FALL 2015 SENIOR CENTRAL SENIORS FORM LIVING GUIDE SPECIAL BOND Section D Page10A Volume 140, Issue 40 www.Polkio.com October 7, 2015 75¢ IN YOUR TOWN DALLAS NEWS If you have a disabled parking placard, do you know what your privileges are parking in the timed parking zones in downtown Dallas? Dallas Police Chief Tom Simpson said it’s a cause of confusion for permit users from time to time be- cause the rules can vary by city or county. There are three types of parking placards. Simpson said disabled parking placards allow holders to park in marked disabled parking spaces, but the same rules apply to them when parking in timed spaces or metered spaces as to anyone else. »Page 3A FALLS CITY NEWS EMILY MENTZER/Itemizer-Observer More than 60 students, faculty and staff at Western Oregon University gathered Saturday for a candlelight vigil in support of the victims and survivors of a mass-casualty shooting at Umpqua Community College. STEPS TO RECOVERY Mass-casualty shooting in Roseburg touches everyone; would we be ready? By Emily Mentzer The Itemizer-Observer MONMOUTH — A bell chimed and a moment of si- lence was held Saturday night at Western Oregon University for each person who was shot and killed at Umpqua Community Col- lege on Thursday. Nine times that bell chimed, following the read- ing of each person’s name. Rebecca Strader, a pastor at WOU and in Falls City, helped organize the candle- light vigil, hosted by West- ern Compass Campus Min- istry and attended by more than 60 students and em- ployees. The event provided a time and place for students and staff at Western to mourn the mass-casualty event that brought attention from around the world, another school shooting, this time in Roseburg. Watching the events un- fold so close to home made it clear: it could happen any- where. “I don’t think you’re ever ready, to be honest,” said Re- EMILY MENTZER/Itemizer-Observer People helped each other light candles in remembrance. becca Chiles, WOU’s public safety director. “But we are preparing. We are trying to make sure that our commu- nity is prepared.” Chiles said she has learned from things that didn’t go quite as planned in Roseburg. The college’s pub- lic safety notification system failed during the active shooter event. “We tested our alert sys- tem this morning,” Chiles said Monday. “It went well. We’ve learned new things about our system.” Upgrades have made it possible for Western’s stu- dents to add their parents to the alert system, Chiles said. A few weeks ago, public safety started hosting a class called ALICE — alert, lock- down, inform, counter, evacuate. “We’re teaching that to both our students and our faculty and staff,” Chiles said. “It teaches people, and gives them options from the moment that they are alerted that an active shooting is happening, to the moment that law en- forcement arrives to en- gage the shooter.” Media relations for WOU Lisa Catto said she believes the campus is ready for an emergency such as an active shooter. “Over the past week or so, a printed emergency proce- dure quick guide was dis- tributed around campus,” she said. “One of the sec- tions details how to respond in an active shooter situa- tion.” Also, the ALICE training was given to new students during New Student Week, Catto said. See VIGIL, Page 5A Meadow Creek property tax up 56 percent Real market values increased, assessor says, while seniors are outraged By Jolene Guzman The Itemizer-Observer DALLAS — Residents of Meadow Creek Village, a manufactured home park in Dallas, received unwelcome news in their mailbox a few weeks ago. Each of the approximately 100 resi- dents opened a letter from the Polk County Assessor’s saying property taxes were about to increase — a lot. The increase was on average 56 per- cent, the largest Polk County Assessor Doug Schmidt had seen in seven years as the assessor and 18 years before that as an employee in the office. The residents, needless to say, were THE NEXT 7 DAYS PLANNING FOR YOUR WEEK none-to-pleased. “We are all angry,” said Meadow Creek resident Vera Cronin. “We all feel like we are being penalized.” On Thursday during a meeting at Meadow Creek, Schmidt heard that, and a number of other concerns from residents wondering why their taxes could make such a huge leap in one year. Schmidt answered that it was a product of home sales in the park that occurred between January 2014 and March 2015. Seven sales were completed in that time period, six of which sold for amounts significantly more than the assessor’s office had for real market value on the properties. The pattern was too consistent for the office to ignore, Schmidt said. “Those seven sales are indicators of what we felt the market value was,” he told the crowd of about 60 gathered to at the park’s clubhouse Thursday. Sale prices ranged from $32,500 to $55,000, in some cases double what the office had as real market value. Noticing the trend, Schmidt separat- ed the park from other similar parks in the county — before this, they were as- sessed as a group — and reassessed all the properties in Meadow Creek. See TAXES, Page 5A wed thu fri sat Pick up your crochet hook or knitting needles and join Yarning for Others in making clothing for those in need. 3-5 p.m. Free. Young Professionals aged 21 to 45 gather once a month at businesses throughout the county to network. 5:30 p.m. Free. Listen to the unique style of 3 Leg Torso at Western Oregon University, part of the Smith Fine Arts Series. 7:30 p.m. $28. Tour the Brunk House at a cider- pressing event. Enjoy apple desserts and pick up a gallon of fresh cider. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. $5. AM Showers Hi: 72 Lo: 52 Partly Sunny Hi: 74 Lo: 53 Partly Cloudy Hi: 75 Lo: 59 Rain Hi: 68 Lo: 54 Every winter those living in an approximately square mile zone near Sheldon Avenue in Falls City experience frequent and sudden looding. Thanks to more than 18 months of detective work on the part of Oregon State University students, namely master’s degree candidate, Joe Kemper, res- idents in the area are closer to inding a cause. Kemper, a master’s degree candidate in the ield of water resources engineering, is using the project as his thesis subject. He hopes to ind feasible ixes for residents who have been dealing with the prob- lem for decades. »Page 13A INDEPENDENCE NEWS Pending council approval, youths coming and going across the city border with Monmouth will no longer be confused about curfew. A proposed change to the curfew ordinance will make it easier for oicers to understand, too, said Independence Police Chief Bob Mason at a joint city council work session on Sept. 29. The councils and mayors from Monmouth and Independence listened to a joint presentation by police chiefs Mason and Darrell Tallan on the topic. The concerns about the inconsistent curfews be- tween the two cities came up at Independence’s April council meeting. »Page 3A MONMOUTH NEWS An open house from 5 to 7 p.m. on Thursday will be held at the Monmouth Senior Center to thank the community for its dedication to seeing the expansion project completed. Because of fundraising eforts by the Friends of the Monmouth Senior Center, donations from the community, contributions from the city of Mon- mouth, and grants from the Collins Foundation, Oregon Community Fund, Meyer Memorial Trust and Ford Family Foundation, the senior center has raised enough money to be able to pay for the ex- pansion. For more information: 503-838-5678. POLK COUNTY NEWS More than 140 students attending schools in Dallas, Central, Falls City and Perrydale experienced homelessness during the 2014-15 school year, ac- cording to a state report released last week. For the purposes of the report, homeless stu- dents are deined as: living in shelters, staying in a motel, sharing housing with relatives or friends, or living in a car, tent or other substandard housing. According to the report released by the Oregon Department of Education on Thursday, two local school districts saw increases in the number stu- dents considered homeless: Dallas and Falls City. »Page 13A sun Eat pancakes, hash browns or French toast, sausage and eggs at the Buell Grange’s monthly breakfast. 8-11 a.m. $6. Partly Cloudy Hi: 68 Lo: 50 mon tue Oct.12 annually cel- ebrates National Freethought Day. It is anniversary of the efective end of the Salem Witch trials on Oct. 12, 1692. Try your hand at crafting fun at Inde- pendence Public Li- brary, where families may create fall crafts. 4 p.m. Free. Mostly Cloudy Hi: 68 Lo: 48 Sunny Hi: 73 Lo: 46