Heppner Gazette-Times, Heppner, Oregon Wednesday, June 15, 2022 -- SEVEN Council hears from ‘concerned citizens’ of Chase St. PUBLIC NOTICE ...continued from page six FTE Court Security FTE Echo Wind Fees FTE Shepherds Flat Fees FTE FTA Grant Fund FTE Community Corrections FTE PGE Carty FTE Sheriff Reserve FTE Wheatridge Wind FTE Orchard Wind FTE Resiliency Fund FTE Non-Departmental / Non-Program FTE Not Allocated to Organizational Unit FTE T o t a l R e q u i r e m e n t s Total FTE - 25,580 - 76,333 - 1,812,887 - 96,603 1.0 631,049 3.0 2,437,303 - 5,496 - - - - - 1,341,805 - 2,956,382 - 25,687,434 - 6 6 , 0 2 3 , 2 9 9 1 2 3 . 0 - 89,351 - 101,885 - 1,672,351 - 546,036 1.0 942,006 3.0 2,450,694 - 87,500 - 101,885 - 1,661,000 - 1,054,777 1.0 840,100 5.0 3,503,500 23,760 19,000 2,073,720 - 141,619 - 13,254,518 - 7,241,387 - - - 7 8 , 2 7 8 , 0 4 8 1 2 3 . 0 2,430,000 - 154,850 - 9,400,000 - 11,186,548 - - - 8 3 , 6 7 4 , 5 2 3 1 3 4 . 2 S T A T E M E N T O F C H A N G E S I N A C T I V I T I E S a n d S O U R C E S O F F I N A N C I N G * For Fiscal Year 2022-23, management and staff will continue to monitor operations in response to current economic conditions. Costs are rising quickly due to inflation, gas prices, supply shortages, and increases in personnel costs. Property taxes collections continue to increase due to growth in Morrow County. Permanent Rate Levy (rate limit 4.1347 per $1,000) Local Option Levy Levy For General Obligation Bonds Residents of Chase wonder when work will be completed on their sidewalks and other areas of the street By David Sykes The Heppner City Council Monday heard from a group of concerned citizens on Chase St. who are not satisfied with the work done during the recent street renovations around town. Eight residents told the council their sidewalks are still gravel and work needs to still be completed on retaining walls and other areas. They wanted to know if and when the contractor who did the work was com- ing back. As an example, Eric Cayce and his wife Rosa of 215 S Chase were at the meeting, and although their side of Chase did have its sidewalks completed, there was still work left to be done leading up from the street to his property. He said there is a 20-inch gap between the street and the edge of his property, making it a very steep gap and drop of that needs to be fixed. As with some of the other property owners on the street, Cayce said he appreciated the work, effort and money put in to make the town look better, but thinks that if the city paid for the work to be done, then the contractor should come back and finish it. He said he feels the contractor left town with the homeowners on that street “holding the bag.” “And you don’t have to be a civil engineer to see it wasn’t done right,” he added. “We are pleased with the attempt; the work is just unsatisfactory, “he told the council. Betty and Don Carter of 160 S Chase were at the meeting and said the contractor did not finish the sidewalks which are still gravel, and when it rains, water now pours into their yard. Don said he had to raise the gate by 4 inches since construction to get it open and shut. Betty says with the gravel out in front of their house, now she has to constantly go out and pull weeds where she didn’t use to. “When is the job going to be finished or do we have to live with what we got?” they wanted to know. “When is it going to be done? One year? Two years?” Doug and Kelly Hol- land live at 240 S Chase, and they also said there was work not done correctly in front of their house, includ- ing the water meter box not being put in professionally. Kelly said she went out to the street during construc- tion to talk to the contractor and ask questions about the substandard work, but “never got an answer.” Mike Hann, who lives at 265 S Chase, said the contractor left behind prob- lems with his retaining wall and that there was also “substandard” work done. Cayce reiterated he appreciated the work be- ing done to make the city look better, but felt what people on the street were asking for was just to have the job done right. “We aren’t asking for anything we shouldn’t have,” he said, reiterating what all the residents said, that the contractor needs to be held accountable. Councilmember Corey Sweeney, who was filling in for absent Mayor Jim Kindle told the citizens the city would have to look into the situation, includ- ing reviewing the city’s specifications and contract with the road construction company to see if they are out of compliance. The property owners were not given a timeline when the work might be done but were told the contractor is coming back to town in July to work on Jones and another street in Heppner. Water and sewer rates going up In other business the council approved an in- crease in sewer and water fees. Effective July 1 base sewer fees will go up $2.99 per month from $39.84 to $42.83. Water will go up $1.93 from $25.78 to $27.71. There will also be automatic increases over the next five years based on the Consumer Price Index, or CPI which measures inflation. LONG TERM DEBT P R O P E R T Y T A X L E V I E S Rate or Amount Imposed 4.13470 - - S T A TE M E N T O F I ND E B TE D N E S S Estimated Debt Outstanding on July 1. General Obligation Bonds Other Bonds Other Borrowings - Capital Leases Other Borrowings - Construction Loan T o t a l 150-504-073-2 (Rev. 11-11) Rate or Amount Imposed 4.13470 - - Rate or Amount Approved 4.13470 - - Estimated Debt Authorized, But Not Incurred on July 1 - 6,860,000 236,001 354,180 7,450,181 - - - - Published June 15, 2022 Affidavit School district receives $2 million gift The Morrow County School District, at their Monday night meeting in Irrigon, announced that the district has received over $2 million as a gift from Am- azon. The $2,545,582.79 gift, donated to the district through the Morrow Ed- ucation Foundation, was especially good news, since voters rejected the dis- trict’s bid to remodel all the schools in the district. Outgoing long-time su- perintendent and educator Dirk Dirksen, commented on what he termed “a fan- tastic year.” Dirksen has worked for the district for 41 years as a teacher, coach, assistant principal, prin- cipal and superintendent. (See related story in this week’s Gazette.) Also at the meeting, the MCSD Board approved anticipated revenues of $29,040,748 for the 2021- 22 year with $28,715,639 in anticipated expenditures, with $325,109 over ex- penditures, a $4,508,248 beginning fund balance and a $4,833,357 projected ending fund balance. In other business, the board: -approved changes to the 2022-23 licensed (teaching) salary schedule with a seven percent cost- of-living increase, rang- ing from Bachelor of Arts/ sciences with zero credits ($273 per day)- $47,798 to Master of Arts/sciences plus 45 credits- ($491 per day)-$85,857. -approved changes in longevity pay to the fol- lowing: beginning of 10 th year-14 th year-$333; 15 th - 19 th -$531; 20 th year-24 th year-$731; 25 th year-29 th year-$929; 30 th year & each year thereafter-$1,131. -approved changes to the extra duty pay sched- ule from step zero, A to F, starting at $4,506, to step four, A-F, ending at $2,056 Father’s Day Specials 10% off Georgia Boots 10% off Jeans 20% off Shirts - Nursery Sale - 20% off all Weeks Roses Morrow County Grain Growers Green Feed & Seed Heppner - 242 W Linden Way - 541-676-9422 (SPED coordinator, Talent- ed and Gifted coordinator, music/band, DART Ell site coordinator, plus Outdoor Education Advisors-$375/ year; ELL/ESOL endorse- ment-$1,605 over a three- year period; Spanish speak- er-$1,605 over a three-year period. -approved changes to the 2022-23 coaches’ sala- ries as follows (depending on steps zero through four and position): high school athletic director: $4,770 to $5,782; high school head coaches-$4,483 to $5,636; high school JV coach- es-$3,469-$4,047; high school third assistant or “C-team”-$2,312-$2,890; junior high athletic direc- tor-$2,312-$2,890; junior high head coach-$1,581 to $2,345; junior high assis- tant coach-$1,192-$1,669. In addition to an “excessive mileage stipend” from $100 to $800. -accepted and appro- priated the following unan- ticipated revenues: Irrigon Elementary-$120.65 Com- munity Impact Fund, ASB, from Lamb Weston-Benev- ity; IJSHS-$1,750 from the Boardman Kiwanis Club; RJSHS-$1,750 from the Boardman Kiwanis Club; MCSO-$2,545,582.79 from Amazon. -approved a revised MCSD 2022-23 school calendar with the first day of school for teachers Mon- day, August 22 with a dis- trict wide in-service day; the first day of school for students Monday, August 29; no school on Friday, September 2- Monday, Sep- tember 5 for the Labor Day holiday; no school on Fridays, Sept. 16, Sept. 30, October 21, November 11 for Veteran’s Day holiday; Thursday and Friday Nov. 24-25 Thanksgiving; Friday December 9, 16; Monday Dec. 19-30, winter break. -received the follow- ing enrollment figures for June: A.C. Houghton Ele- mentary, Irrigon-216; Sam Boardman Elementary, Boardman-346; Heppner Elementary-185; Irrigon Elementary-192; Windy River Elementary, Board- man-250; Heppner Jr./Sr. High School-160; Irrigon Jr./Sr. High School-365; Riverside Jr./Sr. High School, Boardman-484; Morrow Education Center, Irrigon-77; Total-2,275. -received the following report of enrollment by community: Boardman, plus 35, from 1,045 in June 2021 to 1,080 in June 2022; Heppner, plus 34, from 311 in June 2021 to 345 in June 2022; Irrigon, minus 11, from 784 to 773; Morrow Ed. Center, minus 58, from 135 to 77; district totals, steady over two years at 2,275. -approved the list of fall coaches recommend- ed to rehire for 2022-23: (Heppner Jr./Sr. High listed only) Greg Grant-athlet- ic director, head football; Aymee Wilson-1/2 time head cheerleading coach, fall HJSHS; Les Payne, assistant football coach; Robert Wilson, assistant high school football; Mindy Wilson, head high school volleyball; Russ Nichols, head high school cross country; Antonia Nichols, assistant high school cross country; Chad Doherty, ju- nior high head football; Joe Armato, junior high assis- tant football; Petra Payne, junior high head volleyball; Darcee Mitchell, junior high assistant volleyball. -approved the follow- ing employment action for June: Resignations-Jason Dunten, IJSHS high school boys’ wrestling coach; Crystal Kirk, RJSHS social studies teacher; Dan Locey, IJSHS junior high assistant football coach; Jordan Mit- telsdorf, RJSHS head high school softball coach; Edith Velasco, WRE/RJSHS fourth grade teacher and junior high assistant track and junior high assistant volleyball coach; Sarah Wagoner, Irrigon Elementa- ry behavior tech, and Stacey Wainwright, Title I teacher. -approved the follow- ing employment, promo- tions and transfers: Jason Dunten, IJSHS vice prin- cipal; July Hamilton, SBE K-3 Title 1 teacher; Jolene O’Neal, RJSHS Language New Baby in Your Family? Engagement? Wedding? We want to share your life events! Stop in the Heppner Gazette office or email us with details and photos. All birth, engagement and wedding announcements are always free! 188 W Willow Street Heppner, OR editor@rapidserve.net Arts teacher; Daniel Puer- ta, RJSHS social studies teacher; Eddy Ramos Bau- tista, RJSHS humanities teacher; Charly Sturgeon, MEC K-5 online/hybrid teacher; Megan Wilson, RN, MCSD nurse; Mark Wyant-IJSHS health and physical ed teacher. -approved the follow- ing extra duty contracts: Judit Casteneda, RJSHS high school assistant cheer coach; Myka Davis, IJSHS junior high head volley- ball coach; Dan Locey, IJSHS high school assistant volleyball coach; Darcee Mitchell, HJSHS junior high assistant volleyball coach; Nathaniel Verley, IJSHS high school assis- tant football coach; and Edith Velasco, IJSHS high school assistant girls’ soc- cer coach.\ -approved the follow- ing organizational details for the district: Matt Combe, superintendent/clerk, custo- dian of funds, facsimile signatures-checks, budget officer, designate facsimile signatures-checks; Marie Shimer, director of edu- cational services; Gabriel Hansen, deputy clerk/busi- ness manager, custodian of funds, designate fac- simile signatures-checks; Erin Stocker, human re- sources executive director; Barbara Phillips, human resources assistant/exec- utive secretary; Heppner Gazette-Times and East Oregonian-newspapers of record; OSBA/PACE-dis- trict legal counsel; Nancy Snider, Wheatland Insur- ance-insurance agent of record; depositories for dis- trict funds-State Investment Pool, Bank of Eastern Or- egon, Banner Bank, Wells Fargo, U.S. National Bank, Bank of New York; auditors for 2022-23-Dickey and Tremper, Pendleton. -authorized the Mor- row County Treasurer to invest district funds. -approved a resolution for a committed fund bal- ance. -approved the follow- ing board calendar: July 2022-no meeting; August 8 work session and board meeting-Morrow Education Center, Irrigon; September 12-Heppner Elementary; October 10-RJSHS; No- vember 14-Irrigon Elemen- tary; December 12-SBE; January 9-work session and board meeting, North District Office, MEC; Feb. 13-HJSHS; March 13- ACH; April 10-WRE; May 9, Tuesday-IJSHS; June 121-South District Office, HES.