![]()
|
|||||||
|
©
2001 |
County
hears school UGB request
Deschutes County will decide
in January whether to bring 98.2 acres into the City of Sisters urban growth
boundary for a new high school.
Even with county approval
of a required zone change and comprehensive plan amendment, annexation
will depend on a vote by citizens of the City of Sisters next March.
The board of County Commissioners
held a hearing on December 17 to review a decision by the county hearings
officer that approved the proposed UGB and comprehensive plan amendments.
Mel Bryan of Sisters spoke
against the proposal. Bryan said the school district growth numbers did
not justify a new high school.
Bryan suggested the commissioners
should approve the application but for a new middle school instead.
Commission Chair Tom DeWolf
asked if that was an issue for the county board of commissioners. DeWolf
suggested that a change from a high school to a middle school would be
an issue for the Sisters School Board.
DeWolf had the same question
for Jim Mackey of Sage Meadow. Mackey had concerns that the small job
base and high housing costs in Sisters would keep out families with school
age children. He also suggested that school plans were getting ahead of
transportation solutions.
School District lawyer Nancy
Craven countered that if the new schools caused early failure of a transportation
system, the school district would be required to provide a solution under
the conditions of approval.
Population data supporting
the need for a new school cover an area more than just the city, Cravens
said.
The commissioners continued
the hearing to January 9 to give district and county lawyers an opportunity
to review procedures. The record will remain open for written comments
until that time.
|
|
|||||