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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
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Library,
school and city could share site The site of the
current middle school may have three new looks over the course of the next
year.
A proposal for a public facilities
campus on the site was presented to city councilors at a workshop last
Thursday, March 27. Council members generally reacted positively to the
idea.
The latest suggestion is to
turn the current middle school into school administration offices, the
new library and a City Hall building, said City Administrator Eileen Stein.
Eric Dolson (publisher of
The Nugget) spoke on behalf of the school board's point of view.
"It's already zoned Public
Facilities," Dolson said. "If we share resources, would this work?"
The school board has decided
not to relocate district offices to the new middle school. That would
have cost nearly $100,000.
Moving the offices to the
historic brick school building is one idea under consideration.
The current middle school
was the top site choice for the new Sisters Library scheduled to begin
construction next year, but the 3-1/2 acre property was too big, said
Peg Bermel, the Sisters Library Branch Manager.
Meanwhile, City Hall has also
been looking to change locations to have a more visible home in town,
Stein said.
Locating all three entities
on one property might have advantages, Dolson said.
Two possible site plans have
been created by the library's architect.
The library's square footage
is firm at 8,000 square feet; City Hall is looking for 5,000 square feet,
almost doubling the current space.
If a local police department
were ever added to the city, this property is spacious enough to expand.
Because the old middle school
is a gateway to the city of Sisters from the east, the consensus of all
in attendance was not to give way to a commercial enterprise like McDonald's
or Safeway at that entrance of town.
The issue may come down to
dollars.
The property will undergo
an appraisal under both the public facilities zoning and commercial zoning.
"I think personally it is
a good idea," Dolson said. "This feels like the right thing."
The library is on a tight
schedule. The board is willing to push the timeframe back a bit to see
if all of the entities can work together, Bermel said.
The final plans are also contingent
on what is most efficient for the school district.
The school board is not ready
to commit to the "old brick building," said Dolson.
It may be cheaper to bulldoze
it and start from scratch, but part of the charm would be to remodel the
middle school as an entrance to the city.
The community may be sentimentally
attached to the building and Dolson feels the issue should be taken to
the community to hear its take.
Council members were interested
to see if they can make this work.
"We're not looking for anything
tonight," Mayor Elliott said.
"Rattle the idea around in
your heads."
"In the real world, we're
not going to all end up with a home run," Dolson said. "But we could all
end up with a triple." |
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