vashon-maury island beachcomber, june 27, 2012
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75¢WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27, 2012 Vol. 57, No. 26 www.vashonbeachcomber.com
BEACHCOMBERVASHON-MAURY ISLAND
AN ARTISTIC LIFE
Trading in a French horn for a paintbrush.
Page 11
LS CEDAR GROWS
Island business set to expand significantly.
Page 4
Special pull-outsectioninside
See pages 13 to 20
An artist’s eye, a teacher’s heart
Natalie Johnson/Staff Photos
Carolyn Buehl is hugged by fifth graders at the end of class. Below, Buehl beams after receiving a Native American blanket at her retirement party.
County plans to cut bus service, explore alternatives
By NATALIE JOHNSONStaff Writer
As Carolyn Buehl began to pack up her classroom at Chautauqua Elementary School last week, organizing art supplies and wrapping delicate monkey masks to send home with stu-dents, she pulled out an old photo album. Inside the album was photo after photo of col-orful student art, many of it held by grinning young artists.
“Some of the kids in there just graduated from VHS,” Buehl said with a smile.
Several of the projects in the photos — animals, insects and planets — complemented what the students were learn-ing in their classrooms at the
time, while others mimicked art-ists the kids studied in Buehl’s class, such as Georgia O’Keefe or Andy Warhol. And for some projects, Buehl, a spunky and energetic older woman, simply played music and asked children to draw what the sounds made them think of.
“If you have an artistic vision, she lets you pursue it instead of telling you what to do,” said Cyrus Sweet, a fifth-grader. “I think that’s why kids behave better in her class.”
This year Chautauqua said goodbye to Buehl, who, after more than 20 years teaching art at the school district, has become known as a beloved mentor, a creative teach-er and a talented artist in her own right. A group hug that ener-
getic fifth-graders gave Buehl last week on one of the last school days epitomizes how class after class of elementary school stu-dents have grown to adore her.
“She has a very fanciful, energetic and yet disciplined approach of bringing artistic expression into kids’ lives,” said Pam McMahn, who heads the Vashon Artists in the Schools Program and whose own children had Buehl as a teacher. “She’s not afraid to experiment with non-traditional ways of opening kids’ eyes to the beauty of visual art.”
Gail Labinski, who used to teach art at Chautauqua as well and is now a reading specialist,
A beloved teacher steps down after a rich career
SEE TEACHER, 23
Vashon is one of three areas chosen for pilot project By NATALIE JOHNSONStaff Writer
Some of Vashon’s lesser-used bus trips may be cancelled as soon as next year under a King County plan to replace bus service in less populated areas with more cost-effective transportation such as shuttles or carpools.
The plan, which identifies Vashon as one of three sites for pilot projects, was forwarded to the King County Council for approval last week.
“It’s really thinking outside the box of a big bus driving down the highway delivering people where they want to go,” said Joe McDermott, who represents
Vashon on the county council. “It’s a real opportunity for Vashon to be a trailblazer in the county for how we might do this.”
Tim Johnson, who chairs the Vashon-Maury Island Community Council, however, said he was trou-bled by the lack of public inputinto the formation of the plan and questioned whether it would work on the Island.
“I have a hard time envisioning something that would cost less andget people where they’re going,” Johnson said. “The alternatives sound nice, but I just don’t think it’s feasible.”
The plan is being driven by Metro’s ongoing financial woes. Matt Hansen, who heads the coun-ty project, said the transit agency is looking to cut its budget in antici-pation of a $60 million shortfall
Beekeepers troubled by a rash of bee deaths this springBy LESLIE BROWNStaff Writer
Members of Vashon’s grow-ing beekeeping community are expressing mounting concern over the state of their hives after a tough spring that saw the number of hon-eybees dwindle in several colonies and other hives die off completely.
Emails have been flying, with some blaming pesticides for the demise of their hives. Others say a cold, wet spring and insufficient nectar sources may be behind the deaths; some bees have simply starved to death, they say.
Honeybees have also been weak-ened over the years by a mite that bores into the insects, making them vulnerable to disease and viruses. Inexperience among a crop of new beekeepers could also be a factor, some say.
Donna McDermott, a new bee-keeper on Vashon, called it “a per-fect storm.”
“It’s really sad,” added McDermott, who had several bees die in one of her three hives. “You come to love the girls and watch them work so hard. And then you go out one day and they’re acting funny, and the next day, they’re dead.”
Bob Dixon, who’s been keeping bees for 15 years, recently lost one of his six hives — a new one that he purchased in February. He’s had bees fail to survive the winter, hesaid, but it’s unusual for him to lose a hive in the spring.
“We don’t have the answers,” he said. “We don’t know what’s killing the bees.”
As a result of the deaths, some beekeepers are calling on Vashon’s two hardware stores to stop sell-ing certain products, particularly Sevin, a widely used insecticide thatcontains carbaryl, known to be fatal to bees. Concern is also growing about a family of insecticides called
SEE METRO, 26
SEE BEES, 21
“All my life I had been one of the those kids on the margin, and art spoke to me.”
Carolyn Buehl, retired art teacher
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An osprey nest perched on top of a 165-foot microwave tower burst into flames last week, creating an inferno that killed two chicks and completely destroyed the long-standing nest.
As the nest burned Tues-day evening, two adult osprey soared overhead, sometimes getting close to the blaze then flying away — a display that took place while a dozen Islanders, including a crew from Vashon Island Fire & Rescue (VIFR), watched from the ground.
“There’s not much we can do,” Josh Dueweke, a captain at VIFR, said as he watched. “We have to let it burn, unfortunately.”
VIFR’s ladder truck was not tall enough to reach the nest, perched at the very top of the tower. Spraying it with a hose wasn’t an option either, Dueweke said, as that might have scattered burning embers and further destroyed the nest.
The tower, located at the corner of Vashon Highway and S.W. 204th Street, transports telephone traffic between Vashon and Seattle. The fire did not cause a ser-vice disruption, according to Jan Kampbell, a spokes-
woman for the Gig Harbor-based CenturyLink.
Kampbell said officials at her company don’t know what triggered the blaze, nor have they heard of such instances at other towers the company owns.
“They didn’t see anything on our end that would have potentially caused the fire to start,” she said.
She’s heard that pair is already trying to rebuild at the same site. “We won’t try to prevent it,” she added.
Ed Swan, an Island birder, was driving home from the McMurray Middle School eighth-grade graduation
when he saw the blaze andstopped.
“There was quite a little bonfire up there,” he said.
Swan did some research and found that such fires have occurred in osprey nests elsewhere. “This is the firstI’ve heard of it. But appar-ently it happens,” he said.
The osprey population has grown on Vashon over the years, Swan said, inlarge part because of the proliferation of cell tow-ers. When he moved to the Island about a decade ago, there were two or three nesting pairs, he said. Now, there are seven or eight, allof them on cell towers.
Swan, too, doesn’t know how the fire started. Some have speculated fireworks caused it, but he said he didn’t see any sign of fire-works, nor has he heard any yet this summer. He heard that some at VIFR believethe nest might have touched a live wire, triggering the blaze. If that’s the case, hesaid, he hopes that cell tow-ers will be manufactured and wired in such a way thatthis couldn’t happen again.
“Maybe a live wire next towhere birds nest isn’t a good idea,” he said.
The fence erected at the Mukai farmhouse was a wire-mesh fence, not a cyclone fence, as stated in last week’s issue (“Open house at Mukai thwarted by cyclone fence”).
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Loren Sinner says the new warehouses will make his business operations much more efficient.
By LESLIE BROWNStaff Writer
Loren Sinner can locate that 1x4 tongue-and-groove a customer wants in a matter of minutes, but he might have to move stacks of wood to extract it from the piles of cedar in his small, bustling lumberyard.
His lack of space — and the stacking and re-stacking it triggers — has made a demanding business that much harder. He works long hours and a lot of weekends, he said, in part because of the time it takes to manage his inventory.
“It’s killing me,” he said matter of factly.Now, Sinner, the slim, silver-haired owner
of LS Cedar, is about to begin the first rede-velopment of his five-acre site at the corner of Vashon Highway and Cemetery Road since he moved to the location 30 years ago.
He plans to build two new warehouses, an office twice the size of his current one and a lumber shed — all told, a $1 mil-lion project and an 800 percent increase in his building footprint. Demolition and site work began last week.
He currently has one 2,400-square-foot warehouse and a small office. When his project is complete, he’ll have a total of 22,000 square feet of covered space —
including an 8,000-square-foot warehouse on the back edge of his lot, a 10,000-square-foot warehouse in the middle and an open-sided lumber shed along Cemetery Road that will measure 2,500 square feet.
It’s a bold move for a businessman who’s never carried much debt, he said. Indeed, he said, “The minute I sign on the loan, I’ve got a huge monthly payment.”
But Sinner, 56, said he’s done the calcu-lations and won’t need additional revenue to make the loan pencil out. “We can do it with the amount of sales we have right now,” he said.
Sinner has been selling custom-milled cedar and other lumber products for 38 years, the bulk of it to off-Island contractors doing high-end restoration work. He movedto the corner at Center 30 years ago, slowly building up a business that today employs 10 people, including all three of his sons.
For years, he’s wanted to expand, he said. He loses some of his lumber to weather, scrambles to find space for his large inven-tory and spends an inordinate amount of time moving lumber from one spot toanother, he said.
“It’s ridiculous,” he said. “It’s why I work so many hours.”
Three years ago, he began the process ofattempting to secure a building permit — an expensive and time-consuming effort, he said. All told, he said, he’s spent $200,000 on the permitting process, including money spent on legal fees to challenge some of the county’s requirements. According to King County, the actual permit cost around $40,000, though Sinner said it cost even more than that and
Owner gears up for a major redevelopment of LS Cedar The project will result in a building footprint eight times larger than the current set of buildings
Page 5
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As Quartermaster Harbor’s marine recovery area contin-ues to put the health of Puget Sound in the spotlight, local naturalist are gearing up for an annual event they hope will give visitors a deeper appreciation for what lives beneath the water.
This year the Low Tide Celebration, put on by the vol-unteer Vashon Beach Naturalists during one of the lowest tides of the summer, will take place on Wednesday, July 4. It’s the first time the event has been on either a weekday or on the Fourth of July.
Last year the event, which took place under sunny skies on Fourth of July weekend, drew nearly 1,000 people from on and off the Island. This year the beach naturalists are prepared for a similar crowd, said organizer Rayna Holtz, though attendance is largely weather dependent.
“It’s such an extensive beach, it can hold that many people without seeming crowded,” she said.
For six years, the Low Tide Celebration has been held at Point Robinson, where organizers say beach-goers can explore two dramatically different shoreline habitats. The sandy point holds large tide pools where colorful sea stars, anemones and tube worms make their homes, while at the cobble beach to the north, hermit crabs hide under rocks, moon snails peek above the surface and clams squirt water into the air.
Special signs will mark the locations of interesting ani-mals; the Vashon Beach Naturalists will be on hand to identify creatures, and Junior Beach Naturalists from the
Homestead School will lead an activity for kids.Holtz said last year many who attended went out of their
way to thank the volunteer naturalists who spend the dayon the beach locating sea animals, answering questions and telling visitors interesting facts about their lives.
“Many people had been on beaches before, but they hadn’t been aware of how much lives here in very incon-spicuous places,” Holtz said.
The lighthouse will again be open for tours, and in whathas become a well-loved tradition at the celebration, local Native Americans will row the Blue Heron, a traditional Salish canoe, across Puget Sound from Federal Way to Point Robinson, likely sometime before noon.
Dana Schuerholz, a Homestead School teacher who has been involved in the Low Tide Celebration, called the event a grassroots production put on by people who hope to impart a greater care for Puget Sound.
“They really believe that the more other people have an opportunity to really understand more about (shoreline ecology), they’ll be more successful in preserving the envi-ronment in different ways,” she said.
Holtz agreed, saying volunteers call the event a celebra-tion, rather than a festival, for a reason.
“A festival is more just to go and have good time, kick back and be self-satisfied,” she said. “This is a celebration to honor and call attention to and learn about something else.”
— Natalie Johnson
that he saved thousands of dollars by hiring a lawyer who helped him through the process.
“We’ve just been bleed-ing money for the last two years,” he said.
Particularly frustrat-ing, Sinner said, was King County’s requirement that he build a large retention pond to collect runoff from the parking lot he has to install. Under rules man-dated by the county’s new surface water design manu-al, Sinner will have to exca-vate 6,000 yards of dirt and debris to build the pond; the size, he said, is 10 times what some say is needed.
“It’s insanity,” he said.Jim Chan, assistant
director of permitting in the county’s Department of Development and Environmental Services (DDES), said the county’s standards for surface water management are high on Vashon because it’s con-sidered a “critical aquifer recharge area” — meaning, in Vashon’s case, that all of the drinking water comes from the Island’s aquifer.
“Because Vashon is so sensitive, because all of its water comes from the aqui-fer, we have to be a little more sensitive” to surface water management, Chan said.
Sinner remains frustrated with the 14-month process
it took for him to secure a building permit from DDES. “In 1990, a fire burned my place to the ground. This experience with DDES has been worse than that fire,” he said.
At the same time, he’s excited about the project he’s finally launched. His new office will be similar to the Mitchell building across the street, fitting in, he said, with the look and feel of the historic intersection.
“I don’t want to build something that stands out and doesn’t look right,” he said.
He said he could have relocated his operation to Tacoma for the amount of money it’s cost him to go through the building permit process, but he didn’t want to leave Vashon, where he’s lived since 1959. Sinner is a well-known Island musi-cian and a member of the Spotlights; he plays guitar, piano and bass and sings.
“I really want to stay on the Island. I like the life-style,” he said.
He doesn’t plan to close while construction is under way. And if all goes accord-ing to plan, he’ll have a new set of buildings within 13 months.
“I’m very excited about it,” he said. “It’s been a life-long dream to have these efficient, safe, well-orga-nized warehouses.”
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Write to us: The Vashon-Maury Island Beachcomber welcomes community comment. Please submit letters — e-mail is preferred — by noon Friday for consideration in the following week’s paper. Letters should be no longer than 300 words. Only one letter from a writer per month, please.
All letters are subject to editing for length, grammar and libel considerations. We try to print all letters but make no promises. Letters attacking individuals, as well as anonymous letters, will not be published.
Our e-mail address is editor@vashonbeachcomber.com.
Page 6 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
By BART QUEARY For The Beachcomber
Vashon High School hosted nine year-long exchange students this year. While this was an exceptional year, VHS hosts an average of four, and at least as many Vashon stu-dents study abroad each year. Short-term exchange programs in the summer add more than 20 students who travel, study and learn outside the classroom here and abroad.
Why do they do it? I don’t know. They just want to. But here’s my guess: Everyone invents herself or himself in high school and again in college. More imagination can be applied to the task of inventing one-self in the exotic climate of another country, culture and language.
Six years ago I started work-ing with exchange students on Vashon. They have not stopped surprising and amazing me with their planning, talent, energy and imagination. An exchange takes planning a year in advance; it takes talent to arrange your life and classes so you can study abroad for a year; it takes huge energy and dedication to prepare academically and personally, and it takes imagination to accept that an exchange will change you in ways you cannot anticipate.
Here’s how exchanges work, whether you are coming here or going there. Right about now, par-ents and students start looking for a year-long exchange beginning in fall 2013. Short-term exchanges start a bit earlier and are easier to set up. There are many organiza-tions that offer exchanges, and the ones active on Vashon are listed at the end of this article. Once you have found some exchange pro-grams that interest you, check the timelines and fill out a prelimi-nary application.
Where do they go? Asia, Europe, Central and South America, Mexico, Africa, anywhere reason-ably safe.
Where do they stay? Now, that’s the big question every year. Most exchanges are home stays. Most families are volunteers who have an extra bedroom and recognize
the value of an extra kid around the house. When I was growing up, extra kids were always there — cousins for the summer, preceptors from the medical school who fol-lowed my dad around his practice, an exchange student from Brazil, visiting musicians and so on.
Exchange officers are charged with keeping the students safe, so host families need to be inter-viewed and checked. As you might imagine, travel documents for students take longer, since every country reacted in its own way to the events of Sept. 11, and to other terrorist acts. Foreign students have to be enrolled in school, have visas and passports and have a place to stay when they get to Vashon. Each Vashon student has to have the same things when he or she arrives in Warsaw, Istanbul, Bangkok or Berlin. As parents and students are looking for exchanges for 2013-2014, the exchange offi-cers are lining up host families for three to four month stretches for the 2012-2013 school year. The participation of Islanders as host families is what keeps these pro-grams available.
Why do families host students? Well, my own children were gen-erally wonderful, but … In high school anyway, I thought the extra kids in our house had an elevat-ing effect on the general level of
discourse and interaction while they lived with us. Oddly enough, our kids thought so, too. Consider that medieval landowners fostered their children with neighbors and relatives at the high school age so they could learn more than they could or would at home. It is com-mon for host families to become lifelong friends with the students they host and the families that they come from.
“Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness,” said Mark Twain. In case we did not get his point, he invented Huckleberry Finn, a child of nature who learns through his travels how to confront the central prejudice, bigotry and narrow-mindedness of his era. I know of nothing more likely to move us toward international harmony than an ongoing involvement in the exchange of young minds between countries.
— Bart Queary is a retired college teacher and dean and the outgoing
president of the Vashon Rotary.
EDITORIAL
King County has once again missed the mark in its communi-cations with Vashon Island.
It may make sense to find alternatives to the huge buses that roll up and down the highway on Vashon with only a handful of riders onboard. Because of our state’s heavy reliance on the sales tax, the transit agency is strapped for cash. Cuts will likely have to take place next year when a special $20 license tab fee retires, and unfortunately, Vashon’s routes are a target because of the rural nature of the Island.
But in the process of formulating this plan, the county’s out-reach to “stakeholders” included an invitation to only one person
from Vashon, Tim Johnson, president of the Vashon-Maury Island Community Council.
That in and of itself is of con-cern, since the Island is one of three areas in the county slated to participate in a pilot project to develop alternatives to full-sized buses during certain hours of the day. Equally troubling is
that Johnson says he didn’t receive any email invitations, only an email thanking him for his participation.
In its introduction to its 70-page plan, Metro officials write that the proposal to find “alternatives to fixed-route bus service in less populated areas … reflects feedback from stakeholders who met earlier this year and bus riders of routes in candidate areas who participated in an online survey.”
That online survey certainly wasn’t widely advertised; only 170 people participated, and The Beachcomber never received notice about it. And even if Johnson did receive an invitation, does that constitute adequate outreach to Vashon? We don’t think so.
Those involved with the process say there is now opportunity for the public to weigh in, as the proposal is pending before the King County Council. The question before us, apparently, isn’t whether Vashon’s bus service should be “right-sized,” as Metro terms it. The issue is how that might happen and what it might look like. Could Vanpools play a bigger role? Access buses? Dial-a-Ride services?
It’s quite possible some alternatives would work for Vashon. Empty buses are costly and far from environmentally friendly.
But the county needs to be aware of and sensitive to the unique situation on Vashon Island. Suggesting Metro might work with “partner agencies” on Vashon to provide transportation services — as one county official told The Beachcomber — shows a pro-found lack of awareness about Island life. What “partner agen-cies”? In its plan, submitted to the county council, Metro notes its successful relationship with Snoqualmie Valley Transportation, a small transit agency. Nothing even close to that exists on Vashon.
County government continues to face a funding crisis, and there’s little room for waste. It is possible a new model for pub-lic transportation could be crafted on Vashon. But meaningful engagement has to be a part of the process. We trust and hope that will happen soon, before this process gets much farther down the road.
Our advice to the county: Improve communications
ADMINISTRATIONPUBLISHER: Daralyn Anderson
publisher@vashonbeachcomber.com
ADMINISTRATIVE COORDINATOR: Patricia Seaman admin@vashonbeachcomber.com
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EDITORIALEDITOR: Leslie Brown
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OPINIONVashon-Maury
Vashon-Maury Island Beachcomber, 17141 Vashon Hwy SW, Suite B, Vashon, WA 98070; (USPS N0. 657-060) is published every Wednesday by Sound Publishing Inc.; Corporate Headquarters: 19351 8th Avenue NE, Suite 106, Poulsbo, WA 98370-8710. (Please do not send press releases to this address.)SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $30 on Island motor route delivery, one year; $57 two years; Off Island, continental U.S., $57 a year and $30 for 6 months. Periodical postage paid at Vashon, Washington. POSTMASTER: Send changes of address to Beachcomber P.O. Box 447, Vashon Island, WA 98070.
Copyright 2012 © Sound Publishing Inc.
Exchange students enrich our community
Vashon Exchange OfficersRotary International, Charon Scott-Goldman, charon@century tel.net AFS, Leslie Ferriel, leslieferriel@johnlscott.com
Seven of the nine VHS exchange students include, clockwise from left, Magnus Wallgren from Sweden, Selma Jonsdottir from Iceland, Chris Cirillo of Denmark, Wei Wang of China, Kasumi Kinjo of Japan, Nesita Anggraine of Indonesia and Daniel Schwarz from Liechtenstein.
They come from all over, bringing stories from other cultures.
Performing arts centerStructure will be beautiful
Let’s not build another Kingdome. We have been given a once-in-a- generation opportunity to build for the future. The new Vashon Allied Arts center will serve us well for the next 50 years. As I approach my 65th birthday, I look forward to more cul-tural offerings on the Island.
The best architects have given us a beautiful, contemporary building with strong references to our rural heritage. The county building codes dictated the placement close to the road, but I think it will fit in well, with the use of natural materials. Let’s not go halfway and regret it in a few years.
Join me in supporting all the gen-erous and passionate Islanders who are working so hard to realize this dream.
— Linda Weiss
VolunteeringSeniors often lend a hand
Thank you for publishing Mary Kay Rauma’s commentary about vol-unteer service on the magical isle of Vashon (“Speak up when volunteers get it right,” May 30). She has cap-tured the essence of volunteering on our Island home.
There is another part of the story. If one were to look at the rosters of the boards of all of the Island groups
that must have boards because of their tax-exempt status and the pho-tographs of all of the hardy hands who show up for all of the activities that require workers, two things will be apparent: Many of the same peo-ple are on those rosters and in those photographs, and many of them are “citizens of a certain age,” or to be more precise, people drawing Social Security. The article on the Mukai farmhouse (“New board takes over Mukai farmhouse,” June 13) illus-trates both points perfectly.
Here is another example of a need being filled by such conscien-tious citizens. I sit on the board of Vashon Community Care. VCC has been extremely diligent in manag-ing costs so that we can continue to provide aging services for the Island, including for those who can no longer afford to pay. One area that has been restrained is in grounds maintenance. Through donations, we acquired a very efficient trac-tor, needing only volunteers to step forward to run it. Board member-ship was solicited to do this, and the members who were available were indeed the most senior in age. So we need a few good men and women who will come to VCC, run the trac-tor and weed whacker, with the hope that they will be volunteers who themselves do not need walkers!
The Island of which all of us are a part lives on volunteer effort more than any place that I have served. It takes more than the very small percentage who now help, as well as younger people, to keep all of these services afloat.
— Capt. Joe Wubbold
Page 7
Babes 5 & under Broads 40 & over
Strawberry Festival Photo Contest!Sponsored by Seeds4Success – Vashon – a 501c3 non-profi t
All photos will be on display at Constantinople! 17508 Vashon Hwy SW, 206-463-0994Vote for your favorite Babes and Broads and Cats ’n Dogs in our booth during the Strawberry Festival, Saturday and Sunday (7/21–7/22, 2012).
and
To set up a free booking, please contact via email: smile@marlasmithphotography.com
or www.marlasmithphotography.comCell: 206-755-2138
Babes&Broads–Cats’nDogs
Last day to have pictures taken will be July 9th
SUSAN LOFLAND, REALTOR©
GRI, SRES, ASP
(206) 999-6470 susanlofl and@johnlscott.com JOHN L SCOTT VASHON 13401 VASHON HIGHWAY SW VASHON, WA 98070
CURB APPEAL DOES MATTER
First impressions make all the difference.
So when I list a house, I help maintain the
gardens and yard for you. There’s never a
chance that someone will drive by and not
see your home looking its best.
– Susan
Vashon 2012Strawberry Festival
July 20th, 21st & 22nd
Save the Date!
Call Daralyn or Matthew now to reserve
your ad space in this year’s Festival Guide
463-9195
By ADRIA MAGRATHFor The Beachcomber
Summer has officially arrived, and along with Fourth of July barbecues and fam-ily vacations, it is time for the annual celebration of our shore at Point Robinson.
The Low Tide Celebration is a chance for us to connect with our oft-overlooked shore-lines, teach our children about the importance of ecological relationships and learn about interesting native creatures that live in the intertidal zone. Whether you are a day-tripper to the beaches or a waterfront homeowner, a parent, or sim-ply strive for environmental-consciousness, you have reason to celebrate the unique natural riches that surround us on Vashon’s shores.
The ocean conservation movement has been tremen-dously successful in raising awareness of ocean habitat, thanks to dedicated activists and amazing documentaries.
In this region, we are gener-ally more aware of water ecol-ogy issues than the average American, and a lot of our attention is focused on pollut-ants in Puget Sound and the health of the salmon, bivalves and other tasty species. But outside of those particular interests, we tend to overlook the shoreline and its inhabit-ants, vital contributors to Sound and ocean health.
Vashon’s shorelines provide a unique opportunity for learn-ing about the complexity of the intertidal zone and its role in the Sound’s health, apart from the obvious one of being an island. We boast the most undeveloped shoreline in the state’s most populated county. Learning about the critters and ecology of the shoreline gives us an appreciation of the complex relationships of all liv-ing things, not only with each other, but also with the non-living parameters (water flow, the nitrogen cycle, erosion, etc.) that help to determine the quality of ecosystems.
The boundary where Puget Sound meets land is diverse bio-logically; it brings together spe-cies from both environments, supports characters unique to the habitat and produces food for yet other species. Intertidal inhabitants seem almost oth-erworldly to us, but by under-standing their respective stories, we learn to appreciate what each has to offer and find respect for their differences. For example, one’s opinion of the lowly bar-nacle is surely raised when it is learned that it glues itself to rocks using one of the stron-gest adhesives on the planet, a cement-like protein that researchers have been trying to understand for years.
Most Islanders are aware of the many benefits to physical and mental health of a child-
hood spent close to nature. Some have transplanted from the city for exactly this rea-son. And while some can take advantage of Vashon’s nation-ally recognized nature-based educational programs, the rest of us can take the oppor-tunity to teach our children conscientiousness about the natural world through free public events such as the Low Tide Celebration. How many Vashon parents who take their children to the beach know how to teach them “best beach behavior” and why they should not stomp their way through a bed of eelgrass?
The Low Tide Celebration is a chance to not only educate the next generation of conser-vationists, but to celebrate our Island’s great treasury of shore-lines and beaches. Learning more about the complex beauty of the shoreline is important not only for parents and their children, but for anyone who has enjoyed a day on the beach, a kayak trip along the shore, a swim in the Sound or the dive of an osprey.
No matter your religious affil-iation or lack thereof, knowledge of the natural world nourishes us in a deeply spiritual way that is virtually unmatched by human endeavors.
— Adria Magrath, a Vashon Beach Naturalist, is also a biologist,
teacher and nature photographer.
LETTERS Low-tide fest: Learn about our shorelines
Page 8 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
Call us at 463-7411 or E-mail: bryn@trigginsurance.com
or betsey@trigginsurance.cominfo@trigginsurance.comwww.trigginsurance.com
17425 Vashon Hwy SW, Vashon WA 98070
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Trigg Insurance
Quote Drive Fundraiser
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TRIGG INSURANCE AGENCYYour home town advantage.
Trigg Insurance will donate $10.00 per quoted policy to
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Last year over $1,500 was donated to local charities during the Trigg Insurance Quote Drive Fundraiser
Contact us with your personal and business policy for your no-obligation quote and we’ll make the donation.
Granny’s Attic10010 SW 210th St. – Sunrise Ridge
at Vashon Health Center
463-3161Open: Tues, Thurs, and Sat, 10 to 5
Donations: 7 days a week 8am-4pm
Silent Auction:
Singer Featherweight
Sewing Machine starting bid $250.00
Large framed Art Wolfe
print of Lincoln Park starting bid $50.00
1
2
Red BicycleBistro & Sushiin Downtown Vashon
WEEKLY LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
206.463.595917618 Vashon Hwy SW, Vashon
Friday, June 29th
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200 WestAll-ages ‘til 11pm,
21+ after that. Free cover!
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Island Resident206-818-8371
Jim Schmidtwww.ro-enterprises.com
PO Box 1973 Vashon, WA 98070
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LATE BREAKING NEWS www.vashonbeachcomber.com
“You’re a shadow of your for-mer self!” a friend called in greet-ing to me. What? Oh, yeah, she means the 67 pounds I’ve lost.
For anyone who, like me, has been overweight since childhood, this is a tale of hope.
I was 9 when my mother put me on a diet for the first time. I blame it on the French. They cre-ated croissants, after all. It didn’t help that my parents thought sports were for people (actually, boys) who didn’t go to college. They considered physical activity dangerous.
Diets became semi-annual tor-tures — weeks of lettuce, cottage cheese, celery and sugar-free Jello. Yuck! Between diets, food was my comfort when I was down and my reward when I was up. I went to counseling and the 12-step pro-gram for over-eaters. I lost weight, then gained it back.
By last year, walking up hills made me breathless. I barely fit into an airplane seat and had to ask for an extension for the seat belt. My world was shrinking as I expanded.
I began looking into gastric bypass surgery. It seemed the only way I could possibly lose over 100 pounds. But I wasn’t eli-
gible for sur-gery, because I had not (yet) developed dia-betes or heart disease. I felt like giving up.
In Sept-ember, I decid-ed to take
Islander Kathy Abascal’s class about foods that trigger inflam-mation. For 15 years my back and shoulders were so painful that a light touch made me scream. Perhaps this program would help.
Kathy has her students refrain from eating certain foods for three weeks, including sugar, sugar sub-stitutes, alcohol and wheat. When the three weeks ended, I didn’t want to go back to eating those foods. I felt liberated! I wasn’t obsessing about the next bowl of ice cream or pasta. I realized that eating sugar or wheat makes me crave more and more.
I adopted some new behaviors due to Kathy’s program:
protein, vegetables and fruit. I
usually have an egg scrambled with spinach, mushrooms and tomatoes. A little cheese, tofu or ham gets added occasionally.
I eat three meals and two snacks at set times. Snacks are usually 10 almonds and a piece of fruit. Instead of buying lunch I bring it to work, saving money and calories.
-fast consists of equal thirds of protein, grain and vegetables and/or fruit.
after dinner.
you know alcohol has nearly twice as many calories per ounce as meat or potatoes?
expensive, but I now grow five vari-eties of lettuce in window boxes.
My spouse Gary, who does the cooking in our family, jumped on board whole-heartedly. Our kids, not so much, but at least the adults are modeling healthy eating.
Shape Up Vashon is another great resource. It costs only $10 to join and you get free classes and information on nutrition and
health, a supportive group to cheer you on, an online program to track your progress and links to commu-nity members who you can join for walks, swimming or other forms of activity. I like the link to exercises for strengthening core muscles.
Key to my recent weight loss was having a short-term goal. After watching our daughter ride horses for a couple years, I got the crazy notion to learn to ride, too. I doubted I could do it at age 56 — me, the person who never
Fish Bowl Farm agreed to teach me. First, in fairness to the horse, I decided to lose 40 pounds.
While I was losing weight,
was an encouraging teacher, but I realized I needed to be stronger and more agile. I unearthed the treadmill that was serving as a clothes rack and started walking on it 10 minutes a day, followed by stretching. Slowly, I increased time and speed.
When I hit a plateau, I found an app for my phone to track the calories I’m eating and burning. A few weeks ago, I hit another plateau after losing 60 pounds. I joined a
gym near my office and started working with a personal trainer. Another seven pounds gone!
In the mid-afternoons I used to feel like my head turned into a bag of cement that had to be laid
As for my chronic pain, it’s barely noticeable now.
I’m not absolutely rigid about what I eat. On special occasions I may have dessert or a glass of wine, but frankly, most of the time it’s easier to abstain. Along the way I’ve realized this isn’t a diet, it’s a way of life. For the first time, the weight loss feels sustain-able. The good news is, if I can do it, maybe you can too.
— Laura Wishik is a Vashon school board member and mother of two.
HEALTHBy LAURA WISHIK
Finding a new life: A diet becomes a path towards better health
Helpful resourcesKathy Abascal: www.tqidiet.comShape Up Vashon: www.shapeup vashon.org“The Rider’s Fitness Program,” by Dianna Robin Dennis, John J. McCully, Paul M. Juriswww.Livestrong.com: Online pro-gram with downloadable app for tracking calories eaten and burned.“Anti-Inflammatory Foods for Health,” by Barbara Rowe and Lisa Davis
Page 9
Master Gardeners: Stop by with gardening questions and get ideas on improving your garden soil. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. outside True Value.
Preschool Story Time: Zeke Burgin will read to kids and par-ents. 11 a.m. at Vashon Bookshop.
Camp Sealth Open House & Family Play Day: Take a tour of the camp, meet camp and Camp Fire staff and try activities such as boating, fishing, archery and arts and crafts. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Camp Sealth off Wax Orchard Road.
Vashon Island Ultramarathon and Trail Run: The events cel-ebrate Vashon’s wild places and trails, support healthy activities for all ages and promote respect and maintenance of the wild places and trails the runners traverse. Regis-tration is closed, but spectators are welcome. For more information, see www.vashonultra.com. 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at Paradise Ridge Park.
Caulk the Rock — Energy Fair & Solar Home Tour: Learn about energy conservation, renewable energy and green homes. See the latest products and hear from local and off-Island experts. 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Island Lumber park-ing lot. (For more information, see pages 13 to 20.)Master Gardeners: Stop by the clinic with gardening questions. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. outside True Value.
Adopt-a-Cat Day: Vashon Island Pet Protectors hosts an adoption day every week. See www.vipp.org for more information, includ-ing the adoptable pets. 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. at 12200 S.W. 243rd St.
Rick Steves’ Travel as a Volun-teer: Joyce Major, author of “Smil-ing at the World,” will share her experience with her “voluntour-ism” travels. 2 p.m. at the Vashon Library.
Weekend Book Club: Discuss “Cutting for Stone” by Abraham Verghese. New members are welcome. July’s book will be “State of Wonder” by Anne Patchett. Call Nancy Paul for information at 567- 5606. 9 a.m. at Paul’s home near town.
Farmers Market: Find strawber-ries, snow and sugar snap peas, English cucumbers, leeks, basil and gourmet salad greens, as well as gluten-free cookies, artisan chocolate and gray salt caramels. Take home fresh eggs, flowering plant starts, pasture-fed meats and fresh fish. Enjoy locally crafted beer and wine, hand-hewn kitch-en implements, garden journals, bubbles for kids, organic skincare products and soaps and tie dye fashions. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Village Green.
Weekly Cribbage Tourna-ment: Play nine friendly games of cribbage against nine different players. Win cash prizes. Visitors are welcome over the summer. The cost is $8 for visitors and $10 for members. 1 to 4 p.m. at the Vashon Eagles, 18137 Vashon Hwy. S.W.
Raw Food Potluck: The first part of the gathering will be for the potluck and the second for a busi-ness meeting to share thoughts for future potlucks. Call Linda Fox at 963-1058 for more information. 5 to 6 p.m. potluck, 6 to 7 p.m. busi-ness meeting at Fox’s home, 11733 Vashon Hwy. S.W.
Wine Tasting: Taste the wines of Palouse Palouse and support the Vashon Relay for Life. Tickets are $20 and include five pours of wine and hors d’oeurves. This is a team fundraiser for Bergman’s Babes. Proceeds from will help the team reach its fundraising goal and sup-port the American Cancer Society. Contact Karen Bargelt for more information or tickets at 463-7731 or bargelt@hotmail.com. 6 to 8 p.m. at Palouse Winery.
Quilters and Their Stories: Susan Olds, art historian, artist and art curator, will feature true stories about quilters and their craft, including quilt lore from Gee’s Bend quilters to famous contemporary novelists, such as Maya Angelou, Alice Walker and
Jennifer Chiavierini. 1 p.m. at the Vashon Library.
Women’s Service Alliance Meeting: The Women’s Alliance to Enhance the Rock is open to girls and women ages 16 and older. The group will begin working on the two projects it is supporting this year: DoVE’s Free as a DoVE Freedom Dance and DoVE’s Do-mestic Violence Awareness Month campaign. Contact Pam Robbins at Pam@jprobbins.com if planning to attend or for more information. 2 to 4 p.m. at the Ober Park perfor-mance room.
Family Story Times: All ages are welcome for a half-hour of stories, finger plays, movement and music. 11:30 a.m. at the Vashon Library.
Low Tide Celebration: Celebrate Vashon beaches’ abundant wild-life. The free festival will run from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wednesday, July 4, at Point Robinson. (For more information, see page 5.)Fireworks: Enjoy fireworks over Quartermaster Harbor. Fireworks will begin at dark, about 10 p.m. Wednesday, July 4.
Department of Development and Environmental Services: Greg Wessel of DDES holds office hours once a month to answer per-mit questions and review develop-ment proposals. For more informa-tion, contact him at greg.wessel@kingcounty.gov or 296-7242. 10 a.m. to noon Monday, July 9, at Court-house Square.
Swimming Lessons: The Vashon Pool and the Vashon Golf & Swim Club both offer swimming lessons throughout the summer. Call the Vashon Pool for more information at 463-3787 and the golf and swim club at 463-9410.
Introspective Writing: T. Thom-as Elliott will lead the workshop for women and girls. Students will write their most spontaneous and heartfelt thoughts and feelings to gain clarity and understanding. The cost is $20 with scholarships available. Email pam@hestia
retreat.com. to register. 12:30 to 2:30 p.m. at the Vashon Cohousing common house.
Yin Yoga: The class uses long holds in mostly seated or reclined posi-tions and aids in lengthening the connective tissue of the body. To register send a check to Island Yoga Center, P.O. Box 2062, or drop it off in the red mailbox by the front door. Scholarships are available. For more information, contact 463-2058 or info@islandyogacenter.com. 4 to 5 p.m. Sundays, July 1 to 22, at Island Yoga Center.
Fireworks Safety Classes: All ages and skill levels are welcome to the class, where Gabriel Felix and a representative from Vashon Island Fire & Rescue will teach how to use fireworks safely. 3 p.m. Saturday, June 30; 7 p.m. Tuesday, July 3, and 10:30 a.m. Wednesday,
July 4, at Sound Food.
Learn to Row: This class is for anyone 18 or older. No experience is necessary, but students must be comfortable on the water and be able to lift 50 pounds. The class will be taught by Vashon Island Rowing Club coach Richard Parr. Participants will learn the basic stroke, fitness and teamwork on and off the water. The cost is $140. Call the Vashon Park District to register at 463-9602 or see www.vashonparkdistrict.org. The three-
day class will meet from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday, July 5; 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, July 7, and 8 to 11 a.m. Sunday, July 8, at the Jensen Point boathouse.
Kabbalah 101: Rabbi Alyjah Navy will lead the class. Participants will receive Kabbalah insights and techniques for spiritual healing, enhanced intimacy, abundance, inner joy and purpose in life. The cost is $40 with scholarships avail-able. 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday, July 7, at Vashon Inuitive Arts.
Islander Larry Flynn recently participated in AIDS Lifecyle 11, a fundraiser for the Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Center and the San Franisco AIDS Foundation. The annual seven-day ride covers the 545 miles between Los Angeles and San Francisco. Flynn, who was injured and had to stop about 180 miles into the ride, raised $7,300 from 125 sponsors. In the photo above, Flynn is standing amidst the bikes in Bradley, Calif., a town of 93, according to the last census. The town holds a barbecue for the riders — 2,300 this year — and in turn the riders buy enough hamburgers and tourist items to fund the town’s athletic depart-ment for another year.Despite not being able to complete the ride, Flynn noted he was pleased to participate and “bring some money to the table.” In all, the ride raised $12.6 million to help fund programs to end HIV and increase awareness about AIDS.
CALENDARVashon-Maury
Deadline is noon Thursday for Wednesday publication. The calendar is intended for commu-nity activities, cultural events and nonprofit groups; notices are free and printed as space permits.
The Beachcomber also has a user-generated online calendar. To post an event there, see www.VashonBeachcomber.com, scroll to the bottom of the page and follow the prompts.
SCENE AND HEARD: TRUE CHARACTERS
Ends July 2
Will play July 3 to 19
Will play July 13 to 19
Vashon-Maury Island Community Council Board: 6:30 p.m. Monday, July 2, at McMurray Middle School.
Viewers on Vashon (and only Vashon) will find VoV-TV on Comcast Cable Channel 21. Most VoV-TV shows are produced by Islanders.
Tuesdays and Thursdays at 5 p.m. In the schedule it just says “Short Films,” but take a look to see what surprising things young people can do with a camera.
Each year, Harbor School students award commendations to six of their peers, each of whom represents one of the school’s “Cornerstone Values” so strongly as to be an example for others. The Cornerstone Values are a set of principles that provide guidance and lessons to all Harbor School students. This year’s recipients are (from left) Björn Lynge, sixth grade — respect; David Nguyen, seventh grade — responsibility; Lhamu Konrad, eighth grade — personal best; Julian Davis-White, sixth grade — compassion; Mira Jewell-Peterson, seventh grade — integrity, and Oakley Reid, seventh grade — accountability.
Page 10 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
Friday, July 6th
Please have your insurance information when you call and bring a picture ID and Insurance/Medicare/Medicaid cards to the appointment. Thank you for partnering with us in the fight against breast cancer.
17637 100th Ave SW, Vashon, Washington 98070
Vashon Market (IGA) Gift Certificates will be
given to patients
(Additional appts possible Sat. 7/7)
East Side of Vashon Plaza - Parallel to 100th Ave. SW - Mobile Coach - Assured Imaging Women’s Wellness of WA
50 Years Experience
Bay Breeze Farm
Summer Camps9–4, Monday–Friday
July 9th – 13th
July 16th – 20th
August 6th – 10th
August 13th – 17th
August 20th – 24th
Camp Fee $450.00
Joe Cunningham206-459-5343
Riding Lessons,
Boarding, Hauling,
Summer Day Camps
(Liquor service is available to members and their guests) WAC 314-52-115(1)
206.463.5477
Taco Tuesdays, 5-7pmMonday Dinners, 5– 7 pm
Hard $1.50 Soft $3.00Taco Salads $5.00
Friday
VASHON EAGLES
Prime Rib
DINING IS ALWAYS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
Burger WednesdaysTake the “Eagle Burger” Challenge!
1/2 lb. of premium beef burger with your choice of fries or onion rings
Sunday Breakfast Cooked to order
Mark Bouska got 1st place, Brad Middling and Russel Crump got 2nd, and Bill Rady
got 3rd. It was a great turnout!
w w w. p o r t a n g e l e s . o r g( 3 6 0 ) 4 5 2 - 2 3 6 3
Next Big EventRide the Hurricane
August 5
LATE BREAKING NEWS 24/7 www.vashonbeachcomber.com
new museum hours: wed–sun 1–4 pm
tickets: $15.00available at:
heritage museum
café luna
vashon book store
vashon tea shop
Friday, July 20, 2012
6pm – 8 pm
The Vashon Library recently bought a new reader and printer for microfiche and microfilm and is the first branch in the King County Library System to have a machine of this type.
Called the Scan-Pro 2000, it sits next to and interfaces with the library comput-ers. It will allow patrons to research Island history through The Beachcomber, which the library carries on film and fiche back to 1907. It will also be helpful to genealo-gists and professional writers who conduct research in newspapers and periodicals, according to Jan Riley, the library’s opera-tions supervisor.
The machine is easy to use, Riley said, and can magnify, straighten, focus, zoom, crop and brighten. A “word search” func-tion highlights any word, which is particu-
larly helpful when genealogists are looking for a family name, and there are several options for scrolling speed.
With the Scan-Pro, people can still print desired material, including in color, and email material to themselves or save it to a USB drive or a disc. An information sheet is available to users, and library staff are happy to help as well, Riley noted.
Funds for the Scan-Pro, which cost about $10,000, came from donations from Vashon Library patrons.
The Scan-Pro arrived in May, according to Laurie Tucker, a library assistant, and has been well received so far.
“Our old machine was so outdated and worn; this is a big improvement,” she said.
— Susan Riemer
Library staff member Amelia Lincoln demonstrates the new microfilm and fiche reader.
Library acquires new state-of-art reader
Page 11
ARTS&LEISUREVashon-Maury GO PIRATES!: Drama Dock’s rollicking rendition of Giber t and Sullivan’s famed “Pirates
of Penzance” will be staged at 7:30 p.m . Fr idays and Saturdays, July 13, 14, 20 and 21, 4 p.m . Sundays, July 15 and 22, and 7:30 p.m . Thursday, July 19, at Bethel Church. Tickets, $7.50 to $20, will be sold at the Vashon Bookshop and w w w.brownpaper tickets.com .
By ELIZABETH SHEPHERDArts Editor
It’s easy to start feeling hungry in Kristen Reitz-Green’s art studio.
The walls of the small, five-sided cedar studio are hung floor to ceiling with the artist’s colorful canvasses — masterful, close-up oil paintings of fluorescent foods, including ice cream sundaes, chocolate kisses, gummy bears, Swedish fish and glistening jars of honey.
But faces also shine out from the wall — a softly smil-ing, cherubic baby, another child whose closed eyes show off feathery, dark eyelashes and a majestic, genie-like cat that stares back at viewers from the safety of a huge, dark canvas. There are also dozens of smaller paintings of single subjects — chickens, rocks, dandelions, flowers and, tellingly, a single shiny trumpet.
The artist, it seems, has a story to tell, and the paint-ings provide hints that it is a tale of musical instruments, children, animals and, quite unexpectedly, finding a sweet new life on Vashon.
Despite the skill evident in Reitz-Green’s work, she only began painting six years ago, after moving to Vashon at the age of 40.
“You never know what you can do,” Reitz-Green said, as she sat in her studio on a rainy June day. “There was no part of me that ever said, ‘Yes, I can do that, I’ll be an oil painter.’”
Instead, Reitz-Green described a process by which painting came along and took her by surprise.
Before picking up a brush, she had a flourishing career as a classical musician, playing French horn in orchestras throughout the United States, most recently in the pit of the Pacific Northwest Ballet. A graduate of The Juilliard School in New York and the Hartt School of Music in Hartford, Conn., Reitz-Green had spent decades honing her artistry as musician.
She fell in love with Seattle after she passed through the region while playing in a touring Broadway show. Eventually, she married one of her own kind, professional trumpet player Vince Green. Her course seemed set.
“Classical music was my entire life,” she said. Then came children — a girl first and then a boy born a
little more than a year later, when Reitz-Green was in her mid-30s. But shortly after the birth of her son, in 2003, Reitz-Green’s life turned upside down when she was diag-nosed with breast cancer.
Reitz-Green said that after battling and recovering from the illness, she and her husband were eager to escape the intensity of city life. In 2006, the couple moved from West Seattle to Vashon, settling on a three-acre property on the Dilworth Loop that provided plenty of room not only for their growing children but also a menagerie of animals that now includes five cats, a dog and a flock of chickens.
And after Reitz-Green moved to the Island, something else happened: She quit playing the French horn. In the years since her illness, she said, she had found performing to be stressful and exhausting.
“I felt drained after performances,” she said. “You can’t do it halfway — there is no hiding at the bottom of the section.”
Reitz-Green said that at the time, she wasn’t sure what she wanted to do for a living, but she knew that it would have to involve the arts.
“I’m a creative person, there’s just nothing else for me,” she said. “I can’t do anything else.”
Soon, she found herself painting her children’s furniture in a colorful Oaxacan style — a pastime that eventually led her to sell hand-painted furniture at The Heron’s Nest.
Another pivotal moment came when she found a men-tor — well-known Island artist Pam Ingalls, who continued to coach Reitz-Green privately for two years after she first taught her in a three-day oil painting workshop.
The workshop, for Reitz-Green, was a game-changer.“It was the hardest thing in the world for me to do,” she
said. “It was such a step. I had never drawn anything.”Ingalls described Reitz-Green as a student unlike any
other.“It has never happened to me before,” she said. “She just
went straight for the gold. Whatever I said in class, she would just do it. That sounds so simple, but it is very, very rare that anyone catches on that fast.”
Ingalls’ theory is that Reitz-Green’s background as pro-fessional musician gave her unique tools to launch a new career as a visual artist.
“She has great concentration and dedication,” Ingalls said. “I have a feeling that no matter what Kristen does, she’ll do it well.”
And indeed, Reitz-Green is beginning to find her way as an artist. With the same discipline with which she mas-tered the French horn, she now paints daily, never missing a chance to practice. She has had exhibits throughout the Northwest, and in September, she’ll have a solo show at The Hardware Store Restaurant. She is also involved with Vashon Artists in the Schools, recently overseeing the creation of six large canvasses of healthy food, painted by Chautauqua students, that will grace the school’s cafeteria.
But Reitz-Green said she’s still learning, still a student. In 2010, she sold her last and favorite French horn, using
the proceeds to take her family to New York City, a place where she once dashed off to concerts and lugged a music case through the halls of Juilliard. But this time, she said, she did something different — she spent her days inside the city’s gleaming, cavernous museums.
“Before, when I lived in New York, I had musician’s eyes,” she said. “But, after having started painting, it affected me all so differently.”
Kristen Reitz-Green never set out to be an oil painter. Below are two of her works, “Jelly Runneth Over,” and “Blue Chucks.”
From the symphony to the studio
A Vashon artist charts a new course
Page 12 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
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The duo of Jennifer Sutherland and Kevin Joyce will perform a free concert, “Love and Other Demons,” at 7 p.m. Friday at the Vashon Island Coffee Roasterie. Both performers are well known on Vashon. Suther-land currently serves as one of the town’s unofficial mayors in her role as a founder of the Washington State Fairies Singing Telegram Co. She frequently appears at public functions with her fairy cohort, Tami Brockway Joyce. She is also a talented chanteuse who has appeared as the front woman of various Seattle bands, including the well-loved
Evangeline.
Joyce, a performer who moved to the Island more than 20 years ago to help found UMO Ensemble, is a musician, comedian and impresario who frequently works as an auctioneer and host at gala events on and off the Island. With his wife Martha Enson, he runs EnJoy Productions, a company that provides entertainment, training and event coordination to corporate clients. His album “Say It” is a showcase for his skills as a singer and songwriter.
For their show at the Roasterie, Sutherland and Joyce will sing originals and covers of tunes by Leonard Cohen, Bob Dylan, Pattie Griffin and John Prine. Since most of the songs are heart-wrenching love songs, they’ll also try and work in a few happy tunes as well, Joyce said.
The evening will also include a wine tasting with Vashon Winery owner Ron Irvine, starting at 6:30 p.m. Four wines can be tasted for $10. To find out more and to get a discount, visit www.vashonwineclub.org.
A touring band from Southern California, 200 West, will bring its hybrid acoustic, rap, pop and rock sound to Vashon for a show at 8:30 p.m. Friday at Red Bicycle Bistro. The band has recorded both a five-track EP, “Let’s See Where This Takes Us,” and a full-length album, “The Season.” Get out and dance to their beat at their free show at the Bike — it is for all ages until 11 p.m. and 21 and older after that. Check out the music at www.200westmusic.com.
“Attuning: An Evening of Listening and Music” by improvising pianist Lee Pui Ming will take place at 7 p.m. Saturday, June 30, at the gardens and
barn of Hanna Studios, 7712 S.W. Point Robinson Rd. Tickets are $20.
At 2 p.m. Sunday, July 1, a workshop, “Mandala: Journeying Through Music and Music,” will be co-facilitated by Ming and movement artist/craniosacral therapist Mary Ganzon. The workshop will explore personal journeys through contemplative dance practices and the use of wisdom cards. There is a $20 fee, with a sliding scale, for the workshop. Call 463-3530 to reserve a spot for either the concert or workshop.
Classically trained, Ming is now an admired practitioner of evocative improvisational music. Her sixth and most recent CD, “she comes to shore,” features solo improvisations and a concerto for improvised piano and symphony orchestra. Canadian music critic Harry Currie called her “the most unique genius to touch a keyboard in Canada since Glenn Gould.” Mary Ganzon is a dancer, performer and teacher who has performed duo improvisation with Ming at other venues.
Island Jazz Quintet will play a outdoor concert at 7 p.m. Saturday, July 7, at Vashon Winery, 10317 S.W. 156th St. Members of the ensemble are Maggie Laird, Richard Person, Todd Zimberg, Michael Gotz and Todd Gowers.
The quintet was formed in 1999 and rehearsed in a cabin in the woods on Vashon Island. Since then, the ensemble has recorded three albums and played countless shows in the Pacific Northwest and beyond. Their concert is the first of three summer shows at Vashon Winery, followed by Danny O’Keefe on Aug. 4 and “Uncorked and Unplugged,” Vashon Winery’s music festival, on Aug. 18. The $12 admission to the jazz quintet’s show also includes one of the quintet’s CD and reduced wine prices. Student admission is free.
MUSIC NOTES
Kevin Joyce and Jennifer Sutherland will sing on Friday.
Page 13
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Special thanks to Island Lumber,Artisan Electric, PSE and PSCCUfor their support!
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A new industry begins to take hold on Vashon
Making our homes more efficientHOME ENERGY AUDITS
Puget Sound Energy offers free home energy audits to every one of its customers, which on Vashon means virtually every homeowner. (Renters, too, have some options; see our story on page 18.) The audits are a pretty sweet deal: Those who sign up receive 50 free compact fluorescent light bulbs. PSE has gone through a couple iterations with its home energy audits. Initially, the company offered at a reduced cost a comprehensive evaluation, called a HomePrint Evaluation, which included the use of a blower door and infrared scan to find leaks and gaps. Between January 2009 and February 2010, the company conducted 73 such evaluations on Vashon.It now offers a HomePrint Assessment, an abridged version of the pro-gram without the blower door and infrared scan tests. Those began in March 2010. Since then, the company, using two independent con-tractors to conduct the assessments, has conducted 164 of them on Vashon.“It’s a real good deal for homeowners,” said Michael Laurie, one of the two contractors who performs the audits. PSE officials say the company has seen a reduction in home energy use as a result of the audits. All those CFLs alone have reduced consump-tion on Vashon by 115,241 kilowatt hours, said Luke Giustra, with PSE. The company offers them, said Patti McClements, PSE’s community service manager on Vashon, because it ultimately saves PSE money in the long run.“Our goal is to conserve enough energy so that we don’t have to build more power plants in the future, which is far more costly than bringing the energy conservation message to our customers,” she said.But even with free audits, PSE is not seeing Islanders beat down its doors requesting them. McClements thinks it’s because the company has already reached what she called “the early adopters.” “Now we’re trying to reach the next level, which takes a bit more effort,” she said.
— Leslie Brown
Interested in an audit? Call PSE at 800-562-1482 to schedule an appointment.
By LESLIE BROWNStaff Writer
Yvonne Kuperberg lives a life that’s about a green as it gets: She drives a Prius, heats with wood, serves on a
conservation organization’s board and lives in a small A-frame house tucked deep in the woods.
But stand in front of a pair of French doors in her bedroom during a weatherization test, and the cold air blows through with enough force to muss one’s hair.
Now, Kuperberg is joining the ranks of hun-dreds of other Islanders concerned about leaky homes that are costly to heat, uncomfortable and often — if the homeowner uses extra fuel to heat the house — harmful to the environment. Last week, after getting a home energy audit done, she had her house thoroughly weatherized.
“I heat with wood, and I would like to use less wood,” she said simply, when asked why she’s getting her house weatherproofed.
But even Kuperberg, a longtime Islander who cares deeply about the environment, found it took her a while to make good on that audit. Michael Laurie, a consultant who does home energy audits, conducted the one at Kuperberg’s house two years ago. Greg Kruse, with Potential Energy, came in last week to do the work.
“It took me a while,” she said, smiling. Asked
why, she said she had hoped to have family members do the work. But during an especially cold snap last winter, when she found an icicle inside an upstairs cubby, “That told me I better get something done.”
Across the Island, the picture is mixed when it comes to addressing one of the country’s leading environmental concerns — its vora-cious appetite for carbon-based fuels.
For the past three years, WisEnergy — a group of volunteers working to reduce Vashon’s carbon footprint — has pushed hard to raise the Island’s energy-consumption consciousness. The group has had some meaningful success.
Puget Sound Energy’s most recent numbers show energy consumption has fallen about 7 percent in the last couple of years. What’s more, on Vashon, a small industry is beginning to evolve — one built around home energy con-servation and renewable energy.
Kruse, a contractor who specializes in mak-ing homes energy efficient, not only survived the recession but has seen his small company grow steadily since he started it three years ago. He launched Potential Energy with one helper; he now employs three.
“With respect to everybody else in the build-ing industry, I have a pretty sweet story,” he said.
But at the same time, many people have still not stepped forward, despite the fact that Puget
Sound Energy is currently offer-ing free energy audits, replete with 50 energy-saving lightbulbs, some note. Laurie, one of two contractors who handles PSE’s audits, has done 114 audits on Vashon since he began working for PSE two years ago. He could easily do many more.
“I’m not real busy with energy audits,” he said. “I’m not real busy with conservation work on Vashon.”
What makes energy efficiency difficult, some say, is simple: It’s not very sexy. Kruse, when he came into Kuperberg’s house, sealed up leaks, caulked win-dows and plumbed and weather-stripped that drafty French door. “It’s totally basic stuff,” he said.
Both Laurie and Kruse say the savings from energy efficiency can be significant over time. During this period of low-inter-est rates, reducing one’s home heating costs represents one of the best investments a hom-eowner can make, they said. But many think of weatherization as costing money, not saving it, they said.
“I think part of what holds back the conservation effort is that sometimes people don’t think of the money they put into their homes as an investment, like a 401K. But you should,” Laurie said. “Right now, a good return is, say, 5 to 7 percent. A lot of conservation stuff equals or exceeds that.”
Kris Pedrin, owner of Healthier Air and Heating, a Vashon company, is installing his fourth geo-thermal heat pump, a
system that pumps heat from the ground into the home, consid-ered one of the greenest sources of energy available today. He also installs heat pumps, units that absorb outdoor heat and pass it into the home.
But geothermal systems are expensive — they can cost $20,000 to $30,000, he said. And those who have opted for the new systems have done so not neces-sarily to be greener but because they were facing the staggeringly high costs of heating with oil or propane, he said.
One family, for instance, was paying around $4,000 a year to heat their home with oil. With a geothermal pump in place, their yearly heat bill is now around $700, he said.
Pedrin says he, too, could be busier, and, like Laurie, he also has to go off-Island to get enough work to make a living. But his business is relatively new — he started it eight years ago — and he’s optimistic that Vashon cus-tomers will soon be his mainstay.
“I think it’s just a matter of time,” he said.
Mary Bruno, a board mem-ber and one the founders of WisEnergy, said the small non-profit is poised to take the next step as an organization — one that she believes will help home-owners begin to realize the potential of what she believes is an important and inspiring movement. The group hopes to team up with a much larger nonprofit organization that could bring some money and greater expertise to the Island — maybe
as soon as this fall, she said.Should the partnership come
to pass, WisEnergy would be able to hire a staff member or two, she said. And that, in turn, means the organization could help people move — as Kuperberg did — from getting a home energy audit to doing the work of implement-ing its recommendations.
“One way or another,” she said, “by next year, we plan to have a more aggressive program on Vashon.”
She and others at WisEnergy were motivated to found their organization after reading an article in the July 7, 2008, issue of The New Yorker about a Danish island’s shift to renewable energy.
The dream, Bruno said, is still very much alive.
“Vashon is such a cool place, such an aware place. And it feels like it ought to be this utopia for energy consciousness,” she said.
“It’s about creating a model that really works and is efficient,” she added, “and then promulgat-ing it everywhere.”
Page 15
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Michael Laurie, Yvonne Kuperberg and Greg Kruse in Kuperberg’s house, which will be warmer this winter, now that she had an energy audit done and followed up on the many recommendations.
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12:15pm - 1:00pm GEOTHERMAL Kris Pedrin (Healthier Air & Heating) and Jenny Bell
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PARTICIPANT BOOTHS
1. Artisan Electric2. PSE Lighting3. PSE Home Print4. PSE Green Power5. Puget Sound Cooperative Credit
Union6. Island Lumber7. Watershed, LLC8. Healthier Air and Heating, LLC9. Vashon Heating and Cooling10. Moulding & Millwork11. Oly Mountain Fish Compost12. Logix13. James Hardie14. Potential Energy15. Seattle Electric Bikes16. Champion Metal of Washington17. Boise Cascade / Trex Company, Inc.18. Knauf Insulation19. Second Use20. Pathway Construction21. Unforgettable Fire, LLC22. Maestro Heat23. Living Shelter Design Architect24. Artisan Clay & Painting25. Harmony for your Home26. Down to Earth27. Oregon Shepherd Insulation28. Water District 1929. WaterSmart30. NorthWest Alternative Energy31. North Coast Electric32. Davis Wire33. No Tile Left Behind34. NW Eco Building Guild35. Sustainable Works36. Vashon High School37. Backbone38. Vashon Forest Stewards39. VAA40. Transition Vashon41. Community Solar42. VEVA Electric Vehicles
By SUSAN RIEMERStaff Writer
Homeowners often face many choices when making their houses more energy efficient, but for people who rent, weath-erization options often feel few and far between.
In fact, many renters lament that their only real choice is contending with cold homes during the Northwest’s chilly season or paying very high energy bills, according to Mary Bruno, a board member with WisEnergy.
The crux of the problem is that in most rental houses, the homeowners pay for improvements, but in the case of energy upgrades, the tenants benefit from the work. Such a situation, called a split incen-tive in the energy conservation world, leaves little economic motivation for own-ers to undertake such improvements in their rental properties.
But at least one Vashon family and their landlords worked together to create what both parties say is a win-win situation that reduced the home’s energy footprint and
energy costs and increased its livability.Islanders Steve Brown and Sally Fox
own a 1960s-era Maury Island home where Rob Harmon and his wife Kelly Reese have lived since 2005.
When the couple moved in, the home’s energy-consuming flaws — its original oil furnace, inadequate insulation and single-pane windows — were immediately appar-ent to Harmon, who has worked in the energy-conservation field for more than 25 years.
Those flaws were also apparent to Brown, who noted he shares Harmon’s concerns about energy efficiency for both philosophical and pragmatic reasons.
“We are both concerned about the environment and general environmental issues,” he said.
For Harmon’s part, the pragmatic con-cerns were very real. The house felt cold, he said, and the heating bills were high. At just 1,000 square feet, the house is modest. But with high oil prices — the price is now $4 a gallon on Vashon — it can cost thou-sands of dollars to heat a home of any size over the course of a year.
“It’s frightening,” Harmon said.And so he and Brown worked together
to come up with a plan. They brought in an expert to do an energy audit and sought ways to create the most results for the least amount of money.
“It was a pretty clear early on the answer was insulation,” Brown said.
They followed up on that answer, insu-lating the attic, duct work and the small portion of the floor that was not carpeted.
This change reduced Harmon and
Reese’s oil usage by 28 percent, from 468 gallons one year to 335 the next, he said.
Parts of the house continued to feel cold, Harmon said, and after they had their son
Page 18 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
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Renters find a way to make their house more efficient By working with their landlord, one Vashon family was able to create a cozier home
Kelly Reese and Rob Harmon said that after their son Vaughn Harmon was born, they added insulation to the floor. Their rental, they say, is now much cozier and warmer.
Page 19
SUSAN LOFLAND, REALTOR©
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(206) 999-6470 susanlofl and@johnlscott.com JOHN L SCOTT VASHON 13401 VASHON HIGHWAY SW VASHON, WA 98070
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For the past two years, WisEnergy, a small Vashon organization, has put on Caulk the Rock, an ambi-tious energy fair providing Islanders with hands-on information about ways they can live a bit more sustainably on Vashon.About 500 people have come each year, a decent turnout in light of the weather (it’s been cool and rainy the last two years). This year, organizers hope the sun will shine and even more people will attend. And to that end, they’ve made a few changes.The event takes place on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. — this year in the parking lot at Island Hom Center & Lumber. Previously, it was held in the parking lot next to the Village Green. Mary Bruno, one of the founding board members of WisEnergy, said Island Lumber’s site makes sense: There’s more room, she noted. What’s more, Island Lumber will sell food and provide a flatbed truck for a band, adding a festive atmosphere to the event. WisEnergy will also be able to use Island Lumber’s electronic sign, a beacon organizers hope to put to creative use, Bruno said.In one of the biggest changes, the fair this year is now taking place on the same day as Vashon’s Solar Tour, organized by Artisan Electric. Ten sites are included in the self-guided tour — residences or buildings with different kinds of systems for people to view. Maps for the the tour, which will be held from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., will be available at Caulk the Rock.There are also several more vendors and present-ers at this year’s fair, Bruno said — including a company that makes steel products from recycled scrap metal, another that uses sheep’s wool as insulation and an electric bicycle manufacturer. As in previous years, there will be workshops as well — covering topics from beekeeping to harvesting rain for drip irrigation. The volunteer-run organization continues to try to find a way to make a difference on the Island — to
get an increasing number of people to make their homes more energy efficient, a key step toward creating an Island that’s more energy indepen-dent, Bruno said.For three years, they had a presence on Vashon with their energy hut, located next to the Village Green. WisEnergy sold the hut after a board retreat last fall, in part, Bruno said, because the board believed the hut had served its mission — getting people to step inside and learn more about sus-tainability and energy conservation. Now, she said, they’re taking their message to Islanders, trying to reach new groups of people by visiting churches, civic organizations and class-rooms with their message of a brighter future. “We feel proud about what we accomplished with the hut,” Bruno said. “But we were preaching to the choir. We want to be out in the community.”
Vaughn, now 15 months old, they insulated the rest of the floor.
“Your entire experience of being in the house changed,” Harmon said.
For now, Brown and Harmon are not considering replacing the large single-pane windows. While double-pane windows bring a significant comfort benefit, it takes a long time to reap the financial rewards of installing costly new windows.
“There is energy lost from windows,” Harmon said, “but it is not high enough for the savings to pay for the very high cost of replacing them.”
Harmon and Brown are also considering replacing the fur-nace, but most options would require additional gas or elec-trical service to the house, and that expense, too, is a stum-bling block.
Financially, the couples involved have worked out an approach that seems fair for them — one they believe could be a model for other renters and landlords to follow. Brown and Fox have paid for the upgrades, while Harmon and Reese increased the rent they pay each month equal to the savings they obtained in their utility bills.
Brown noted people in the real estate field have told him the upgrades will not increase the value of the home but may make it more desirable should
he and Fox decide to sell it. The potential financial risk for them is that while Harmon and Reese say they have no plans to move for quite some time, they do not have to stay — and that would bring an end to the reimbursement plan.
For his part, Harmon said even though he and his wife are not saving money from these upgrades, the work was beneficial.
“It is the correct thing to do to reduce the amount of energy wasted in the house I live in,” he said. “And I have derived a lot of practical comforts out of it.”
WisEnergy’s Bruno said that many homes on Vashon were built several years ago as sum-mer homes and were often not intended as year-round dwell-ings, leaving the Island with what Bruno calls a “drafty housing stock.” With the ener-gy situation and energy costs being fundamentally different today than they were when many homes were built, the kind of partnership Brown and Harmon created is important, Bruno said.
Harmon concurs. “Overall the housing stock
on Vashon is in dire need of energy efficiency upgrades,” he said. “If people sit down and do the math together, they can find a way to share the savings, and both folks benefit.”
Jason Williams of Artisan Electric and Janie Starr with Sustainable Vashon take a close look at the solar panels on the roof of the Land Trust Building, which will be a part of this year’s Solar Tour.
Page 20 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
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Page 21
neonicotinoids, commonly used by large-scale farmers to control pests on corn, cotton and sunflowers.
Others are working on educational materials that could be displayed at local stores or are pushing for the creation of what they call bee-friendly gardening displays.
“There are a lot of unknowns, but there’s a growing body of evidence that pesticides are likely play-ing a role in bee colony col-lapse,” said Michael Laurie, who is working on an educa-tional campaign focused on the environmental effects of pesticides. “I think we’ll find over time that there are mul-tiple factors, and pesticides are likely one of them.”
But some of Vashon’s most experienced beekeep-ers say it may be wrong to assume that pesticide-use on the Island is the leading cause of honeybee death.
Steve Rubicz, who’s been keeping bees since 1971, said Vashon doesn’t have the kind of wide-scale pes-ticide-use some parts of the country experience, where agriculture occurs on an industrial scale. Used incor-rectly or at the wrong time of the year, some insecti-cides can be quite harmful to bees, he said. “It’s true that bees are killed by pesti-cides,” he added.
But he believes weather — particularly a lot of rain, which leads to damp hives susceptible to fungus and pathogens — is hard on an insect that originally hailed from the Mediterranean.
“Weather quite often is the problem in the Northwest. It’s amazing how many hives disappear
in the spring for that rea-son,” Rubicz said.
“It’s never been easy (to raise bees) in the Northwest,” he added.
Elizabeth Vogt, a Ph.D- level entomologist who used to do forensic dissections of honeybees for a living, said she, too, believes “our cold springs” have taken a toll on bees. But despite a beekeep-ing community on Vashon with an active listserve, information about what’s happening to Vashon’s honeybees is anecdotal and incomplete, she said.
As a result, she hopes to work with other beekeepers to gather information about the situation on Vashon — how many hives, where they’re located on the Island and what kind of losses, if any, they’ve experienced.
Vogt sees a kind of alarm sweeping Vashon’s beekeep-ers, which is understand-able in light of the deaths many are seeing, she said. “What if chickens were get-ting wiped out?” she asked. “Chicken owners would be panicking.”
“That’s where we are,” she added. “And that’s why we need more information.”
Concern about honeybees has been growing over the years as a result of a phenom-enon called Colony Collapse Disorder, first identified in 2006 and now thought to be responsible for the death of a third or more of the nation’s honeybees. The collapse is cause for alarm in large part because of the role honey-bees play in agriculture: The insects pollinate about one-third of the nation’s crops, including more than 130 different kinds of fruit and nuts; in the case of almonds, the nut would not persist were it not for bees pollinat-ing almond trees.
Theories have abound-ed about the cause, from
viruses to stress to a cell-phone signals, alleged to interfere with the bees’ nav-igational abilities. A writer for Scientific American, in a post on the magazine’s website in April, wrote that three new studies have implicated neonicotinoids — commonly used by farm-ers in some parts of the country — as one of the leading culprits.
In one study, research-ers found that 94 percent of the hives whose bees had been fed the pesticide died within six months, accord-ing to Scientific American. Researchers believe the bees ingest the pesticide not only after it’s sprayed on crops but from corn syrup made from insecticide-treated corn; some beekeepers use corn syrup to feed their bees when their honey stores are not sufficient.
Dixon, a Dockton bee-keeper concerned about pes-ticide use, said he was pre-pared to introduce a motion to the Vashon-Maury Island Community Council calling for Vashon to become “a pes-ticide-free zone.” The motion — advisory only, since the community council doesn’t have the power to enforce such a zone — was scheduled to be voted on next month.
But Dixon said he’s withdrawing the motion because others in the bee-keeping community believe a better approach is to work cooperatively with Vashon’s hardware stores.
“A number of people have been working on this pes-ticide problem. They think my motion might upset the apple cart,” he said.
John Yates, the owner of True Value, said he’s been struck by the number of Islanders who have come into his store wanting to discuss the issue. Just last week, he said, five or six people brought up the sale of pesticides at his shop.
Yates said he’s hesitant to stop selling products that some say may be linked to bee deaths, since those who want the products will simply get them elsewhere. But he said he’s willing to put out brochures or other materials that could educate consumers.
“We’re very happy to help in the educational process,” he said.
As for identifying certain products as bee-friendly,
Yates added, “That has been suggested, and we’re quite open to that idea. We’re open to people who are willing to present the information, to provide it in a non-confron-tational manner.”
At least one beekeeper said he’d oppose any effort to ban the use of certain pesticides. Bob Norton, an orchardist and gardener who has both mason bees and honeybees, said he believes people have to be very careful in their use of pesticides. He has Sevin for his crops, though he rarely uses it. “I have healthy bees, and I have for many years. I use pesticides when I need them,” he said.
It’s imperative, he added, that people read the labels
and follow the directions.“Bees aren’t interested inleaves,” he said. “They’re interested in nectar in flow-ers. Don’t spray anythingthat blooms; if you avoid flowers, you’re not going to harm pollinating insects.”
Others, though, worry that neither science norconsumers can stay abreast of the new pesticides com-ing onto the market — and that as a result it’s best toavoid them, especially insecticides, consideredmore toxic than chemicals aimed at noxious plants.
“There are just thousands and thousands of chemicals coming out on the market,” said Laurie. “They’re coming out faster than detailed stud-ies can keep up with them.”
Did YouKnow... For more information about VYFS, call
463-5511or visit www.vyfs.orgLIKE us on Facebook.
At VYFS, pets are family too.During the dog days of summer, our furry family friend’s coats are HOT and can create life-threatening conditions. And during
LOUD and frightening to them.
Summertime fun time is here again! With it brings memories of all the traditional family times we’ve had in our lives. Here at Daystar, our residents get to relive memories all through the year as we have ice cream socials, picnics and more!
Join us for one of this month’s events where you can meet some of our residents and learn more about the apartment homes that we offer. Come home to Daystar!
JULY EVENTS
Please RSVP Three Days in Advance Seating is limited, and reservations are required for all events.
206.937.6122 2615 SW Barton St., Seattle, WA 98126
www.DaystarSeattle.comIt’s so good to be home!
Please see our website for other exciting
events!
DEBBIE DIMITRE AS BEATRIX POTTERTuesday, July 10th 2:30 p.m.
This Northwest actor and storyteller’s dramatic presentations bring characters to life before your eyes!
MUSEUM OF FLIGHTWednesday, July 18th 10:30 a.m.
Take a road trip with us to see the Museum’s collection of more than 150 historically significant air- and
spacecraft, as well as the Red Barn®.
OLD FASHIONED ICE CREAM SOCIALThursday, July 19th 2:30 p.m.Remember hanging out at the neighborhood
soda shop? Join us for some fun and memories at this month’s ice cream social.
THE IMPORTANCE OF HYDRATIONThursday, July 26th 11:30 a.m.
This month’s lunch and learn series features Ed Carr, RN, Director of Resident Services. Join us for a light lunch
and learn why proper hydration is essential for seniors.
Summertime Means Family Fun at Daystar!
CONTINUED FROM 1
Page 22 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
SPORTSVashon-Maury
BASKETBALL CAMP: Registration is stil l open for Vashon Island Junior Basketball Camp. The camp, for players in kindergar ten through eighth grade, is on July 9, 10 and 11. For more information or to register, visit w w w.vashonparkdistr ic t.org or call the park distr ic t office at 463-9602.
Serving Vashon Island Since 1929 463-9134
WILLIAMS HEATING Proudly Sponsors…
Ryan BinghamCrew, Vashon Island Rowing ClubRyan led both the boys quadruple sculls (with Gus Magnusson, Tate Gill and Baxter Call) and double (with Magnusson) to silver medals at the 2012 US Rowing Youth Nationals in Oak Ridge Tennessee. Ryan had a great season, including wins in the double at the Brentwood Regatta in Canada, and in the quad at UW’s prestigious Windermere Cup. Ryan is graduat-ing this year, and leaving Vashon for college in Ithaca, NY. His work ethic and skill will be missed, but he always led by example, and leaves a great legacy for all of the athletes at the Vashon Island Rowing Club.
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The McMurray Middle School girls track and field team placed first of seven teams at the West Sound League meet on May 31. With results not immediately avail-able, the girls just recently learned of their big win.
Coach Marilyn Oswald said that in the past decade the team has never placed higher than third.
“This is a real accomplish-ment,” Oswald said. “These are big schools with over 150 athletes each that we compete against.”
The athletes earned a com-bined score of 131 points at the meet. The next closest school only had 89 points. Virginia Miller earned 20 points with two first place finishes; Annika Hille earned 17, Audrey Benner 8, Jane Oswald 8, Katrina Heffernan 10, Kat Andrus 12, Delaney Anderson 6, Jessica Merritt 4, Lauren Jenks 1, and Kate Atwell 1.
Oswald said the MVP award for the meet should go to Abigail Kim, who earned 30 points individually, and then
anchored the girls 4x200 to victory for another 10 points. This team also set a McMurray record with a time of 1:52.
Based on encouragement from her coaches, Kim went on to compete in an Amateur Athletic Union-sanctioned track meet in Renton last weekend. There she placed
second in the 100 and 200 meters and had a personal best long jump of over 17 feet to qualify for the national Junior Olympic track meet in Houston, Texas in August. Kim also qualified to com-pete in the USA Track and Field qualifier at Chief Sealth Stadium last Saturday.
Vashon’s 14-and-under fast pitch softball team, made up of seventh- and eighth-grade girls, came in second place in the West Seattle Softball League. The team wrapped up its season on June 14 with a tournament in West Seattle.The Vashon Fury, sponsored by the Barber & Beauty Shoppe, entered the championships with a winning record of 15-0, but lost the last two games of the season-ending tournament. The team is coached by Lauri Hennessey.Top row, from left, Lauri Hennessey, Aria Garrett, Emma Figgins, Lilly Hennessey, Rhea Enzian, Olivia Santiago. Bottom row, from left, Abigail Eades, Mallory Breen, Aubrey Kraabel, Katie Poplin, Delaney Anderson. Bailey Kormsby is not pictured.
McMurray’s 4x200 relay team came in first at the West Sound League meet, helping the girls’ track team to an overall victory. From left, Delaney Anderson, Audrey Benner, Abigail Kim and Annika Hille
McMurray girls win league track meetSWINGING THEIR WAY TO THE TOP
Page 23
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says she’s seen countless chil-dren come alive in Buehl’s class-room. Buehl creates an environ-ment where students can be cre-ative within certain parameters, Labinski said, and where they learn that there are no mistakes in art.
“Add a whacky nature and a great storyteller, and she’s an expe-rience,” Labinski said. “And it’s one you can’t replicate.”
Patricia Toovey, an artist who has volunteered in Buehl’s class-room as part of the Vashon Artists in the Schools program, agreed. Recalling the time Buehl created the frame of a nearly life-size orca and let children decorate the out-side, Toovey said Buehl has a way of “making the bones and hanging the creative expression on that.”
“I’ve seen kids that are not maybe prosperous in other aspects of their schooling that thrive in that environment,” Toovey said.
Struggling in school is a story that’s all too familiar to Buehl. She
herself is dyslexic. Unlike her own students, Buehl
grew up in a time when not much was known about dyslexia, and children who suffered from it didn’t get the help they needed in school.
“I had teachers tell me I was so stupid I would never succeed at anything,” Buehl recalled. “They had me standing in corners and all kinds of stuff.”
But art class was where Buehl thrived, and to this day she credits an art teacher she had in fifth and sixth grade with turning her life around.
“(She) kept me alive. … She provided a venue for me to show my abilities, and I never had that before,” Buehl said. “Art is such a good tool for self-esteem.”
Eventually Buehl graduated high school with a C average and went on to earn a bachelor’s degree in art education as well as a master’s degree in drawing.
In the late 1980s, as an artist who taught summer camps for Vashon Allied Arts, Buehl approached the superintendent of the Vashon Island School District, which at
the time did not have a dedicated elementary art teacher.
“All my life I had been one of the those kids on the margin, and art spoke to me. I said, ‘I want to know who is speaking for those children.’ I said, ‘Hire me, and I’ll push a cart.’”
Buehl did push a cart at first, and eventually got her own classroom. Early on in her career she helped spearhead the Vashon Artists in the Schools program, and she has continued to take art classes in her spare time.
“I always say you can’t feed oth-ers unless you’re feeding yourself,” she said.
Over the years, Buehl said, she has seen herself in children who struggle in other subjects but thrive with a paintbrush in their hands.
“I make sure I check on them, and I make sure sometimes that they know my story, because it’s huge for them,” she said.
Retirement is bittersweet for Buehl. She’ll miss teaching dearly, she said, but is looking forward to spending time with her hus-band and focusing on her own art,
which has ranged from drawings of anthropomorphic animals to more expressionistic paintings and prints.
While colleagues, parents and students all laud the retiring teach-er, she is quick to ward off their praises, saying instead she’s been blessed to be able to teach. Last week at a retirement party, teach-ers presented Buehl with a Native American blanket and thanked her for what she’s done at Chautauqua, and Buehl, tearful at times, simply returned their remarks.
“I have so much respect for all of you and the work you do with children,” she said.
Even in the classroom, Buehl says it’s her students who have inspired her.
Last year she decided to make felt hats with the children, a huge undertaking. When the the project was finally complete, Beuhl said each hat looked just like the stu-dent who made it.
“Each child has so much creativ-ity. What is important is you just have to fan their flame,” Buehl said. “What am I going to do now? I’m going to fan my own flame.”
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Page 26 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
Jory RandlesJory passed away on
May 28th after a long illness. His kind spirit and gentle nature will be remembered forever by all who knew him. He was very proud of and loved his children and grandchildren very much. Before his illness he was a handyman on Vashon Island and a talented artist, which was visible in the care he took with all the projects he worked on. He also enjoyed gardening, music and restoring old cars and trucks. He graduated Franklin High School in 1968 and received an associate of arts degree from Green River Community College and a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Oregon and held a teaching certificate. He taught school in Oregon before moving back to the Seattle area and going to work for Boeing Aircraft Company. He loved Puget Sound and spent a lot of time at Alki Beach. His final wish to have his ashes scattered in Puget Sound was carried out by his loving immediate family. He was preceded in passing by his loving mother Audrey. He is survived by his father Jack, children Jason and Jenifer, brother Marty sister Linda, his precious grandchildren Jordan, Janelle, Arden and Foster and many relatives and friends. There will be a celebration of his life on August third at two p.m. at the Kenney Community Room located at 7125 Fauntleroy Way SW, Seattle WA 98136 Gifts of remembrance can be made to the Kenney
Foundation at the address above.If you plan to attend the celebration of Jory’s life
please R.S.V.P. in the guest book.Please visit our online guest book at
www.islandfuneral.com
next year, mostly due to falling revenue from the sales tax. Last year the county council approved a two-year $20
license tab renewal fee that sustained Metro service through next summer. But unless the state Legislature finds a way to fill the deficit when the fee expires, Hansen said, the transit agency will be forced to cut the equivalent of 600,000 ser-vice hours county-wide.
If cuts are required, the changes will come first to Vashon, the Snoqualmie Valley and Southeast King County, the three rural areas selected for a pilot project. The county will start the process by exploring the elimination of bus trips in the three areas that have the lowest ridership, those in the bottom 25 percent county-wide. On Vashon, those include early morning, mid-day and evening trips on routes 118 and 119.
In its 70-page report, the county suggested several ways to meet a community’s transportation needs if bus trips are cut and promised community participation will factor into those discussions. For instance, Vanpools, or county-spon-sored carpools in Metro vans, are already in use all over the
county. A shuttle subsidized by the county and operated by a local organization could fill in when buses don’t serve. And the county’s Dial-a-Ride Transit vans could serve regular routes and be booked for trips in advance.
More unorthodox options in the report include bike renting, car sharing and contracting with school buses to transport adults as well.
“We’re not going to leave people without service,” Hansen said. “It might look different, and we hope it will cost less, but they won’t be left with nothing.”
Hansen said the county would determine what options worked best for Vashon through a public feedback process that would likely include multiple public meetings.
“If your trip is to get you to a ferry terminal during com-mute hours, maybe we do something different with a fleet of vans,” he said.
Hansen said that just because a bus trip has low rider-ship doesn’t mean it will be cut. He also said the county wouldn’t cut runs if there was significant resistance from Vashon residents.
“The plan proposes a process, rather than a table for say-ing, ‘This route here,’” Hansen said. “Metro always has a list of the bottom 25 percent performing routes, and there will always be a compelling reason to not have some of those services eliminated.”
About a year ago the county approved the creation of a five-year plan to implement alternative transportation.Metro is now waiting on the county council to approve Metro’s proposed process for identifying and implementing the bus alternatives.
According to Metro’s plan, submitted to the council last Friday, the agency held several meetings at the beginning of the year to inform and get feedback from representatives of those who may be affected by the new plan. A list of 80 so-called stakeholders the county reached out to included city public works directors, social services providers and represen-tatives of schools and large employers such as Boeing. Vashon,however, was not represented at any of the meetings.
VMICC’s Johnson is listed as a stakeholder for Vashon,but he said he was never invited to the meetings and hadn’t even heard of the plan until contacted by The Beachcomber.
“That is news to me,” he said of the stakeholder meetings.Rochelle Ogershok, a communications specialist with
the county’s Department of Transportation, said Johnson should have received multiple emails about the meetings. Johnson said he received a Metro email thanking stake-holders for their involvement but nothing prior to that.
Johnson said he was most concerned that there seemed to have been very little communication with Vashon residents about a plan that could significantly alter Metro service on the Island. He said the situation reminded him of the recent installation of rumble strips on Vashon Highway, a decision made by the county with little to no communication with Islanders.
“I can’t speak for everybody, but the vast majority of people I talk to feel like they’re being ruled by an absentee landlord
All-Merciful SaviourOrthodox Monastery
9933 SW 268th St. (south of Dockton)SUNDAYS: DIVINE LITURGY 10:00 am
Followed by PotluckCelebrating 2000 years of Orthodox Christianity Call for a schedule weekday and Holy Day services.
463-5918www.vashonmonks.com
Burton Community ChurchALL ARE WELCOME
INSPIRATION not Indoctrination!Worship 11 am
Rev. Bruce Chittick, PastorMaggie Laird
Pianist/Choir Director463-9977
Bethel Church14736 Bethel Lane SW(Corner of SW 148th St.
and 119th Ave. SW)9am Sunday Bible School
10am WorshipFollowed by coffee fellowship
AWANA Thurs 6:00pm Sept-May
Offi ce phone 567-4255
Vashon Island Community Church
Worship Service 10:00 am (Children’s Church for preschool–5th graders)
Offi ce Phone 463-3940Pastors:
Frank Davis and Mike Ivaska9318 SW Cemetery Road
www.VICC4Life.com
Catholic ChurchSt. John Vianney
Mass–Saturdays at 5:00 pmSundays 8:00am and 10:30am
Pastor: Rev. Marc Powell16100 115th Avenue SW,
Vashon WA 98070
office 567-4149 rectory 567-5736www.stjohnvianneyvashon.com
Vashon Island Unitarian Fellowship
Community, Diversity, Freedom of Belief,Enrichment of Spirit
Sunday Services at 9:45 am (Sept–June)Religious Exploration for toddlers–8th Grade
Lewis Hall (Behind Burton Community Church)
23905 Vashon Hwy SW
Info: www.vashonuu.org 463-4775
Vashon Friends Worship Group
(Quakers)
10 am Meeting for Silent Worshipin members’ homes.
Call for Location567-5279 463-9552
Havurat Ee ShalomServing the spiritual, social and
intellectual needs of Vashon’s Jewish Community
9:30 am Saturday Services
15401 Westside Hwy SWPO Box 89, Vashon, WA 98070
463-1399www.vashonhavurah.org
Episcopal Churchof the Holy Spirit
The Rev Canon Carla Valentine PryneSundays – 7:45 am & 10:15 am
Church School & Religious Exploration9:00am
Child CareMid-week Eucharist, Wednesday–12:30pm
15420 Vashon Hwy SW 567-4488www.holyspiritvashon.org
Vashon Lutheran Church18623 Vashon Hwy. SW (1/2 mile south of Vashon)
Children’s Hour 10:30 am (Sept.- June)
Holy Communion Worship 10:30 am
Pastors: Rev. Bjoern E. MeinhardtRev. Jeff Larson, Ph.D., vm: 206-463-6359
www.vashonluthernchurch.org/JeffLarson/JeffLarson.htm
463-2655e-mail: vlc98070@centurytel.net
Vashon United Methodist Church17928 Vashon Hwy SW
(one block south of downtown)
Pastor: Rev. Dr. Kathryn MorseSunday Service & Sunday School
10:00 a.m.Weekly Gluten-Free Communion
Offi ce open Mon.–Thurs. 9 a.m. – 12 noon 463-9804
www.vashonmethodist.orgoffi ce@vashonmethodist.org
Calvary Full Gospel Church at Lisabeula
Worship 10:30 am & 7:00 pmThursday Bible Study 7:00 pm
Call for locationSaturday Prayer 7:30 pm
Pastor Stephen R. Sears463-2567
Vashon Presbyterian Church
Worship 10am17708 Vashon Hwy (center of town)
Pastor Dan HoustonChurch Offi ce Hours
Monday– Thursday 10 am - 2 pm
463-2010
Our Vashon Island
Community warmly invites
you and your family to worship with them.
Pla ces of Wors hipon our Island
Centro Familiar CristianoPastor: Edwin Alvarado
Ubicados En Bethel Church14726 Bethel Lane SW
206-371-0213Hora De Services: Sabados 7:30pm
Todos Son Bienvidos, El Lugar Ideal Para Toda La Familia
Dios Les Bendiga
METROCONTINUED FROM 1
Page 27
WILLIS JACOBUSFebruary 6, 1927 — June 8, 2012
On June 8th the Pearly Gates opened wide and Heaven gave Willis a hero’s welcome. His death from a heart attack was a huge shock to all who knew him because he was the youngest 85 year-old you could ever meet. He was an inspiration: able to hike mountain trails, water-ski, and snow ski into his eighties. He was a kind, loving, adventurous, energetic, artistic, hard working man, with a gentle wit. He loved Jesus, his family, the beauty of the Pacific Northwest and the Husky Football Team. His heavenly family was overjoyed to be reunited, but his earthly friends and family will miss him greatly.
He was born in Seattle and settled in the Sea-Tac area and attended Highline High School. He enlisted in the Navy during World War II and “fought the Battle of Bremerton”. After the war, he returned to Highline and was able to play football and to court his high school sweetheart, Gwen Phillips. They graduated in 1947. After high school, Willis attended the University of Washington for one year and fulfilled his dream of playing on the Husky Football Team. He moved on to the Burnley School of Art where he was able to refine his God-given artistic talent. After graduating from Burnley, Willis went to work for Pacific Northwest Bell Telephone Company in the capacity of graphic artist. He spent about fifteen years illustrating the telephone directory, travelling all over Washington. After so many years of too much time away from home, he took another position at “Ma Bell” and was able to devote more time to his family. He was an assistant Scout Master and a member of the Snoqualmie Pass Ski Patrol. Willis took early retirement from AT&T in 1985.
Willis married Gwen in 1949, and they were together for 46 years until her passing in 1995. Together they raised two children; Bill and Lyn. After he retired, Willis and Gwen became snowbirds and enjoyed many winters in Coolidge Arizona. As a lonely widow, Willis turned to a former neighbor, Annabelle Richards for companionship. Their friendship blossomed and they were married in 2002. They first lived in Eatonville and then moved to Spanaway. They also spent many fun filled and work packed days at “Pancake Heaven”, the Phillips’ family retreat, on Vashon Island. Together, they attended as many family birthday parties, weddings and graduations as humanly possible. Willis and Annabelle worshiped at the Eatonville Methodist Church and the Vashon Community Church.
He is preceded in death by his wife, Gwen: his son, Bill: his parents “Brick” and Grace: his brother Jerry and his sister, Shirley. He is survived by his wife Annabelle; daughter Lyn Lang (Bruce), daughter in law Cindy Jacobus; Grandchildren Amber Sawicki ( Josh), Thea Chavez (Stephen), Billie Reade (Bill), Hunter Jacobus, Sean (Heidi) Lang and Jesse Lang. His stepson Larry Richards (Beryl); nine great grandchildren; his sister Suzanne Gehring (Dick), his brother Dale Jacobus and numerous nieces and nephews.
A memorial service celebrating Willis’ life will be held on July 14th at 2PM at the Vashon Community Church. Island Funeral Service is in charge of arrangements.
Please visit our online guest book at www.islandfuneral.com.
Letters accepted must be no more than 150 words and include a daytime phone number. Deadline for this section is noon on Friday. Letters in this section will run as submitted except in the cases of libel or profanity.
Thanks for beautifyingour groundsVashon Community Care thanks the Windermere real estate agents for their com-munity service on June 15. The Windermere agents spent the day beautifying the grounds of VCC. Thank you for enriching the lives of individuals on Vashon through creative, collaborative, caring community-wide services.
Janelle AnsellVCC Administrator
Thanks to Engel’s Repair & TowingVIFR would like to extend its thanks to the employees of Engel’s Repair and Towing for their assistance with a medical emergency and for their commitment to the community of Vashon and Maury Islands. Their firm and personnel have repeatedly gone above and beyond in rendering assistance to our fellow citizens.
Chief Hank Lipe, Vashon Island Fire & Rescue
Thanks to all the Vashon angels who helped at celebrationMy thanks to all the Vashon angels who made the celebration for the elders at my home on May 26 so amazing. Thanks to Dan Brown and Co. for music that made you want to dance; Barb Adams and the Threshold Singers for their songs; and Suzanna Leigh and Carol Wameke who demonstrated tai chi and got everyone in the dance, however they could. Sissel Johannessen brought champagne and Hawaiian orchid leis for the 90-year-olds, my son-in-law Floyd Smith came up from Portland to cook the hot dogs, and other angels packed recyclables magically away. Thanks to those who donated cans of food — enough to fill five shopping bags, plus more than $450 to aid in the work of the Interfaith Council to Prevent Homelessness.
Most of all, thanks to the elders who came up my walkway with canes, walking-sticks, crutch-es, walkers and in wheelchairs with family, friends, and solo. Margaret Rosser drove herself. All came with smiles, making it a great day!
Dorothy Hall-Bauer
who makes decisions that affect you,” he said.
In April, a large group of county staff came to Vashon to present the new Community Service Area (CSA) program — a pro-gram to engage citizens of unincorporated King County and replace the com-munity council model. At the meeting, staff also gave information on several cur-rent and upcoming county projects on the Island. The rumble strip project wasn’t mentioned, Johnson said, and neither was the alter-native transportation plan, although both were well under way. The transporta-tion plan was listed briefly in a 16-page document handed out at the meeting.
“It seems like the CSA meeting ended up being more about glad-handing and talking about the future than it was actually using the opportunity to inform people,” Johnson said.
McDermott, however, said he was happy with Metro’s process in crafting the plan. He said the point of the plan is to involve the public when it’s time to decide on alternatives.
“We’re just beginning the process. We haven’t made decisions about how to pro-vide service on the Island,” he said. “You bet we’re going to be on the Island talking to a bunch of stakeholders, the community council, health-
care providers, churches, employers, schools.”
McDermott noted that a couple evening trips on Vashon’s line 118 were recently cut. Under the new county plan, he said, some-thing would have replaced those trips.
“This is a chance to have a conversation that’s different than just cuts,” he said.
Johnson said he was look-ing forward to learning more about the county’s plan but had a hard time imagining how the proposed alterna-tives would take the place of bus trips on Vashon.
“I’m willing to be con-vinced, but I don’t see it,” he said. “My guess is a lot of the alternatives they talk about aren’t really feasible for Vashon. I’m getting the sense that this is a cut. People are going to have to find another way to get where they’re going or ride an earlier route.”
Hansen, meanwhile, said he hoped Vashon residents would be open to trying less-traditional ways of getting around.
“I’m expecting people on Vashon might kind of run with this,” he said. “It’s an opportunity to do some-thing different and creative. We could do something that no one else does nationwide and if works for (the Vashon) community, yippee.”
The King County Council is expected to vote on the plan late this summer.
Firefighters finish work at a home on Cove Road where a short in a ceiling fan ignited a fire.
Last Thursday Vashon Island Fire & Rescue (VIFR) responded to a fire at a small home on the 10200 block of Cove Road, where a renter woke to find his bathroom on fire. Investigators later determined that a short in a the bathroom’s ceiling fan started the blaze, said Capt. Josh Dueweke.
After the man opened the bathroom door, fire and smoke did significant dam-age at the home. However, VIFR’s quick response time, about three minutes, saved the structure, Dueweke said.
“I don’t believe it’s a total loss,” he said.
About a week earlier, on Friday, June 15, VIFR was called to a house fire on the 22700 block of Wax Orchard Road, another rental house where a short, this time in a lamp cord, started a fire in a second-story bedroom. Responders were able to contain the fire to the bedroom. However, there was significant smoke damage, and the renters, a family with four children, were forced to move out.
Sally Adam at The Harbor School began a collection for the family; they had no rent-ers’ insurance, and many of their personal items were destroyed.
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Pacific Research Laboratories, Inc. (Sawbones) is seeking a Production Manager to join our team on Vashon Island, WA.For over three decades, Sawbones, the originators of “hands-on” workshop models, continues to be the leader in medical models for orthopedic and medical education. Sawbones models have been specifically developed for use in motor skills exercises where a realistic artificial anatomical model is required for the “hands-on” teaching of surgical procedures. We offer a complete range of services to enhance the world of medical education, product demonstration, and patient awareness.Job Description:The Production Manager is responsible for all activities related to the manufacturing operations on the production floor. This includes planning of production, production control, new product integration and continuous process improvement. This position oversees a staff of approximately 70 employees on multiple shifts and reports to the CEO.Responsibilities:
requirements, labor hours, cycle, and production costs.
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environment with competing demands.
About Vashon:Vashon Island is located five miles south of the north end ferry terminal which services Fauntleroy (West Seattle) and Southworth (Port Orchard). The economy is heavily based on residents commuting to Seattle and Tacoma. The pace on the island is a bit slower than the surrounding cities and the attitude is more relaxed. It is considered to be the “Heart of the Sound” with views of water and mountains at every corner.
Stock Ownership Program (ESOP). Employees enjoy a diverse, creative, and friendly
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More animals and info at www.vipp.org Give a Pet a Home!
Jack Black is a
sweetheart. Spunky and generously
proportioned, like his namesake, he
is also easy going, relaxed and in no
way obnoxious (unlike the original,
perhaps). He absolutely adores
being petted and is best suited
to loving home whose humans
appreciate a pet that drools when
delighted. Perhaps he should have
been named after Robert Palmer,
since he’s clearly addicted to love.
Kiki was a VIPP cat that recently
came back to the shelter when her
person went to the nursing home.
Kiki is a petite cat that loves nothing
more than to sit beside her human
and get combed and petted. She
would be a great cat for a senior
citizen. Kiki came back to VIPP 3/12. Lilly is a little BIG dog! She is a very cute 3
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other dogs but would be best in a house with
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Call 206-389-1085 or email dogs@vipp.org to
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Follow VIPP on Facebook: www.facebook.com/pages/Vashon-Island-Pet-Protectors
Last chance to save $20 on adoptions of an adult cats
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from 11:30-2:30, pet some cats and see what VIPP is doing for
Island orphan kitties. Just off of Old Mill Rd at 12200 SW 243rd Street. You’ll be glad you did!
More animals and infoat www.vipp.org
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Page 32 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
13401 Vashon Hwy SW 567-1600 VashonHomes.com
Lavish gardens, all-day sunLive large in this spacious, open home
with views from almost every room!Chef’s kitchen, 3 bdrms, 1.75 baths,
large basement. MLS #369564 $469,000
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Pond, pasture, gardens & more!Everything from orchards to 300’ hi-bankwft on 8.25 acres of gorgeous land! Big,
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3 bdrm 2.25 bath 5.15 ACCustom home on forest-stewardshipland! Hydronic heat, fabulous master,media room, garage, shop and lovelygardens. NWMLS #246490 $549,000
3 bdrm 2.5 bath .47 ACSuper affordable! Lots of updates, lotsof room inside & out, two bonus rooms,
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