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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
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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. |
Woodshop
using donated equipment Three
large electrical woodworking tools donated to Sisters High School by Central
Oregon Community College have flunked safety tests and, for the time being
at least, cannot be used.
But High School Principal
Bob Macauley is not complaining; he said last week that the total donation
involved about $40,000 worth of equipment. The unusable machines are valued
at about $18,000. So the school can still make use of a lot of hardware
it would not otherwise have.
"We're still way ahead," Macauley
said.
The donation came after budget
cuts forced COCC to drop its cabinetry program. Sisters officials heard
about the available equipment and worked out a deal to trade for the college's
use of some Sisters classroom space for evening adult classes.
A fall inspection by a representative
of the Underwriters Laboratories office in Camas, Washington, determined
that three big machines would not qualify for UL labels -- a drum sander,
an edge bander (planer) and a multi-hole drill table.
"This used equipment is very
old," inspector Joe Butler wrote in his report, "and most of the testing
necessary for its certification cannot be performed in the field. Items
such as necessary guarding, internal wiring conditions and non-certified
parts are a few issues that cannot be verified."
Macauley said he thinks the
planer can be salvaged and be made usable. But it would be "pretty expensive"
to make the necessary upgrades to the other two pieces.
"Even though a couple of machines
are not up to par we will still be able to do it (offer cabinetry classes),"
the principal said. "The way it works is that Jim Reiss will be coming
in to teach eight Heart of Oregon kids cabinetry, at no cost to the district.
And in the spring we will do an integrated approach to construction and
cabinetry where we share instructors, which will provide eight ADM (average
daily membership) we didn't have before. So everything seems to be a win-win."
He was referring to the way
the state counts school enrollment, which becomes the basis for the per-student
allocations every Oregon school district receives annually from the state.
Macauley explained that in
the absence of the drill press students will build a template and "drill
the holes individually instead. It will just take a little longer."
Similarly, the lack of a sander
will make sanding take longer but won't make the job impossible. |
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