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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
purchases land for new facility Two
land purchases last week moved Sisters toward the creation of a central
"campus" for three public entities -- the city, the school district and
the library.
The City of Sisters and the
Deschutes Public Library District each bought parcels from the Sisters
School District -- parcels that were part of the former Sisters Middle
School site.
The irregularly shaped site
lies between Highway 20 and Main Avenue on the east side of town.
Both buyers paid $9 per square
foot for the land. The city bought 32,400 square feet on the northeast
corner of the site for $291,600. The library district bought an adjacent
43,200 square feet on the northwest corner for $388,800
The Sisters City Council hopes
to build a new city hall on its newly acquired property while the library
district is expected to build a new Sisters Library next door.
A southern section of the
site, which contains a brick building that was originally built as the
Sisters High School in 1937 and more recently housed the middle school,
will be retained by the school district. The school board is exploring
the possibility of remodeling the building as the district's central administration
office.
Both purchased parcels lie
north of what is expected to become an extension of Cascade Avenue. From
its $680,400 proceeds, the school district will pay for the demolition
of a classroom building and gymnasium that occupy part of the area sold.
The district also agreed to take care of asbestos removal and the removal
of an old fuel oil tank on the property. All three owners will share the
cost of the extension of Cascade Avenue through the site.
The school board made its
decision to sell a portion of the former Middle School in April 2001,
after voters approved a bond issue to build a new high school. The bond
included money to remodel the existing high school so that it could become
the district's new middle school.
Some time before, the city
had zoned the middle school site for public facilities only, which limited
its potential on the market. The 2001 sales resolution expressed the school
board's intent "to market and sell the property at the maximum value possible
after rezoning to its highest and best value."
The same resolution promised
to "use $500,000 in proceeds from the sale of this property to finance
the district office facility and establish a maintenance reserve fund."
The board seems satisfied
with the outcome of its property-marketing effort.
Board members Eric Dolson,
publisher of The Nugget, and Bill Reed, a Sisters Realtor, constitute
the board's facilities committee and as such acted as chief negotiators
for the sale. When asked about the result last week, Dolson said: "We
(the board) determined that a portion of the community and certainly the
city probably wanted that property to remain in a public facilities zone."
"Given that we had two willing
buyers for this property under that zoning, (including) shared responsibilities
for development, I think everybody comes out ahead," he said. "I think
truly this is the highest and best use of the property and is in the community's
best interest."
Could the district have received
more if the zoning had been upgraded? Dolson said: "I think if you were
to take a look at what the school district received and look at what the
relevant expenses would have been for rezoning, partition, sales commissions
and all of the other expenses that would have been incurred by the school
district...this is a very fair price for all parties.
"We have to think of other
things besides just purely maximizing the dollar value. There was great
community concern expressed about the future of this parcel. But I actually
do believe we realized a sales price that nets us very close to what we
would have gotten had we gone through the pain and heartache of a rezoning."
Dolson declined to estimate
the cost of demolition of current structures, asbestos removal and extraction
of the old fuel oil tank, saying he did not want to influence the bids
for those jobs.
The two property sales apparently
won't hinder SOAR (Sisters Organization for Activities and Recreation),
the nonprofit organization that occupies two buildings on the middle school
site facing Locust Street.
SOAR owns and holds a number
of classes and other activities in a building on the northeast corner
of the site. But Tom Coffield, executive director of SOAR who was elected
to the school board last spring, said that modular building will be put
up for sale and can be moved to wherever the new owner wishes.
SOAR's own offices and a new
Head Start program co-sponsored by the organization occupy a "metal, garage-looking
building," as Coffield described it, to the south. It is owned by the
school district and presumably will be demolished eventually.
SOAR is constructing a new
building on the site of the new Sisters High School on the old McKenzie
Highway west of town. That building should be finished in January.
Coffield said, "We will move
the first week of February...and from what I understand both the city
and the library have okayed us staying (in existing quarters) until that
time..." |
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