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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. |
City,
library consider school site Sisters
residents may soon be able to check out a book and drop off a ballot or
pay their water bill with one stop.
The Deschutes Public Library
District is considering building a new Sisters Library where the former
Sisters Middle School now stands. The City of Sisters may build a new
City Hall in the same area.
"The (school) district is
very interested in selling a portion of the middle school property to
both the city and the library," said Sisters School Board Chairman Glen
Lasken.
The library and city would
build separate facilities.
Such a sale is currently under
discussion, Lasken said.
"We are very close to reaching
an agreement and I'm very optimistic that we will reach an agreement,"
he said.
None of the parties involved
would discuss details such as price, the size of parcels or exact locations
on the nearly four-acre property.
The property became surplus
to the school district once a new high was completed and middle school
students were moved to the "old" high school.
The land is zoned Public Facilities,
which means only a government or public agency can be sited there.
The decommissioned middle
school site was the community's top choice for a new library site, according
to DPLD Director Michael Gaston. The DPLD board of directors agrees.
"Our assessment is that it
would be a great site if we could make it work," Gaston said.
A primary consideration, Gaston
noted, is that building there would be comparable in cost to two other
sites DPLD is considering. Gaston declined to state where those sites
are located, other than that they are within the city limits of Sisters.
"So far, we've found the school
district and the city extremely cooperative," Gaston said.
Sisters City Administrator
Eileen Stein confirmed that the city is "interested in a portion of the
middle school property" for a new City Hall.
"We're looking at maybe a
5,000-square-foot building," Stein said.
She emphasized that required
size of the building has not been confirmed.
The city has been looking
for a new city hall location for nearly a decade.
The city purchased the two-story
building that houses Multnomah Publishers for that purpose.
However, the building turned
out to be impractical for use as a City Hall. Extensive changes would
be required to bring the building into compliance with the Americans with
Disabilities Act.
According to Stein, those
changes added up to $80,000 to $90,000, including installing an elevator,
remodeling and adding restrooms and widening a staircase.
Stein said the council is
discussing what to do with that property if they build City Hall elsewhere.
Stein, Gaston and Lasken all
expressed optimism about the possibility of co-locating, although the
details must still be worked out.
"At this point, the devil's
in the details," Gaston said. "We're very optimistic about it."
According to Lasken, the fine-tuning
of details does not have to do with price.
"There appears to be an agreement
between the parties as to the value of the property," Lasken said.
Lasken said the school district
has received offers from both DPLD and the City of Sisters and is preparing
counter proposals.
He expects those proposals
to be before both parties within "a few to several days," he said. |
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