears those initial goals are being met, but not without first-year hiccups. Breakfast sales have grown by nearly 6.5 percent and lunch sales have increased about 3 percent. Overall, rev- enue increased 1.4 percent. On the flipside, expenditures increased nearly 6 percent from last year. One of the biggest cost increases happened early in the school year. From July through September, the district paid $78,000 in increased costs. Of that, $51,000 was in purchas- ing food to begin the year. Under the former contract, the food service company would not charge the district for food until it was served to students, so the large upfront costs didn’t exist. “We have to buy the food because the vendors don’t want to store the food here without us paying for it,” Mon- tague explained. Still, she said the next challenge is to bring expenditures down. “We know where the issues are, and they are being ad- dressed,” Montague said. “After looking at the last few months, I have a lot more confidence.” Vetter said when the program was introduced in Cen- tral, it experienced the same issue, but revenue eventually matched or surpassed costs. “I do see Dallas becoming a very strong food service program,” Vetter said. “Just seeing the growth we’ve had so far and talking to all parents and the children, all I’m hear- ing is ‘Mike, it’s so much better.’” Charter meets enrollment needs By Jolene Guzman The Itemizer-Observer DALLAS — New charter school Dallas Community School (DCS) will be offer- ing kindergarten when it opens this fall. The Dallas School Board, the school’s charter spon- sor, approved an amend- ment to DCS’ charter Mon- day night expanding enroll- ment from 1-8 grades to K- 8. That change will allow DCS to accept up to 45 more applications from parents interested in en- rolling their kindergarten- ers in the school. “I’m going to go tell a bunch of parents some real- ly good news tonight,” said Wendy Sparks, a DCS board member after the decision. With 128 applications submitted before Monday’s decision, the inclusion of kindergarten will allow the school to not only meet its enrollment goal of 125 to open next fall, but have a waiting list for the start of the 2015-16 school year. Students accepted into DCS for its first year will be selected by a lottery. DSC will use a “home school charter” model with students still being home schooled, but under the su- pervision of a licensed teacher who will serve as an educational guide. The school will offer op- tional small-group classes and additional enrichment activities in the afternoons at a school site in Dallas that is yet-to-be-deter- mined. The application deadline for the 2015-16 school year is April 30. For more information about the school: http://dallascommuni- tyschool.org/.