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Camas Post Record

Washougal celebrates East County Family Resource Center renovations
Author: Doug Flanagan

Michelle Wright understands firsthand the value of the city of Washougal’s East County Family Resource Center.

That’s why Wright, who recently managed the Center’s remodel, did not view her role as just a job, but rather a way to ensure Washougal residents continue to receive the type of life-altering treatment Wright’s family had to depend on recently.

Wright said “everything changed” when the father of Wright’s son’s girlfriend died in a car accident. The father was the family’s sole supporter, so the young woman dating Wright’s son not only had to learn to live without her dad, but also how to figure out how to secure health insurance, food and money to live on.

“I brought her to the East County social service (building) so we could figure out how to start putting back together the pieces of her life,” Wright said. “(The staff members were) so kind and helped provide the tools to help her find the resources and the support she needed. We are so lucky to have a place like this that can help you when you need it.”

The city of Washougal and Akin, a Seattle-based family service organization, held a ribbon-cutting and open house event May 9, at the East County Family Resource Center in Washougal to celebrate the building renovations and provide community members with information about the programs the social services building houses.

In 2021, the City of Washougal received a $226,500 Community Development Block Grant to fund a project that provided the building with exterior repairs, new roofing, a new HVAC system, interior lighting, new windows, interior and exterior paint, flooring and an exterior Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) public restroom, according to Wright.

After some delays, the project was completed earlier this year.

“The social service building has become the primary facility for low-income and elderly activities for Washougal, Camas and portions of Vancouver, Clark County and Skamania County,” Wright said. “The facility is over 75 years old, and (needed) many repairs to fix many structural deficiencies. These needed repairs and maintenance items will ensure its continued viability.”

The facility has “benefitted the community to a great extent,” according to Washougal City Councilmember Ernie Suggs.

“I think we are the only small city in Clark County that provides a facility so that services like this can be provided to the community,” Washougal City Manager David Scott added. “It’s a super high priority for our council to be able to have this facility to continue to provide the services that we provide here.”

Akin, the building’s primary tenant, provides children and family counseling, treatment for child victims of sexual abuse, family support services — including parent education, parenting classes and family advocate services — and emergency food supplies for individuals and families in need.

Akin was formed earlier this year when two of Washington state’s family services organizations — Childhaven and Children’s Home Society of Washington — combined forces.

“This merger allows us to grow and evolve as one organization, not for the sake of size but for the scope of direct impact in how Akin can partner with parents, caregivers, children and communities, together, to strengthen families,” Akin Chief Executive Officer Dave Newell stated in a news release. “Our connection to families is foundational, yet the existing child well-being system ultimately leads to often unnecessary and harmful family separation through crisis intervention. Instead, we aim to understand the unique stressors and needs of each family to provide more concrete support and ideally prevent that crisis from occurring in the first place.”

The building also houses a branch of the Washington State Department of Health’s Women, Infants and Children program, which supports healthy nutrition for all pregnant and breastfeeding women and children through the age of five, providing services such as health screening, nutrition and health education and breastfeeding support.

The demand for the building’s services has increased over the past few years, according to Akin employee Beverly Skoda.

“This center is really well-supported by the community,” Skoda said. “There would be a lot of people in real dire need that wouldn’t get their needs met if we weren’t here.”

Skoda said the center provides vital services to people living in east Clark County, and noted that finding transportation to Vancouver to receive services can be “a nightmare” for many people.

“Just being out here (to provide services to east Clark County residents) is a huge plus,” Skoda said.

Candidates file ahead of Aug. 6 primary election
Author: Kelly Moyer

The candidate filing period for the Aug. 6, 2024 Primary and Special Election came to a close May 10, and the final list includes several Camas-Washougal residents hoping to be elected to federal, state and county seats.

The primary race for Washington’s 3rd District congressional seat — now held by Democratic Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez — will include Republican challengers Joe Kent, of Vancouver, who lost the seat to Gluesenkamp Perez in November 2022, and Camas City Councilwoman Leslie Lewallen. Camas resident John Saulie-Rohman also has thrown their hat in the ring for the 3rd District seat and will be running as an independent candidate.

The primary race for the District 17, Position 2 state House seat now held by Republican Rep. Paul Harris will include Democratic candidate Terri Niles, of Vancouver, and two Republican candidates — Washougal Mayor David Stuebe, who has said he would like to retain his mayoral seat if elected to the state legislature; and Hannah Joy, of Carson, Washington.

Harris has filed to run as a Republican candidate for Sen. Lynda Wilson’s 17th District state Senate seat. Wilson announced in March that she plans to retire following a 10-year run in the state Legislature. Harris will run against Democratic candidate Marla Keethler, of White Salmon, for the 17th District state Senate seat.

Meanwhile, incumbent state Rep. Kevin Waters, a Republican from Stevenson, will run unopposed for the state Legislature seat he won in November 2022.

At the county level, there are three Camas residents vying for the Clark County Council’s District No. 4 position — including former Camas City Councilwoman Shannon Roberts, who quit her Council position unexpectedly in July 2022, a little more than halfway through her four-year term.

Other candidates competing for the County Council District 4 seat, which represents Camas and Washougal residents, include Peter Cutile, of Camas; Matt Little, of Camas; Dorothy Gasque, of Brush Prairie; and Joe Zimmerman, of Vancouver.

Clark County Elections will mail ballots for the Aug. 6 election no later than July 19, and voters should expect their ballots to arrive by July 25.

The election also includes three propositions important to Camas and Washougal voters:

• Proposition No. 4, a $26 million bond to build a new fire station/headquarters in downtown Camas;

• Proposition 12, a $15.7 million bond to replace the Washougal fire station; and

• Proposition 5, which would authorize a single-year levy lid lift to help fund the East County Fire and Rescue District north of Camas-Washougal.

The deadlines to register or update voter registration are July 29 (online) and Aug. 6 (in-person).

For more information, visit clark.wa.gov/elections/august-6-2024-primary-special-election-0

Silver Star Search and Rescue settles into new home
Author: Doug Flanagan

Silver Star Search and Rescue (SSSR) is settling into its new home north of Camas-Washougal.

The search and rescue group moved into East County Fire and Rescue’s Station 92, located near the intersection of Northeast 292nd Avenue and Northeast Ireland Road north of Camas-Washougal, in October 2023, after the group’s lease with the city of Washougal for a building near the Washougal Police Department expired, forcing the organization to find a new home close to the Washougal area.

“We’re highly relieved that we have a place to keep our equipment,” said SSSR Rescue Coordinator Rick Blevins. “It’s a decent facility for us. It’s fairly secure, and we can still maintain our (machinery). And we can make improvements around here. I just have to talk to the fire chief, and most of the time, he’s pretty good about saying, ‘Yeah, go for it.’”

Formed by a group of CB radio operators in the early 1960s to assist the local sheriff’s department, SSSR had been operating out of its former Washougal headquarters, located at 1220 “A” St., next to the Washougal Police Department, since 1983, when its leaders struck an agreement with the city of Washougal to build a site on city-owned property and to lease that property for the next 35 years.

In 2019, however, the City informed SSSR leaders that their lease, which was set to expire in October 2023, would not be renewed. The City is planning to use the building as a temporary fire station during its fire-police station remodel project, which it hopes to kick off next year if voters OK the construction bond in the Aug. 6 election.

“The problem was that we knew that it was coming, and then COVID hit, and all of our efforts to try and reach out to folks were hindered by the fact that we were simply unable to communicate our dilemma,” said SSSR medical officer Jeff Berner. “We couldn’t meet face to face with folks for a while, which just compounded the issue. Fortunately, the folks (at ECFR) came through for us, and we’re super appreciative.”

Blevins credited the efforts of SSSR board president Wade Oxford, who negotiated a renewable two-year agreement with ECFR, which allowed SSSR to use the station for free.

“They were just using this building for storage (because it’s) not up to standards for the fire department,” Blevins said. “They tried to make it into sleeping quarters, but it doesn’t meet the criteria. There’s no water. There’s no septic tank or anything like that. There’s nothing. This is just a building that can house equipment, that’s all. The equipment that was in here, the chief told me it hadn’t been used for years because it was just stored there. It all got towed out.”

SSSR volunteers respond to wilderness and urban emergencies and perform search-and rescue-missions in Southwest Washington. They cover miles of wilderness while looking for missing hikers, climbers, hunters, or mushroom- and berry-pickers who have been reported overdue and are potentially lost or injured.

“We have close to 30 members, and I would say at least 16 that are really active,” Blevins said. “Our numbers have actually been increasing. I wish we had a bigger facility to hold all of them.”

SSSR volunteers also help city police officers and county sheriff’s deputies search for lost children, people with cognitive difficulties and other at-risk individuals.

“The day we got the letter that confirmed that (the City wasn’t) going to renew the lease, the stress level just went tenfold because we have a lot to deal with,” Blevins said. “Trying to find a place … was very stressful because time was just moving at jet speed all the way. It was like, ‘We’re going to run out of time to do this.’”

SSSR leaders conducted a “moving sale” in September 2023 to unload some of its equipment that it wouldn’t be able to fit in its new facility. They were able to keep some of their furniture, however, relocating it to The Outpost in Washougal.

“(The move) was rough on the team, for sure, because we’ve been in that building for a very long time,” said Jacie Bogar, vice president of the SSSR board of directors. “We had to sell a lot of our stuff because we just don’t have anywhere to put it now, and I know The Outpost has a lot of our tables and furniture and stuff like that. We had been in that building forever, so it’s bittersweet. We have a place now, so we’re very thankful and grateful for that.”

Station 92 is just big enough to house SSSR’s rescue truck — a Ford Super Duty F250, affectionately called “Sasquatch” by the volunteers — snowmobiles, all-terrain vehicles and other equipment.

“Parking is tight, but … we do a lot of stuff out towards Skamania, and a lot of the calls are out in the Gorge, so it’s nice to be closer to the highway,” Bogar said. “And we’re very excited to be working with ECFR. We’re looking at setting up some joint training sessions and working together in the future, so that’s exciting. That’s a positive outcome.”

Station 92 doesn’t have any meeting space, however, forcing SSSR board members and volunteers to gather at The Outpost and the Armed Forces Reserve Center in Orchards, where they also sometimes hold training sessions.

“I know eventually, we’d love to have our own building all together again, but I don’t think we’re looking,” Bogar said. “I don’t think we have the means (to do so), or that’s even in discussion at this point. It was really nice to be able to do our training in the same building where we have all of our equipment. But I think right now, we’re just happy to have a place to have all of our equipment and have a new home.”

Death notices: May 16, 2024

Convey, Michael L., 83, Camas died May 11, 2024. Brown’s Funeral Home and Cremation Services, 360-834-3692.

Lebedev, Andrey Y., 94, Portland, died April 27, 2024. Brown’s Funeral Home and Cremation Services, 360-834-3692.

NYT Politics

House Passes Bill to Force Biden to Reverse Israel Arms Pause
Author: Annie Karni
The legislation has no chance of advancing in Congress or being signed into law. Republicans scheduled a vote anyway in an effort to spotlight Democratic divisions over Israel and rebuke the president.
Trump Says He Has ‘No Problem’ Including R.F.K. Jr. in Debates
Author: Neil Vigdor
But President Biden’s campaign has been firm in wanting the debates to be between only him and the former president.

Portland Business News

Kotek looks to give Port of Portland $40M to keep Terminal 6 open
Author: Demi Lawrence
The Port has faced funding shortfalls and cuts that have resulted in what is projected to be a $14 million shortfall from container service this year.

Washington State News

Washington Supreme Court overrules 1924 conviction of Yakama hunter

(CN) - In a 7-2 ruling on Thursday, the Washington state Supreme Court overturned a century-old judgment of a Yakama tribal member that once denied his right to hunt in areas once guaranteed through an 1855 treaty with the U.S. government.

"The treaty between the United States and the Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation explicitly enumerates many rights reserved by the Yakama people, including

Columbian Newspaper

McDonald’s plans $5 US meal deal next month to counter customer frustration over high prices
Author: DEE-ANN DURBIN, Associated Press

McDonald’s plans to introduce a $5 meal deal in the U.S. next month to counter slowing sales and customers’ frustration with high prices.

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Stock market today: Wall Street hangs around its records after Dow briefly tops 40,000
Author: STAN CHOE, AP Business Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. stocks edged back from their record heights Thursday after the Dow Jones Industrial Average briefly topped the 40,000 level for the first time.

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