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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. |
Councilors
want access to offender names If a
Sisters resident wants to know the names and addresses of registered local
sex offenders, he must call the state police and listen to a list of countywide
names.
City council members met with
Becky Jackson, Deschutes County Adult Parole and Probation officer on
Thursday, October 2, to discuss options to give residents easier access
to such information.
After considering options
including listing names on the Internet, notifying newspapers, and keeping
a list at city hall, the council agreed to meet with Jackson and other
interested parties in a public hearing at the end of October.
The meeting is tentatively
slated for 6 p.m. on October 23 at City Hall.
Councilor Lon Kellstrom pointed
out that residents who appear to be the least likely candidates have actually
committed sex offenses.
"I think that is all the more
reason we should invite them (county officials) back (for the October
hearing)," Kellstrom said. "The Catholic priest is the poster example
of that (unlikely criminal)."
Stein said the city or any
public service would be taking on a delicate and dangerous risk by publicizing
the names of sex offenders.
"The devil is in the details,"
Stein said. "What if John Doe is a sex offender and he lives over there
and then he moves and everyone thinks the new resident is the sex offender?
It sounds like a noble cause, but there are a lot of details and people
to consider."
In other business, the City
Council took the first step to build a new city hall. City Council unanimously
approved the purchase of 132,400 square feet of the northeast corner of
the old middle school property for $291,600 ($9 per square foot) from
the Sisters School District (see
related story).
The city has been looking
for nearly a decade for a location for a new city hall.
Stein said no designs have
been configured for the city hall, but it will have to meet city code
requirements, such as representing a Western theme.
In other business, the City
Council unanimously agreed to sign a resolution of the City of Sisters
which proclaims its support of providing open access to the public on
the Lower Deschutes River.
Sisters has now joined the
cities of Maupin, Madras and The Dalles in signing a resolution which
opposes plans by the Bureau of Land Management to implement a permit system
which would limit public access to the river between Warm Springs and
the river's mouth at the Columbia River. |
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