![]()
|
||||||||||
|
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. |
Sisters
to vote on college board seat The Sisters area
will have a role in the May election of board members for Central Oregon
Community College. Four positions on the seven-member board will be on the
ballot, including the one for Zone 7, which covers Sisters.
John Overbay of Sunriver,
current occupant of the Zone 7 seat, has filed for re-election. He was
first elected in a contest for an open seat in 1999 and is completing
that four-year term.
Overbay, 68, lives in Sunriver.
He is the former owner of the Wagner Markets and still owns the land and
buildings on three Wagner sites in Bend and Redmond. He sold the business
to Albertsons eight years ago. He has been actively involved in fund-raising
for the college and has been on the board of the college foundation for
10 years.
The COCC electoral map was
recently redrawn to reflect population changes reported in the 2000 census.
Redmond, which was part of Overbay's zone when he was elected, has been
split off to form the core of a zone of its own. This leaves Zone 7 with
the rural areas and small towns on the western side of Deschutes county,
including La Pine, Sunriver and Sisters.
Last week, the college board
appointed Diane Bohle to an open seat representing Crook County and some
adjacent areas. Bohle is the executive director of the Prineville-Crook
County Chamber of Commerce. She fills a post vacated by veteran board
member Kate Van Voorhees, who was first elected in 1988 and re-elected
three times. She resigned in December.
In recent months the board
has been struggling to make budget cuts made necessary by the loss of
about $3 million in state funds resulting from state government's revenue
shortfall for 2001-2003. The board is currently considering the closure
of four college centers -- in Prineville, Madras, La Pine and Sisters
-- to cover about $200,000 of the loss. Under the plan, college centers
would remain open in Bend, Redmond, Warm Springs and North Lake County.
The newest board member is
expected to seek election to the remaining two years of Voorhees' original
term.
Aside from the Bohle and Overbay
seats, the May ballot will contain two positions from the zone that is
centered on Bend and covers an area that includes Tumalo and Deschutes
River Woods as well.
The incumbents in the two
Bend seats are Connie Lee, who is expected to file for re-election, and
James Carnahan, who has served for nine years and has said he will not
run for another term.
Overbay has had a long association
with COCC, having attended the school 50 years ago. He also attended Lewis
and Clark College in Portland for two years, studying business administration.
Although he did not receive a degree from either institution, he told
The Nugget: "If it wasn't for COCC giving me a jump-start I doubt that
I would have been able to accomplish what I have in life."
The mailed-ballot election
for positions on the COCC board and many local school boards will be held
May 20. The filing deadline for those interested in becoming candidates
is March 20. |
|
||||||||