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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. |
Mayor
announces he will resign Mayor Steve Wilson
announced on Thursday, July 25, that he will step down from the Sisters
City Council effective September 12.
Wilson and his family are
moving outside the city limits to Tollgate. The city charter requires
that city councilors reside inside the city.
"My family found their dream
house and unfortunately it was outside the city limits," Wilson said.
The mayor is in his second
term. The city council will appoint his replacement in September and seek
applicants to fill his vacant position on the council.
Wilson said he plans to remain
active in the community in some manner, though he said, "to be honest,
I'd like to have a little break."
Sisters has undergone significant
changes on Wilson's watch. The construction of a municipal sewer system
was the major project under his regime and it is very near completion.
There are only two or three
residential hookups remaining in the Buck Run subdivision. Wilson said
he is pleased to have delivered on the construction of the sewer and on
the promised $39/EDU per month service fee.
The mayor believes he is leaving
a council and city government that are "more proactive," and has more
of a sense of working toward long-term goals.
There are a couple of major
issues on the horizon that Wilson believes the city will have to work
hard to address.
He said he hopes the city
and its residents will "be bold and courageous in addressing the transportation
issue."
He believes the community
should move forward as quickly as possible on creating a couplet on Hood
and Main avenues before the traffic situation in downtown Sisters becomes
unmanageable.
Wilson has been vocal recently
in his concern that a new code allowing much smaller residential lots
is too radically changing the culture of Sisters.
"I'm still concerned about
the livability issue as it concerns the densification of Sisters," he
said.
Asked if that played a role
in his decision to move outside the city, Wilson acknowledged that changes
had some impact.
His own neighborhood has changed
with the development of Pine Meadow Ranch, a change he said he always
knew would come.
Still, he said, the cabin
on a cow pasture at the south end of Pine Street "didn't have the same
... draw to us that it did when we moved in" in the early 1990s.
Wilson said he looked in town
when the opportunity arose to sell his current property, but "lots are
pretty small," he said.
In addition to concerns about
transportation and densification, Wilson said he hopes the city continues
to advocate for preservation and public access on the "Squaw Creek corridor"
south of town.
The area was involved in a
proposed land swap recently.
He said that is an issue that
he will continue to work on as a private citizen. |
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