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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 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. |
Three
board positions will be open this spring Three of the
five Sisters School Board positions will be on the ballot next May 20.
The three incumbents whose
seats will be on the ballot are Eric Dolson, Steve Keeton and Jeff Smith.
Dolson and Smith say they will run for re-election. Keeton will not.
"The main reason I'm not running
again is the time commitment," Keeton explained last week. "It's really
a big time commitment."
Keeton, 42, operates his own
construction company.
Dolson, 53, is co-publisher
with his wife of The Nugget. He was appointed to the board last
June to replace Heather Wester, who resigned in mid-term.
If Dolson wins on May 20,
he will serve out the remaining two years of Wester's original four-year
term.
Dolson said last week that
he wants to remain on the board to work on three main projects -- completion
of the new Sisters High School building; selection of a new superintendent
to replace Steve Swisher, who plans to retire in April; and improvement
of certain areas of the curriculum, specifically math and foreign languages.
Smith, 57, is the board's
current chairman. He was elected in 1999, along with Keeton. He has the
most unusual career situation of any of the members: He is a professor
of public administration at California State University-Dominguez Hills,
in the Los Angeles basin.
Every Tuesday during the academic
year he gets up at 3:45 a.m. and hops a plane to L.A. He teaches three
midweek classes, then flies home Thursday evening.
"I also work on the plane,"
he said. "I'm pretty efficient."
Smith is enjoying a more relaxed
schedule this year because he is on leave from his teaching post. But
he plans to return in the fall for at least one more year of full-time
work before retiring. He has been on the Dominguez Hills faculty for 27
years; he and his wife have lived in Sisters since 1995.
When Steve Keeton completes
his term June 30, the board will be without the two members who constituted
one side of the biggest controversy that divided the group during the
past year -- the battle over how to dispose of $1.9 million in interest
money the district expected to earn on the $20.5-million bond issue for
the new high school.
Keeton and Heather Wester,
then the board's chairwoman, advocated returning the interest earnings
to the taxpayers. Board members Bill Reed and Glen Lasken argued for using
the money instead to help pay construction costs of the new school.
Smith opted for splitting
the difference, which is essentially what the board eventually did.
When she resigned last April,
Wester pointed to that battle as a partial cause of her departure.
Interested candidates must
file a petition of candidacy with the Deschutes County elections office
by Thursday, March 20. |
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