Sunday 31 August 2014

Summit Pacific stops annexation efforts


The hospital commissioners in charge of Summit Pacific Medical Center on Thursday revoked an earlier resolution, which would have put an annexation measure on the ballot for the Montesano area.


Hospital CEO RenĂ©e Jensen said that had the hospital kept the annexation request on the November ballot, it probably wouldn’t have done anything since the Montesano area ended up being incorporated into the new hospital district to benefit Grays Harbor Community Hospital.


If anything, Jensen cautioned, it could have set Summit Pacific up for a legal battle with the new hospital district over the Montesano area.


“There is a rare, rare possibility that we could be successful,” Jensen said. However, Summit Pacific would end up paying for the costs of the election — as well as numerous attorney bills.


“It seems like a heck of a lot of money to spend to pay for a dead horse,” said Hospital Commissioner Art Thumser of McCleary.


“Even if we won, we would lose because there’s nothing we could gain from it,” added Hospital Commissioner Chad Searls of Elma.


Mick Jones of Brady told the hospital commissioners that he plans to lead an effort to de-annex the Brady precinct from the new hospital district. Although the hospital district received 61 percent of the vote across the entire boundaries, stretching from the Satsop River to the beaches, most in Brady opposed the measure.


A precinct breakdown in Brady showed that 187 residents voted against the measure and 107 voted for it.


That means 63.6 percent voted it down.


Jensen told Jones that he would have to lead a petition campaign and get it certified by the County Auditor’s Office to get it on the ballot.


“There’s lots of interest already,” Jones said. “I haven’t had a good battle since Vietnam.”


Jensen also pledged cooperation with the new hospital district.


“Anything that community hospital needs, we’re willing to share,” she said.



Saturday 30 August 2014

Live wires — A demonstration of dangers


Grays Harbor District employees, first responders and media were invited to the Grays Harbor PUD on Thursday to watch a safety demonstration showing a variety of scenarios that could lead to accidental electrocution, injury and death. The demonstration utilized the Cowlitz County PUD’s Arc Trailer display, a ground level, high voltage safety display tool resembling a common power line setup. PUD lineman use the Arc Trailer display to show what happens when common items such as ladders, shovels and kites come into contact with dangerous levels of electricity and to raise awareness regarding electrical hazards.



Kilmer shown sea-level view of coastal concerns


Congressman Derek Kilmer met with North Beach business leaders, toured Ocean Shores’ jetty, marina and Damon Point on Friday, departing with what he said were several new perspectives on the issues impacting the central Washington coast.


Later in the afternoon, he visited Taholah and the Quinault Indian Nation, viewing the endangered and threatened seawall there that had to be shored up with emergency repairs earlier in the year.


“I know there are specific and unique issues out here on the coast,” Kilmer said. “Coastal communities have substantial challenges, such as infrastructure challenges, challenges of the tourism industry, challenges facing our small businesses. So I think it’s important to be out here and hear how I can be a good partner.”


In a day that started with breakfast hosted by the Ocean Shores/North Beach Chamber of Commerce, the first-term Democrat from Gig Harbor painted a picture of a Congress largely gridlocked by partisan issues despite the efforts of many enthusiastic newer members like himself. The 40-year-old representing the 6th Congressional District currently is running for his second term against Republican Marty McClendon, a Gig Harbor real estate broker.


“I think there is a lot of opportunity to have an impact down here,” Kilmer said of the county as a whole. “Frankly, we still have a number of challenges down here. I’m not telling you anything you don’t know. Grays Harbor County unfortunately has consistently vied for the highest or near-highest unemployment in the state.”


He noted that Congress has been out of session since the end of July, which gives him the opportunity to tour the district, but it also keeps Congress from doing its job.


“Congress is earning its low approval rating,” Kilmer said.


Later, he outlined economic development as the “biggest challenge facing both our area and our country.” While there is no “silver bullet” to get the economy going again, Kilmer said he believes there is some “silver buckshot. I think there is a bunch of stuff you’ve got to do,” he told the Chamber. “I spent a decade working in economic development in Pierce County.”


What he learned is that “workforce matters. In fact, the No. 1 issue … that businesses use when making their relocation decisions is the availability of good, skilled workers.”


The other lesson: “Infrastructure really matters. Sometimes the efforts and the failure of the federal government to make investments, either to address threats or just basic road or sewer infrastructure, is very, very important.”


Kilmer said he was working on bills to strengthen what he called “coastal resiliency,” and later in the morning took a tour of the impact erosion has had on the jetty, the Geotubes along the shore, the undredged marina, and the impact of storms and erosion at Damon Point/Protection Island.


“He has been amazing in paying attention to what is going on in Grays Harbor County, and we haven’t had a lot attention in the past,” said Ocean Shores Mayor Crystal Dingler in introducing Kilmer to the Chamber. “I really, really appreciate the fact that he is coming out to see not just us, but he’s coming to all the cities, he’s talking to all the people.”


It was the second time in the past year that Kilmer has visited Ocean Shores since he won the seat previously held by the retiring Norm Dicks.



Attorney fighting to get paid by county after judicial orders vanish


A former Guardian Ad Litem attorney representing vulnerable children for Grays Harbor Superior Court is fighting to get paid what she says the county owes her for services performed several years ago.


Tamara Milligan-Darst of Montesano recently filed a $39,002 claim for damages against the county after discovering that court orders signed by Superior Court Judge Gordon Godfrey ordering that she get paid inexplicably vanished out of the court files.


Darst says she had to discontinue being an attorney in 2011 due to health reasons and discovered that the payments were never sent. But, she says, she was focused on her own health and didn’t want to deal with billing issues.


Today, she says she feels better and wants the issues dealt with. She says she discovered that the four judicial orders from Godfrey ordering payment were not in the court files. Because of that, the county never processed payment.


“I was just shocked to discover that the orders just didn’t exist,” Darst said. “I, apparently, was the only one with copies of the orders. I’ve been an attorney for more than 21 years and have helped the county on and off during that entire time.”


Clerk Cheryl Brown said she was initially concerned, as well, wondering if someone had raided the files in Superior Court.


“I’ve since discovered that the orders signed by Judge Godfrey were never filed,” Brown said. “They didn’t come from the court administration offices to juvenile court. I don’t know what happened.”


Since Darst had copies of the filings, Brown took them and sent it on to the county’s budget office for processing this past June. Instead of processing the payments, Judge David Edwards signed several orders n June 16 declaring that the earlier orders ordering attorney fees “is null and void.”


Edwards adds, “If Ms. Milligan-Darst wishes for the court to entertain a request for attorney fees, she can properly note it on the motion dcoket with supporting documentation of her hours.”


After Darst objected, noting it’s improper for Edwards to cancel a legitimate order by another judge, Judge Godfrey, himself, issued a similar order making the payments null and void.


Edwards told The Vidette he wasn’t sure what the issues were in this case because he was relying on Godfrey’s input on the matter. Godfrey is in the midst of retiring from his judge’s position.


“Clearly, I did the work,” Darst said. “The clients were taken care of. I have the court orders, signed. The money was just never sent — and I was sick. I couldn’t go collecting it. What’s crazy is I really could have used that money, too, because I had no insurance at the time.”


Darst’s claim for damages seeks $24,996 for the fees she says she’s owed, plus 12 percent interest. She also seeks attorney fees of $5,500 “for guidance through the process, both judicial and administrative” for a total of $39,002 sought.



Grays Harbor teams meet up at Montesano Jamboree


MONTESANO — As it developed, the eighth annual Montesano Football Jamboree was dominated by non-Harbor teams.


Tenino and Centralia each won both of their mini-games in a six-team jamboree Friday night at Rottle Field.


Centralia unofficially downed Montesano, 6-0, and Aberdeen, 13-6, while Tenino topped Elma, 13-0, and Hoquiam, 7-0, in 20-play contests.


Tenino, under the direction of former Hoquiam coach Randy Swilley, unofficially was awarded the jamboree “championship” on the basis of point differential. Since scores aren’t officially recorded in jamborees, no trophy is likely to be forthcoming.


Montesano trounced Aberdeen, 20-0, while Elma edged Hoquiam, 14-12, in the other contests.


The jamboree marked the first football event at Rottle Field since the grandstand, destroyed by fire during Monte’s 2012 state championship season, was rebuilt last spring.


A decent-sized crowd witnessed a series of entertaining — if typically informal — mini-games.


Not only were coaches on the field as varsity and JV contests were conducted simultaneously on opposite sides of the 50-yard line, but the captains engaged in rock-scissors-paper competition in lieu of coin flips to determine which team had the opening possession in each game.


The best news of the night was that the event was completed without apparent significant injuries.


Elma 14, Hoquiam 12


Two conversions by all-Evergreen 1A League placekicker Steven Persell proved the difference in perhaps the most competitive of the contests.


After opening the mini-game with a 20-yard run, Hoquiam’s Tyler White scored on an 8-yard jaunt three players later. The Grizzlies also scored on the last of their 10 allotted plays when Michael Harris punched it in from one yard out. Neither conversion, however, was successful.


Breaking tackles near the line of scrimmage, Elma’s Rio Ortega shook free on what was officially a 40-yard scoring run to trim the decifit to 12-7. Although no plays were supposed to originate from beyond the 40-yard line, the ball on this occasion was marked closer to the 43 after Persell was nailed for a loss on the previous play.


The Eagles also scored on their next possession. After hitting Justin Spencer on a 23-yard completion, junior quarterback Tristan Robinette took it in on a keeper from 4 yards out.


Montesano 20, Aberdeen 0


The Bulldogs racked up 125 yards in their 10 plays against the Bobcats.


Junior running back Kylar Prante sandwiched touchdown runs of 11 and 35 yards around Jake Herzog’s 26-yard scoring pass to a wide-open Kaleb Chastain.


Montesano running back-turned-quarterback Anthony Louthan, limited to placekicking duties by a broken hand, booted two of the three conversions.


A high snap from center in the shotgun formation blunted Aberdeen’s chief threat after the Bobcats had reached Monte’s 20-yard line.


Centralia 6, Montesano 0


The Class 2A Tigers scored on their final play for the lone TD of this contest.


Montesano’s swarming defense had kept the Tigers at bay through eight plays. But Centralia’s Gavin Kerner took a 36-yard pass from Joe Aliff down to the 4-yard line, then swept the left side for the touchdown on the next play.


Thanks primarily to Herzog’s 24-yard pass to Prante, the Bulldogs were on the Tiger 2-yard line for their final play, but Herzog was stacked up shy of the goal on a quarterback draw.


Tenino 13, Elma 0


Reigning Evergreen 1A champion Tenino demonstrated a strong ground attack against Elma.


Running back Thomas Pier motored 13 yards on fourth-and-eight to set up quarterback Calvin Guzman’s 2-yard touchdown run.


That left the Beavers two snaps to reach its 10-play allotment. They made good on them as Pier followed Guzman’s 12-yard pass to Nihls Peterson by breaking a 28-yard scoring run.


After a dead-ball personal foul penalty moved the ball back, Guzman boomed a 35-yard conversion kick for the final point.


Centralia 13, Aberdeen 6


Kerner swept the left side for a 40-yard scoring run on this contest’s opening play.


Aliff hooked up with Riley Christensen on a 27-yard TD pass five plays later.


The Bobcats, who moved the ball fairly well in both mini-games, finally found the end zone on Carter Harris’ 7-yard quarterback keeper. Joel Dublanko contributed a 14-yard run and Harris logged another 20 yards on a pair of completions to Braden Castleberry-Taylor during that drive.


Tenino 7, Hoquiam 0


Zeb Chamberlain’s 13-yard halfback pass to Spencer Brewer on fourth down represented the lone marker against Hoquiam. Guzman again tacked on the PAT.


Hoquiam’s Bubba Dick and Jeff Capoeman each turned in decent performances in dividing time at quarterback. Dick scrambled 26 yards on the Grizzlies’ final play, but was taken down on the Beaver 5.


The four Grays Harbor teams will start playing for real next Friday. Aberdeen hosts River Ridge, Hoquiam is home against Meridian of Bellingham and Montesano entertains Black Hills, while Elma travels to Klahowya.



Friday 29 August 2014

Hospital board gets dose of public in first meeting


It’s rare in this day and age for citizens to be able to witness the creation of a public entity from the ground up, but that’s exactly what began Thursday at Grays Harbor Community Hospital in Aberdeen.


But, don’t blink. With just four months to be operational and running the hospital, commissioners for the newly formed Grays Harbor Public Hospital District 2 have much to do in a small time frame.


The board met Thursday for the first time inside the facility it will soon be tasked with running. A majority of Grays Harbor voters approved the creation of the district in August. The board’s first order of business was to consummate the district’s formation by adopting bylaws and electing officers.


No financial decisions were made Thursday, though those may come fairly quickly for the seven-member body. The district must have a plan in place to transfer the assets from the current non-profit hospital to the new district by Jan. 1 to take advantage of higher Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement rates allowed by recently passed legislation.


Brad Berg, a health care attorney for Foster Pepper PLLC in Seattle, began by providing a basic briefing on public hospital districts to the board and around 30 citizens, elected officials and hospital employees in attendance. He then introduced draft bylaws to the seven member board — consisting of commissioners Maryann Welch, Armando Juarez Jr., Miles Longenbaugh, Andy Bickar, Pete Scroggs and Dr. Ryan Farrer in attendance, and Commissioner Bob Torgerson, who attended by teleconference.


In the draft bylaws was a provision to hold one meeting per month. Welch, acknowledging the mammoth task ahead in the next 120 days, immediately suggested meeting twice per month until the end of the year to better accommodate the task.


After discussion, the board decided to hold meetings on the second and fourth Tuesday of each month, with the first meeting of the month at 1 p.m., and the second at 6 p.m., on Torgerson’s suggestion that a night meeting is more convenient for both commissioners and the public.


Public comments


A much longer discussion on public comment at the board’s meetings followed, with opinions called out from the audience repeatedly interrupting the board’s discussion.


In the draft bylaws was a suggested meeting agenda structure without a set time for public comment. Torgerson suggested a comment period be established at the end of each meeting, after the conclusion of the board’s business.


“Should we do that before action is taken?” asked Longenbaugh, who, due to garnering the most votes in the election, was filling in as the acting chairman for the first meeting.


Torgerson explained that he felt the board was elected to conduct its business in public, which he feels very strongly about, but that didn’t necessarily mean the public should get involved before the meeting’s actions are taken.


“The commission could always reconsider its decisions,” he explained. Welch agreed.


“I’m kind of torn on this,” Longenbaugh countered. “If we are truly going to allow public comment, shouldn’t it be before we make a decision?”


Randy Peck of Ocean Shores, a vocal hospital watchdog, didn’t like the idea of only being able to comment after decisions were made, nor did several other audience members.


“It’s sort of like putting the horse behind the cart,” Peck said.


Aberdeen Councilman Jeff Cook chimed in from the audience as well, suggesting a public comment structure similar to his council, where there is an initial comment period at the beginning of the meeting restricted to agenda items only, then a general comment period at the end of the meeting to allow citizens a chance to address the council on any item they choose.


After a few other comments from the audience, with Longenbaugh trying to reign in the discussion, Torgerson reminded the board and the audience that the decision needed to come from the commissioners.


“The commissioners are not discussing our business, we’re having other people discuss our business,” he said.


Bickar helped bring the discussion back to the front table.


“I think public comment on the agenda is acceptable,” the Aberdeen restaurant owner said. “There needs to be some sort of an open forum.”


The commissioners decided on adopting a policy like Aberdeen’s, on a trial basis at Welch’s suggestion, though she expressed some reservations.


“It’s going to be a job for the chair to police that,” she said.


After asking Berg to make adjustments to the meeting schedule, public comment periods and a few other minor changes, the board unanimously approved its new bylaws.


Hence, the hospital board’s next meeting will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 9.


Officers


Scroggs nominated Torgerson and Welch as potential board presidents, and all the board members except Torgerson voted for Welch.


When votes for Torgerson were called for, the Aberdeen Police chief joked over the speakers via teleconference, “My hand is up, but you can’t see it.”


After Welch’s election as president, Scroggs nominated Torgerson for board secretary. With no other nominations, he was unanimously installed.


Welch and Torgerson will serve in the board offices until the end of the year, as the commission’s freshly approved bylaws call for the posts to be up for election at the beginning of every calendar year.


Duty to the public


With the initial housekeeping out of the way, Longenbaugh opened the floor to public comment at the end of the meeting, though much had already been said from the audience.


Several questions about how the board will disseminate agendas and board member contact information in the near future were asked, and, like many things at this stage, the commissioners admitted the mechanisms were a work-in-progress.


Several audience members also cautioned the board to tread carefully through the next four months, among them 88-year-old Jack Burtch.


“I’m concerned about how many people involved in the previous hospital board came to the new one,” he said.


He cautioned the commissioners to not conduct business in the same way as on the private board, and to carefully consider all aspects of the current hospital, including its management staff, before simply moving them over to the public district without appropriate scrutiny.


Peck tried to put the new venture into perspective with his pointed caution to the commissioners. He detailed some of the difficult financial transactions that will need to be carefully monitored in the coming months while reminding the board that many are watching them carefully.


“Each of you has a fiduciary duty to us, the public, not the former (non-profit hospital),” he said. “Do take that very seriously. We the public are watching, and we are concerned.”



Thursday 28 August 2014

Several World of Outlaws storylines will roll into Elma on Labor Day Monday


ELMA — It has become tradition to celebrate Monday Night Outlaws on Labor Day night at Grays Harbor Raceway and this Monday is no exception.


The World of Outlaws will make their 16th appearance at the three-eighths of a mile clay oval at Grays Harbor Fairgrounds and there are several stories following the national tour this time around.


For starters, the “King of the Outlaws” Steve Kinser is running his final Outlaws tour before retirement and could make his last stop in Elma on Monday.


Another retirement came across the tour on Monday when two-time Grays Harbor Raceway event winner and three-time Outlaws champion Sammy Swindell retired immediately from sprint car racing.


Also, the weather, which knocked out two consecutive visits by the Outlaws in 2009-10, will always be a storyline. The reigning 2013 World of Outlaws track champion, Donny Schatz, is leading the overall Outlaws standings and is aiming for his sixth tour championship.


On Monday, the Outlaws will warmup and get rolling at 6 p.m., with the opening ceremonies starting at 7 p.m. The Outlaws will be at Skagit Speedway in Alger on Friday and Saturday and will leave Elma on Monday to run at Willamette Speedway on Tuesday and Southern Oregon Speedway on Wednesday.


Steve Kinser


At 60, Kinser is making one last trip around the sprint car nation to enjoy his time before retiring. With 577 wins, Kinser is the undisputed leader of the Outlaws tour and his 20 Outlaw tour championships may never be duplicated or surpassed.


With that, he’s stepping away from a full-time schedule.


“Oh, I don’t know. I’m 60 years old; you can’t do it forever,” Kinser said to the Las Vegas Review-Journal in March. “We’ll see what happens. Right now, I’m just worried about this year, trying to run good, see where we’re at at the end of the year.”


The last time the Bloomington, Ind., native won on the Outlaws tour was in February in Florida and he is more than 1,000 points behind season standings leader Schatz this season.


Kinser grabbed the second of two Grays Harbor Raceway wins with the Outlaws in 2004. His first came in 1998.


His final Outlaws tour championship came in 2005, the year before he left with Danny Lasoski and Tim Kaeding to join the National Sprint Tour, which was run by the late Grays Harbor Raceway promoter Fred Brownfield in 2006. Kinser finished second overall to Lasoski in the NST title race and marked five race wins in the 45-race schedule.


After Kinser returned to the Outlaws in 2007, he finished second overall in 2010 and third twice in 2008 and 2011.


Kinser is currently racing with Tony Stewart Racing, which also has Schatz on the team.


Sammy Swindell


One driver sprint car fans may not see in Elma is Swindell, who owns two Grays Harbor Raceway wins on the Outlaws tour. The wins came 15 years apart — the first in 1997 and the second in 2012.


Swindell returned to a full-time schedule for the first time in years in 2012 and took care of the field for a wire-to-wire 30-lap victory. The Germantown, Tenn. driver, 59, announced his immediate retirement from sprint car racing on Monday.


“After the last two weeks of our break from racing, I have decided to retire from racing,” Swindell said in a press release from his racing team, Big Game Motorsports. “I have been thinking a lot about this for the last three months. It has been a hard decision to make. I always knew when the time came to retire it would be clear. I’ve had a long and very successful career.”


Swindell said he’ll run midget cars in the Chili Bowl Nationals in Tulsa, Okla., where he’s won five titles in his career, the most in the event’s history.


Swindell owns the second-most Outlaws event wins at 292, including two wins this season. The win in Elma in 2012 was one of a tour-leading 13 on the season and he finished third overall, just 138 points behind Schatz, in the standings.


Swindell owns three Outlaws tour championships — 1981, 1982 and 1997 — in his career.


Weather


In 2009 and 2010, Mother Nature was the winner when she brought more than enough rain to Elma to wash out two consecutive World of Outlaws shows.


Ever since then, sprint car fans will take a look at the short- and long-term weather forecast around the Outlaws shows.


From weather.com, there is rain in the forecast for the Labor Day weekend, but not on Monday. As of Tuesday night, there is only a 20 percent chance of rain on Labor Day.


The forecast can still change, so keep an eye out throughout the week.


Season so far


Schatz, of Minot, N.D., and Daryn Pittman, of Owasso, Okla., have been battling each other for A-main event wins and the top spot on the Outlaws season standings all season.


Schatz has been on a hot streak. After winning the Knoxville Nationals for the seventh time in eight years, Schatz has won four of the last five Outlaws shows, including his home track in Minot and two in a row in Edmonton, Alberta for the Oil City Cup.


Schatz leads the tour with 17 event wins, with Pittman trailing by 177 points. Pittman, who is competing for Kasey Kahne Racing, owns 12 race wins this season and is the reigning Outlaws tour champion. He edged out Schatz for the title in 2013 by just 14 points.



Traveling love for our best friends


The Quinualt Indian Nation played host to the Humane Society Veterinary Medical Association Rural Area Veterinary Services program this week in the Taholah Community Center, giving anyone from the area the opportunity to bring in their cats and dogs for free vaccinations, examinations, neutering, spaying and more complicated surgical prodcedures when necessary. The non-profit organzation consisted of veterinary surgeons, technicians and students from as far away as Scotland who travel the country and specialize in providing veterinary services in Native American reservations, where veterinary services are not as common, while educating both the communities and students within the organization about veterinary care.



School test results mixed on Twin Harbors


Schools on the Twin Harbors reported mixed results as standardized test passing rates for 2013-14 were released Wednesday by the Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction.


MSP or Measurement of Student Progress tests are taken at all levels except at the high school. The 10th graders take the HSPE (High School Proficiency Exam).


This year’s test results carry a bit more weight, since the U.S. Department of Education refused to renew Washington State’s waiver from some of the requirements of the No Child Left Behind Act, including the reporting of “adequate yearly progress.” Without the waiver, schools could be forced to divert some of their federal Title 1 funding to specific programs prescribed by the law if they don’t make adequate yearly progress, taking those funds away from other programs. Title 1 funding supports low-income students.


According to the OSPI, of 295 school districts in the state, just 22 met the adequate yearly progress requirement. At the school level, just 260, out of more than 2,100 elementary, middle and high schools statewide, made adequate yearly progress.


Many Harbor districts and individual schools are in some level of “school improvement” under the law due to not making adequate yearly progress.


Missing from today’s MSP test results release were Aberdeen, Cosmopolis, Montesano and McCleary school districts, who participated in field testing for the Smarter Balanced Assessment. The results of the field test were not compiled and released, so those districts do not have test results for the elementary and middle-school grades that took the new assessment.


The Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium is working to develop the new test that is in line with so-called “common core” standards in English, language arts and math.


Though the Legislature has yet to finalize all the details, the plan is for Smarter Balanced tests to replace the reading and writing portions of the MSP for this school year. High school juniors will also take a Smarter Balanced test, but it will not be a graduation requirement until the Class of 2019, according to the OSPI. Currently, high school sophomores must pass the HSPE to graduate.


Hoquiam


Hoquiam Superintendent Mike Parker noted the mixed results in his district. “we’ve been busy, boy, we have been busy over the past many years with the purpose of wanting to improve and doing all we can to improve.”


The HSPE scores in reading and and writing did drop slightly to 82 percent and 83 percent respectively. “Kids are all different aren’t they?” Parker said. The high school had “really good groups” that scoreD in the 90s a year or two ago, he said.


“We are not where we want to be, but we are not disappointed either,” Parker added. The scores were competitive, he added.


The 9th grade showed some gains and “we have been working hard with our middle school,” where an OSPI coach has been working with the principal and teachers, he said. The students benefited from that work. “We are on the right track there,” he said. “We didn’t quite see the gain we want” in 6th and 7th grade, he said.


Skill groups, where students of like abilities are grouped together, are helping in elementary ages, he added.


Scores dropped in math and writing for 4th and 5th grade, and Parker said OSPI coaching will be added to Central Elementary to help it meet yearly progress this year.


The staff met Tuesday to emphasize personalizing teaching so that each student feels they have an adult advocate, Parker said.


“We have to be prepared to dig deep to reverse the trend at Central,” he said.


“We don’t want any students to fall through the cracks,” he said. “It’s not realistic that 100 percent of the kids meet reading and math standards.”


Part of the challenge is that students with special needs such as fetal alcohol syndrome, learning disabilities, or “social and emotional deficits” are expected to do as well and judged in comparison to other students, he said.


That is the “challenge across all of our schools, we have got to focus and find a way to move those kids higher and we are doing that in middle school,” he said.


Aberdeen and other districts


Aberdeen’s only reported scores — its 10th-grade scores — were higher than last year and close to the state average.


Montesano’s reported scores showed optimistic trends. All of the district’s scores in the 7th, 8th and 10th grades were up except for math in the 7th and writing in the 10th grade.


Pacific County schools had some good news to report, as well. Tenth-graders in Raymond outdid the state average in writing, though they dropped in reading. Willapa Valley 10th-graders scored higher than the state average in both reading and writing.


Elementary students in the Wishkah Valley also did well, particularly in 4th grade where math and writing scores hit the 90th percentile, though reading dropped below 60 percent.


Ocosta Schools reported increases in virtually every grade and every category except the 5th grade, which fell in reading and math. Seventh-graders reported lower math scores, as did 4th-graders.


“We were very happy with the results, we are still analyzing them,” Ocosta Superintendent Dr. Paula Akerlund said. “We are actually looking at what our strategies for even hopefully strengthening our scores are … yeah, we were pretty pleased.”


Unlike Hoquiam, Ocosta did not have to send a letter to parents saying they have failing schools.


“We are one of those districts that did not fail, we had certain subgroups where we did not make AYP overall results (but) we did not have to send a letter to parents saying we were ‘failing schools.’ ”


With the changes next year to standardized tests and the move to common core, Ocosta is in the same boat as most everyone else. “We are just looking at all that right now,” she said.



Airport’s future up in the air at appreciation event


The fog cleared just on time to allow several landings and takeoffs for Airport Appreciation Day Saturday at the Ocean Shores Municipal Airport.


What remains unclear is the future of the airport after the Federal Aviation Administration recently declassified the city-run facility because it has fewer than 10 planes based on site.


On Saturday, members of the volunteer citizens committee that oversees the airport and about 25 people listened to longtime resident Lee Funderberger give a history of the airport, with this cautionary conclusion:


“I really hope this airport continues to be an attraction to this city,” Funderberger said. “A city without an airport, to me, is a city that is not alive.”


Funderberger told how in the 1960s he first flew from Oregon to Ocean Shores when the airport used to be located on what is now the 14th fairway to the golf course, behind Shores Bowl and the Bank of the Pacific. Prior to that, the family would fly to Copalis Beach and land on the beach. A few planes still exist that land there to this day.


“We would fly to Copalis Beach, where there is a natural beach runway there, dig clams and then fly back and land at Ocean Shores and walk over to the Ocean Shores Inn for lunch or dinner,” he recalled. “We found out about Ocean Shores that way, and that was the late 1960s or early ’70s.”


While the airport being in downtown Ocean Shores was convenient, it also proved to be hazardous. The move of the airport to the current site on the harbor side of the peninsula was caused in large part by the inevitable accident: a plane clipped some of the power lines behind what is now the pharmacy.


“Luckily, the plane landed safely but it did take the power lines down and thereafter they were buried,” Funderberger said. “We learned something, and that brought up the idea of moving the airport and building a bigger airport, because there was no room for expansion there.”


In late 1980, the search began for funding and design, along with wetlands and shorelines reviews, since the new proposed site off Duck Lake Drive needed to be filled in several areas.


In July 1984, the bids were opened and Quigg Brothers from Aberdeen were the low bidders on the project. Construction took about two years.


“What a change that was, out here in the open and not in downtown,” Funderberger said.


The airport back then was named for Gale Stokes, a former chief of police, who also was an avid pilot.


“According to many reports, he was the very first person to do a touch-and-go before the paving was completed,” Funderberger said of the chief.


Transportation, however, always has been an issue for the airport. Funderberger’s father, Glen, and other pilots who used the airport once created a pilot’s lounge and started a volunteer taxi from the airport using a former city patrol car that had been surplussed. No such facility or service now exists.


“That’s our biggest challenge to this day, getting to and from town,” said Bill Capron, who chairs the city’s airport committee.


Funderberger noted the airport became a political issue within city government after it moved to the new location away from downtown and the pilot’s lounge was deemed to be a non-conforming structure as a trailer in 1992.


“Pilots to this day still have to arrange transportation to and from here,” Funderberger said.


Until its recent move, when it failed to classify the Ocean Shores Airport, the FAA had provided a needed boost in funding some of the maintenance and upkeep, along with improvements at the airport. That money now appears to be in jeopardy.


In recent years, the runway has been extended, there are new lights, and the taxiways are no longer grass. Most of the improvements have been paid for with grants and matching funds from the FAA and the city. But the federal money will no longer be coming in if the airport cannot regain its classification as a general aviation runway. Currently, there are only three airplanes based at the airport, the City Council was told in a report last month.


“The FAA has changed the ruling on things. If you don’t have ten airplanes at home on the field, they are not interested in funding too much any more,” Funderberger explained.


“So what does the future hold here? Where will the general aviation go in the next couple of decades? We’re not sure. But I can tell you this, many good people have given their time and their lives, and some of their personal funds as in hangars being built, to make this field what it is today.”



AG warns high court of “slippery slope” on public education


OLYMPIA — The Washington Supreme Court should not go down a “slippery slope” and punish the Legislature because it didn’t come up with a complete plan to improve public schools, the state attorney general’s office said.


Although public education is the state’s “paramount” duty, it is not the only duty, and the Legislature still has to pay for programs for public health, safety and welfare, Attorney General Bob Ferguson and a group of senior assistants said this week in their last written argument before all sides in the case appear before the state’s highest court next Wednesday.


“It is not appropriate for the court to hold the state in contempt because the Legislature did not pass a bill or resolution,” they argued. “Holding the state in contempt for failing to legislate is a slippery slope.”


The attorneys filed a final argument for the Legislature in the case commonly referred to as McCleary, the name of one set of parents who sued the state for failing to provide adequate money for public schools. In a landmark decision in 2012, the state’s highest court agreed and ordered the Legislature come up with a plan to meet its “paramount” constitutional duty by the 2017-18 school year, something that by some estimates could cost more than $4 billion.


After two special sessions in 2013, the Legislature did add about $1 billion to education for the two-year-budget that started that fall. This January, the court said it wanted a plan on how the Legislature would handle the rest of the job. But with Democrats firmly in control of the House and a predominantly Republican coalition in charge of the Senate, legislators couldn’t agree to the next round of changes, and essentially told the court that in April.


The coalition of families, community groups and education organizations who won the earlier ruling asked the court to find the Legislature in contempt and impose some sanctions that were threatened when the orders first came down — which could include the justices taking over the budget process. The court ordered all sides to show up Sept. 3 to make their best case on why sanctions should or should not be handed out to the Legislature.


The prospect of the court sanctioning the Legislature or dictating terms on how much the state should budget for education has legislators and legal scholars warning about a separation of powers conflict, which state attorneys highlighted in their brief.


The Legislature, they said, “is a coequal branch of government … and it possesses some powers beyond the court’s authority to command.” Among those are the power to levy taxes and decide how that money is spent, decisions which the court is “not equipped” to make, they said.


Even though the Legislature didn’t come up with a plan, the January order did set the stage for the next big chance to make real progress next year, attorneys argued: “The true measure of progress will be the actions the Legislature takes in the 2015 session.”



Hospital honors doctor who perished in Fox Island fire


A magnolia tree and bench stand outside the emergency room of St. Anthony Hospital in Gig Harbor, a quiet respite from the trauma inside.


On Tuesday morning, hospital employees, law enforcement and fire personnel gathered to watch the tree and bench be dedicated in the memory of Dr. Thomas Babson, an emergency room physician at the hospital.


On Dec. 4, the 62-year-old Babson and his 8-year-old daughter Allie died in a house fire at their Fox Island home. They are survived by wife and mother June; daughter Katie; and son Tobey, Allie’s twin brother. The family was on hand to see the tree dedicated.


Babson traveled to small hospitals around the state, including Summit Pacific Medical Center in Elma, where he worked in the emergency room several times a month.


Katie and Tobey ceremonially watered and planted the tree at the dedication. Katie spread dirt around the base while Tobey used a watering can to water it. He then watered the flowers around the tree.


Coworkers of Babson from St. Anthony remembered a man who was kind, giving and generous. Human resources director Vicki Lackman said the summertime dedication had been in the works for awhile. The hospital wanted time to let the leaves grow in and the tree to stretch closer to the sky. The plaque calls Babson “hero, healer, colleague, friend.”


In addition to being a doctor, Babson was also a reserve deputy sheriff with the Pierce County Sheriff’s Department. Members of the department came out to pay respects at the ceremony.


The bench and tree provide shade and a resting place for those in the emergency room. Rev. Jo Nivling, who has been chaplain at the hospital for about a year, closed the ceremony with a prayer asking that “(the) space would be one to help people remember that there is hope and healing even at the most tragic of times.”



Abandoned vehicle leads to search for Seattle woman


The Grays Harbor Sheriff’s Office is looking for information about a missing Seattle woman after her car was found abandoned on a logging road near the Quinault Ridge Road on Friday.


The U.S. Forrest Service notified the Sheriff’s Office of the abandoned 2000 Honda Civic, which had been located by hunters scouting the area near Neilton. The car was in a remote area and a deputy was eventually able to make it to the vehicle. The car was overgrown with vegetation, so it is believed the car had been there for some time. The keys were still inside, as were camping and hiking gear. There were no clues as to what may have happened to the vehicle’s occupants, the Sheriff’s Office reported.


The vehicle is registered to 33-year-old Donna Van Zandt of Seattle. Investigators located family and friends of Van Zandt and were able to determine that none of them had seen her since April. Family members explained that Van Zandt’s father had apparently been murdered in New York in January, and April would have marked two years since the death of her mother, according to the Sheriff’s Office.


On Sunday, a search and rescue effort was mounted near the abandoned vehicle, but Van Zandt was not located. Anyone with information on the whereabouts of Van Zandt is asked to call Grays Harbor Sheriff’s Detective Keith Peterson at (360) 249-3711.



Wednesday 27 August 2014

Parnell murder trial put off again


The murder trial of Patrick Parnel on charges he killed his newborn baby in Ocean Shores in 2013 has been rescheduled for Sept. 30 and may be pushed back yet again.


Grays Harbor Interim Chief Deputy Prosecutor Katie Svoboda said the case had been set for trial on Tuesday before being rescheduled, and that witness availability issues might force another delay with the rescheduled date.


Parnel, now 23, is being held in Grays Harbor County Jail in Montesano with bail set at $1 million. He was originally arrested and booked April 6, 2013, after the body of the infant girl was found in a residential lot in Ocean Shores.


Police found Parnel’s girlfriend, Brittany Taylor, had given birth to the girl in an Ocean Shores motel room and then Parnel is accused of abandoning it on the vacant property, where it was found dead by a passerby.


Taylor, of Humptulips, pleaded guilty to first-degree abandonment of a dependent person and has been sentenced to four years, 10 months in prison. Parnel, however, has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder in his child’s death.


After he left the hotel room with the baby, prosecutors allege he hit the girl in the head with a tire iron before leaving her in the bushes, where a jogger found her the next morning. An autopsy of the girl found her cause of death was blunt force injury.


Parnel’s trial was initially set for Nov. 13 last year.



Tuesday 26 August 2014

The man behind the Revival


How does Seattle T-shirt brand Horses Cut Shop relate to Grays Harbor?


It’s the brain-child of Gabe Johnson, a former Aberdonian who now lives in Seattle’s Queen Anne Hill neighborhood. After years of touring the nation finding quirky, hole-in-the-wall places to profile on his T-shirts, Johnson is returning to his roots with a line of Grays Harbor-inspired garments and a Timber Revival on the grounds of the Polson Museum.


“I’m an Aberdeen guy, four generations,” Johnson said. “My family is steeped in history here, and I’m ready for that to inspire my work.”


Into the T-shirt business


Johnson left Grays Harbor in 1980 when the region was under going major changes — a decline in the timber industry due to foreign competition and the spotted owl, and the following economic impacts.


“When I left, it was during the time when you could still graduate from high school and get a good job,” Johnson said. “My dad wanted me to stay and my mom wanted me to go.”


He left to attend the University of Washington and has lived in Seattle ever since, besides a brief stint in Minneapolis. He got caught up in the dot-com boom, but tired of the fast-paced lifestyle that accompanies the competitive field.


“More money, longer hours until the point where it just wasn’t the kind of life I wanted to live,” Johnson said.


He got his start in the clothing business in 2004 when he began working with a friend, Peter Smith, who made and sold bar T-shirts. He quit his job as marketing director for a technology firm in 2008 and hit the road in an old Chevy Suburban towing a vintage Airstream trailer in search of new ideas.


“For 18 months, I lived on the road making T-shirts and telling stories,” Johnson said.


At about the same time, he started another business venture: a private social club called Horses Cut Shop, located in Seattle’s eccentric Fremont neighborhood.


“The social scene wasn’t giving me what I needed, or what my friends needed,” Johnson said. “So we carved out a little place of our own in an old garage where they used to part out cars, a chop shop.”


The “Cut Shop” portion of the name is a nod to venue’s former function, and “Horses” references social clubs found across the United States — the Benevolent Protective Order of the Elks, the Fraternal Order of the Eagles and the Lions Club.


“All the cool animals were taken,” Johnson said. “So what’s left? A horse. It’s kind of the quintessential American mammal that embodies the American spirit.”


Eventually, he and Smith merged their respective businesses, keeping the name Horses Cut Shop but closing the social club. The duo is still work together, with Smith running the business and Johnson browsing the country for new ideas.


Telling stories on shirts


Most of the T-shirts — which are sold online and at Nordstrom — feature old business logos. The Harborena shirt, which commemorates Hoquiam’s still-functional skating rink, is printed with a winged roller skate that’s modeled after the rink’s sign and an older sign on display.


“Every time I go into Harborena, it’s strange how a physical place can transport you back in time,” Johnson said. “Because it’s not just memory, it’s a physical thing. I remember that bench, I remember that door. You can’t see yourself, so you almost feel like you’re 13 again.”


And those deep-seeded memories are the reason and the inspiration for the Timber Revival and a line of Grays Harbor T-shirts.


“It’s not enough to just do a shirt for Harborena,” Johnson said. “I wanted to do more.”


He’s “resurrected” logos from several local entities, including Rabey Trucking and Grays Harbor College, and will begin selling garments featuring those logos online Aug. 30. The shirts will also be available at the Timber Revival Aug. 30. Proceeds from these shirts will benefit the businesses that provided the logos in addition to Grays Harbor College’s Natural Resources program


Johnson identified Hoquiam’s Polson Museum as the perfect venue for the celebration, which will feature food and live music. He approached John Larson, the museum director, with the idea. Larson said he recognized that they had a similar goal: educating people about the region’s rich history although Larson’s work typically focuses on an earlier time period.


“Just the idea of the timber revival is something we’re trying to do with our timber camp,” Larson said. “Just keeping the idea alive.”


The Timber Revival will take place Aug. 30 from noon to 8 p.m. at the Polson Museum. T-shirts can be purchased at http://ift.tt/1zzttQf. Grays Harbor T-shirts will be availible Aug. 30.



“Next generation” of civic group gets together in Hoquiam


Hoquiam’s elected officials are harnessing the power of Facebook to connect constituents with the Re-Vision Hoquiam group, similar in form and function to Our Aberdeen.


Denise Anderson, who started her first term on the Hoquiam City Council in January, started the group in early July, and already 140 Harborites have signed on as supporters, discussing issues from drug use to bike paths on the social media site.


Anderson said she started the group to find a more positive way to discuss Hoquiam’s problems in the wake of the city laying off then re-hiring four firefighters and months of indecision on marijuana legalization.


“The goal is ever-changing,” Anderson said. “But the original thought was that we needed it after the firefighter thing and not reaching a decision on the marijuana.”


The conversations that started on Facebook have carried over to a crowded meeting at Hoquiam City Hall in July and another at the Hoquiam Timberland Regional Library on Aug. 20, with Mayor Jack Durney moderating the discussion.


But the hardest thing will be translating those discussions into actions, Anderson said. The key will be to reach out to members of the community who have expertise in different fields. For example, some citizens expressed a desire for more walking and biking paths in the city, so the group invited Catherine Corkery, a health educator for Grays Harbor Public Health &Social Services to share her ideas at the August meeting.


Corkery explained that there’s already a local movement to increase mobility county-wide through the CONNECT Grays Harbor Coalition — and that Re-Vision Hoquiam could be a key part of helping to in get projects started in the city.


“There are some great ideas floating around, and it’s just a matter of getting people together to look at them,” Corkery said. “The idea is to get communities interested and educated so they can move forward.”


Citizens also had a chance to introduce their own ideas.


There’s a precedent for community groups being able to create change within the city, Durney said, drawing a comparison to the Hometown Hoquiam meetings he started early in his career as Hoquiam mayor.


“We created a list of things we wanted to accomplish, and we’ve worked our way through them,” Durney said.


Successes of Hometown Hoquiam include the creation of the Hoquiam Business Association and a sidewalk repaving project. He called Re-Vision Hoquiam the “next generation of city improvement groups.”


The August meeting didn’t just draw citizens from west of Myrtle Street. Several Aberdonians were also in attendance, including Aberdeen City Councilman Jeff Cook and Al Gregory of the Gregorian Group.


“We need to work independently and together,” Gregory said.


Citizens who would like to get involved with Re-Vision Hoquiam should visit the Facebook page to participate in discussions and find information about upcoming meetings, Anderson said. The Facebook page can be found at http://ift.tt/1sw4paj 82000283139/.



Nirvana and Aberdeen mural up, dedication is Sept. 20


The “Nirvana and Aberdeen” mural was installed over the weekend on the upper Wishkah Street side of Moore’s Interiors and will be dedicated on Sept. 20.


The mural was envisioned and executed by four local artists working under artist Erik Sandgren, who was commissioned by civic group Our Aberdeen to do the work shortly before the 47th birthday of Kurt Cobain on Feb. 20. Cobain grew up in Aberdeen and co-founded Nirvana.


Cobain’s close friend, Nirvana co-founder, bassist and former Harborite, Krist Novoselic has agreed to say a few words.


The city celebrated Cobain’s birthday for the first time this year. Cobain committed suicide in 1994. Nirvana was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame recently on the first ballot.


Sandgren and the four artists worked on the vision through email. Artists Dominic Senibaldi of Indianapolis, Ind., Jason Sobottka of DuPont, Anthony James Cotham of Buffalo, N.Y., and David Wall of Olympia traveled to Aberdeen this summer to work on the mural with Sandgren in the historic Electric Building. All have studied or worked with the Grays Harbor College fine arts instructor before.


The mural is 68 feet long and ranges from four to eight feet high and took 720 hours of artist time, Sylvia Dickerson of Our Aberdeen said.


The dedication will also celebrate two other Our Aberdeen murals that were worked on this summer. There will also be a street fair on Broadway, starting at 5:15 p.m. on Sept. 20, Dickerson said.


The other murals to be celebrated will be Jenny Fisher’s Kelp Forest mural, which was painted on the side of City Center Drug at 108 E. Wishkah St., and the restored Bob McCausland Southside Swanson’s mural, if restorer Galvin Miller is finished by then, Dickerson said.


“The majority of the limelight will be devoted to ‘Nirvana and Aberdeen,’ ” she said.



Man charged with killing dog


A 27-year-old Aberdeen man has been charged with animal cruelty in the first degree for the brutal killing of his family’s dog.


Acting Prosecutor Gerald Fuller says John T. Robinson is accused of using a railroad stake and tying the dog up to die. And when that didn’t kill the dog, Robinson allegedly brutally beat the dog.


Robinson told Aberdeen detectives that the dog had asked him to kill him. The charging papers state that Robinson’s family described the man as “schizophrenic,” and the man’s mother had gone to stay in Ocean Shores because he “was acting strangely and making delusional statements, which scared her so she immediately left.”


Robinson allegedly led Aberdeen police officers to the dog’s body near the railroad tracks on Port Industrial Road.


“The dog was found lying on its right side with his legs stiffly straightened out,” the charging documents state. “There was a long metallic item with a wooden handle sticking out of the top of the dog’s left side. The officer observed that the dog appeared to have been stabbed several times. … The officer could observe a slight amount of frothy blood coming from the dog’s lower jaw consistent with a punctured lung. … The dog was tied with a short rope to a black harness, which was attached to a fence post. The dog had struggled against the harness pulling back and was able to get one of his front legs out of the harness before he collapsed. A retractable walking leash was lying nearby with the frayed end hanging over the fence post. The other end was still attached to the D-ring on the dog’s harness. It appeared that the dog had either chewed through or broken the leash before being hooked up with the white rope to the fence post. A four-by-four wooden post was nearby. Officers observed blood smears on the post.”


A veterinarian confirmed the dog died from its injuries, including a punctured lung and skull fractures.


The dog was a grown boxer named “Duncan.” Bail for was set for $10,000.



Pride in Hoquiam


The Grays Harbor LGBTQ community took its pride to a new level this weekend, with the first-ever Pride Festival on Saturday in Hoquiam sponsored by the newly-formed Out & Proud Coalition. Live music, carnival-style games, and a drag show were just some of the activities enjoyed by festival goers.



Montesano player wins Little League sportsmanship award


WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — Even though it wasn’t in the form he imagined, Montesano Little League all-star Cole Daniels of Montesano realized his goal of making it to Williamsport.


The 12-year-old Daniels received Little League’s International Good Sport of the Year award during the Little League World Series that concluded Sunday in Pennsylvania.


The Good Sport award annually recognizes a Little League player who has demonstrated superior qualities of sportsmanship, leadership, a commitment to teamwork and a desire to excel. The sole recipient of the honor, Daniels was chosen from thousands of nominees internationally.


“Cole’s willingness to help other players and the respect he shows for both his peers and elders are great examples of what we hope every Little League learns from the game,” Little League President and CEO Stephen D. Keener said in a press release. “Cole proves that good sportsmanship is not about your talent and ability, but rather your attitude and love for the game.”


The shortstop on Montesano’s district runner-up major league team, Daniels was nominated by Montesano Little League President Steve Bove.


“He puts 100 percent effort on every play and does it with a smile,” Bove said in the press release. “Win or lose, he is the first in line to shake hands and congratulate his opponents. (Off the field), Cole is always willing to help, whether it is in the scorebooth or picking up garbage in the stands.”


Daniels received the award at a banquet last Thursday. Required to give an acceptance speech, he handled it well enough that ESPN broadcaster Karl Ravech, who followed him to the podium, jokingly referred to Cole as the next commissioner of Major League Baseball.


“I think it is an honor, but also a responsibility,” Cole said in the press release. “It’s important how you act on and off the field. Kids notice, parents notice, teammates note. Having a good attitude is important. Sometimes kids can be more of an influence than even coaches, so I feel it is my job to be a role model to the younger kids in Little League if I can. I had a kid ask me if he could wear my number next year. That was pretty awesome.”


Cole and his parents, Corey and Kellie Daniels, received an all-expense trip to Pennsylvania. After a couple days in Washington D.C., they watched every Little League World Series game from Wednesday to Sunday. Cole threw out the ceremonial first pitch in Friday’s South Korea-Japan International championship game.


“He was (treated) like a rock star. You can’t believe how much attention he got,” Kellie Daniels said Monday from Gettysburg, Pa., where the family was touring the famed Civil War battlefield. “We didn’t really know how big it was until we got here.”


Having already attended a Washington Nationals game last week, the Daniels family planned to take in a Tampa Bay Rays-Baltimore Orioles game at Baltimore’s Camden Yards stadium before heading home.


“It was the most incredible trip we’ve ever been on,” Kellie Daniels said Monday.



Sunday 24 August 2014

No one seriously hurt in rollover


No one was seriously hurt when a four-door sedan rolled over while heading east on Highway 12 just outside Aberdeen early Sunday morning, the State Patrol reported.


The driver, Lindsey V. Quintana, 19, of Aberdeen was transported to Grays Harbor Community Hospital where she was treated and released, the nursing supervisor said.


The passenger, Joel C. Beauchamp, 23, of Fort Lewis, was not injured.


The car was headed east just after 2 a.m. when it left the road to the right at Milepost 2. The car rolled and landed on its wheels, the State Patrol said. Seatbelts were used and drugs and alcohol were not, the patrol said.


The accident is still under investigation.



Saturday 23 August 2014

Fair Fun — Pacific County Fair continues Saturday


The Pacific County Fair kicked off Wednesday and will be continuing through Saturday night in Menlo, complete with rides, fair food, prize-winning livestock and live music. Saturday is Kids Day at the fair. The main gates open at 10 a.m. and carnival rides open at 11 a.m. Events include a Prettiest Critter Contest at 11:30 a.m. and 4-H presentations from 1 to 3 p.m. Stage acts range from the Naselle Marimba Band, Tony Wintrip, Country Mile and the Jesse Lee Falls Band, in addition to a magic show and hypnotist show. The night’s entertainment rounds out with the North Country Blue Grass Band at 8:30 p.m. For more information, go to http://ift.tt/1BOssYs.



Michael Bruce: A mayor of all seasons


Mayor of Westport Michael Bruce likes to live by the words: “Do what you want to do and do it well.”


He seems to apply them to his lifetime of professions: logging, construction, education, broadcasting, politics and photography.


His white hair and beard are neatly trimmed on a recent morning when he is dressed casually in hiking boots, soft cloth pants, a t-shirt and a fleece vest seated in his airy and pleasant office in city hall adorned with photographs, cartoons and other mementos of his three terms.


Two out of his three post-graduate degrees were earned during his stint as mayor. He wanted to improve his governmental knowledge so he pursued an master’s business administration with an emphasis on human resources from the University of Phoenix and a master’s in public administration, from Strayer University. That is in addition to the master’s in speech he earned at Washington State University as a young man.


All that for a job that pays $500 per month. To him, the benefits of public service are great and worth the investment. He clearly enjoys being mayor and plans to run for a fourth term — there is too much left on his bucket list for the city left to do.


One of the cartoons on the wall depicts a much heftier Bruce at 553 pounds. He had to move in a motorized wheelchair. He lost 90 pounds in 70 days on his own. It wasn’t enough.


He read eight books about his options and chose bariatric surgery.


On Aug. 10, 2010, he had the surgery, dropping to a low weight of 302. He now weighs 318 pounds. Part of his stomach “will never see food again.” He has to drink a lot of fluids and make sure to consume “enough protein to make an Atkins devotee blush,” he said.


It annoys him that restaurants will not allow him to order small portions—his stomach can’t take much.


Old habits die hard and though he feels better, some days he has what he calls buyer’s remorse for having the surgery even though he feels better.


He misses crunchy food the most. Beer tastes good, though carbonation can be tricky. It’s hard to drink wine, too much sugar. He recommends liquid protein drinks from Costco in vanilla and chocolate, served warm or cold.


He walks when he can, but “the polio limp doesn’t make it easy.”


POLIO


Bruce caught the virus as a six-year-old boy. His is the last recorded case of infantile paralysis in Skagit County.


His father had a fear of stories about people dying or being paralyzed by the vaccine so the five Bruce children were not vaccinated.


One morning, he awoke, felt feverish suddenly and couldn’t walk, Bruce remembers. The doctor put him on a table and he fell over. The doctor called in another in disbelief.


“You tell me how I caught it,” he said. But no one could. None of his brothers or sisters had it, no one at school did either. It was never determined how he was infected.


Their home was quarantined. Friends and neighbors left games and toys for the children on the doorstep of their home in Big Lake.


Left with the limp, he watched his brothers played sports. Part of his decision to study broadcasting at WSU was so he could talk about sports if he couldn’t play them.


He was the only one in his family to go to college. WSU Professor Remo Fausti told him he was “good at explaining things.” Fausti guided him to a master’s in speech so that he could teach.


After graduation, he went to work for his father’s logging firm and worked as a college instructor. He helped set up KSVR-FM at Skagit Valley College. He worked as a program director and taught radio for a quarter in the mid-1980s.


He discovered a lifelong passion for photography, studying under Lee Mann, a popular Northwest landscape photographer.


Bruce’s work has been published widely in the state. He never goes anywhere without his camera and shares his work with visitors to his office as well as 2,000 plus followers on Facebook. He also takes photos for Ocasta High School students who cannot afford yearbook photos.


He met his wife, Melissa or Missy, while working in the logging and construction industry. He stopped in for groceries at the deli where she worked. They have been married for 25 years, he helped raise her son and daughter. They have a granddaughter who is 26-months-old.


Then in 1995, the truck he was driving hit a bump on the road in what he calls a freak accident. His head slammed into the the truck’s interior roof. His spine absorbed the shock, he had a compression fracture in his back, and his right leg, the one affected by polio, was re-injured. The doctors told him no more logging or construction work.


He taught remediation and technology. Except for a year in Mansfield near the Grand Coulee Dam, the Bruces lived mostly in Concrete, where he served two terms on the city council.


He helped write virtual classroom parameters for video conferencing across the nine Education Service Districts in the state. Students could sit and learn French in a classroom on the network.


In the aftermath of the accident, he found himself angry. Feeling crippled infuriated him. Perhaps it resurfaced from childhood, he said. He sought help and worked on the anger.


WESTPORT HO


Sometime around the millennium — he is bad at specific years he says — they moved to Westport where he was hired to work as the librarian and technology director in both the Ocasta Elementary and High Schools. It was a seven-day-a-week job. He retired recently.


He volunteered to help bring Timberland Library to Westport. He tried to volunteer for the city and found city hall closed off to newcomers, he said. So he challenged the incumbent mayor Berkeley Barker as an outsider. He ran and earned more votes than the incumbent in the primary in 2001. He ended up winning.


In 2010, the year after being elected to a second term as mayor in 2009, Bruce decided to run for county commissioner, a political job that pays considerably better that would give him a chance to work to help improve the area countywide.


Running as a Democrat, he lost in the primary. It is the one time he has lost an election.


As mayor, he prides himself on working with other mayors in the Grays Harbor Mayors Group. He is chairman of the Grays Harbor Council of Government.


“I have found Mayor Bruce to be unfailingly generous with his time, supportive, and genuinely helpful,” said Ocean Shores Mayor Crystal Dingler.


“It is a pleasure to work with him … We both find humor in county partisan politics knowing we serve all citizens of our city regardless of their political persuasions,” said Mayor Ken Estes of Montesano.


Indeed, Bruce said the only sleepless night he has had was over partisan angling within his own party.


He plans to run for mayor again in 2015, and is on the fence about running for commissioner in District 2 in 2016. He has that bucket list for Westport.


WESTPORT BUCKET LIST


Bruce praises team members at the city, such as Margo Tackett who is retiring in December and City Administrator Randy Lewis.


He wants to help develop more industry besides tourism in the area. He sees positive trends. The yacht company is hiring, there are new cold storage and production facilities. The Quinault Indian Nation just invested in a seafood processing plant.


Keeping business open year round is a struggle.


“We also desperately need a local grocery store to serve the needs of Westport and South Beach visitors,” he said.


There is hope after a long recession.


“(This year) will go down as probably the best charterboat fishing season of the decade,” he said.


Westport is a great place to start a business. Property prices are slowly edging up. He points to recently re-stained luxury homes and other residential enclaves just waiting for the economy to turn around. The general fund is slowly growing.


The city is putting final touches on improvements at Gar Baseball Park and more park upgrades are planned.


Bruce tours his town in his “beach rig,” a 1994 Chevy Blazer. He is proud of the new boardwalk, and the condominiums.


He spots an eyesore of an RV on Wilson Avenue and makes a mental note.


He drives atop tons of pounded sand barrier and the rock jetty that keeps the sea from eroding the beach. He’d prefer the more solid rocks of riprap to the sand, but he’ll take the federal government’s perennial effort to keep the sea at bay.


His photographer’s eye catches the wings of flocks of brown pelicans. He loves them and as if on cue, they take flight.


What is challenging about being mayor of Westport? “Every day is different.”


Erin Hart: 360-537-3932 or ehart@thedailyworld.com and @DW_Erin on Twitter



GHC women’s soccer makes its debut this season


Hired in January, the first thing Grays Harbor College women’s soccer head coach Chris Schumacher did was start recruiting. He’s been on the recruiting trail ever since, not including mounds of paperwork, logistics and running his two businesses in Elma.


Thus, the Grays Harbor College women’s soccer program was born.


On Tuesday, the Chokers will take the field at Starfire Complex in Tukwila at the season-opening NWAC Friendlies. Thirteen players will suit up for the Chokers in their inaugural match.


GHC’s first home match at Stewart Field will be at noon on Sept. 9 against Green River College. The majority of the Chokers’ matches will be played on Fridays and Saturdays and all of the home matches will start at noon.


“But are friendlies really friendlies?” Schumacher asked rhetorically. “It has been an ongoing process to get everything up and running. It is a lot of work, but we’ll get to the good part — playing the games — soon enough. We’ve been welcomed with open arms here on the Harbor. More people are hearing about us and the interest is growing.”


The last time GHC fielded a soccer program was in 2001, when the men’s program folded after a 2-16-2 record and 10 losing seasons. This is the first GHC women’s soccer team and it’ll be stocked full of Twin Harbors players in blue and white.


“The education and the quality of the school we play for is important,” said Schumacher, who coached the Elma High School girls varsity soccer team for seven seasons prior to joining the Chokers. “I want to bring in good talent, both locally and regionally. I want to be able to showcase the girls to give them the chance to move on to four-year schools to play soccer and get a good education. That’s a great reputation to have.”


Montesano’s Alyx Miller and Hoquiam’s Jesina Alvarenga are two of the three all-Evergreen 1A all-league players to join the squad this season. Miller, a midfielder, and Alvarenga, a goalkeeper, were both first-team selections in 2013.


Hoquiam’s Kayla Hilliard, who will also play softball for the Chokers in the spring, was a second-team all-league pick in 2013 as a midfielder. Lindsay Leonard will join Alvarenga and Hilliard on the team as well.


Aberdeen has three players on the roster — defender/midfielder Jill Hardy, defender/midfielder Kaylee Nguyen and midfielder Moriah Martin — with Johana Esparza representing Lake Quinault, which doesn’t field a high school soccer team.


Eatonville’s Kaitlyn Roebuck and three Las Vegas-based players — goalkeeper Elena Duenas and midfielder/forwards Elvia Duenas and Reina Alonzo — round out the roster.


“There’s a lot of talent here, but we will be short on substitutes,” Schumacher said. “We’re going to create as many scoring opportunities as possible. We all need to work together to get this going.”


The veteran high school and youth head coach noted that he’ll be learning the style of play in the NWAC as the season progresses. He emphasized that the team will be fast-paced, physical and loaded with scoring potential regardless.


During the pre-season workouts, the team has been working with a physical fitness trainer at the YMCA of Grays Harbor to help them survive the rigors of a 90-minute match and a compact 10-week, 20-match season.


Even as a first-year program, Schumacher hasn’t dampened his confidence or expectations for this season.


“We’ll fly under the radar, just like how I like it,” Schumacher said. “We’re going to have a good season.”


The squad is still open to accepting walk-on players. Any players who are enrolled at GHC who are interested in turning out, you can contact Schumacher at cschumacher@ghc.edu.



Friday 22 August 2014

Commissioner race recount: Olson to face Raines in November


The machine recount in the Grays Harbor County Commissioner, District 3 race is complete and Republican Keith Olson still holds a 10-vote lead over Democrat Al Smith in the contest to advance to the general election, Election Supervisor Katy Moore said Friday.


No challenge of the recount result has been filed so far.


Olson will face Cosmopolis Mayor Vickie Raines, who is running with no party preference, in the November election. Olson has led Smith since the first updated count of the primary votes. The lead was so narrow, a machine recount was mandated by law.


The race will pit Olson, who is from Quinault in the rural and northernmost area of the District 3 against Raines, the longtime mayor of Cosmopolis. The district also contains the urban areas of Hoquiam and Ocean Shores. It runs from Central Park west along the north end of the Harbor to North Beach and north up to the border with Jefferson County.


The defeat of Smith is a loss for Democrats. Fellow Democrat, Commission President Frank Gordon, championed Smith’s candidacy and actively opposed Raines in the race.



Thursday 21 August 2014

School Board approves bids for fuel and milk


The Aberdeen School Board unanimously approved the bids to supply fuel for vehicles and milk for its about 3,090 students at its meeting Tuesday evening at the Aberdeen High School.


First, the board approved the bid from Acme Fuel Company/Fast Fuel in Olympia for a price ranging from $3.11 for unleaded gasoline to $3.13 for diesel with a power service additive.


There was only one bid for supplying the district with fuel, district business manager David Herrington said. Board member Jennifer Hagen wondered why MASCO Petroleum, a local company, did not bid. Superintendent Tom Opstad and Herrington confirmed MASCO was notified of the bid request but that no bid was submitted.


“Unfortunate,” she said. Opstad theorized it may be because MASCO, which supplied the district last year, has been busy since Pettit Oil closed its doors abruptly earlier this year. MASCO took over a lot of Pettit’s fuel and home heating business in the region.


The board also voted unanimously to accept the low bid of $127,747.92 from Dairy Fresh Farms to supply the district with skim, 1 and 2 percent low-fat milk, chocolate- and strawberry-flavored milk, non-fat cottage cheese, no-fat sour cream, light sour cream and all purpose shake mix. The products cost just under $10,000 more than the bid price of $117,937.32 from last year.


The only other bid was from Food Services of America, which bid high at $146,360.00.


Other board members voting yes were President Sandi Bielski, members Jeremy Hawkins and Christi Boora and new member Jamie Walsh. The next school board meeting is set for Sept. 2.



Hoquiam addiction clinic draws more than 100 patients


Since officially opening in mid-June, Evergreen Treatment Services has become one of the busier businesses in downtown Hoquiam, drawing 119 patients for opioid addiction treatment on a daily basis.


Clinic Director Doug Stenchever said he hadn’t expected the patient load to grow so rapidly — and the clinic started with 50 patients who had previously been treated at the Olympia clinic. About 40 additional patients are currently on the waiting list.


“We’ve had a deluge of people coming to see us,” Stenchever said. “We’re getting people in as fast as we can, but the word has gotten out faster than we can handle.”


And despite initial concerns from Hoquiam Police Chief Jeff Myers, the business has been running smoothly and there hasn’t been an increase in criminal activity in the area.


“I am not aware of any issues over there whatsoever, other than a few issues with drivers not familiar with the one-way street,” Myers wrote in an email.


Stenchever also runs the Olympia Evergreen Treatment Services clinic and was trained at one of the Seattle clinics. Most Seattle patients have some type of state-funded insurance — Medicaid or Apple Health, he said. In Olympia, about 50 percent of patients are covered by state-funded insurance, and the rest are employed and use private insurance.


He said he wasn’t sure what to expect from Grays Harbor.


“I think the tendency is that we’re going to see a lot of people on Medicaid and Apple Health, at least early on,” Stenchever said. “And I think those were the people who had the biggest need, and those are the people who are coming to us the quickest.”


Treatment at Evergreen Treatment Services costs people $14 per day, and that amount covers medication, counseling, drug testing and any other costs. Charging for treatment by the day is the most cost-effective practice, he said. If a patient skips a visit, he or she is still charged for that appointment if they’re paying in cash. But Medicaid won’t cover the $14 for a missed appointment.


Before the opening of the Hoquaim clinic, about 50 patients were transported to the Olympia clinic and the cost was covered by the state.


“There were agencies around the county that didn’t think that we could have a clinic here,” Stenchever said. “They didn’t think we had the resources, they didn’t think we could get the counsellors, they didn’t think we could get the medical staff. But we’ve showed that we can.”


And those same resources have allowed the clinic to grow.


The first step to becoming an Evergreen Treatment Services patient is to undergo a psychosocial assessment to determine whether the person has an addiction, Stenchever said. If they do, patients are scheduled for an appointment with the clinic’s medical staff the following day to medically confirm that they’re actually addicted.


He explained that these measures are necessary to make sure that drug seekers aren’t allowed into the program. “They’ve got to show physical symptoms of being ill with withdrawal, blood pressure, eyes, that kind of thing,” Stenchever said. “And you can’t fake that.”


New patients are then placed on a low dose of methadone and continue to meet with medical staff to find the correct dose, he said. They also meet with counsellors on a weekly basis for the first 90 days of treatments — longer if they’re still using heroin or other drugs.


Stenchever said he hopes to expand the clinic’s treatment options in coming months to include Suboxone, another medication used for opioid replacement.


“We’ve had so many people coming in for the methodone we haven’t even had time to think about the Suboxone,” Stenchever said.


Opioid addiction is a “chronic condition,” Stenchever said, so many patients will continue with some level of treatment throughout their lives.


“Opioid addiction is a long-term problem, so we get to work with them long-term and see the change,” Stenchever said.



Angling for the big catch


Saturday marked the beginning of the coho salmon fishing season for the Chehalis River, attracting anglers by land and boat from around the Harbor. Anglers are permitted to keep up to six cohos, including three adults but must release adult chinook.



First-ever Pride Festival


Merriment will ensue this weekend for Grays Harbor LGBTQ community with the first-ever Pride Festival sponsored by the newly formed, as of June 2014, Out &Proud Grays Harbor Coalition. The festivities will start at 11 a.m. along 8th and Levee streets in Hoquiam.


Expect free carnival-style games as well as bouncey houses for kids. There will be live music including Full Moon Radio, Hot Cops, Driftin’ Harbour Rats and Kimya Dawson. Many food vendors, including the Grays Harbor Burger Wagon serving their infamous onion burgers, and the 8th Street Ale House will have a beer garden and BBQ for adults.


In addition to food and drink, more than 45 vendors are signed up and will offer unique items such as jewelry and art.


According to Sarah Gillies-Alvarez, one of the event’s organizers, many organizations from churches to medicinal marijuana as well as other non-profits and commu- nity resources will have booths with information about their organizations.


The downtown festival will continue until 4 p.m, but the festivities will not end at that time.


At 7:30 p.m. the event will regain momentum, this time at the 7th St. Theatre, where you will be treated to a drag show for all ages featuring per- formers such as Ceasar Hart, Adam Cooper, Jessah Kiah, Mr. Gay Washington and many more.GH Wine Sellars will be in the lobby serving specialty drinks during the evening to the 21+ crowd during the event and the theatre will be selling concessions. Bring your wallet; there will be many opportunities to support a good cause.


After the drag show, there will be a short intermission before the showing of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” at 10 p.m. Please refrain from bringing squirt guns, hot dogs, buttered toast, rice, confetti, etc. to the theatre; if you would like to interact with the film, now will be a great time to pull out your wallet as Out &Proud will be selling audience participation bags for $5 in the lobby. This is a small price to pay for a really good time. Both events are family friendly and free to attend, but O&P would gladly accept your donation.


Que wallet.


If you would like VIP seating, O&P is offering the front row for $10 per seat.


To fund the expense of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show,” Gillies-Alvarez created a gofundme campaign hoping to raise $1,150 as of Wednesday the campaign had collected a little more than half. The show will go on and you can continue to donate to the campaign throughout the weekend.


All of the proceeds from the event will go toward the non-profit organization, Out &Proud Grays Harbor Coalition.


Grays Harbor Pride Festival and Out &Proud Grays Harbor Coalition, a nonprofit organization, are dedicated to advocacy and education to create a just society free of discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity. All proceeds from these events will help us to create a community where everyone can live freely without fear of violence, where identities, relationships and families are respected, in creating a safe Harbor for all humans to express themselves free of judgment. For more information, visit the website at www.opghc.org.



New hospital commissioners to meet Aug. 28


The newly elected Grays Harbor County Public Hospital District 2 commissioners will hold their first public meeting Aug. 28, beginning the process of converting private, non-profit Grays Harbor Community Hospital into a public entity.


The meeting will take place at 1 p.m. in Grays Harbor Community Hospital’s conference room C on the first floor.


Six members of the seven-person board were sworn in Tuesday afternoon at a ceremony in Montesano. Armando Juarez Jr., Dr. Ryan Farrer, Pete Scroggs, Miles Longenbaugh, Andrew Bickar and Robert Torgerson all participated in the ceremony after the primary election results were certified the same day. Commissioner Maryann Welch did not attend the ceremony.


Each commission seat will eventually carry a six-year term, though to offset their elections, two of the these first commissioners will run again next year, two will run in 2017, and three will be up for re-election in 2019, according to Grays Harbor Auditor Vern Spatz.


It was originally thought that these first commissioners would hold two-, four- and six- year terms, but Spatz said Wednesday that, on further investigation, each would be a year less since special district elections always fall on odd-numbered years. Which of the current commissioners get the longer terms is determined by overall vote numbers — the highest vote-getters garner the longest of the initial terms.


Spatz said, based on that criteria, Longenbaugh, Farrer and Juarez will serve five-year terms and be up for election in 2019, Torgerson and Welch will serve three years and face election in 2017, while Bickar and Scroggs will be back on the ballot next year.


Hospital CEO Tom Jensen previously said that commissioners will most likely take care of book keeping items — like deciding on board structure and electing leadership — at their first meeting.


Many of the big decisions commissioners will need to make will take place over the next few months so that the hospital can begin collecting higher Medicaid reimbursement from the state as quickly as possible under a bill passed by the Legislature in February.


Jensen has said that if the plan isn’t in place to transfer the assets by Jan. 1, that higher reimbursement rate could be in jeopardy for next year.


About 75 percent of Grays Harbor Community Hospital’s patients are covered by state programs, giving the hospital a “payer mix” that isn’t conducive to running a profitable business, Jensen said.


The hospital has been running between 2 and 3 percent in the red for about three years and budgets are usually balanced using reserve funds, Jensen explained in an April interview. In 2013, the hospital had about $16 million in dwindling reserves and $106 million in expenditures. So securing the higher reimbursement is critical to stabilizing the budget, Jensen said.


“It’s not a service issue. If I moved this facility to Bellevue, we wouldn’t be having this conversation,” Jensen said. “It’s not a service issue, it’s a payer mix issue.”


The transfer of assets from the non-profit to the hospital district will not take place overnight, and will be decided in negotiations between the new public district and the existing non-profit hospital. The assets — including buildings, equipment and property — in addition to the bonds and other debt will all be part of that negotiation, Jensen said.


“The goal would be that the two organizations did what would be the best as a community asset — the least expensive, the least obtrusive, and to make the bondholders happy with the debt,” he said.


The new board could also levy property tax of up to 75 cents per $1,000 of property value without a vote of the people. Jensen explained that doing so could be important in allowing the district to borrow money.


“A public hospital district can’t leverage it’s assets,” Jensen said. “You can mortgage your home if you wish to purchase something — public hospital districts can’t do that. So they have to secure (their debts) to something, and what they normally secure them to is tax revenue.”


Meetings held by the new commissioners will be open to the public, so citizens will be able to watch as the elected officials make their decisions.



Humpback is third juvenile found on Twin Harbors this year


The carcass of a humpback whale found stranded on Grayland Beach will be allowed to decay naturally, Dyanna Lambourn, marine research biologist for the state Department of Fish &Wildlife said Wednesday.


The whale is the third juvenile to be found on Twin Harbors beaches in less than a year, she said. It is hard to say why they are stranding, just that all three have been juveniles, she said.


The other two were found in late winter and late spring, she said.


A necropsy of the more than 30-foot humpback was conducted Monday. There were recent wounds and lacerations on the tail stock and fluke, “more of the entanglement” type, she said. The damage could have been done by nets, fencing or ropes, for example, she said.


The sex of the whale could not be determined. Tissue samples were taken for “further and ancillary diagnostics” which could take a couple of months, she said.


The department will monitor the decay with state parks which is responsible for the stretch of beach where the whale was found last Sunday.


People from Cascadia Research, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and Westport Aquarium helped with the necropsy. Stranding coordinator Jennifer Olson, from the Whale Museum, came down to participate since she had not had the opportunity to examine a whale before, Lambourn said.



Registered sex offender set to work at the fair arrested


SOUTH BEND — A registered sex offender who was in Pacific County to work at the fair was arrested by sheriff’s deputies after he came to register in the county.


Jason A. Miner, 38, was reporting to the Sheriff’s Office to register within the county as required by state law, Chief Criminal Deputy Pat Matlock said. He was arrested on an outstanding felony warrant out of Yakima County for failing to register as a sex offender there.


Miner, who is from Yakima, was in the county to work for the company contracting carnival rides and activities at the Pacific County Fair.


Miner was booked into the jail and bail is set at $10,000, Matlock said.



Wednesday 20 August 2014

Hospital district commissioners sworn in; first meeting Aug. 28


Six of the seven commissioners of the new Grays Harbor County Public Hospital District 2 were sworn in Tuesday afternoon at a ceremony in Montesano. Armando Juarez Jr., Dr. Ryan Farrer, Pete Scroggs, Miles Longenbaugh, Andrew Bickar and Robert Torgerson all participated in the ceremony after the primary election results were certified the same day. Hospital commissioner Maryann Welch did not attend the ceremony.


The seven-member commission will now begin working to transfer the assets of Aberdeen’s Grays Harbor Community Hospital from its current non-profit structure to the public district.


Each commission seat will eventually carry a six-year term, though to offset their elections, two of the these first commissioners will run again next year, two will run in 2017, and three will be up for re-election in 2019, according to Grays Harbor Auditor Vern Spatz. It was originally thought that these first commissioners would hold two-, four- and six- year terms, but Spatz said Wednesday that, on further investigation, each would be a year less since special district elections always fall on odd-numbered years. Which of the current commissioners get the longer terms is determined by overall vote numbers — the highest vote-getters garner the longest of the initial terms.


Spatz said, based on that criteria, Longenbaugh, Farrer and Juarez will serve five-year terms and be up for election in 2019, Torgerson and Welch will serve three years and face election in 2017, while Bickar and Scroggs will be back on the ballot next year.


The hospital commission will hold its first public meeting at 1 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 28, in Grays Harbor Community Hospital’s Conference Room C on the first floor.