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©
2002 |
School
annexation passes by wide margin
Sisters residents voted overwhelmingly
March 12 to annex approximately 100 acres of land west of town as the site
of the new Sisters High School.
The 200-120 vote (67.30 percent
to 37.38 percent) allows the Sisters School District to move forward with
construction of a new high school, expected to open in 2004.
The annexation will also allow
SOAR (Sisters Organization for Activities and Recreation) to carry forward
its master plan for developing ball fields and recreational facilities
on 15 acres of the site.
Opponents of the new high
school mounted an aggressive anti-annexation campaign in an effort to
derail the project.
Mel Bryan said that he was
not surprised by the vote, since the school board had announced its determination
to build a high school regardless of annexation.
"I'm disappointed, but I expected
it," Bryan said. "The annexation of the land is great for the city. Building
a high school on the land is a ridiculous waste of taxpayer resources.
But the voters have decided in the way they wanted it, I guess."
Board member Glen Lasken,
who spearheaded the pro-annexation campaign, was not surprised by the
outcome, either.
"The feedback we got from
our door-to-door campaign was that people were willing to vote on annexation,
not on any perceived hard feelings," he said. "When you boiled it down
to the issue at hand, they were in favor of annexation."
Sisters voters have yet to
turn down a bid to annex land to the city.
The Sisters City Council approved
an ordinance formalizing annexation at its Thursday, March 14, meeting.
The passage of annexation
and the apparent resolution of questions about auditorium size and other
features of the high school appear to have smoothed the way toward construction
of the school.
Bryan was unsure whether he
would continue to be involved in the issue. He said he had not talked
yet to other members of his campaign.
"But," he said "I know when
to quit banging my head against a wall."
The 321 voters who turned
in ballots represent a 50 percent turnout in the mail-in election. Only
city residents were eligible to vote.
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