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The Chronicle - Centralia

Toledo starts out fast to cruise by Winlock

Ignited by five total extra-base hits and continuous scoring, the Riverhawks coasted past the Cardinals in a 16-0, three-inning verdict on Thursday afternoon in a C2BL contest in Winlock.

Toledo (13-3, 6-2 C2BL) stays tied for second with Onalaska in the standings, two games behind Adna and just a game ahead of a handful of teams approaching the regular season finale.

Winners of three straight league games, the Riverhawks busted the game open with five runs in the first and piled on with eight more in the second and three in the third. Quyn Norberg notched three hits, including a home run, and Kailea Lairson also recorded three hits. Those two plus three other batters each drove in two runs.

Winlock (3-8, 1-5) had just one hit from Abby Miller on the day. Its defense was plagued by five errors. The Cardinals hit the road on Friday to take on Mossyrock for two games while Toledo battles Toutle Lake on Monday.

Pirates thump Tigers in quick C2BL contest

It didn’t take the Adna softball team long to pick up its 11th consecutive victory, needing just three innings to dispatch Napavine 16-0 on Thursday afternoon in a league matchup in Adna.

Ava Simms faced the minimum for the Pirates (12-3, 7-0 C2BL), striking out eight. She also went 3-for-3 at the plate with an RBI. Their offense erupted early with 12 runs in the bottom of the first.

Most of the initial runs came on singles, walks and passed balls, then Margarite Humphrey blasted a grand slam to make it 10-0 and Lena McCloskey roped a two-run double to cap the frame. Brytin Dollarhyde finished off the run-rule win with a three-run home run in the third.

Napavine (11-4, 4-3) now is a jumbled mess with Toutle Lake and Rainier all at the same league record with a week to go in the regular season.

Adna will turn its attention to Morton-White Pass on Monday while Napavine will host Kalama in a vital league matchup.

Camas Post Record

‘Stride Run’ grants promote reading in Washougal schools
Author: Doug Flanagan

For the past several months, Washougal School District (WSD) elementary school students have been “reading around” their libraries thanks to a new program that encourages them to discover new literary genres and write book reviews.

WSD district librarian teacher-on-special-assignment Hillary Chapman’s “Passport to Reading” program, which largely succeeded in its initial efforts to expose students to different types of writing, wouldn’t exist without the Washougal Schools Foundation (WSF) Student Stride for Education event.

“Luckily, the Washougal Schools Foundation is just amazing,” said Chapman, who received $1,000 from WSF in 2023 for the reading program. “We are very lucky to have the Washougal Schools Foundation supporting innovative ideas. (The support it provides) is a huge deal. The innovative grant money does so much across the district. They have been an institution for 20 years, and the Stride is a wonderful community event. I think it really brings our city together.”

The 21st annual Stride event will be held from 8 to 11 a.m. Saturday, May 18, at Washougal High School. Proceeds from the yearly “fun run” provide opportunities for students via teacher grants from the WSF.

“Seeing these grants in action keeps our all-volunteer board motivated,” said WSF President Jeanie Moran. “We love to see what the teachers have done, and we’re all driven by the idea that one idea can make a huge impact in the ability for one student to grasp a subject. Washougal teachers are motivated to help their students learn, and we’re grateful for the ability to provide a path for these teachers to prove out the best ideas so that they may become an established method in the future.”

WSF provided a path for Chapman to bring her program, which she first discovered halfway around the world, to Washougal.

“I’d done Passport to Reading in an elementary school that I had worked at in the Philippines, and it was so popular,” she said. “I had run that program with transitional kindergarten to grade three, but I chose to do it with fourth and fifth grades here because I wanted to get them reading around their libraries. Fourth- and fifth-graders, this is when they tend to start a series and read the whole series, or get really hooked on graphic novels, and all they read is graphic novels. I’m not saying that’s bad, but I wanted to open their eyes to their library (and show them) that there are other kinds of books.”

Chapman used the majority of the funds — $900 — to purchase books for the Gause and Hathaway libraries.

“Both of those collections had holes,” she said. “They needed to be beefed up, or needed some newer titles in some areas. In Gause, I put some money into the history and geography section, but also included multicultural stories (to showcase people of) different races and different abilities. Hathaway needed some (more books about) arts and recreation, so I put some (money into) nonfiction, some fiction, and picture-book stories. And because Hathaway (hosts our) dual-language program, I focused on (getting more) Spanish and Russian books.”

She used the remainder of the money to create “passports,” which were printed by Minuteman Press in Camas and distributed to every fourth- and fifth-graders at the two schools at the start of the 2023-24 school year.

The students read one book per month, each from a different genre, from October 2023 to March 2024.

“The reason I got a passport was that I was thinking, ‘There’s seven continents in the world, so throughout the year, every month we could focus on a different genre,’” Chapman said. “The students wanted to finish the passport (by completing the books). The passport is kind of their memento.”

The students then wrote book reviews, which were entered into the district’s library software system. The reviews include a “hook” (why students should read this book), a summary, and a persuasive statement that leaves the reader “hanging and excited to read the book,” according to Chapman.

“That was the intention, my dream for this whole project, that the students’ words would influence other readers in the schools,” she said. “They’re really proud of their reviews and seeing their names (in the system) when one of their friends, maybe from a different class, says, ‘I read your review, I picked up that book, and I thought the same thing.’ Can I say that that’s happening? I don’t know. But that would be my dream.”

Some of the students “absolutely” benefitted from the program, according to Chapman, who added that she hopes that it can continue next year.

“As we started to finish, I would talk to some of our kiddos, and they were like, ‘You know what? I really like mysteries now. I always thought I’d only read graphic novels, but I really like trying to figure (the mysteries) out,’” she said. “Mystery ended up being one of our popular genres in both schools. Some of (the students) who are readers really loved (the program). The kids who really don’t enjoy reading really resisted. But some of my most resistant readers ended up finding at least one new kind of story that they liked.”

WSF launched the Student Stride for Education in 2004 “as a way to build awareness for the Washougal Schools Foundation by showing support for students with a family friendly event,” according to Moran. It has grown substantially since then.

“About 10 years ago, Discovery Dental became our title sponsor and created the ‘Beat the Docs’ challenge, (which) has become a crowd favorite,” Moran said. “More recently, the Ninja Warrior Course and the Mean Team Robot have added elements for everyone who attends. We’re so proud that the spirit of the event, and our community is too. Many sponsors seek us out and support year after year. We (also) have students who compete with their prior-year time in an effort to keep getting better. How cool is that?”

The event will feature youth runs for grades K-5 and a 5K run-walk for high school students, middle school students and adults, and a “ninja warrior” course.

“We have an amazing team of 11 directors that have worked hard to make the 20th Stride a celebration,” Moran said. “There have been social media posts focused on the history of the event and some of the critical volunteers, like Rene Carrol, Kyle and Stephanie Eikens, the Stinchfield families, and art teachers. This year, the T-shirt logo is a compilation of the past 20 ‘Stride Cats’ thanks to Taylor Stinchfield.”

The WSF expects that more than 800 runners and 100 volunteers will participate in the event.

“We have reached more sponsors than previous (years),” Moran said. “Our goal was to collect $24,000 in 2024, and our sponsors have surpassed our request.”

To register, visit washougalschoolsfoundation.org/stride.

Washougal School District names interim leader; approves ‘painful’ cuts
Author: Doug Flanagan

The Washougal School Board has appointed Aaron Hansen as the Washougal School District’s interim superintendent.

Hansen, who has worked as the school district’s assistant superintendent of human resources and student services since 2019, will replace Washougal School District (WSD) Superintendent Mary Templeton.

Templeton announced last week that she has accepted a position as the superintendent of the Lake Stevens School District in northwest Washington, and will be leaving her Washougal position, which she has held since 2018, in June.

On Tuesday, April 30, the Washougal School Board approved a motion to name Hansen as the district’s superintendent for the 2024-25 school year.

Washougal School Board President Angela Hancock said the Board did not have time to conduct a search for a permanent superintendent ahead of the 2024-25 school year.

“Appointing an interim would provide the necessary stability and direction that we need right now to get into the next school year,” Hancock told The Post-Record in April. “It would also give us the capacity to have a process in the fall where we can gather community input about the qualities and attributes that we’re seeking in a superintendent.”

Hancock said the interim superintendent “should possess a superintendent credential, and the leadership abilities, experience in education administration, communication skills, the ability to build relationships and collaborate with various stakeholders.”

“We are looking for someone who has strategic thinking, problem-solving skills, adaptability to quickly understand and address the district’s needs, and a commitment to fostering a positive and inclusive learning environment for students and staff,” Hancock said. “Additionally, a deep understanding of educational policies, budget management, and organizational dynamics is crucial.”

Some question budget cut impacts

Hansen will inherit a district that has had to cut $3 million from its budget and downsize its staff ahead of the 2024-25 school year.

On April 23, the school board approved a resolution to implement the district’s modified educational plan, which will cut 14 educators, according to James Bennett, the president of the Washougal teachers’ union, the Washougal Association of Educators (WAE).

“This is the hardest thing (to do), especially to people that we know,” Hancock said before voting on the resolution. “They are people in the community, people that are neighbors, people that taught my kids. It makes me sick. If there was another way to do it, we would do something else.”

Hancock said school board members understand the hardships caused by the cuts.

“This is not fun at all,” she said. “I’m truly sorry that this is what it is.”

The district’s budget cuts include:

• Administration reductions ($484,000): eliminate assistant superintendent position; reduce the working hours of the district’s custodial manager by 50%; reduce the district’s contract with Educational Service District 112 for communications services by 60%; implement a pay freeze and cut for superintendent, directors, and supervisors; and reduce board travel, professional development, professional memberships, and superintendent vacation benefit, travel and training.

• Certified staff reductions ($1.6 million): eliminate 4.6 supervisory teacher-on-special assignment positions, 6.8 secondary certified staff positions, and 4.2 elementary certified staff positions.

• Classified staff reductions ($694,000): eliminate two secretary positions, one attendance coordinator, one transportation staff member, one custodial staff member, one security staff member, one culinary services staff member and one technology staff member; suspend community education preschool program; reduce highly-capable program administrative support; and implement district office clerical pay freeze.

• Other reductions ($208,000): decline to renew contracts with AVID, PLC@work and EduClimber; reduce employee assistance program, weather forecasting, community newsletters, travel and professional development; and defer turf replacement project.

The district also will suspend its community education preschool and dual-language program expansion plan; and reduce Washougal Learning Academy instructional support and highly capable administrative support.

“Today, we are in a financial challenge that we’ve never seen before. We’ll call it a crisis, because that’s what it is,” Templeton said during the April 23 meeting. “That is our recognized challenge. We must continue to move forward and make really hard decisions that impact people. When we talk about reductions, these are not numbers on a piece of paper. These are people. These are human beings. These are teammates. I recognize that as your superintendent. (But) this district must survive.

“We very thoughtfully went through a process that was very painful. We heard (the community’s) feedback. We heard it loud and clear — (that we) must reduce administration more than anything else, and we did.”

Several WSD staff members objected to Templeton’s claims about the district office employee reductions, however. Bennett said the modified educational plan includes “laying off 14 more teachers but no layoffs in administration.”

‘‘Earlier this year, the community was asked to provide guidance regarding the needed budget cuts. The community responded. We overwhelmingly stated the cuts should focus on retaining classified and certificated staff and reduce administration and admin support. In spite of the community feedback, classified and certificated have taken the brunt of the cuts,” Washougal Learning Academy teacher Rebecca Woodings said during the April 23 Board meeting.

“The people closest to the students are the ones who are being let go rather than administration,” Woodings said. “According to public data, Washougal School District administration salaries have risen more than classified pay or certificated salaries. Admin says they’re taking a cut in pay. A slight cut in pay is easier to digest when you had significant raises just before the decrease. The district has not actually cut a single administrative position despite the community input they sought.”

Les Brown, WSD’s director of communications and technology, said district administrators have agreed to salary concessions.

“This includes a pay freeze and pay cut agreed to by the superintendent, directors, and supervisors,” Brown said. “The district office clerical staff have also agreed to a pay freeze. The Principal Association of Washougal has agreed to take an increase below what was negotiated in their multi-year agreement. It is clear from looking at the reduction list shared with the community several months ago that the category with the largest percentage of cuts is administrative staff. In fact, it’s almost twice as much as the reduction for classified and certified.”

The teachers’ union and district are currently in contract negotiations.

“We have a good number of tentative agreements on various proposals so far,” Bennett said. “Many of our proposals have focused on student discipline issues, working conditions, and support staff. Of course, the big question centers around compensation, and we haven’t come to an agreement on that yet. With the district’s financial issues, it may be challenging to find common ground that recognizes both the district’s position and the hard work that teachers do.”

Woodings and Josie Barrett, a third-grade teacher at Cape Horn-Skye Elementary School, said thedistrict has hinted that it wants to renegotiate the implicit price deflator (IPD) clause included in the most recent teachers’ contract.

“We all know that everything is more expensive and the same amount of pay doesn’t go as far,” Bennett said. “The state provides for a cost-of-living increase through the IPD for district employees. Unfortunately, the state only provides this cost-of-living increase for the number of staff calculated through the ‘prototypical school model.’ Pretty much every school district out there employs more staff than the model. It’s just not enough to do the work.”

The importance of giving versus saving

A few years ago, I turned a carport into a bedroom. But first I had to empty out the books, papers, furniture, rugs and tools that were in the carport. Then I took it all to a storage unit where rent was $50 a month.

After three years of thinking about it, and only occasionally pawing through the storage unit for a lost item, I finally sorted out a handful of books and items that meant something — I could have fit them in a suitcase — and held a yard sale for the rest.

I think about that when I see storage facilities spreading and expanding across the country. At least 500 units have been built here in eastern Oregon’s Wallowa County, population 7,500, and storage businesses can be found in towns and suburbs across the West.

A local entrepreneur who owns about half the local units is now building in regional towns as well: Concrete slabs with metal buildings on top, single light bulbs inside, no plumbing.

I’m past 80 now, and, although my house is small, I have held onto a lot of stuff. In the normal course of events, my children would inherit it.

But my two children and their families live in Arizona and Guam, busy building their own inventories of stuff. In a previous age, when there was a family house and three or more children to a house, the house and its basic furnishings would go to one child, and the remaining children would parcel out anything else.

In my nuclear family, it worked like this: Mom passed on, and no one wanted or needed the house, so Dad called a summit meeting as he prepared to go into assisted living.

We four siblings gathered for a week in the sunny southern California backyard and emptied the house. Dad sat in his captain’s chair and laid down the rules: if you brought it into the house — sculpture from Africa, old sports equipment — you took it away or traded with a sibling. One table was set up for stuff to go to dad’s best friend and another for a yard sale, and off we went to sort through the remaining items.

When it came to dad’s fine collection of old cameras, they went to my brother, Phil, who, in dad’s estimation, was the only one of us who knew how to take a decent photo. The tools were split between my sister, Mary, and me because, as dad said: “You both at least know the difference between an end wrench and a crescent.”

Dad said he had seen families argue and split over parental belongings, and he wanted no part of that. So on we went, sorting through grandma’s rag rugs, old diplomas, a collection of bell bottom pants and lots of keepsakes, all the while drinking beer and retelling old stories.

We cried some as we set dad up with a few things for the assisted living place, then left for our own homes. I got dad’s last Ford — his cars were always Fords — as he figured my family needed a good second car more than the others.

It was a wonderful week.

I don’t have plans for a summit, but I am looking around the house and thinking about what child or grandchild might want the things I have held onto, such as carpets from Turkey, artwork by Northwest artist friends, cast iron cookware and so many books.

Books written and signed by Ivan Doig and Ursula LeGuin — they can go to libraries now. And I smile thinking about taking my best Turkish carpet to my granddaughter’s first house.

Last week, Nez Perce artist Carla Timentwa brought a fine collection of beadwork, woven basket hats and shell dresses to the Josephy Center in the town of Joseph, where I work. She said she’d ignored her grandmother’s teachings as a child, but on becoming a grandmother herself, took up the arts and began making things to give away: hats for granddaughters who serve food in the Longhouse, a fine beaded vest for her husband, dresses for young women to wear at naming and mourning ceremonies.

It’s important, Carla said, to take care of others as they come into the world, as they grow and as they leave. It’s a good lesson — giving is always more important than storing stuff away.

Rich Wandschneider is a contributor to Writers on the Range, writersontherange.org, an independent nonprofit dedicated to spurring lively conversation about the West. He feels lighter in Joseph, Oregon.

NYT Politics

Biden Appeals to North Carolina With Program to Replace Lead Pipes
Author: Peter Baker
In a stop in Wilmington, N.C., the president announced $3 billion in new spending to upgrade water systems around the country.

Portland Business News

Oregon cannabis prices sink to record lows
Author: Pete Danko
Federal rescheduling could help and there are signs that a two-year sales decline might be over.
How Portland hospitality wages have changed since 2017
Author: Malia Spencer
Hospitality employment software maker Poached analyzed wage data between 2017 and 2023 to find how hourly wages have changed.
Salt & Straw's Kim Malek on opening new Northeast locations
Author: Malia Spencer
Salt & Straw has had requests to open shops in New York City since it opened in 2011. Now they are finally headed to the Big Apple.

Seattle Times Opinion

Israel-Hamas war: Don’t ‘nullify legitimate political criticism’
Author: Letters editor

Re: “Parents, schools have responsibility in face of rising antisemitism” [April 25, Opinion]: Please, can’t we stop calling legitimate criticism of Israel’s policies, particularly about Palestine, “antisemitism”? Anyone who has followed the decades-long taking of Palestinian land and Israel’s restrictions on Palestinians’ movements, employment and education will be aware of the difficulties they have been […]

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