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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
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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. |
Advisors
say couplet must enhance downtown A couplet
must enhance the downtown commercial area -- at least that's what the Couplet
Advisory Committee set as its primary focus in its first meeting on Monday,
November 10.
The committee, which consists
of 18 business owners and community leaders, was created by the mayor
last month to help refine plans to disperse highway traffic from Cascade
Avenue by creating a one-way Hood/Main Avenue couplet.
Members of the committee said
the idea of a couplet paints a negative picture for members of the community,
who picture a major highway that will steal customer traffic and diminish
the scenic, small-town ambiance.
Eileen Stein, Sisters' city
manager, said the couplet is intended to be used as a "pressure relief
valve" to help freight trucks and highway traffic avoid congestion during
busy weekends and special events.
With the additional highways,
Stein said the city would have the option to close off Cascade Avenue
from vehicles during downtown special events.
Committee members nodded approval
at that notion, which leaves a still-flourishing Cascade Avenue.
Matt Hastie, the project manager
of Cogan Owens Cogan, the consulting team which will design the Sisters
couplet, told the committee that the couplet will likely run at 25 miles
per hour and surround a two-way, fully-accessible Cascade Avenue.
Stein said she hopes the committee
will come up with some signage ideas or other options that will keep potential
customers and sight-seers using Cascade Avenue.
"We need help on knowing how
to design the entrance and exit to the couplet," Stein said.
"I think folks that have businesses
on Cascade want traffic to continue along that route, so we need to create
something so folks know they have two options and can use one when it's
congested."
The community is a long way
from being solidly behind a couplet.
Ric Nowak, Executive Director
of the Sisters Area Chamber of Commerce, said members are still confused
about what the couplet would look like and if there are other options
for traffic relief.
Sisters District Ranger Bill
Anthony concurred
"The community is not clear
on what, when and where the couplet will be," Anthony said. "What if 75
percent are opposed to the idea? What will the (city) council do then?"
Mayor Dave Elliott said there
is still a possibility the city will not receive the funding from the
Oregon Department of Transportation, but he said the city is closer than
it ever has been to receiving funding and approval for the project.
He said regardless of the
outcome, the city will refine a plan to have ready if the project is approved.
But Jerry Norquist, representative
of Cycle Oregon, still worried over the implications of such a plan.
"We need to look at 10 to
20 years down the road and what we want our community to look like," Norquist
said. "The question needs to be asked, 'Are we just moving traffic through
the community?' Is that the best thing we need for this community? If
the couplet is a done deal, then we will make the best of it, but maybe
we need to make another committee (to look at those concerns)."
Elliott said the city has
already studied other options beside a Hood/Main couplet and found this
couplet to be the most sensible.
The other options, which were
not approved, are detailed in chapter six of the city's Transportation
System Plan.
Those options include adding
lanes to Cascade Avenue, which was not approved because of the need to
retain on-street parking; to keep the streets as they are, which was not
approved because it would result in heavy traffic congestion; and to build
a bypass, which was not recommended because it would only reduce congestion
by an estimated 20 percent and would be highly expensive, according to
the TSP.
ODOT suggested the city consider
a couplet, which is less expensive than building a bypass, according to
city reports.
Construction of the couplet
could cost as much as $2 million and may not occur until 2008 or 2010,
officials said.
The committee will also design
parking on the couplet, decide the location and design of the entry and
exit intersections of the couplet, connect and add perpendicular through-streets
and mitigate pedestrian safety and traffic flow.
Peter Russell of ODOT said
the design of the couplet will favor cyclist and pedestrian mobility over
that of vehicles.
"The only thing that complicates
that is that Highway 20 is a freight route," Russell said.
The Couplet Advisory Committee
meetings are open to the public and will be held on the third Monday of
each month at City Hall. |
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