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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Plans
for downtown park move ahead
Plans for new
public restrooms on Ash Street are moving ahead -- despite uncertainty over
grant funding.
City Administrator Eileen
Stein thought the city had landed some $30,000 in left-over Central Oregon
Community Investment Board grant funding, but the money evaporated in
the face of the statewide budget crisis.
However, the Sisters Area
Chamber of Commerce has committed $25,000 to the project from a restroom
fund and the city council has indicated a willingness to loan funds to
the project.
Stein said in an October 10
workshop that the city can seek a grant from the Small Community Investment
Fund.
"It's specifically for communities
that have projects that are ready to go," Stein said.
The public restroom project
is, indeed, ready to go --as part of a downtown park plan that will close
off Ash Street between Hood and Cascade Avenues (leaving vehicle access
to the alleys behind adjacent businesses).
Plans created pro bono by
architects Scott Steele and Associates show new diagonal parking to replace
the streetside parking on Ash Street.
According to city planner
Neil Thompson, there will be a net gain of at least three parking spaces
from the park, with the possibility of gaining two more spots on Cascade
Avenue.
The park will provide a downtown
rest area for pedestrians with grass and a water feature, as well as the
public restrooms that have long been considered a vital need for the downtown
area.
The restroom facility will
have eight stalls, four each for men and women. According to planners,
design restrictions made it impossible to dedicate more restrooms for
women's use.
Plans call for skylights to
provide natural light and cut down the need for electricity. The restrooms
will likely have log siding.
Park design committee chairman
Peter Storton said the restrooms can be built first and the park created
around them if necessary. The committee hopes to have the facility operational
by Rodeo Weekend in June.
The Sisters City Council approved
naming the park the Harold Barclay Memorial Park in honor of the pioneering
businessman who was instrumental in creating the city's Western theme.
Storton said that, based on
public input, the name should be changed to the Barclay Memorial Park
to equally acknowledge the contributions of Dorothy Barclay.
The council agreed to vote
on a resolution to that effect.
Storton said the committee
hopes to raise funds for the project in the community. The total project
is expected to cost in the neighborhood of $225,000.
The Sisters Garden Club has
already donated $2,000, Storton reported.
Donations may be made to the
Harold Barclay Memorial Park fund at Bank of the Cascades; account number
04347633.
"There's a lot of people in
the community with a lot of love and respect for the Barclays, so I think
we'll get a lot of participation," Storton said. |
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