![]()
|
|||||||||||
|
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. |
Habitat
partition plans rile neighbors
Plans to put
three Habitat for Humanity homes on a 16,770-square-foot-lot have raised
the ire of neighbors in Edge of the Pines at the east end of Sisters.
Several neighbors argue that
siting three homes between Maple Lane and Tamarack Lane creates too much
density for the neighborhood.
"We feel they're just trying
to crowd too much on there," said Merl Monroe, who lives across Tamarack
Lane from the site. "The people immediately around it are set against
it."
Monroe said he has no objection
to affordable housing in his neighborhood. In fact, Monroe has worked
on eight Sisters Habitat for Humanity homes in Sisters.
The Sisters Habitat for Humanity
proposal would partition the lot into three smaller pieces of 6,256 square
feet, 4,880 square feet and 5,634 square feet.
The minimum lot size in the
City of Sisters is 6,000 square feet, but Habitat is taking advantage
of a 25 percent affordable housing bonus that allows lots as small as
4,500 square feet.
The Sisters Habitat for Humanity
Board of Directors issued a statement, saying that "we acknowledge that
some current residents do not welcome the increased density that is occurring.
Nonetheless, we take seriously our obligation to make maximum use of our
resources in faithfulness to our mission to provide affordable, decent
housing to eligible families in Sisters."
The lot was sold to Habitat
For Humanity by Wayland and Alice Ann Stephenson for $80,000 -- well below
it's $130,000 market value. That is the kind of donation Habitat relies
on.
"The way it is now," said
Sisters Habitat Executive Director Sharlene Weed, "if we don't put a (third)
house there, that's $30,000 (in land value) that we're losing.
"That's hard fought-for money,"
she said. "That's donations, that's grants, that's Thrift Store volunteers
working their hearts out."
The current controversy reflects
a kind of "culture shock" that has been rippling through the City of Sisters
since a sewer and new codes have allowed greater density.
Last spring, then-Mayor Steve
Wilson said that some residents feel that the character of their neighborhoods
--with big, pre-sewer 10,000-square-foot lots -- is being radically altered.
Dave Ellison, who lives next
to the proposed Habitat partition, certainly feels that way.
"We bought this house because
we wanted some space," Ellison said. "Now we're all going to be crammed
together; the kids won't have any place to play. It's just wrong.
"I don't know where the city
gets off (partitioning) lots into such small parcels anyway," he said.
City Planner Neil Thompson
will take comments on the application for partition until December 13.
He said he has not completed his review, but he said his initial impression
was that it would meet the requirements for approval.
According to Weed, neighbors
have been invited to share their concerns with the Sisters Habitat for
Humanity board of directors at their monthly meeting on the third Tuesday
of each month.
For more information call
549-1193. |
|
|||||||||