
Sisters to get a Subway
By Jim Cornelius
It's not easy for a new eatery to move into Sisters, but the town will
soon host a Subway sandwich shop at the intersection of Hood Avenue and
Locust Street.
Tom McMeekin, owner of the adjacent Sisters Pumphouse, will operate the
franchise in partnership with deve loper Richard Carpenter.
The city's approval of a new sandwich shop, given by the Sisters Urban
Area Planning Commission February 19, surprised some Sisters residents,
who believed there was a moratorium on new restaurants due to sewer restrictions.
According to City Planner Neil Thompson, there is no moratorium on restaurants,
although drainfield restrictions do pose practical barriers to restaurant
development.
Thompson said the City of Sisters requires septic system approval either
from the county or from the state Department of Environmental Quality. While
the county would not approve the site under its existing guidelines, Thompson
said, developer Carpenter was able to get DEQ approval for the sandwich
shop.
Subway does no bread processing on site, therefore has fewer septic requirements
than most restaurants, Thompson said.
He noted that other franchises have inquired about moving into the Sisters
market, but could not economically justify meeting local drainfield requirements.
City Councilor Tim Clasen raised questions at the April 24 city council
meeting about the removal of several elm trees on the site. Thompson told
the council that the trees were rotted, which Carpenter confirmed.
"I really hated to take those trees down, but they were 80 or 90
percent rotted," Carpenter told The Nugget.
Siting a franchise sandwich shop in Sisters has raised a few eyebrows,
but Thompson said they are entirely legal.
"Franchises are allowed in the city," he said. "They just
have to conform to the requirements of the city."
And, Thompson said, plans indicate that the shop will do so, with signs
rendered in wood and an appropriately western-themed building scheme borrowed
from a Utah mining town.
"It looks to be a pretty attractive building," Thompson said.
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