Failed to execute CGI : Win32 Error Code = 3
The drive to fund a community center in Sisters got a boost Thursday, December
19, with an endorsement of the project from the city council. The endorsement
clears the way for the city to ask for a $600,000 community development grant
to fund the project.
Sisters Kiwanis and Rotary clubs are assessing community needs and studying
potential sites for a community center that could house teen and senior
activities and community organizations such as SOAR, the Sisters chapter of the
Central Oregon Council on Aging and the Family Access Network.
According to Carole C. B. Davis, who is helping to coordinate the undertaking
for the Kiwanis, the project is still in the initial phase of study. No site
has been decided upon and planners do not know whether the center will be put
in an existing building or if a center will be constructed.
"We have not discounted anything," Davis told The Nugget. "We're keeping
an open mind and a positive attitude."
Davis said the planners will send out questionnaires in January asking a wide
range of people for input as to what the Sisters area needs. Information from
the questionnaires will be analyzed in a needs assessment forum in February.
Kiwanis and Rotary anticipate a year-long study before launching the project.
They plan to be ready to apply for the Community Development Block Grant from
the Oregon Economic Development Department in January, 1998. The City of
Sisters or another public agency must handle the actual grant application.
According to Davis, planners hope to get the center started without creating
any cost to the city and its residents. She noted that funding ongoing
maintenance and operations costs, estimated at roughly $25,000 per year, will
be a challenge. A portion of the hoped-for grant could be used to pay those
costs, Davis said.
The City of Sisters is eligible to apply for a 1997 grant. The council received
a request to apply for a $10,000 technical assistance grant on behalf of
Skillful Means, a women's support group. The organization did not appear at the
December 19 meeting to make a presentation, so the council deferred a decision
to a later meeting.