![]()
|
||||||||
|
The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Outlaw
Cafe nixed by school district Plans for a student-run
cafe in Sisters have been shelved by the school district in the face of
budget cuts.
"With the additional cuts
we no longer have the capacity to provide the operation off-site for the
cafe concept," School Superintendent Steve Swisher told Community Action
Team of Sisters Director Lorri Craig in a letter last month.
CATS had secured a $25,000
grant from the Central Oregon Community Investment Board (COCIB) for the
project.
According to Craig, COCIB
agreed on Thursday, October 3, to reduce the grant amount from $25,000
to $12,500 to fund an on-site culinary arts program at Sisters High School
and a "coffeehouse" at the SOAR facility at Sisters Middle School.
According to nutrition services
coordinator Janice Comfort, Sisters High School will host a "restaurant"
called A Taste of Our Own serving lunch for students and staff.
The menu will be simpler than
that planned for the Outlaw Cafe.
The CATS newsletter reported
that SOAR's teen coffee house will be called the Cabana Club.
"The middle school teen center
is being remodeled to accommodate the coffee house concept," the newsletter
states. "Once the transformation is completed, it will be open after school
Monday through Friday for middle school students. On Friday and Saturday
nights it will provide a positive alternative social setting for high
school students.
"Half of the room will be
set up as a coffee house and the other half will be a game area, with
foosball, pool and air hockey. It will have a South American motif, with
open microphone time, movies and live entertainment."
The Outlaw Cafe proposal had
met with mixed response in Sisters, with some restaurateurs upset at the
notion of using public funds to create a business that would compete for
clientele and workers with private businesses. |
|
||||||