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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here. ©
2002 The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Grant
for Outlaw Cafe draws fire from city council Not everyone
is cheering the $25,000 grant that will help launch the Outlaw Café (see
related story).
The grant came from the Central
Oregon Community Investment Board (COCIB), which awards grants in Crook,
Deschutes and Jefferson counties for economic and community development
projects.
The city applied for and failed
to receive grants to study the feasibility of a Sisters conference center
and for development of the Harold Barclay Memorial Park.
In a workshop with the Deschutes
County Board of Commissioners (who participate with COCIB) on Thursday,
July 18, city councilors expressed their frustration with the grant process.
"We're real disappointed as
a council," said Councilor Lon Kellstrom.
He noted that the park and
conference center had appeared on a short list from Deschutes County,
leading the council to believe they were in a good position for a grant.
"How (the park) got dropped
off, I don't know," Kellstrom said. "We've been on that (project) forever.
The Outlaw Café pops up and it's funded."
The City of Sisters actually
provided a letter of support to the Community Action Team of Sisters (CATS),
which sought the Outlaw Café grant. Mayor Steve Wilson told The Nugget
that that letter came from then-city administrator Barbara Warren, not
from the council.
He said he and other councilors
do not remember discussing the café project and would not have supported
it.
"I can honestly say, based
on the knowledge I have at this time, it would not have been a priority
on our radar screen," Wilson said.
He noted that the grant provides
public funds for an enterprise that will compete with local businesses.
"I philosophically don't support
using taxpayer money for that kind of venture," Wilson said.
Susan Mayea, county financial
officer and COCIB vice president, said the café "fit the criteria better"
than the city proposals.
When queried by The Nugget
about the criteria, Mayea said she couldn't define them on the spot, but
that the project benefited from involving youth and being entrepreneurial.
CATS won the grant for the
Outlaw Café. According to comments from Mayea and county commissioner
Tom DeWolf, who sits on COCIB, CATS wrote a good application and lobbied
for the grant.
"That's going to focus me,
naturally, in a given direction," DeWolf said. "I never heard from a member
of this council during that entire time."
Kellstrom and Mayor Wilson
were not satisfied with that argument. They countered that the commissioners
were well aware that the park and conference center were top city priorities.
They also questioned why CATS
should have such influence when, as Kellstrom noted, the group is unelected
and does not officially represent anybody.
Referring to CATS, Wilson
told the commissioners that, "that feeling that we have a runaway horse
that we're trying to rein in continues to prevail."
COCIB distributed $1.062 million
in its most recent grant cycle. The $25,000 grant to for the Outlaw Café
was the only grant awarded in Sisters.
Lorri Craig, CATS director,
thinks the paucity of grants to Sisters is the issue, not which group
in Sisters got the grant. Craig argues that Sisters needs to find a way
to get representation on COCIB.
COCIB is a 15-member committee
appointed by the Crook County Court, the Jefferson County Board of County
Commissioners, and the Deschutes County Board of County Commissioners.
There are five members from each county. Board members are volunteers
who serve two year terms.
Councilor Deb Kollodge defended
CATS and echoed Craig's belief that Sisters should have more voice on
COCIB. She believes that the conference center study is a perfect project
for a board that grants economic and community development funds.
"A conference center is a
poster child for economic development in a community," she said. |
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