vashon-maury island beachcomber, september 12, 2012
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September 12, 2012 edition of the Vashon-Maury Island BeachcomberTRANSCRIPT
BEACHCOMBERVASHON-MAURY ISLAND
NEWS | Schools to enforce new immunization policy. [4]ARTS | VAA unveils lineup for upcoming lecture series. [12]SPORTS | Cyclist will entertain in advance of race . [17]
75¢WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2012 Vol. 57, No. 37 www.vashonbeachcomber.com
A BAND COMES HOMETrolls Cottage to make a
rare Vashon visit.Page 13
FARMING FUNMarket awards go to
some of the best foods.Page 14
A classic sport takes hold on the Island Signs of recovery
Housing market sees a slight uptickBy LESLIE BROWNStaff Writer
A few months ago, when Chris Ballew and Kate Endle found the home of their dreams on the western edge of the Island, they had to do somethingrelatively unheard of in this lingering recession: Act fast.
Indeed, they faced a bidding war forthe small, handcrafted home perched above Ober Beach, a place Ballew affec-tionately calls a “lumberjack’s music box.” Only later, after they’d bought the house, did they learn that there were several backup offers.
“I freaked out when I saw the listing,” recalled Ballew, aka Casper Babypants,a popular recording artist for kids. “We looked at it the next day and made anoffer immediately. … We just love the house.”
Ballew and Endle’s experience wasunusual; bidding wars are still rare. At the same time, their story is illustrativeof something many agents say they’reseeing: The Vashon real estate market, after four years of sluggish sales and falling prices, is moving again.
Last year, by the end of August, 65houses had sold. This year, as of Aug.31, agents on Vashon had closed 90 deals, according to statistics suppliedby Denise Katz, a Windermere agent.Currently, Katz said, 33 homes are in contract — suggesting the number of sales for 2012 will easily top those of the last four years, when agents closedaround 100 transactions.
What’s more, the free fall in pricesappears to be over, although agents are quick to note that it’s impossible to know for sure. Since the high of 2007,housing prices have tumbled a total of 42 percent on the Island. So far this year, there’s a tiny uptick: Prices are up, on average, 1 percent.
Last August, the median sale price on Vashon logged in at $296,000;this August, the median price was $360,000.
Jean Bosch, who with her sister Leslie Ferriel represented Ballew and Endle,
Care center hopes community will help it refinanceMillions could be saved if new loan is securedBy SUSAN RIEMERStaff Writer
Vashon Community Care is launching its largest fundraising effort since it built its facility more than a decade ago, a drive that, if successful, will enable it to refinance its mortgage and secure much-needed financial stability.
The center has never been flush with cash, but recent years have been particularly dif-ficult for the small facility because of the
ailing economy, increased costs, decreased government reimbursement rates — and a considerable mortgage payment each month. This fall for the first time since it opened in August of 2002, VCC may be able to refi-nance, exchanging the 7.65 percent loan it has been locked into since it opened a decade ago for one at 3.5 percent or lower, according to Lynn Davison, president of VCC’s board.
This move would bring down its $55,700, per month mortgage payment by some $20,000 and save $9.6 million over the course of the loan.
“That’s a pretty good return on invest-ment,” Davison said. “This will set us in a
place where we have a mortgage payment we carry for the next 40 years.”
To refinance, however, VCC must raise money to cover fees associated with refinanc-ing and pay down $285,000 in debt. In all, to achieve its goal, it must raise $350,000 by the end of 2012, in addition to the $150,000 it has raised this year so far. Typically, Davison said, VCC raises $250,000 each year and is aiming is to double its revenue generation this year.
“We do not expect to have to do this again,” she noted.
The VCC board and administrators began
SEE VCC, 23 SEE REAL ESTATE, 8
By AMELIA HEAGERTYFor The Beachcomber
Islander Maggi McClure stood watch as her young border collie herded a flock of sheep down a field, criss-crossing quickly behind the white crea-tures and pushing them hun-dreds of yards toward her.
It was quiet on this Maury Island expanse, a wide-open field fringed by firs, except for the occasional sound of McClure’s high-toned whistle. As the sheep approached, McClure told Rob, her dog, to lie down. He instantly obeyed. “Come,” she commanded. He did.
McClure, a longtime animal lover, smiled at Rob, one of her border collies.
“There’s nothing he’d rather do,” she said, a shepherd’s crook in her hand, as her collie kept an intense eye on the flock. “He makes it look easy, but it’s not that easy. … He knows what to do; he’s making all these small adjustments.”
This weekend, both Rob and McClure will join dozens of other dogs and handlers at the Vashon Sheepdog Classic, com-peting in what is becoming an increasingly high-profile event on the Island. McClure, how-ever, will have a special role to play: She’s the organizer of the event, a three-day affair that will take place at Misty Isle Farms — 30 acres of rolling meadow in the center of the
Island.McClure started this new
incarnation of the event (it actually began in 2000 but fiz-zled after a few years) three years ago and has pushed hard to expand it. She dreams of a day when thousands converge on the Island for the entire weekend to watch these highly trained dogs perform.
Already, though, it’s got some
serious traction. A fundraiser for Partners in Education (PIE), the event last year drew more than 2,000 spectators and pulled in $8,000 for the nonprofit, which provides grants and materials for teachers and administrators at Vashon’s public schools. She’s hoping for bigger numbers — in both spectators and fundraising — this year.
The trial will feature food,
crafts and raffles — from an afghan blanket to various pies — all part of an effort to sup-port the education organiza-tion. Spectators can watch the herding action from the natural amphitheater created by Misty Isle’s terrain.
“We are very proud to be associated with (the Sheepdog
Leslie Brown/Staff Photo
Maggi McClure, organizer of the Vashon Sheepdog Classic, with her border collie Rob.
SEE TRIALS, 9
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By LESLIE BROWNStaff Writer
The Vashon Island School Board decided last week to continue with two energy-saving systems for the new high school building rather than axe them from plans to help address cost increases the project is facing.
After a brief discussion at a meeting last week, no one on the board put for-ward a motion to jettison an air-to-water heat pump and a rainwater harvest sys-tem, two green measures that can save the district in operating costs. If removed from the budget, the district would have saved $360,000 in construction costs.
“We’re building this for 50 years,” board mem-ber Kathy Jones noted at Thursday night’s meeting. “I think we should stick with our original choices.”
Steve Ellison, another commissioner, concurred. “The value of changing the course right now is not a great value,” he said.
Under the latest version of the budget, the district will cover the additional costs — due in part to some of the bids coming in about 2.7 percent higher than antici-pated — by using a por-tion of a $2.75 million state grant the district received to assist in the construc-tion of the new high school. The district also has contin-gency funds it can dip into if costs escalate, adminis-trators and board members noted Thursday.
The higher costs mean the project is now a $49
million one — not a $47.7 million project, as initially presented to voters. But Dan Chasan, who chairs the board, said the proj-ect may end up costing less than $49 million.
“It is in the budget, but not everything in the bud-get has been or will be spent,” he said. “So while the budget has increased by that amount, the cost of construction won’t neces-sarily increase.”
What’s more, he said, with most of the bids in and the dirt work completed, “The two biggest uncer-tainties are behind us.”
Superintendent Michael Soltman said costs have increased because “the bid climate changed remark-ably” between the passage of the bond in February 2011 and the start of the project this summer.
Construction has picked up considerably in the Seattle area, making the situation more competitive for the small school dis-trict. What’s more, Soltman said, the recession put some contractors out of business, resulting in a smaller pool of contractors who could bid on jobs.
“Skanska had to work hard to get bidders for these jobs,” Soltman said, refer-ring to the district’s general
contractor.Other costs have gone
up as well, said Eric Gill, the district’s capital proj-ects manager, because of changes the school board has made. For instance, he said, the board decided to upgrade the exterior siding of the building, using mate-rials that will last longer and not need paint.
“These were conscious decisions by the board,” he said.
But Hilary Emmer, one of the only members of the public who attended last week’s special board meet-ing, said she was concerned that the board was decid-ing to use the state funds “before we’ve even poured any concrete.”
“They’re making me ner-vous,” she said of the board. “Anything that’s being rec-ommended, they’re saying, ‘OK.’ ... We just barely start-ed this job.”
Chasan, however, said the board still has lots of tough decisions to make in the weeks ahead as it works to manage the project’s budget.
“With costs coming in high, we’ll have to decide — do we pull some things out now or eat into the con-tingencies,” he said. “We’ll have other such decisions before us.”
Vashon Forest Stewards completed a thinning operation at the school district’s 50-acre forest, pulling out Douglas firs, alders and madrones that will be used to accent the new high school building.The thinning was done for both ecological and safety rea-sons: Some of the trees were considered a potential hazard to students who run, bike and even study in the woods. The woods were also too dense for good forest health, said Dave Warren, who heads Vashon Forest Stewards.The operation, completed last week, resulted in about six truckloads going to mills off-Island and six staying on-Island, where the Forest Stewards will mill the logs for high-end use in the school. The organization will spend a couple of months milling the logs, its biggest job to date, Warren said.“There couldn’t be anything more satisfying to me,” Warren said. “This is the ultimate project. ... We’re pleased, we’re proud, we’re excited to do it.”
School board opts to retain green features
Page 4 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
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October Zamorana, a Mexican restaurant that opened in a taco truck about a year ago, has hung a shingle in town.
Last week the restaurant moved from the truck out-side Sound Food to the small restaurant space adjacentto Treasure Island. The spot, which previously housed Uptown Takeout, includes some indoor seating.
Owner Jorge Garnica said the truck was popular and he enjoyed cooking there, but the winter months were approaching and he wanted to move permanently into a warmer space.
“I look at the customer’s side. I really don’t want to stand outside and wait for food when it’s cold and rainy,” he said.
Zamorana’s truck will return next year for catered events and the farmers market, he said.
Along with the new space, Garnica said the restaurant will soon expand its hours and its menu, adding breakfastand a few new lunch and dinner items. The breakfast menu will include traditional Mexican dishes, such as huevos rancheros.
“It’s going to be a really good breakfast,” he said. Zamorana is currently open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Monday through Saturday.
A community forum on The Affordable Care Act, the health care bill signed into law by Pres. Obama in 2010, will meet next week and include a panel with expertise in a variety of health issues.
This gathering, hosted by the Vashon Social Services Network (VSSN), is intended for families, individuals and businesses, according to Ava Apple, director of the Vashon Senior Center, a member of VSSN and one of the organiz-ers of the event. It is the fourth annual forum the group has held since forming in 2009. The topic seemed an important one, Apple said.
“I expect a large crowd,” she said. “This is a fundamental change that is going to come.”
She noted that the gathering will not be political, but will focus on what the act means for Islanders.
The format of the gathering had not been set at press time, but Apple said she expected that the heart of the evening would be given over to questions and answers,
many of which have already been compiled by organizers. Audience members will be able to ask questions as well.
Panelists will include:
hospitals and medical groups and one of the founders of the Vashon Health Care Council, a group that formed in 2011 to try to address Vashon’s unmet health care needs.
regional office of Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, based in Seattle.
on health care issues and has been involved for many years in the issue of access to affordable care on a national level.
Providence Health & Services.The forum will meet from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 20,
in McMurray Middle School’s multipurpose room.
The Vintage Motorcycle Enthusiasts (VME) hosted their 30th annual Isle of Vashon motorcycle ride on Sunday, registering 800 motorcyclists for the event, according to organizer Jody Heintzman. The club — dedicated to promoting motorcycle safety and aware-ness, as well as the enjoyment of classic motorcycles — discloses the date of the event only to its membership of some 500 motorcy-clists to keep the ride low key and dedicated to old bikes. Heintzman, a Vashon resident, expressed appreciation to the community for hosting the event, the Sportsmen’s Club for pro-viding the location of the afternoon festivities and the Vashon Grapplers for selling hot dogs and hamburgers there. VME contributed $500, a portion of its proceeds from the day, to the Vashon Maury Community Food Bank.
With the soccer season under way,
open its new fields north of town for light use later this fall.
Susan McCabe, the agency’s interim executive director, said it may not be possible but the agency is hopeful that the fields will be ready soon.
“They’re delicate. ... We’re doing our best to get the fields in shape for play this fall but can make no promises at this point,” she said.
however, sounded a more optimistic note. “I think they might be ready in a week or two,” he said last week.
The date for the fields’ opening has been a moving target. Initially, the sports complex was slated to be com-pleted by last summer — then, last year, the project manager said the fields could be ready for play this summer.
Access to the fields is important to the Island’s soccer community, which currently does not have enough soc-
cer space. The situation will be harder than usual this year because of the Vashon High School project, which has led to the closing of the “tweener field” between the football stadium and the main classroom building.
“It’s difficult. We end up putting more feet on fewer fields and that tends to beat them up pretty bad,” said
Vashon Island Soccer Club. Meanwhile, questions have been
raised about how it is that the park district failed to realize it needed a water right before it began irrigating its fields this summer. The state is now working with the park district to bring it into compliance with state law.
intendent Michael Soltman sent an
Wendy Braicks in February 2010 tell-ing her he believed a water right was in order. The school district owns the five-acre property; the park district,
which is responsible for the project’s development, is leasing the land.
“Based upon the regulationsattached, I’m very sure that you can-not use the well for irrigation without a water right,” he said in the email. Braicks, he said, did not respond.
maintenance director, said he also broached the issue. “I recall multiple conversations about it,” he said.
Braicks, who left the job nearly a year ago, said Monday she had been tracking the issue but didn’t believe awater right was necessary then because the well hadn’t gone into use yet. It began pumping water this summer.
“It was a project in process,” she said. “It didn’t seem like everything had to be done at the moment.”
The district, she added, was some-times behind but always managed to correct its missteps. “We always triedto do the right thing,” she said.
— Leslie Brown
Park district hopes to open fields this fall
Page 5
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By SUSAN RIEMERStaff Writer
Vashon public school students who do not provide immunization records within 30 days of being told the paperwork is miss-ing will not be allowed to attend, a move that will put the school district in compli-ance with state law.
For many years, the state has required that children receive vaccines for a num-ber of diseases before they attend school. Parents who choose not to vaccinate can-sidestep the requirement if they complete a Certificate of Exemption form and turn that into the school. If no documentation is provided, students are to be excluded from school.
But the law hasn’t been followed on Vashon, a situation that Superintendent Michael Soltman said he was unaware of until last year. In fact, district nurse Sarah Day, who is beginning her second year with the school system, said she found no immunization documentation for nearly 10 percent of the district’s students last year — a fact she discovered while computerizing the records.
In other districts where Soltman has
served, his office has excluded students for lack of documentation, and doing so typi-cally brought about a prompt resolution to the problem, he noted. He is committed to doing the same on Vashon when the required documentation is missing.
“I feel very strongly about it,” he said. Day feels strongly, as well. “This hap-
pens at most other districts,” she said. “No records, no school.”
The district will also adhere to a law passed last year that requires an additional step from parents seeking an exemption from the state’s vaccination rules: Those parents now have to submit proof that they discussed the benefits and risks of vac-cines with a health care provider. This law applies primarily to those students who are new to the district or have not turned in immunization paperwork in prior years, Day said. Typically, parents file immuniza-tion paperwork when a student enters the district, either in kindergarten or a later grade; the new law applies only to those who have filed for exemptions after July 2011.
“I think it makes good sense,” Day said of the 2011 law. “If people are not vaccinat-ing for contagious diseases, they should know what the community-wide implica-tions are.”
So far, Day said, she hasn’t had any prob-lems with people following the require-ments. She’s already worked with several families, helping them to obtain health insurance, schedule vaccines and proceed
with exemption paperwork.“We are here to help in any way we can,”
she said.No one wants to see students excluded
from school for paperwork reasons, she added, and if families are making a good-faith effort or facing extraordinary circum-stances, the district will give them some latitude.
“There is no need for an exclusion to happen,” she said.
Parents had a flurry of questions for Day after she sent out an email earlier this week announcing the changes, she said, and she wanted to allay unwarranted concerns.
“Everyone will get notified, and we're going to work with them. That is the bot-tom line,” she said.
Day noted that it is important for the school to have accurate vaccine records, not just for the potential health of the dis-trict’s students and employees, but because the information makes up an important database. Public health officials call upon her frequently to look at Vashon's records, she said, and it is important that they be accurate.
Washington is still in the midst of a pertussis outbreak, with almost 4,000 cases reported in the state so far this year, com-pared to 387 cases reported through the same time period last year, according to the Washington State Department of Health. Public health officials recently expressed concern that the return to school will cause a further spread of whooping cough, a respiratory illness that can be deadly for
infants. Day, who shares that concern, said people who are not immunized are eight times more likely to catch pertussis and pass it to others than those who are immu-nized against it. People without protection are also more likely to acquire a stronger case of the disease, which is then more likely to spread.
In King County, rates of pertussis are highest in children between ages 10 to 13, followed by infants less than a year old,according to Public Health — Seattle &King County.
On Vashon, Day said, 18 percent of the district’s 1,500 students have not been vac-cinated against one or more of the illnessesfor which the state requires vaccines, threetimes the state’s average. But exemptions inthe district are going down, she said, and she hopes people who have not vaccinated their children against two of the most con-tagious and potentially harmful diseases — pertussis and measles — will reconsider and do so.
“I am really encouraging people strongly to get the booster for whooping cough and the measles shots,” she said. “Those are the two diseases our Island’s at risk for because of our low levels of immunizations.”
Vashon’s health clinics participate in the Washington State Childhood Vaccine Program, which provides vaccines for chil-dren under 19 at no charge, though some clinics may charge an administration fee for giving the shots. If that fee is a hardship for families, parents can ask that the fee bewaived, Day said.
New immunization policy may keep students out of the classroom
The PBS Newshour recently featured Washington’s pertussis outbreak and included interviews with Islanders March Twisdale and Celina Yarkin. To watch the segment, see www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/health/july-dec12/cough_08-22.html.
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 [email protected].
Page 6 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
EDITORIAL
A decade ago, it was called the Christmas miracle. Now, Vashon Community Care — rescued nearly overnight when Islanders rallied several years ago and raised enough money to keep it from shutting its doors — is looking for another remarkable Vashon moment.
It’s seeking to raise $350,000 in a matter of months, round two, so to speak, in its decade-long effort to become a viable, independent care center for our elderly friends, relatives and neighbors.
On its face, it seems pretty far-fetched. That’s a lot of money to raise in a short amount of time. And while the organiza-tion may be compelling, the ask — at least at first blush — is not. All this money just to refinance? On an Island with a lot of inspired projects, this may not seem like the most exciting one.
But in fact, as Lynn Davison and Janelle Ansell pointed out in a news story this week, this isn’t your garden-variety refi-nance. It represents a significant, even historic opportunity for VCC to right itself financially, continue its mission and keep its doors open to those who are dependent on Medicaid.
It’s a chance to fulfill the vision that was so powerfully articulated a decade ago.
VCC plays an important role on the Island, especially one with an aging population. For some of us, it means a parent can get the support he or she needs — not far from our own home. It offers a break to those of us who are caregivers. It provides short-term rehabilitation to Islanders struggling to recover from surgery or illness. Most importantly, it completes a circle on Vashon: We care mightily about our children; VCC provides an opportunity to care for our elders.
A month or so ago, the Island rallied to support our local movie theater, raising enough money for owner Eileen Wolcott to make a needed conversion to a digital movie pro-jection system. It was a fantastic effort, proving that Islanders can and will step up when a project tugs at their heart.
Let’s do it again, this time for the Island’s only full-service senior care center. A decade ago we saw the opportunity. It’s time, now, to finish the job.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
VCC’s compelling mission
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As an historian of the American West, I confess that I stand in awe of Clint Eastwood’s body of work. He has crafted some of the most indelible images associated with that unending font of significance that Americans call “the frontier.”
Eastwood crossed a frontier again in Tampa at the Republican National Convention two weeks ago. In fact, he crossed the line.
It has been suggested that Eastwood’s appearance was designed to provide a kind of comic relief, that it should not be taken too seriously as part of the Republican convention program. While the Romney campaign tried to protect itself from any blowback by insisting that Eastwood was “ad libbing” and that it “was a break from the political speech-making,” it also pointed out that “the crowd enjoyed it.”
Many commentators have labeled it “rambling,” but it’s hard not to believe that the entire per-formance was at some level care-fully crafted by the Oscar-winning director. The rambling functioned as a bit of cover — like a shot to get the guards to look the other way and allow Eastwood to get away with what he was doing.
The Western hero has been preeminently a man of action, not words. In Westerns, he stands as the opposite of the garrulous
and guileful politician, the untrustworthy man of words. Over the last five years, this mirrors one of the main Republican assaults on Obama: He
is a man who says pretty things but has no follow-through and no substance. By contrast, the Western hero doesn’t say much, but when he is pushed against the wall — when some violence is enacted against him or his fam-ily — he strikes back. In “Hang ’Em High,” Eastwood plays a man who survives a lynching, and then exacts vengeance one by one on the people who tried to kill him.
At the convention, Eastwood played the victim again. With an approving audience of thousands looking on, Eastwood now had President Obama just where he wanted him — seemingly seated, or tied up, in a chair below him, supposedly demanding that Eastwood tell Romney to do something profane to himself, and then telling Eastwood to shut up.
Obama was a hollow, hollering man, and Eastwood was a man back in control ready to quietly exact revenge for the slings and arrows suffered when Obama took power. For those Americans who feel aggrieved by the fact that Barack Obama occupies the White House, Eastwood’s seizing of the bully pulpit was a cathartic master stroke. To illustrate his advice that the American people should fire Obama, Eastwood dragged his finger across his throat.
There was more than a hint of violence. Eastwood first took the stage under a monumental pro-jection of the actor as the outlaw Josey Wales, six-shooters in both hands. The performance ended with what should have been a bone-chilling call-and-response: Eastwood saying, “Go ahead,” and the audience roaring back, “Make my day.” Suddenly, the invisible, mute yet foul-mouthed and uppity president was cast in the crimi-nal role of the punk from “Dirty Harry.”
Presumably, one more peep out of this president and Americans would be forced to exercise so-called Second Amendment solu-tions.
— Douglas Sackman, a Vashon resident, is a history professor at the
University of Puget Sound.
POLITICSBy DOUGLAS SACKMAN
Unforgiven? A great director crosses a line
Park district
For almost three decades, the Vashon Park District has had only one common denominator: Commissioner Bill Ameling. As an accountant and building contractor, he should be held accountable for his poor leadership of the district.
According to what I’ve been told, the fields project was allowed to move forward, under Ameling’s lead-ership, with absolutely no pre-construction services contract. Had there been one, water and sewer issues not only would have been identified, but would have been mitigated.
The financial debacle in which the district now finds itself is not one that the public should have to solve with fundraisers. We pay tax dollars to have these public properties professionally developed and stewarded. On the park district’s website, it states that only $300,000 is needed to have all the money in hand to complete the fields project. It is my under-standing that the pending state contract that will pro-
vide funding will not materialize until the construc-tion problems are corrected; that’s certainly the way it works with grants in most governmental circles.
This is no simple problem, and the one person who could have helped facilitate the correction of these prob-lems has been fired. These are sophisticated construc-tion problems that volunteers certainly cannot correct.
I believe it is time to set term limits for park commissioners so that the arrogance with which issues are handled can be stopped. In addition, at minimum, I believe Bill Ameling and David Hackett should be recalled.
— Priscilla Beard
Marijuana
Voters in Washington state have the opportunity this November to make it legal for persons age 21 and over to possess up to an ounce of marijuana and for
School’s in: Drive carefullyThe days are getting shorter, and school is back in session.
It’s important that those of us zipping to make the ferry or get to town for an appointment remember those two critical pieces of information.
Already, buses are lumbering through town, slowing traffic and adding to our collective sense of impatience. It won’t be long before children will be waiting for those buses in the dark or near-dark — usually with an adult nearby, but not always.
So take it easy. Allow yourself the time you need to get to your destination without speeding. And be aware of the kids walking or biking on our narrow rural shoulders or goofing around while waiting for a bus. And if you feel impatient, remember that you, too, were once a kid.
Page 7
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206-463-4060 or 1-800-209-4168
We had a really great time looking at houses with you and
we’re excited about moving to Vashon. I guess the only
hesitation is that it really is an island. It feels like a big deal
to have to take the ferry every time you want to go shop-
ping. We work from home so we don’t really have to commute, but I’m
used to taking the kids and going out to eat or to a park or to a mall.
How do people adjust?
First, you need to spend more time on the island. Most of us fi nd everything we need right here on Vashon. Our local stores and shops offer pretty much everything we need or want. You don’t know that yet because you haven’t really shopped here. The Island
is fi lled with wonderful parks, open space, trails, beaches and recreational oppor-tunities so I wouldn’t worry about where to take the kids.
As for eating out, we have a small number of restaurants and cafes but they are diverse and good. Everybody has their favorite place to eat. It may take you awhile to go through “mall withdrawal” but it will be healthier for your family. After awhile you won’t miss the hype, the crowds, the mile wide parking lots, or the impersonal atmosphere. An occasional off Island shopping trip can be a fun adventure, especially when it is a special event once a month, not a daily activity.
I rarely leave the Island. There just isn’t all that much reason to go. You need to spend some time shopping here and getting to know what we have to offer. Talk to local shopkeepers. If they don’t have what you want, most are happy to fi nd it for you. Talking to folks around town is a good way to get to know our community and make some real connections. You’ll also want to check out the medical services, library, parks, and schools as well as shopping. I think you’ll be surprised!
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Just Ask EmmaCurrent Real Estate Issues
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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.
VIPP Dog Walk a SuccessOn behalf of Vashon Island Pet Protec-tors I would like to thank all those who participated in the VIPP Dog Walk 2012. Our grand total was $1,415 which includes merchandise sales and donations. Our top three contributors who each received a gift certificate from Joanna Gardiner: Loving care for animals, plants and homes were: First place: Molly, Hanna & Oso; Second place: Gail Dubin and Karen LeVasseur; Third place: Nancy Clark.
VIPP would like to thank The Beachcomber, Thriftway, The Loop, Fair Isle Animal Clinic, Pandora’s Box, The Vashon Pharmacy, The Vashon Bookshop, Vashon Print and Design and Dee Weedin for advertising space as well as VIPP volunteers Ginny
Young, Jerry Benton, Bob Smueles, Joanna Gardiner, Lisa Guy, and the VIPP Dog Pack for staffing the event. A special thank you to our photographer Cindy Koch who provided our participants with an opportunity to receive a commemorative 2012 VIPP Dog Walk photo.
VIPP is very grateful to the community for its continued support of our goal that there are “No More Homeless Pets” on Vashon. If you are ready to add to your family, please go to vipp.org or call VIPP at 206-389-1085 to see all the adoptable felines and canines awaiting their forever home.
Sincerely,Victoria RohlfsVipp volunteer
I was on Bainbridge last weekend, meditating, with a beer in my hand. You see, my parents were visiting, and I was doing two-pronged stress-reduction. The visit went well. Thank you for your concern.
My go-to comparison of the two islands is that Vashon was settled by the native people of Eugene and Bainbridge by the natives of La Jolla. Even with-out that joke, when I say that my parents came to visit, but went to Bainbridge, everyone on Vashon knows that’s funny.
It got me thinking: What do we think or assume belongs on Vashon?
My beer meditation was dis-rupted by the barking of the dog, whom my parents were watching, with the help of the eccentric, exorbitantly expen-sive professional dog-walker who lived across the fence, the same dog whose occasional barks have caused the neu-rotic neighbor across the other fence to keep a tidy log of the minutes barked, and report it to the police, who have kindly informed him several times that he doesn’t have a case.
That kind of doggy doo doesn’t fly, or belong, on
Vashon, I’ll tell you what. But there’s more, and at the very real risk of slaughter-ing various sacred cows, I
must speak!Remember the recent dust-
up about the guy with the Obama-as-Hitler poster in front of the post office? Totally doesn’t belong! Why? I read his material, and the syntax was deplorable! There was no sense of grammar, style or coherence at all. I was offended by the example his “writing” set for our community — and not just for the children, but for all of us. Take your horrible sentence structure elsewhere!
OK, breathe. Moving on, I’m just going to say it: Why was there a Costco booth at Strawberry Festival? Not that we don’t want their booth fee, but what are they doing? For
15 minutes I watched from a safe distance the utter lack of booth traffic suffered upon the two young employees and wondered if it wasn’t some kind of retail missionary work for new hires?
I love Costco, love the new exit off the West Seattle bridge, love everything they’ve done to make booze available in laundromats. But why do they come to us? Are they test-ing the local market to possi-bly build a store, then a bridge, then a stadium? Call me crazy!
Here’s a bigger one: I won-der if government belongs here. I mean government of any kind. We cannot for the life of us seem to get it right. There’s something in the water that makes us unruly and ungovernable.
So let’s just call a spade a spade, and secede — from the county, the state and the coun-try. Imagine the laws we could make if left to ourselves! Bring back the stockades! Publicly humiliate anyone who tries to pass on the merge up ferry dock hill! Talk about creating a sense of community.
For anyone still reading — hello, head lice have no place
on Vashon! I mean they do, currently, and you may be scratching your head wonder-ing where? Without a shred of political correctness, I say, kill them all. They’re disgusting and we hate them.
So, here’s what we do: huge public lye vats for periodic, voluntary self-dipping. Unless children won’t do it voluntarily, in which case we create a pool of money from a small com-munity tax and pay them, on a sliding scale. We offer $1, and if they refuse, we’ll go up to $5; after that, we dunk them.
The technology does exist to keep Vashon free of lice. I’m thinking, and I know you are too, of the ticket scanners used by the ferry workers. Modify them to scan for head lice! We have smart people here, and the need is real. Yes, it may take a little more time, and yes, some people will miss their boat.
We know what belongs here, and we are willing to con-tinue to sacrifice any sense of being normal to keep Vashon Vashon. Vashon. I just had to say it again, I love it so.
— Kevin Joyce is a writer, father, dog-owner and humorist.
What really belongs here? It’s a question worth askingISLAND WAYSBy KEVIN JOYCE
state-licensed growers to produce marijuana for sale at state-licensed stores.
If I-502 is approved by the voters, I will be interested to read the articles in The Beachcomber in support of the people who will be locally producing drugs for consump-tion by their Island neighbors. I would expect to see articles like that in The Beachcomber given the article published recently celebrating the new distillery and the excitement that is surrounding the opportunity for local produc-tion of one of the most destructive, damaging and addictive drugs available. After reading so many articles and opinion pieces in The Beachcomber regarding substance abuse prob-lems on the Island, I have to say I was a little surprised to see an article promoting drug use. Or was it an article promoting shopping locally, another Beachcomber favorite?
Either way I am curious to see if The Beachcomber will treat marijuana growers with the same amount of respect and admira-tion that they give to alcohol distillers.
— Jeremy DeKoker
Ref. 74
Our whole family is hoping that our Vashon friends and neighbors will join us and vote to approve Referendum 74. We strongly support every Washingtonian’s right to marry whom they love and choose to share their life with. Let people be happy; it is the right thing to do.
Please vote to approve Referendum 74.
— Jake and Shelley Dillon
Page 8 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
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said she’s had a couple of bidding wars this summer and seen several situations where there were multiple offers on a property. Several factors are at play, she said, includ-ing extremely low interest rates, savvier buyers and sellers and the pent-up demand that several years of slow sales has created.
“People are poised to make a purchase. They’re ready to buy,” Bosch said.
Crist Granum, another John L. Scott agent, concurred, noting that special prop-erties are the first to go. “If you’ve got something rare or cute, the buyer will be there,” he said.
Beth de Groen, who owns the Windermere office in Vashon, said she predicts sales will be up 5 percent this year over last year. Many of the people who she and other agents are working with are first-time home buyers with young children, “really nice young people who I think will be here for the rest of their lives,” she said.
But it’s not just properties on the low-end of the price spectrum that are selling.
“We’re going to sell a lot of expensive waterfront houses that were on the market last year and didn’t sell,” de Groen said.
Emma Amiad, a buyer’s broker on Vashon, agreed, noting that if sellers set the price right, their house will sell quickly. “We’ve been seeing that in the 200, 300, 400, even 600,000-dollar range,” Amiad said. “It’s all based on whether or not they get that price right.”
The trends on Vashon mirror those throughout the region, where both the number of sales and the median prices are on the rise. In King County, the number of single-family homes that sold in August was 22 percent higher than that of a year ago, and the median price climbed 8 percent, according to the Northwest Multiple Listing Service. King County’s robust summer has proved to be the busiest summer for home sales in five years, The Seattle Times reported last week.
But setting the price right can be a bit-ter pill for sellers, especially those who purchased a house between 2003 and 2007,
when housing prices on Vashon were esca-lating at a rapid clip, or who refinanced during those flush years and took equity out of their home.
Ray and Kate Willey bought their house on the north end of Vashon for $359,000 in 2005, then refinanced it in 2009, pulling out $40,000 for a remodel, Kate said. Last year, the couple decided to move to Vermont —
where a state-subsidized health care program would put an end to their escalat-ing health care costs — and placed their house on the market for $319,000. It sat for two months without an offer, Kate said. The couple put it on the market again this spring, listing it for $299,000. It sold in six days.
The couple was glad to sell; their new home in Vermont — a spacious place on 11 acres — cost $180,000. It’s situated in a beautiful part of the state, she added, where her husband will be able to hunt and fish. Even so, she said, she feels sick about the price they ultimately had to accept on Vashon.
“We lost all our equity,” Kate said. “We almost gave it away.”
Amiad said she knows of similar situa-tions, where couples bought at the top of the market and sold at a considerable loss. The situation will likely continue for some time, she said. Most real estate experts believe it will be years before people see their houses regain the value they lost over the last few years.
“We’re not going to catch up for a really long time,” she said.
Ballew, who is also a member of the rock band The Presidents of the United States of America, said he’s experienced the tumul-tuous housing market from both ends. He bought a house in 2006, only to see its value drop and find he couldn’t sell it. He now owns it as a rental. Ultimately, he said, he’s tried to follow what he called his “cre-ative barometer, rather than the financial barometer.”
“The funny thing is, you can wait until the timing is perfect, but when life presents an opportunity, you sometimes have to act. For Kate and I, it was time to start enjoying the tone Vashon had to offer,” he said. “We needed that in our lives. Where the market was at was not a factor.”
REAL ESTATECONTINUED FROM 1
Classic) because Maggi has a very big picture in her head of where this could go,” said Terri Colello, a PIE board member. “We’re proud to be a part of it and hope to con-tinue it into the future.”
This weekend, top-notch dogs and their handlers from around the Northwest and as far away as Kentucky will descend on the Island, ready to give their best showing, McClure said.
“We’re still a very young trial, but we’re on schedule to becom-ing one of the West’s top events,” she said.
The Vashon Sheepdog Classic is a nationals qualifying event for the U.S. Border Collie Handlers Association and is drawing qual-ity competitors, including the association’s 2010 national cham-pions, handler Patrick Shannahan and his dog Riggs. About 140 dogs will run the Misty Isle courses this weekend. Though the event is open to all breeds of dog, 98 percent of the entrants are border collies, McClure said.
“Maggi is one of our top han-dlers and is a good host,” said Francis Raley, secretary of the U.S. Border Collie Handlers Association. “Handlers look for-ward to her trial.”
Two aspects of the Vashon event make it an attractive and challenging one for handlers and their dogs, McClure said.
Misty Isle’s rolling hills make
visibility difficult, forcing the dog and handler to work with greater skill. What’s more, some of the animals the dogs will herd are lambs that have had little experi-ence with canines; their minimal exposure to dogs and their young age could make them unpredict-able and tough to keep together on the course, McClure said.
In the competition, each dog has a set of tasks on which it is judged. First, it must approach a group of five sheep 300 to 400 yards away, then herd the sheep down a field toward their handler.
Next, the dog pushes the sheep through sets of wooden panels and separates two sheep from the rest. Afterward, the sheepdog must split just one sheep from its group, and finally guide the entire group of sheep through a gate and into a pen.
On each part of the course, the dog can receive a perfect score or lose points for errors. The top dogs and handlers from each day of the three-day event will receive cash and prizes, McClure said.
The Vashon Sheepdog Classic originally began in 2000 but was
only recently revived in 2010. It started as a way for Vashon sheepdog handlers to give back to the competitive world of their sport, said Bill DeVoe, an Islander who founded the event and is this year’s course director.
“In sheepdog trialing, every-body has to contribute, and you all do your part,” DeVoe said. “Part of the way you can give back to the sport is if you can put on a trial yourself, … and we just thought we’d do our part and put on a trial.”
McClure has brought the event to a new level this year, DeVoe said, by including the Island community in the planning and execution of the trial as well as by securing lambs for the com-petition.
“You can evaluate the dogs and the handlers much better if you have challenging sheep,” he said. “It makes for an interesting trial.”
McClure looks the part of a sheepdog handler, with straight blonde hair that she wears in a loose ponytail and an upright car-riage that gives her an air of dig-nity. But she’s also laid-back and relaxed, and as she sat in the liv-ing room of her comfortably worn house — a saddle in one corner and paintings of sheep adorning the walls — she gently rubbed the head of one of her dogs with her sock-clad foot.
McClure said she’s been pas-sionate about the sport of sheep-dog herding for years — the mail-box at her Point Robinson home has a cutout of sheep along the
top of it — and re-establishing the Vashon Sheepdog Classic was a natural idea for her.
A graduate of Vashon High School, McClure moved back to the Island with her family in 2002. Her son, 9, attends Chautauqua Elementary School.
Today, she makes her living training animals for her Island-based company, Mighty Mutt.She offers training for dogs with aggression or other behavioral issues on Vashon and throughout the region.
“It’s a 50-50 partnership,” she said of her herding work with the dogs. “It’s this little dance.”
Back out at the field on Maury, McClure looked around her, tak-ing in pastoral scene.
“It’s so much fun to stand in a beautiful field with your dog and your sheep,” she said. “This is such a wonderful way to bond with my animals.”
Rob’s work was winding down; he skillfully got the sheep back into the pasture where they’dspend the rest of the day grazing, then looked at McClure, awaiting further instruction.
McClure smiled at the eagerdog, then uttered those words made famous by the movie “Babe,” about a sheepherding pig.
“That’ll do,” she told the dog, and the two headed back to her truck.
Page 9
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The Vashon Sheepdog Classic will be held at Misty Isle Farms dawn to dusk Friday to Saturday, Sept. 14 to 16. Entry is $5 per day.
Maggi McClure and Rob, her dog, escort a flock of sheep out of a pen after a practice session near her home on Maury Island.
Page 10 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors Meeting: 8 to 10 a.m. at the Puget Sound Energy conference room.
Bridge: All levels of players can drop in to play. 9:30 a.m. to noon at the Vashon Senior Center.
Get Set for Winter Storms: Retired Brig. Gen. Joe Ulatoski will share updates from Vashon-BePrepared and offer practical tips to stay safe and help others. Ev-eryone will get a free emergency gadget and can sign up to buy readiness kits to use for three or more days without services. Shape Up Vashon is hosting the event. Go at 6:15 p.m. for a blood pressure check, do a YMCA exercise test or to weigh in. 7 p.m. at the Sheffield Building, 18850 103rd Ave. S.W.
Così fan tutte: Vashon Opera’s season opens with this comedy, sung in Italian with English super-titles. The production will feature a “Choose Your Own Adventure” ending, where audience members vote on the outcome of the tale. This show is a dress rehearsal; tickets are $15 and are available at Vashon Bookshop. 7 p.m. at the Vashon High School theatre. (For more information, see page 12.) Vashon Computer Club: The group will hold its first meeting of the fall season. Almita Ranstrom and Mary Pekarek will review the use of e-readers for library books from King County Library. Anyone may attend for free, but member-ship has benefits and is inex-pensive. 7:30 p.m. at the Vashon Senior Center.
Current Events: Gary Knutson facilitates a discussion of local, state, national and international news suggested by the group. 1 to 3 p.m. at the Vashon Senior Center.
Skeptics and Believers — Re-ligious Debate in the Western Intellectual Tradition: These lectures on DVD are open to the public. The topics of the evening are “From Catholocism to Protes-tantism” shown between 4 and 5 p.m. and “The Scientific Revolution and Descartes” shown between 5 and 6 p.m. in Lewis Hall behind Burton Community Church. The series is ongoing and is hosted by the Burton Community Church and the Unitarian Fellowship.
Vashon Vespers: This new 35- minute service is meditative and musical, a chance for stillness and grounding, and is open to all. 7 p.m. at the Church of the Holy Spirit.
Master Gardeners: Bring your plant problems and questions to the clinic. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. outside True Value.
Vashon Sheepdog Classic: More than 50 dogs and their handlers will compete in this annual event, which benefits Vashon’s Partners in Education. Dawn to dusk, Friday to Sunday, Sept. 14 to 16, at Misty Isle Farms. (For more information, see page 1.) Duplicate Bridge: Open play. 6 to 8 p.m. at the Vashon Senior Center.
Così fan tutte: 8 p.m. at the Vashon High School theater. (For more information, see page 12.)Vashon Drum Circle: All ages are welcome to drum and sing with Buffalo Heart, a large community drum. Free; but donations will be accepted. 7 p.m. at Vashon Intui-tive Arts.
A Frugal Cyclist’s Guide to the Universe: Adventure cyclist Willie Weir will talk about his life as a cyclist. Free. 7:30 p.m. at the Ober Park performance room. (For more information, see page 17.)
Treasures in the Attic: The Vashon-Maury Island Heritage Association invites Islanders to bring their “treasures” to sell or be appraised by experts. People may also donate items to the auction, which will go on throughout the day. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. behind the Heritage Museum on Bank Road. Master Gardeners: Volunteers will be on hand to answer garden-ing questions and talk about the benefits of joining the group of Islanders in the upcoming master gardener program. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. outside True Value.
Recalling the 13 Indigenous Grandmothers Council: Five Islanders who attended this gathering will share their experi-ences. Learn about the riders who healed the trail back to Montana from Oklahoma, the return of the wolves and more. Donations welcome. 6:30 p.m. at Vashon Intuitive Arts.
Unitarian Fellowship: The topic will be “Homecoming and Min-gling of the Waters.” Celebrate the rhythms of life in community. This will be new minister Rev. Carmen McDowell’s inaugural service. 9:30 a.m. at Lewis Hall in Burton.
Pilates Open House: Esther Edel-man will host an open house in her new studio. There will be free demonstrations on new equip-ment and open house specials for those interested in classes. Contact Edelman for more information at 463-6765 or [email protected]. 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 21212 Monument Rd.
Hestia’s Hearth Circle — Sha-manic Body Knowledge: Learn to integrate shamanic energies, breath work and body awareness in treating the body’s challenges. Christine Kendra and Sarah Hanson
will guide participants using jour-naling, dialogue and introspection in healing. The cost is $20. Contact [email protected] to register. 1 to 4 p.m. at the Cohous-ing Common House.
Senior Center Potluck: Good friends and good food combine. 2 to 4 p.m. at the Vashon Senior Center.
Così fan tutte: 2:30 p.m. at the Vashon High School theater. (For more information, see page 12.)
Party Bridge: George Eustice hosts weekly games. Call him at 567-4074 for reservations. 7 to 9 p.m. at the Vashon Senior Center on Bank Road.
Vashon Quilt Guild: Sharon Baker from Idaho will be the featured speaker. Baker has had exhibits at the Blue Heron and the La Conner Quilt & Textile Mu-seum, and she teaches a variety of design classes in quilt shops. For more information, contact Jo Ann Bardeen at 567-5841. 10 a.m. at the Presbyterian Church.
Family Story Times: Newborns to kids age 6 with a caregiver can stop by for stories, finger plays, movement and music. 11:30 a.m. Tuesdays this month at the Vashon Library.
Vashon Heritage Museum Tour: A guided look at the new exhibit, “The Ever-Changing Face of Vashon Highway” takes place. 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 19, beginning at the Vashon Senior Center.
Community Forum on Health Care Reform: A panel of experts will provide information and an-swer questions. 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 20, at McMurray Middle School. (For more information, see page 4.)
SAVE THE DATE
Holly Daze Bazaar: All craft-ers and vendors are invited to participate. The registration fee is $30; sellers keep their proceeds. Call Kris Cushing at 962-0691 for information and registration forms. Tables are assigned on a first-come, first-served basis. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 17, at McMurray Middle School.
CLASSES
Vashon Allied Arts: Preparation for “The Best Christmas Pageant Ever” will be for grades one to five from 3:45 p.m. to 5:30 p.m., and grades six to nine will meet from 2:45 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays, Sept. 17 to Dec. 12. Creative Writing, with instructor Eric Horsting will focus on elements of creative writing,
including plot, setting, dialogue, and more. Classes meet from 1 to 3 p.m. Tuesdays, Sept. 18 to Nov. 6. The complete class schedule, registration and scholarship forms are available at www.Vashon AlliedArts.org or call 463-5131.
UMO School of Physical Arts: Fall classes include aerial performance, acrobatics, clowing and gen-eral circus. For more information, including class times and costs, see www.umo.org. Classes meet Mondays through Wednesdays, Sept. 17 to Dec. 12, at the Open Space for Arts & Community.
Coastal Observation and Seabird Survey Team Training: Beach watchers and birders are wanted as volunteers to collect data on beach-cast carcasses of marine birds to establish the baseline pattern of beached bird mortality on North Pacific beaches. Data collected helps ad-dress marine conservation issues and protect marine resources. The training provides volunteers with
the tools to monitor for potential changes in the marine environ-ment and promote stewardship of local marine resources. Reserve a spot by calling COASST at 221-6893or emailing [email protected]. Free. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 15, at the Land Trust Building.
Improvisational Dance: Kids up to age 5 meet from 3:15 to 4:15 p.m., and ages 6 and up meet from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. The fee is by donation or an eight-class card for $50. Adults meet from 6 to 8 p.m. The fee is by donation or a seven-class card for $55. For more information, see www.explomov.weebly.com or call instuctor Karen Nelson at (503) 740-0523. Classes meet Mondays through Dec. 10 at the Hanna Barn studio, 7712 Point Robinson Rd.
Quilting: Rose Hughes, a fiber artist from California, will lead the workshop, The Dream Land-scape, about how to translate
In Vashon’s first Island Ingenuity Tour, 16 Islanders will open their homes, gardens and businesses to showcase ways they are saving money, simplifying their lives and conserving natu-ral resources. The fair will be from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 22.Visitors will see some homemade ways to harness solar energy,use home-grown timber, collect rainwater and farm on small lots. A map and site guide can be downloaded at www.island-greentech.org, requested by email at [email protected], or picked up at the Farmers Market on the day of the tour. This is a bicycle-friendly event. Sponsors include Sustainable Vashon, Puget Sound Cooperative Credit Union, WisEnergy, Vashon Island Growers Association, Island GreenTech and Transition Vashon.
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.
VASHON THEATRE
7 p.m. Sept. 12. Free.
Plays Sept. 14 to 17.
Streamed live from the San Franciso Opera. 7 p.m. Sept. 20.
Plays Sept. 21 to 27.
Sept. 21 to 24.
6 p.m. Sept. 25. Free.
King County Cemetery District #1: 3 p.m Wednesday, Sept. 12, at the Vashon Cemetery, 19631 S.W. Singer Rd.
Vashon Island School District: 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 13, at McMurray Middle School.
Vashon-Maury Island Community Council: 7 p.m. Monday, Sept. 17, at McMurray MIddle School.
Vashon Sewer District Board: 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 20, at the Vashon Senior Center.
King County Airport District #1: 7 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 20, at Courthouse Square.
Viewers on Vashon will find VoV-TV on Comcast Cable Channel 21. Most VoV-TV shows are produced by Islanders.
and — 7:30 p.m. “Discover China.” A 15-minute tour-ism video Richard Montague shot and directed for the People’s Republic of China. Features Guilin, Xi’an, Beijing and Shanghai.
and Wednesday — 9 p.m. “VHS Percussion Ensemble 2012 Performance.” An hour-long performance by the award-winning Vashon High School Percussion Ensemble.
Page 11
SCENE & HEARD: BACK TO SCHOOLphotographs into fabric designs from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 15 and 16. The cost is $140. Katie Pederson, author of “Quilting Modern,” will teach See-ing Value, a color workshop, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 23. The cost is $85. To register, call Island Quilter at 713-6000.
Your Essential Nature — A Practical Guide to Greater Creativity and Spiritual Har-mony: Darsie Beck will lead this workshop. Students will focus on creating a personal centering prac-tice and a daily creativity journal. Tuition is $210 or $235. For more information, contact Beck at 669-0745 or [email protected]. 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Saturdays, Sept. 15 and 22, at Waterworks Studio.
Delta Dogs: Learn how to be part of a therapeutic pet partner team. Contact Kathleen Farner at [email protected] for more information. 7 p.m. Monday, Sept. 17, at Vashon High School.
Beginning or Brushup Bridge: Ellen Trout teaches lessons and answers questions. 1 to 3 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 18, at the Vashon Senior Center.
Intermediate Bridge: Daphne Purpus gives lessons to players with some experience. 1 to 3 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 19, at the Vashon Senior Center.
Raw food and Green Juicing: Jessica Bolding will lead this class as a follow-up to the film “Simply Raw — Reversing Diabetes Natu-rally.” Students will learn some of the basics as well as some of the science of green juicing and raw food. Participants have attended to lower blood pressure, lose weight, reduce or eliminate pain, balance hormones, balance blood sugar and more. The cost is $85. 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesdays, Sept. 19 to Oct. 3 with a potluck on Oct. 10.
Swingset Music and Move-ment: Kim Thal and Gabriele
Burgess lead this class for kids ages 9 months to 4 years. The cost of the session is $130 with a 20 percent discount for PlaySpace members. To register, email [email protected]. 10 to 10:45 a.m. Thursdays beginning Sept. 20, at the PlaySpace.
Master Gardeners: Classes are held at the Center for Urban Horti-culture on the University of Wash-ington campus through Wash-ington State University Extension. The application deadline is Friday, Oct. 5. Students will study botany, geology and soil composition, water quality, entomology and plant pathology as well as roses, perennials, home orchards, lawn care and more. Applications are available a www.king.wsu.edu/ gardening/becomeamg.htm. For more information, stop by the Master Gardeners’ table outside Thriftway or call Olivia Graffe at 567-5132. Training will be held on 12 Tuesdays, beginning on Jan. 8.
Did YouKnow... For more information about our programs and classes, call VYFS at
463-5511or visit our website at www.vyfs.org
LIKE us on Facebook.
...that Vashon Youth and Family Services offers parenting classes for parents of children and teens? The Incredible Years Parenting class, beginning September 25th, is a 12-week class for parents of children ages 2-10. It focuses on the value of positive discipline, effective limit setting and developing emotional intelligence. Class meets Tuesday evenings from 5:30-7:30 pm, and includes dinner.
soon. Call VYFS at 463-5502.
By ANDREW SCHWARTZFor The Beachcomber
While the last full moon of summer begins to fade, Jews around the world look forward to the “Days of Awe.” The Jewish New Year (Rosh HaShanah) and the Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur) mark a special time of year. This period is characterized by reflection, self-examination and growth. It is a time for letting go and forgiving.
This time serves as an important opportunity to clear the air over past mis-takes, grievances and wrongs. Promises made that cannot be kept are released, and it is a blessing to make peace with those with whom you have quarreled.
Vashon Island’s Havurat Ee Shalom offers High Holiday observances for everyone, under the leadership of Rabbi Fern Feldman.
On Sunday, Sept. 16, at 6:45 p.m., the group will welcome the Jewish New Year. Rrefreshments will follow the service with Rosh Hashanah challah and other sweets.
On Sept. 17 at 9:30 a.m., Rosh Hashanah morning service will be fol-lowed by a Kiddush lunch at the Havurah. Rosh Hashanah services will employ
the Shofar (ram’s horn) and prayers for renewal, introspection and forgiveness.
At 3 p.m., there will be a special Taschlich service at Lisabeula Park, in which the traditional “casting off” of old habits, grudges and errors will be held with Shofar and poetry.
On Sept. 18 at 9:30 a.m. services for the second day of Rosh Hashanah will focus on T’shuvah, the process of growth and self-examination that is traditionally involved in preparation for Yom Kippur and the year to come.
Tuesday, Sept. 25, at 6:20 p.m., Rabbi Fern will lead the traditional singing of Kol Nidre to mark the start of Yom Kippur. This most solemn day in the Jewish year will be observed with traditional song and prayer over the next 24 hours.
Wednesday, Sept. 26, beginning at 9:30 a.m., Yom Kippur services will run all morning and include the Yizkor Memorial Service in the afternoon. A break-the-fast potluck for the community will begin after sundown, around 8 p.m.
All activities will be held at Havurat Ee Shalom, 15401 Westside Hwy S.W. For more information, contact Louise Olsen at [email protected].
new museum hours: wed–sun 1–4 pm
Is it junk or treasure?
saturday, september 15
10am – 2pm
Admission $5
Treasuresin Your Attic!
Vashon’s Own Road Show Event
THISWEEKEND!
Last week The Beachcomber requested photos from readers regarding the annual autumn rite that brings summer to a close, regardless of what the calendar says: going back to school.At left, Daniel Loeb, 6, shows his exuber-ance on his first day of first grade. Below, Bryna Sparks, also in first grade, and her brother Sean, in third grade, were all smiles waiting for the bus near 115th Avenue S.W. and Bank Road.School started Tuesday, Sept. 4, with a full day at the public schools. Drive carefully and watch for kids waiting for their bus.
Page 12 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
ARTS&LEISUREVashon-Maury GOT A SHOW? Apply for Vashon Allied Ar ts’ New Works Ser ies 2013. The ser ies provides
a chance for Island resident ar tists to present new work in a var iety of per formance genres including music, dance, l iterar y and multimedia. For information, visit w w w.vashonalliedar ts.org or contact JaniceR@vashonalliedar ts.org. The application deadline is Sept. 29.
Wing Birdseed Company is celebrating its second anni-versary of being in business on Vashon with a month-long exhibit by artist Marcia McKinzie, who creates original watercolor batiks on rice paper. Stop by the shop’s gal-lery and check out the work, which includes rooster designs rendered in a multi-layered process involving water and wax media.
A few tickets might still be available for Vashon Opera’s production of Mozart’s “Così fan tutte,” slated for regular performances 8 p.m. Friday, Sept. 14, and 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 16, at Vashon High School. Check $32 ticket availability at Vashon Bookshop and www.vashonopera.org. There will also be student/family dress rehearsal at 7 p.m. tonight. Tickets for this performance are $15 and will be sold at Vashon Bookshop and, depending on availability, at the door.
DJ Million, also known as Davee C. Carpenter from Seattle, will spin dance tunes from 9 p.m. to 1 p.m. Friday at Nirvana Indian Restaurant. Nirvana owner Rohit Sharma said, “DJ Million plays funk, hip-hop and soul and he knows the best songs to get everyone up and moving. Our guests always have a great time.” Dancing is free, and all ages are welcome until 11 p.m. After that, the show is for ages 21 and older.
Vashon Allied Arts is gearing up for its annual art auction — a festive, two-night gala that will raise funds for gen-eral operations for the organi-zation, as well as a scholarship fund for Islanders who need assistance attending VAA’s art and performance classes. The auction — themed “Bond with the Arts” — will take place Sept. 21 and 22 in a big tent on the Blue Heron grounds. Tickets to the Sept. 21 auction are $45/general and $25/contributing artists; for the Sept. 22 event, tickets are $120. Tickets can be pur-chased by calling 463-5131.
BRIEFS
Writers, artists, historians converge for VAA’s lecture series
Talking it upBy ELIZABETH SHEPHERDArts Editor
A heaping helping of intellectual food for thought will be served up soon in Vashon Allied Arts’ popular Arts
and Humanities lecture series.The series of Sunday night talks, now in
its fourth year, brings accomplished authors, journalists, visual artists and other cultural heavyweights to Vashon. This year, the series is expanding from five to six lectures, with a sepa-rate sidebar series of six Tuesday morning talks by noted art historian Rebecca Albiani.
The expansion, organizers note, came about after audience feedback and the standing-room only success of past editions of the series.
“It really says something about our audi-ences,” said Mike Feinstein, who organizes the series with his wife Geri Feinstein. “They are intellectually curious and inquisitive.”
For the 2012-13 season, the Feinsteins have invited speakers to examine a menu of top-ics, including contemporary and historical art, trends in filmmaking, the evolving news media landscape and the process of writing fiction.
The series will kick off on Oct. 7, when art historian Rebecca Albiani will preview Seattle Art Museum’s upcoming exhibition, “Elles: Women Artists from the Centre Pompidou in Paris.” The timely talk will take place just days before the show — a compendium of 125 works by 75 women artists created between 1909 and 2007 — opens at SAM.
Albiani has also been recruited to present five Tuesday morning talks about about “Masters of Color” — a closer look at the work of Paolo Veronese, Jan Vermeer, Hiroshige, Camille Pissarro and Wassily Kandinsky. Those talks start on Nov. 13.
“Rebecca’s talks are very accessible, and she has a wonderful sense of humor,” said Mike Feinstein. “Just as sheer entertainment, she is really great.”
Feinstein is also excited about a talk sched-uled for Nov. 4, when best-selling author and journalist Blaine Harden will be interviewed by Islander Eugene Carlson about his work for PBS Frontline, The Economist, Time Magazine, The New York Times and The Washington Post. The pair will also discuss Blaine’s new book, “Escape from Camp 14,” an international bestseller about a prisoner’s escape from a North Korean gulag. Harden, a native Washingtonian and resident of Seattle, is also the author of the acclaimed book, “A River Lost,” an account of the Columbia River’s degradation.
On Jan. 13, veteran film critic Robert Horton will reflect on 2012 films and share perspec-tives on emerging filmmaking trends. Horton reviews films for the Everett Herald and KUOW, and also pens a popular blog, The Crop Duster.
The speaker on Feb. 10 — a “real coup,” according to Mike Feinstein — will be Bainbridge Island-based novelist, short story writer, poet, journalist and essayist David Guterson, winner of the prestigious PEN/Faulkner Award for his book “Snow Falling on Cedars.” Guterson will discuss the notion of
purpose and value as it applies to fiction writing. Veteran newsman Lester Crystal will share an
insider’s view about how technological advances have influenced journalism and the resulting social and cultural implications in a talk sched-uled for March 10. Crystal is a past president of NBC News and was also the executive producer of PBS NewsHour.
The series will conclude on March 24, when artists and world travelers Sabrina Knowles and Jenny Pohlman will discuss how they create unique sculptures inspired by their travels to developing nations.
For the Feinsteins, avid lecture-goers who have had long careers writing, editing and pro-ducing publications for businesses, associations and universities, the series is a labor of love. The
treasure hunt of finding speakers, they said, is almost as exciting for them as the actual lec-tures.
They volunteer their services to Vashon Allied Arts to organize the series, and they both said their enthusiasm isn’t flagging after four years at the helm of the program.
“If it were a paid job, we’d say it was too much work,” said Mike. “But we think of it as a avocation — we think of it as something we do for fun.”
Speakers for VAA’s arts & humanities lecture series are top row, from left, travelers and artists Sabrina Knowles and Jenny Pohlman and author David Guterson; middle row, from left, journalist Blaine Harden, film critic Robert Horton and newsman Lester Crystal; and bottom, art historian Rebecca Albiani.
Tickets to Vashon Allied Arts’ Arts and Humanities series are selling fast. Prices vary for season tickets, individual tickets and Tuesday morning lecture series tickets. Call 463-5131 or visit www.vashonalliedarts.org for more infor-mation.
Page 13
(Liquor service is available to members and their guests) WAC 314-52-115(1)
206.463.5477
Friday
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For the first time in three years, the Vashon-born band Trolls Cottage will return to the Red Bicycle Bistro to play an adults-only show on Saturday.
All five members of the band — Jacob Bain, Gabriel Blake, Earl Clay, Erik Reimnitz and Mike Marlatt — are native sons of Vashon, having grown up on the Island before going on to gain acclaim throughout the Northwest and beyond for their musicianship.
The band plays an infectious, danceable blend of reggae and other rock and world-music inflected sounds that have won raves from music critics and fans, and garnered the group gigs all over the Northwest and the Hawaiian islands.
Islander Pete Welch, who is promoting the concert, is thrilled that Trolls Cottage will be back at the Bike after a long hiatus.
“There are a million reasons that I love Trolls Cottage,” Welch said. “The well-written songs that take me on this journey, remembering all the shows over the last 10 years, the personal relationship that I have with all five members of the band, who are all good friends and the nicest people on earth.
“It’s the song-writing, the energy, the positivity. People love them, especially Islanders who grew with them over the last 10 years, going to shows and dancing the night away.”
Saturday night’s show, for people 21 and over, begins at 9:30 p.m. and has a $10 cover. It’s the first of two in September that will cel-ebrate the music of Jacob Bain, the front man for Trolls Cottage.
On Sept. 29, Welch will bring Bain’s other band, Publish the Quest, to play a show at the Red Bike. That group has toured extensively, including a recent trip to West Africa, where they not only played at a large music festival but also conducted workshops for local children and collaborated with local musicians in Cape Verde.
— Elizabeth Shepherd
Trolls Cottage returns to its home turf for a show at the Bike
Trolls Cottage, shown above at a performance at Lisabeula Park,started playing on Vashon a decade ago. They’re returning to the Red Bike Saturday night.
www.vashonbeachcomber.com24 HOURS A DAY 7 DAYS A WEEK
Page 14 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
CELEBRATINGTemperatures topping 80 degrees on Saturday didn’t stop Islanders from celebrating the pending arrival of fall at the Farmers Market’s annual Harvest Celebration.More than 600 visitors to the market enjoyed a day of food demonstrations, late summer produce and contests for the Island’s best jam, pickles, tomatoes and scarecrow. Rob Peterson of Plum Forest Farm (left) won the Tomato Tasteoff when people voted his Blush Tomato to be the best. Nancy Lewis-Williams (below) won a blue ribbon for her raspberry current jam. Jasper Forrester’s winning Vashon Bread and Butter Pickles (top right) put her in the spotlight for the second time this month after a Farmers Market star turn in the current issue of Sunset Magazine.Finally, Kristine Marvich (bottom right) took the day with her handsome Harvest Scarecrow.
fall’s bounty
Page 15
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SPORTSVashon-Maury
PIRATES ON THE WEB: Vashon Island High School has created a new website for its athletics depar tment. Visit the site for game schedules, results, announcements, photos from the season and useful information for players and their fam i l ies. See w w w.vashonislandathletics.org.
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By BRIAN BRENNOFor The Beachcomber
In a long first home game that included a power outage and a plethora of penalties by the opponent, the Pirates lost another close game, 28-20, to Bellevue Christian on Friday.
The Pirates received the opening kickoff and were forced to punt. Both teams traded punts then Bellevue scored on a 43-yard run.
Vashon had a drive featuring two long runs by quarterback Nick Amundsen, a catch by Ezra Lacina and on fourth down a catch by Garrett Starr at the 8-yard line. But Bellevue intercepted a Pirate pass, then Clyde Pruett intercepted a Bellevue pass to end the first quarter.
To start the second quarter, the Pirates fum-bled the ball with Bellevue recovering. Next the Pirates stopped Bellevue on fourth down, and in a drive aided by penalties and runs by Amundsen, including a 5-yard touchdown run, the Pirates scored to tie the game.
Vashon had one more drive in the half, taking the ball to the 5-yard line, where they had to turn the ball over to Bellevue on fourth down. The quarter ended with a 7-7 tie.
As the teams ran out on the field for the sec-ond half, the stadium lights went out and did
not return for at least 20 minutes. When play resumed, Bellevue received the ball and scored several plays later on a 50-yard touchdown pass to lead the game, 14-7.
The Pirates again went three and out. Bellevue got the ball and quickly scored again to lead 21-7. Both teams then traded punts as the third quarter ended.
In the fourth quarter the Pirates got the ball at the 15-yard line and on fourth and one got a first down. Starr then gained 82 yards on a pass to the 1-yard line. Amundsen ran it in for a touchdown to bring the score to 21-14.
Bellevue got the kickoff then was forced to punt. Bellevue’s punt was blocked by Lacina and recovered by Jefferson Douglas at the 35-yard line. The Pirates drove down to the 10-yard line on runs by Nick Lawson and Amundsen, who scored from the 10-yard line. The point after was missed, leaving Bellevue ahead, 21-20.
Bellevue took the kickoff to the 35-yard line then drove down for their final touchdown, leading 28-20. The Pirates had 2:27 left on the clock but were unable to score as the game ended.
The Pirates’ next home game is Friday, Sept. 21.
— Brian Brenno is the president of the Vashon Bounty Club.
By KEVIN ROSSFor The Beachcomber
Last Thursday the Vashon Pirates kicked off the cross country season at a fun and informal jamboree meet in Bellevue.
At the jamboree 14 cross country teams — nine from the Nisqually League and five from outside the league — compet-ed not against each other but against their own predictions.
Five-person coed relay teams completed a 1.75-mile loop
through Kelsey Creek Park, and before the race the teams pre-dicted their own finish times. The team that completed the relay closest to its predicted time would win.
In the end a team from University Prep took the day, finishing just two seconds off from the time it predicted. Bellevue Christian took second with a 44-second difference.
Vashon High School had two coed teams in the relay. Team Vashon Island finished with a 6:29 difference from what it
predicted, and Team Pirates had a 6:33 difference.
On Thursday the team willtravel to Fort. Steilacoom along with Life Christian and Seattle Christian for a meet host-ed by Charles Wright. Then on Saturday the Pirates will compete with about 65 other teams at the Fort Steilacoom Invitational at the same loca-tion.
— Kevin Ross is a Vashon High School cross country coach.
Junior Phillip VanDevanter reacts to the cheers of Pirate teammates as he nears the finish line at Thursday’s jamboree.
Runners race against the clock at first meetPirate freshman Clyde Pruett, 20, is brought down inside the 10-yard line after intercepting a Viking pass early in Friday’s football game.
Close game ends in a Pirate loss
Page 17
Ad deadline: Sept. 28thPublishes October 17th, 2012
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Lifeline eligible subscribers may also qualify for reliable home high-speed Internet service up to 1.5Mbps for $9.95* per month for the first 12 months of service. Further details are available at centurylink.com/internetbasics.
If you live in a CenturyLink service area, please call1-800-201-4099 or visit centurylink.com/lifeline with questions or to request an application for the Lifeline program.
*CenturyLink Internet Basics Program – Residential customers only who qualify based on meeting income level or program participation eligibility requirements, and requires remaining eligible for the entire offer period. First bill will include charges for the \first full month of service billed in advance, prorated charges for service from the date of installation to bill date, and one-time charges and fees described above. Qualifying customers may keep this program for a maximum of 60 months after service activation provided customer still qualifies during that time. Listed High-Speed Internet rate of $9.95/mo. applies for first 12 months of service (after which the rate reverts to $14.95/mo. for the next 48 months of service), and requires a 12-month term agreement. Customer must either lease a modem/router from CenturyLink for an additional monthly charge or independently purchase a modem/router, and a one-time High-Speed Internet activation fee applies. A one-time professional installation charge (if selected by customer) and a one-time shipping and handling fee applies to customer’s modem/router. General – Services not available everywhere. CenturyLink may change or cancel services or substitute similar services at its sole discretion without notice. Offer, plans, and stated rates are subject to change and may vary by service area. Deposit may be required. Additional restrictions apply. Terms and Conditions – All products and services listed are governed by tariffs, terms of service, or terms and conditions posted at centurylink.com. Taxes, Fees, and Surcharges – Applicable taxes, fees, and surcharges include a carrier Universal Service charge, carrier cost recovery surcharges, state and local fees that vary by area and certain in-state surcharges. Cost recovery fees are not taxes or government-required charges for use. Taxes, fees, and surcharges apply based on standard monthly, not promotional, rates.
Late Breaking News When You Want It!www.vashonbeachcomber.com
By JEFF HOYTFor The Beachcomber
After 60,000 miles of cycling across every kind of terrain through 32 coun-tries, adventure cyclist Willie Weir will add Vashon’s infamous rumble strips to his list of chal-lenges when he pedals over to the Island to present “A Frugal Cyclist’s Guide to the Universe.” Weir will speak at the Ober Park per-formance room on Friday evening. Admission is free.
The event serves as something of an appetiz-er for Island cyclists who will tackle Passport to Pain (P2P), a punishing 78-mile ride up and down Vashon’s steepest hills, the next morning. In fact, Weir plans to stay the night and see how he does in the P2P ride himself.
“I may get my butt kicked by Vashon’s hills,” said Weir, “but I believe a solid butt-
kicking is good for the soul.”Weir is a columnist for
Adventure Cyclist Magazine and a traveling commen-tator for Seattle’s KUOW radio. His articles on adven-ture travel have earned him the Lowell Thomas Award from the American Society of Travel Writers. He speaks at events around the coun-try, telling stories from his adventures and advocating
the bicycle as the world’s best travel vehicle.
In “Frugal Cyclist,” Weir tells tales of getting the most bang for his buck when cycling the world, wheth-er he’s giving the world’s cheapest engagement ring, knocking on doors for free lodging or eating his way to free ice cream. His talk Friday night will bring to life stories from his latest book, “Travels with Willie,” tales Weir hopes will leave his audience chuckling and “wanting to chuck the day job and hit the road.”
Weir cites fear of the unknown as the biggest obstacle that gets in peo-ple’s way when considering a bicycle adventure in a for-eign land.
“The first question you have to answer is whether or not you really want to go on an adventure,” said Weir. “Don’t obsess over finding the perfect bike or learn-ing the language inside and
out or getting into the best shape of your life. Answer that first question and the rest will get done.”
So what will Willie do to help him overcome the toughest hills that Vashon can throw at him?
“I’ll just chant ‘It’s not as bad as Baldwin Street’ over and over to myself,” he said.
To hear Willie’s story of cycling up Baldwin Street, the world’s steepest residen-tial street located in New Zealand, come to the Ober Park Performance room Friday at 7:30 p.m.
— Jeff Hoyt is a cyclist and a member of the Vashon
Island Rowing Club.
Vashon goalkeeper Lauren Ockinga, a junior, makes a save in the first half of the girls soccer team’s opening game against Cedar Park Christian, a new member of the Nisqually League, on Tuesday, Sept. 4The game was Ockinga’s first compe-tition since suffering a concussion in a JV wrestling match in 2010.Vashon lost to Cedar Park Christian, 0-5. Two days later, however, they defeated Cascade Christian, 4-1, in another home game. The Pirates will play Life Christian next Monday in an away game.
Girls soccer gets going with one win, one loss
Willie Weir
Cyclist brings his tales of adventure to Vashon
There are still spots left in the second annual Passport to Pain, a ben-efit for the Vashon Island Rowing Club. See www.vashoncrew.com/p2p.
Page 18 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
The Brown Agency
Good Luck Pirates & Mustangs!
g y
Have A Great SeasonPIRATES and MUSTANGS!
Have a Blooming Good Season!
Home of the Pirates!You make us proud.
Denise KatzGo Pirates and Mustangs!
Have aGreat
Season!
Stand up tothe opposition!
Vashon Floor Store
We’ll see youon the Sports page!
GO PIRA A A O
MU
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AN
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IRA
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Go Pirates & Mustangs!Northwest Sports
Rock the House, Pirates!
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We hope your year is full of plunder!
From the Crew at
Best of Luck Pirates and Mustangs!
Dr. RASMUSSEN & Staff
Roast ‘Em Pirates!
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Have A Great Season
Pirates & Mustangs!
Trigg Insurance Agency
PRIDE, DETERMINATIONTHE WINNING COMBINATION
Good Luck Pirates & Mustangs!from Your Fans at
Varsity Football
DAY DATE OPPOSITION LOCATION TIME
Saturday 9/15/12 Cascade Christian Sunset Stadium 7:00 PM
Friday 9/28/12 Port Townsend H S Port Townsend 5:00 PMFriday 10/05/12 Charles Wright Charles Wright 7:00 PM
Friday 10/26/12 League Division TBD 7:00 PM Cross-Over Game Friday 11/02/12 Tri-District Game TBD 7:00 PM
Girls Varsity Soccer Fall 12 Girls Varsity Soccer Fall 12
Tuesday 9/11/2012 Charles Wright Charles Wright 4:00 PMMonday 9/17/2012 Life Christian Puyallup 2:45 PMWednesdayFriday 9/21/2012 Seattle Christian Valley Ridge 3:30 PM
Wednesday 9/26/2012 Chimacum Chimacum 4:00 PMFriday 9/28/2012 Cedar Park Christian Cedar Park Christian 4:30 PMTuesday 10/02/2012 Cascade Christian Bonney Lake 6:30 PMThursday
Tuesday 10/16/2012 Bellevue Christian Redmond 3:45 PM
Tuesday 10/23/2012 Eatonville Eatonville MS 4:00 PM
Girls JV Soccer Fall 12
Wednesday 9/05/12 University Prep University Prep 3:30 PMFriday 9/07/12 The Northwest School Starfire Field 3:15 PMWednesdayFriday 9/28/12 Cedar Park Christian Marymoor Park #6 5:30 PMTuesday 10/23/12 Eatonville Eatonville 4:00 PM
Boys Cross Country Fall 12
Thursday 9/06/12 Nisqually League Bellevue 4:00 PM Jamboree Kelsey Creek Park Thursday 9/13/12 Life Christian Charles Wright 4:00 PMSaturday 9/15/12 Fort Steilacoom Ft. Steilacoom 10:00 AM Invitational
Thursday 10/04/12 Cascade Christian, Cascade Christian 4:00 PM Cedar Park Christian, EatonvilleSaturday 10/06/12 Port Townsend Ft. Worden 10:00 AM InvitationalThursday 10/11/12 Bellevue Christian Kelsey Creek Park 4:00 PM 4k InvitationalThursday 10/18/12 Nisqually League Meet Fort Steilacoom 4:30 PMSaturday 10/27/12 The Westside Classic American Lake Golf Course TBASaturday 11/03/12 State Meet Pasco TBA
Girls Cross Country Fall 12
Thursday 9/06/12 Nisqually League Bellevue 4:00 PM Jamboree Kelsey Creek ParkThursday 9/13/12 Life Christian, Fort Steilacoom 4:00 PM Seattle Christian, Charles WrightSaturday 9/15/12 Fort Steilacoom Fort Steilacoom 10:00 AM Invitational
Thursday 10/04/12 Cascade Christian, Cascade Christian 4:00 PM Cedar Park Christian, Eatonville
Varsity Football
Girls Varsity Soccer Fall 12
Girls JV Soccer Fall 12
Boys Cross Country Fall 12
Girls Cross Country Fall 12
Vashon’sFall 2012
Sports Schedule
Girls Cross Country Fall 12 continued
DAY DATE OPPOSITION LOCATION TIMESaturday 10/06/12 Port Townsend H S Fort Warden 10:00 AMThursday 10/11/12 Bellevue Christian Kelsey Creek Park 4:00 PMThursday 10/18/12 Nisqually League Meet Fort Steilacoom 4:30 PMSaturday 10/27/12 The Westside Classic American Lake Golf Course TBASaturday 11/03/12 State Meet Pasco TBA
Volleyball Fall 12
Wednesday 9/12/12 Cascade Christian Vashon 5:45 PMMonday 9/17/12 Chimacum H S Chimacum 5:45 PMWednesday 9/19/12 Seattle Christian Seattle Christian 5:45 PMMonday 9/24/12 Life Christian Life Christian Academy 5:45 PMWednesday 9/26/12 Charles Wright Charles Wright 5:45 PMMonday 10/01/12 Cedar Park Christian Vashon 5:45 PMWednesday 10/03/12 Eatonville Vashon 5:45 PMTuesday 10/9/12 Bellevue Christian Bellevue Christian 5:45 PMMonday 10/15/12 Cascade Christian Cascade Christian 5:45 PMWednesday 10/17/12 Chimacum H S Vashon 5:45 PMMonday 10/22/12 Seattle Christian Vashon 5:45 PMWednesday 10/24/12 Life Christian Vashon 5:45 PMSaturday 10/27/12 Nisqually League Bellevue Christian TBAThursday 11/01/12 Tri-District Tournament TBA TBAFriday 11/9/12 State Tournament Yakima Sundome TBASaturday 11/10/12 State Tournament Yakima Sundome TBA
JV Volleyball
Wednesday 9/12/12 Cascade Christian Vashon 4:30 PMSaturday 9/15/12 Mariner High School Mariner 8:00 AM TournamentMonday 9/17/12 Chimacum Chimacum 4:30 PMWednesday 9/19/12 Seattle Christian Seattle Christian 4:30 PMMonday 9/24/12 Life Christian Life Christian Academy 4:30 PMWednesday 9/26/12 Charles Wright Charles Wright 4:30 PMMonday 10/01/12 Cedar Park Christian Vashon 4:30 PMWednesday 10/03/12 Eatonville H S Vashon 4:30 PMTuesday 10/9/12 Bellevue Christian Bellevue Christian 4:30 PMMonday 10/15/12 Cascade Christian Cascade Christian 4:30 PMWednesday 10/17/12 Chimacum H S Vashon 4:30 PMMonday 10/22/12 Seattle Christian Vashon 4:30 PMWednesday 10/24/12 Life Christian Vashon 4:30 PM
Boys Tennis
Tuesday 9/11/12 Northwest Christian Vashon 3:30 PMWednesday 9/12/12 Cascade Christian Cascade Christian 3:30 PMFriday 9/14/12 Seattle Academy Vashon 3:30 PM Tuesday 9/18/12 Eatonville Eatonville 3:30 PMFriday 9/21/12 Northwest Christian Northwest Christian 3:30 PMMonday 9/24/12 Charles Wright Charles Wright 3:30 PMTuesday 9/25/12 Cascade Christian Vashon 3:30 PM Friday 9/28/12 Eatonville Vashon 3:30 PMTuesday 10/02/12 Charles Wright Vashon 3:30 PMWednesday 10/03/12 Northwest Christian Northwest Christian 3:30 PMFriday 10/05/12 Cascade Christian Vashon 3:30 PMTuesday 10/9/12 Eatonville Eatonville 3:30 PMSaturday 10/20/12 Nisqually League Charles Wright TBA TournamentSaturday 10/27/12 Tri District Tournament TBA TBA
Cheerleading
Saturday 9/15/12 Cascade Christian Football 7:00 PMFriday 9/21/12 Eatonville Football 7:00 PMThursday 9/27/12 Seattle Christian Cross Country 4:00 PMFriday 9/28/12 Port Townsend Football 5:00 PMTuesday 10/02/12 Charles Wright Tennis 3:30 PMFriday 10/12/12 Pemberton Grizzlies Football 7:00 PMFriday 10/19/12 Chimacum Football–Homecoming 7:00 PMWednesday 10/24/12 Life Christian Volleyball 5:45 PMThursday 10/25/12 Chimacum Soccer 6:00 PMFriday 10/26/12 Football–TBA 7:00 PM
Girls Cross Country Fall 12 continued
Volleyball Fall 12
JV Volleyball
Boys Tennis
Cheerleading
Page 19
Closethe dooron the
Opposition!
ISLANDESCROWSERVICE
Stake yourclaim Pirates!Good Luck, Linda Bianchi
Go Pirates!Go Mustangs!
Susan Lofland
Nail ‘emPirates!
Go Pirates! Go Mustangs!From the team at
RENT1ONERENTAL CENTEREarl Van Buskirk, Inc.
Go Pirates&
Mustangs!Williams Heating
Eric, Dennis, Nancy, Janet, Jason & Bill
Go Pirates!
Vashon PharmacyGood luck from the staff!
Drs. Maki & Langland
Clean ’em up and – keepsmiling! From all the staff!
Best of luck to youfrom our team!
Beauty NookGood Luck Pirates!
– Beth
Go Pirates and Mustangs…
Put your moves on!
Meetthe
Challenge!
Windermere Real Estate/Wall Street, Inc.
Pirate Pride!Have a great year!
Connie Sorensen
Senior cheerleader Kaitlin Davies, center, leads a practice routine as some of the 26 Vashon High School cheerleaders prepare for the fall season. Following Davies are, from left, freshman Kaija Elenko, senior Layla Flint, senior Beatriz Sahagun and freshman Callie Andrews.
Pirate quarterback Nick Amundsen picks up nine yards late in Friday’s football game. A penalty against Bellevue Christian gave Vashon a first down inside the 10-yard line.
AT YOUR SERVICEAT YOUR SERVICEAT YOUR SERVICE
To place an ad in the Service Directory, contact Daralyn or Matthew at 463-9195. Deadline for ad placement is Friday at 1pm.
Page 20 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
Carpeting, Wood, Laminate, Floor Coverings & More!
We can install what we sell ◆ Free in-home estimates
Chuck & Mary Robinson, Owners
(206) 408-715517504 Vashon Hwy SW (Next to Bob’s Bakery)
Vashon Floor Store
Shane Marx
206-335-2265Licensed, Bonded, Insured & EPA Lead Certifi ed
LIC# LYNXHHI898K7
Meeting All Home Improvement Needs From All General Construction to Handyman Repairs
Serving Vashon Since 2002
Home Additions, Siding, Window Installation, Decks, Tile,
Flooring, Roof Repair, Bathroom & Kitchen Remodeling,
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and Much More…
VASHON ferries documentsNatives OldTimers Newbies Visitors Lovers Relatives
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206-935-1575Michael KennicottIsland Resident
WA 98108
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free estimates206-463-1302
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To place an ad in the Service Directory, contact Daralyn or Matthew at 463-9195. Deadline for ad placement is Friday at 1pm.
Page 21
AT YOUR SERVICEAT YOUR SERVICEAT YOUR SERVICE
Thomas Fox Ventures LLCIsland Owned
206-463-1403
Rotary Cutting Rotary TillingFlail Mowing Surface Leveling & Grading
D&De l e c t r i c
Vashon Island ContractorCommercial & Residential
Electrical Installation & Repair
206-463-3977cell 206-409-1822
DDELE**011PH
FREELANCE BOOKKEEPERIdeal for small to mid-size businesses on Vashon
Call Raymond (206) 463-6920
RAY MATTHEWS CONSTRUCTION
Serving Vashon 35 years Additions, Decks, Siding, New
Windows & Doors, Garages, Sheds, or Remodel any room in your home463-2237 or 303-7705
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Don Boles, Owner– Island Resident –
www.aawoodstree.com
206.463.9333
Tree ServiceFREE
ESTIMATES
Specializing in Challenging Trees and Tight Quarters
Competitive PricingLicensed, Bonded, Insured
Lic# CC AAWOOWT885JT
AlterationsTailoringHemmingResizing
Kate465-9222
15 years of experience
Bob Webster
handyman service
(206) 455-4245
Licensed, Bonded & Insured LIC# BOBWEWH9290E
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H E A T I N G & C O O L I N G...an energy management team
Maintenance aids Furnace efficiency
Time for a tune up!
463-1777 www.VashonHeating.com
WA Lic #VASHOHC8917F and #VASHOHC891PF
Ad deadline: Sept. 28thPublishes October 17th, 2012
Call Daralyn or Matthew to reserve your ad space: 463-9195 or [email protected]
Profi le yourself or your business
in ouraward-winning…
Vashon’s Women inBusiness
Vashon’s Women inBusiness
Brothers Landscaping, Inc.
Call anytime for an appointment
206-793-7749
An island business with island employees
206 818 8371www.ro-enterprises.com | [email protected]# ROENTEI924RS
CERTIFIED
AGING IN PLACE
SPECIALIST
Kitchens/BathroomsAdditions
Seismic RetrofitDecksSiding
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RO Remodeling & Construction
Island Yoga
islandyogacenter.com
“Yoga for Every Body!”
463-2058
Page 22 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
Washington NewspaperPublishers Association
Call today to buy a Region or the Entire State!
206.463.9195
HONORS
Vashon Garden Club members brought hundreds of specimens from their gardens to the club’s annu-al flower fair, which took place Aug. 3 and 4 at the Vashon Library. Islanders participated in judging the event, and the awards were as follows:
Bulbs: First place Marlyce Dixon; second place Becky Janke, both gladiolas.
Annuals: First place Kay White, spider flower; second place Kay White, shooting stars.
Roses: First place Cindy Stockett, “Lawrence of Arabia”; second place Cindy Stockett, “Compassion”.
Perennials: First place Kay White, porcupine tomato; second place Kay White, carnation.
Grasses: First place Cindy Stockett, Japanese blood grass; second place Kay White, bunny tails.
Herbs: First place Kay White, dill; no second place.
Shrubs: First place Cindy Stockett, hydrangea; Second place Jeanette Wakeman, smoke bush.
Trees: First place Kay White, curly pine; Second
place, Cindy Stockett, vari-gated Japanese maple.
Fruits and Vegetables: First place Kay White, strawberry spinach, second place GreenDale Foodbank Farm, veggie platter.
Arrangements: First place tie, Christel Stierle and Jeanette Wakeman.
Dahlias: First and second place Becky Janke with 40 dahlia specimens.
Aug. 24: Disorderly con-duct was reported at Ober Park.
Aug. 28: Shooting gear was stolen from a pickup truck parked on the 17400 block of 97th Avenue. The
gear was reportedly worth more than $1,000.
Aug. 29: Bags of rotting garbage, including bones and flesh, were found on the side of the road on the 13000 block of Cove Road. Sheriff ’s deputies sent photos of the bones to King County Medical Examiner’s office. The office determined that the remains were not human and the King County Roads Division was asked to remove the bags.
A suspicious vehicle was reported on the 12500 block of 148th Street. The individual who reported it said the vehicle’s occupants gave conflicting stories as to why they were there.
Aug. 30: Items were sto-len from a purse during a
music festival on Old Mill Road. The purse was left in a tent.
Sept. 1: A mailbox on the 13600 block of Reddings Beach Road was exploded with fireworks.
Sept. 2: A deer was injured by two dogs in a wooded area on the 12000 block of 153rd Street. A sheriff ’s deputy determined that the deer would not live and killed it.
Sept. 3: Vandalism was reported at Island Center Forest. A woman said she saw a pickup truck spinning around in a gravel parking lot at 188th Street.
A transient living in a tent in a backyard on the 16500 block of Vashon Highway stole electricity from a neighbor.
Sept. 5: An individual pulled over on Vashon Highway was driving under the influence.
An attempted burglaryoccurred at Kathy’s Cornernursery. The suspect or suspects removed fenc-ing in an attempt to stealplants.
Sept. 6: A motorcycle was stolen from the north end ferry parking lot.
Sept. 7: A fuel line was cut and gas siphoned from a vehicle parked at Upcycled Home Furnishings. It was the fifth occurrence there in three months.
Sept. 8: An assault oc-curred at Sporty’s. The sus-pect punched the victim in the face, causing a cut over the victim’s eye. According to the report, the assault was unprovoked.
An assault occurred at a home on the 9900 block of 188th Street. The sus-pect was intoxicated and threatened to hit a woman with a beer bottle and take revenge on her family.
FYIVashon-Maury
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: [email protected]
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 [email protected]
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
A number of Vashon nonprofits are vying to receive some of the $5 million in grant money being offered by Chase Community Giving through an online contest.
The organizations, which were nominated by Chase employees and customers, are competing against non-profits across the country to earn the most votes on Chase Community Giving’s Facebook page and website. The 196 organizations to receive the most votes will win between $10,000 and $250,000 in grant money. In addition, three organizations in Western Washington will receive grants totaling $100,000.
The 17 Vashon organizations participating in the contest include Vashon Allied Arts, the Vashon-Maury Island Land Trust, Vashon Community Care, Burn Design Lab, Vashon Partners in Education, Vashon Youth & Family Services and American Hero Quilts.
See a full list and vote through Sept. 19 at www.face-book.com/chasecommunitygiving. Chase customers can vote at www.chase.com/giving.
www.vashonbeachcomber.com
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Page 23
Geraldine Margare t Fries WhiteGerry was born in Tacoma on August
20, 1929 to Arthur J.Fries and Margaret O’Connor Fries. She passed away on September 4th, 2012 after gracefully living with Alzheimer’s for 7 years. Gerry grew up in North Tacoma and summered on Vashon Island’s South End. After she graduated form Stadium High School, she attended the University of Washington where she joined the Delta Delta Delta sorority and gained sisters for life.
In 1950 she left the U.W. to marry Raymond White whom she had met on
Vashon Island. For 62 years they had many adventures. Together they raised a family in West Seattle and returned to Vashon Island in 1972. Gerry worked many diff erent jobs throughout her life including Gunderson’s, Gene Feedler Cheverolet, and K2 Ski Corporation.
Gerry was an active member of Vashon Lutheran Church, even though she grew up Presbyterian and never really thought of herself as Lutheran. She was a gracious hostess who never let a guest go hungry or thirsty. She enjoyed sewing and needlework, making clothing, quilts and several needlework wall hangings. After Ray retired, they went on many cruises, enjoyed time in their home at Talequah, gardening, walking Pohl road, and enjoying the view. She also enjoyed spending time with her grandchildren.
Gerry was preceded in death by her father, mother, step-father Harold Fisk, and step-sister Joan Fisk Adkins Melendy. She is survived by her husband Raymond White, daughter Wendy (Stan) Smitherman, son Doug (Shelly) White, and her grandchildren Ruth, Jakob and Coco. Several brother and sister-in-laws, nieces and nephews will also be missing her.
Services will be Saturday, September 15th at 1:30pm at Vashon Lutheran Church. Memorial donations may be made to Vashon Lutheran Church or the Alzheimer’s Association.
Please visit our online guest book at www.islandfuneral.com
Donna PughOn Th ursday, August 30,
2012, longtime Vashon Th riftway employee Donna Pugh lost her battle with cancer and passed away. Donna had been an important part of the Vashon Th riftwayfamily for over 22 years and was a customer favorite from the beginning. In addition to consistently deliv-ering great customer service, Donna was integral in starting the espresso bar at Vashon Th riftway (which was the fi rst on Vashon Island), of which she was the manager for many years. Donna will be greatly missed by all of her fellow employees as well as the thousands of customers she served with a smile.
Kind words or a memorial contribution can be shared with Donna’s family through the mail at:
PO Box 1804, Vashon, WA 98070
You are not alone.Call 24 hours 206-462-0911
The DoVE Project provides services to survivors of domestic
violence, including a support group, protection orders,
and navigating existing services and legal systems.
Celebrating Vashon’s Women
in Business
Ad deadline: September 28th
Publishes:October 17th, 2012
Call Daralyn or Matthew to reserve
your ad space 463-9195 or
www.vashonbeachcomber.com
the first steps of the refinancing pro-cess in the spring, Davison said. In addi-tion to fundraising, some other hurdles need to be cleared before refinancing is a certainty. But just last week, VCC Administrator Janelle Ansell noted she received “momentous” news about the underwriting process, which they are in the midst of, and early indications have been favorable.
“We are optimistic. Our lender is opti-mistic,” Davison said.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), which backed the current loan, must agree to back the loan again, Davison noted, which she expects it will do.
“We’re the kind of organization they do this for,” she said. “But the deal isn’t done until the deal is done.”
On Vashon, VCC is the largest provider of services to seniors, with assisted liv-ing apartments, a skilled nursing facil-ity, adult day services, respite services and, as of recently, rehabilitation servic-es, including occupational, physical and speech therapy. It is an independent non-profit organization, which is unusual and means, in part, that VCC does not have a “parent organization with deep pockets,” Ansell said.
VCC has made several spending cuts in recent years and is already operating on
an extremely lean budget, Davision said. But even with the hope of more funds on the horizon, the organization expects to make additional cuts soon.
While many long-term care facilities do not accept people who pay with Medicaid, the government subsidized health insur-ance for people of limited financial means, a central tenet at VCC is that it be accessible to anyone who needs it. In 2011, on average, 68 percent of the residents in the skilled nursing facil-ity were on Medicaid, which pays just 79 per-cent of the cost of care. In the assisted living facility, last year roughly one-third of the resi-dents were on Medicaid, which pays only 60 percent of the cost of care there, according to Ansell.
Still, both Davison and Ansell stressed there has been no discussion about chang-ing the Medicaid policy.
“That would be a disservice to the people of the Island,” Ansell said.
Furthering the financial challenges at VCC is its small number of residents, Ansell added. No matter the size of nurs-ing home, Davison said, there are certain elements of the infrastructure that need to be in place, in part because of govern-ment regulations. On Vashon, there are a smaller number of residents to help carry those costs. And in larger centers that have facilities for independent liv-
ing, assisted living, skilled nursing and memory care, they “feed into themselves more,” Ansell said.
Expanding VCC is not the answer, Davison said. “We’re the right size for Vashon.”
VCC will continue to attempt to expand its services, however, in ways that gener-ate revenue and serve the population of Vashon as people age here, both at VCC and in the wider community as a whole,
both women noted.Meanwhile, Davison
said, the board will commit itself to rais-ing funds for the refi-nancing opportunity. On Oct. 17, it will host its largest annual fund-raiser, Uncork the Love, which is an evening of entertainment and din-ner at The Hardware
Store Restaurant, given over entirely to the event. Tickets are $500 a piece, and through donations, ticket proceeds and sponsorship, Davision said the goal this year is to raise $75,000. VCC recently benefitted from a variety of fundraising events, including a fiber arts trunk show that brought in nearly $5,000, its annual garage sale, the Telling Stories speaker series with John Moore and a night of music at the Red Bike with blues legend Mark DuFresne.
This week, every Island residence will receive VCC’s newsletter, which includes information on the refinancing opportu-
nity and a request for donations. Board members will also do “personal asks,” Davison said, looking for both larger andsmaller gifts.
“Our goal is to have as many donors as possible,” she said. “The broader the base, the happier we are.”
Board and staff at VCC are aware thatmany organizations on the Island are seeking financial support for important work and that competition for financial support is high right now.
“It’s a challenging time,” Davison said. “But this is a wonderful and unique and opportunity.”
If they don’t raise enough money, Davison said, the staff and board will stay the course, continue doing the work they do and continue fundraising.
“If we don’t refinance, we will limp along until we can,” she said.
But further cuts would be needed, shesaid, action no one wants to take and one that would be challenging to implementand still maintain the vision for the facility and the kind of care people receive there.
The soonest VCC could close on its refi-nance is the end of October, Davison said,if sufficient funds would come in that quickly and all the procedural matters are taken care of. While the goal is the end ofthe year, the sooner the better, Davison said, so that VCC can apply the money it is spending on its mortgage debt to car-ing for residents and building a financial reserve.
“The board is committed to making this happen,” she said.
CONTINUED FROM 1
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Born 2001, Byron and his buddy
cat, Cookie, were relinquished when
they had a hard time with the toddlers
in the family. Byron is a friendly cat
but he isn’t comfortable about being
picked up. Byron gets along with other
cats and he has shown easy going
personality at the shelter with all the
cats and volunteers. Byron is the kind
of cat that will follow you around like a
dog but is not ever a pest. He has great
house manners too.
Born 2006, Cookie and her buddy,
Byron, were relinquished to VIPP since
they were having a hard time living with
toddlers in the household. Cookie is a
shy girl who likes to get pets but she is
unsure about being picked up and held.
Cookie is submissive and she hangs
back from the other cats in the shelter
fi nding a safe spot in a cat cubbie.
Cookie and Byron are part of our
Purrfect Pairings program where the
adoption fee on a second cat is 1/2 off.
Lilly is a little BIG dog! She is a very cute 4
year old, Corgi/Boxer mix. She is about 50 lbs
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older kids and no cats. Call 206-389-1085 or
email [email protected] to meet this sweetheart!
The adoption fee is $125.
Celebrating28 Years
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Page 28 WWW.VASHONBEACHCOMBER.COM
WATERFRONT GETAWAY! COMMUTER’S DREAM!Park-like setting near the ferries! Space galore inside &out, open floor plan, 3 baths, basement & carport. Hugedeck overlooks sweeping lawn. MLS #392624 $435,000
Great beach cabin & pristine privacy in this secludedspot! Magnificent views, stepped path to beach; bonusroom, woodstove & big deck. MLS #402115 $319,000
IT ALL HAPPENS HERE
JeanBoschBroker
206/919-52234 bdrm4.75 AC
LOVELY WOODS!
LeslieFerrielBroker
206/235-3731
Pristine Northwest forest is alive with the melodies of brook& birdsong! Close to town, schools & ferries. Near town,
schools & ferries. Private well in place. Offered at $65,000
7.3 ACWestside
Whether you dream of an Island farm or simply want tosoak up sunshine & pastoral views, this is the place! Roomy,
immaculate, near Seattle ferries. Offered at $399,000
3 bdrm 1 bath 5 ACSun-filled pastures, big orchard near Pt.Robinson lighthouse! Promising vintage
cottage, lots of outbldgs. Create the homeof your dreams! MLS #399159 $280,000
CristGranum
CRS206/419-3661
6 bdrm.92 AC
LenWolff
GRI206/300-7594
150’ WFView
VashonHomes.comVashonHomes.com206-567-1600206-567-1600
Phil McClure (206) 696-1800Val Seath (206) 790-8779Nancy Sipple (206) 465-2361Diane Stoffer (206) 650-6210
Ken Zaglin (206) 940-4244Len Wolff (206) 300-7594Jean Bosch (206) 919-5223
Deb Cain (206) 930-5650Ishan Dillon (206) 355-4100
Leslie Ferriel (206) 235-3731
Crist Granum (206) 419-3661Susan Lofland (206) 999-6470
David Knight (206) 388-9670JOHN L SCOTT VSH
Phil McClure (206) 696-1800Val Seath (206) 790-8779Nancy Sipple (206) 465-2361Diane Stoffer (206) 650-6210
Ken Zaglin (206) 940-4244Len Wolff (206) 300-7594Jean Bosch (206) 919-5223
Deb Cain (206) 930-5650Ishan Dillon (206) 355-4100
Leslie Ferriel (206) 235-3731
Crist Granum (206) 419-3661Susan Lofland (206) 999-6470
David Knight (206) 388-9670JOHN L SCOTT VSHThis office independently owned & operated 13401 Vashon Hwy SWThis office independently owned & operated 13401 Vashon Hwy SW
Friday, Sept 21 Saturday, Sept 22
VVVVVashon Allied Arashon Allied Arashon Allied Arashon Allied Arashon Allied Artststststs2012 Ar2012 Ar2012 Ar2012 Ar2012 Art Auctiont Auctiont Auctiont Auctiont Auction
206.463.5131 VashonAlliedArts.org
3 bdrm 2.25 bath .66 ACSpacious farmhouse, fenced garden &
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Triplex .69 AC Mid-IsleOn bus line, with 1720 sq. ft & recentupdates! Unit #1 has 2 bdrms, 1 bath;Units #2 and #3 each have 1 bdrm, 1
bath. MLS #396950 $339,000
3 bdrm 2 bath 5.37 ACWestside! Large living spaces, pine
floors, wood stove, hot tub on the deck,pastoral land. Barn, garage, lots of
garden space. MLS #306230 $319,000
September 16th
1:00 - 4:00
OPENSUNDAY!
21432 Tramp Harbor Rd SWCedar cottage has great views, big
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KenZaglin206/940-4244
3 bdrmView
23413 - 77th Avenue SWUpscale home has multiple living
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SusanLofland206/999-6470
4 bdrm200’ wf
JUST
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4 bdrm 4.5 bath 5.43 ACDistinctive NW home on 5+ acres with
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3 bdrm 2.5 bath 1.0 ACNewer country home on an acre of sunny,level land at the center of the Island near
EVERYTHING! Studio cottage, barn.Move-in ready! MLS #387990 $455,000
3+ bdrm 3 bath 8.88 ACWhether you love gardening, farming,
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