News and Opinion from Sisters, Oregon

Articles written by eric dolson


Sorted by date  Results 261 - 276 of 276

Page Up

  • Gasoline to be tested

    Eric Dolson|Updated Nov 21, 1995

    Under strenuous lobbying last week from AAA Oregon, the Oregon Legislature's Emergency Board has approved spending a $292,600 grant to establish a statewide gasoline testing program. Oregon is currently the only western state that does not test its gasoline. Some local gas dealers feel the testing could benefit the consumer, while others feel it is a waste of money. Money for the testing comes from an $8 million settlement Oregon received from major oil companies which were sued for conspiracy, price fixing and creating an... Full story

  • County faults restaurant

    Eric Dolson|Updated Nov 21, 1995

    The Coyote Creek Cafe & Lounge was snagged last week by relatively new, tougher state food handling procedures. The restaurant was closed for 24 hours on Monday, November 13 for not keeping hot food hot enough, according to owner Eric Metzel. "One item was not up to temperature," Metzel said. The item had been pulled from a cooler and put on the steam table to heat. However, a steam table is designed to keep already hot items hot, not bring them up to temperature, he explained. When tested in a visit by the county... Full story

  • Teachers show support for contract settlement

    Eric Dolson|Updated Nov 14, 1995

    More than 40 teachers wore T-shirts and three carried signs urging an immediate settlement to wage negotiations during the first part of the November 13 Sisters School Board meeting. Two of the signs read "Settle NOW!" The third said "Compensate EXCELLENCE." Before the meeting, teacher Chuck DeKay said the teacher's union and the board "were closer" to a contract agreement. He declined to give details. "When we met last time (on Wednesday, November 8) the board made an offer and we countered back. I think both sides felt it w... Full story

  • Voters nix bond request

    Eric Dolson|Updated Nov 14, 1995

    Voters turned down a $5.5 million bond request from the Sisters School District that would have added eight classrooms to the elementary school, remodeled the old intermediate school for seventh and eighth graders, funded fencing, field irrigation, school labs and maintenance projects. According to Deschutes County Clerk Susie Penhollow, the Sisters school bond was defeated by a vote of 1,087 in favor to 1200 opposed, or 48 percent yes against 52 percent no. School board chairman Bill Reed was disappointed by the close defeat... Full story

  • Mistake, not mistletoe, takes old growth pine

    Eric Dolson|Updated Nov 7, 1995

    About 176 trees mistakenly marked for logging by the Forest Service have been cut and will go to the mill despite protests by the Sisters Forest Planning Committee, a local environmental group. The trees, including 121 with diameters of 21 inches or greater and regarded as "old growth," were sold to Crown Pacific which is currently harvesting the Walla Bear Timber Sale about 10 miles south of Sisters despite furious opposition from Paul Dewey, a Bend lawyer and environmentalist active with the SFPC. The Walla Bear sale was... Full story

  • Blackout strikes part of Sisters

    Eric Dolson|Updated Nov 7, 1995

    A new piece of equipment at the recently rebuilt Tollgate substation cut power to portions of the Sisters area starting at about 10:15 Sunday morning. According to Don Lang, Chief Engineer with Central Electric Cooperative, a differential relay that is designed to detect problems within the substation itself "misoperated" and caused the failure. Crews came from Plainview and Prineville to discover there was no fault in the substation, "so they were able to reset (the relay) and restore power," Lang said. A majority of the... Full story

  • Out of gas? Out of luck!

    Eric Dolson|Updated Oct 31, 1995

    It was probably not the best decision, and Delmas Rodney Holsapple, 49, would probably do it differently if he had it to do over again. But he doesn't. On Wednesday, October 25, Holsapple was on his way through Sisters with a friend, but nearly out of gas. And out of money. A local gas station sent him over to city hall to pick up a gas voucher, sponsored by a local church. But the vouchers are issued by Sisters Police. They scrutinized the folks who ask for them. Holsapple told police he was on his way to Eugene, where he... Full story

  • Federal timber to be sold in Sisters area

    Eric Dolson|Updated Oct 31, 1995

    The rumble of log trucks may be heard again in Sisters after a hiatus of nearly three years. The Forest Service hopes to put the 3.58 million board foot Big Bear Timber Sale on the block by the end of December. The Big Bear sale is located on 1,500 acres (with 578 acres actually scheduled for harvest) on Green Ridge just past Bear Spring. It will be the first timber sale of over 1 million board feet on the Sisters Ranger District since the 4.2 million board foot Twin Swamp sale in 1992, according to Alan Heath, Timber... Full story

  • Teachers hoping for contract

    Eric Dolson|Updated Oct 24, 1995

    A quiet game of tug-of-war is going on between teachers in Sisters schools and the Sisters School Board. The teachers have asked for a 6.7 percent pay increase. The school board says money for pay increases is not available without cutting staff and increasing class sizes. Both sides are trying to stay upbeat and calm. There are also some non-monetary issues. The teachers want complaint procedures modified, and what they call "fair share," where all of the teachers "would bear the cost of union representation" by the Oregon... Full story

  • Nason defense questions key witnesses

    Eric Dolson|Updated Oct 24, 1995

    Mandy (Nason) Mays was on the stand at the Nason trial last week. The defense probed changes in her testimony since May, 1992, when she denied she had ever been shocked with a cattle prod or hit with a bottle by Diane Nason. These are key accusations in the trial of Dennis and Diane Nason on charges of abuse, forgery, manslaughter and racketeering. Mandy (Nason) Mays, 18, was an armless baby girl from the slums of Calcutta when the Nason's brought her to Sisters in 1980. The Nasons argue the adoption of Mandy was an act of Ch... Full story

  • Metolius River plan due

    Eric Dolson|Updated Oct 17, 1995

    In 1988 the Metolius River was designated as one of America's wild and scenic rivers. A draft plan to guide use of the river is now at the printer and should be available by the middle of November. According to Tori Roberts, Information assistant with the U.S. Forest Service in Sisters, the draft Environmental Impact Statement contains alternatives for management, including the preferred alternative. The draft EIS also serves as the preliminary document for the Oregon State Scenic Waterway Rules, which apply to private land,... Full story

  • Proposed poison project perceived as pernicious

    Eric Dolson|Updated Oct 10, 1995

    The U.S. Forest Service will begin trapping and poisoning gophers this month and continue for as long as weather conditions allow, the Sisters Ranger District announced on October 6. However, the project has provoked a local naturalist into vociferous opposition. The project will place traps or poison oats underground in order to reduce the number of gophers within about 2,000 acres of tree plantations located south of Sisters, in the Metolius Basin and on Green Ridge, according to project manager Dave Moyer. In these areas... Full story

  • Juvenile jail on ballot

    Eric Dolson|Updated Oct 10, 1995

    The push is on by law enforcement professionals to build a 65-bed juvenile justice center in Deschutes County. The $14.4 million project would include two new courtrooms, a new sheriff's office, new community corrections facilities and additional court space. The bond issue will be on the November 7 vote-by-mail election. Ballots are to be sent out at the end of October. According to information provided by justice center backers, the proposed levy rate will cost the owner of a $100,000 home about $15 per year (the actual amo... Full story

  • Nason trial nears climax

    Eric Dolson|Updated Sep 26, 1995

    The following is not strictly a "news story." It includes impressions beyond words spoken in the courtroom. Sometimes, facts can obscure the truth. Reader beware. On Thursday last week Diane Nason sat on the stand in a Bend courtroom and answered questions from her own attorney. This was her chance to answer allegations the state has made against Diane's "Celebration Family." The state is alleging that the "Celebration Family" was a not a family at all but instead a criminal enterprise set up to bilk the good hearted out of... Full story

  • Nason trial nears final chapter

    Eric Dolson|Updated Sep 19, 1995

    The following is not, in the strict sense, a news story. It includes impressions beyond words spoken in the courtroom. Sometimes, facts can obscure the truth. Reader be warned. The Nason trial is coming to an end. After more than 200 witnesses, with more than 89,000 pages of discovery and an exhibit list that runs into the thousands, Diane Nason is set to take the stand this week. It's about time. Central Oregon's suburb of "Simpsoncity," which is how one writer refers to the circus in Los Angeles, may actually be over... Full story

  • Water bill outrage pours into Sisters City Hall

    Eric Dolson|Updated Sep 19, 1995

    Sisters residents have flooded city hall with complaints over recent water bills. Meters now measure nearly every gallon and once-emerald lawns have withered to a parched brown. "Everybody is upset. The city council is upset," acknowledged City Administrator Barbara Warren on Friday, September 15. The new meters are the result of improvements to the Sisters water supply system over the last couple of years. The new reservoir and supply lines under city streets were partially paid for through state and federal grants and... Full story