Saturday, July 1, 2017

Olympia Candidates Discuss Sea Level Rise Plan


Candidates Fishburn, Zita, Miller, Gilman and Rollins comment about sea level rise 

Above: Port of Olympia Commissioner E.J. Zita meets with Rueben Males after a community meeting regarding the City of Olympia's sea level rise plan on Tuesday night. Males wants the Port of Olympia to be part of the climate solution, and not the problem, by initiating job creation to renewable energy and promoting the local sale of locally produced electricity. 

By Janine Gates
Little Hollywood
http://www.janineslittlehollywood.blogspot.com

Several elected officials and candidates for public office were present at the City of Olympia's community meeting on sea level rise issues Tuesday night. 

The city revealed a schedule of activities to be spearheaded by the city, the Port of Olympia, and the LOTT Clean Water Alliance. 

The process is expected to take 18 months.

This past week, Little Hollywood asked each candidate who was in attendance what they thought about the sea level rise planning meeting, the concerns expressed by community members, the concept of a strategic retreat, and what, if any, questions they had about the process.

Bill Fishburn is running for Port of Olympia commission, District 2, currently held by Bill McGregor.

“….What I see is a plan for a plan….Through a project management lens, I see that the engagement with the public seems late in the process. The first workshop comes three fourths of the way through what appears to be the third phase,” said Fishburn.

“The Squaxin Island Tribe, Washington State, and environmental groups appear to be absent from the early discussions and planning. And much of what I can see of the 'plan for a plan' appears to be focused on downtown. Such a narrow scope has the risk of leading to narrow solutions.

“That said, I was impressed by the number in attendance and the willingness of the city to engage with the public outside the milestone dates in their schedule. Since the city signed an interlocal agreement with LOTT and the Port, it was also good to see at least one port commissioner in attendance.

“My question would be: Given some of the pollution present in the impacted areas, what are we doing proactively to deal with that pollution? Between now and 2050, are there other phenomena such as king tides and heavy rains that need to be considered in our interim solutions?

“The strategic retreat discussion is interesting to me for a couple of reasons. I think it's worth exploring, but I think there needs to be a concerted effort to involve the public in how such a retreat would be planned.

“I also find it interesting that at the same time we are talking about sea level rise and how to perform a strategic retreat, the city appears to be still considering permit issuance in places that will be clearly impacted by sea level rise. I wonder if that will make the city and taxpayers responsible for costs associated with sea level rise impacts to buildings resulting from those permits?”

Port of Olympia Commissioner E.J. Zita was in attendance at the meeting. She is running for reelection to her seat in District 3, and has a challenger.

“The City of Olympia has a great start on evaluating risks to our area due to sea level rise,” said Zita.

“Andy Haub and colleagues have shared scientific knowledge so we can understand the impacts to Olympia. When seas rise two feet, we can expect flooding downtown every other day.  This is likely to happen in our lifetime, since climate scientists expect seas to rise by two meters, over six feet, by 2100.  King tides already flood downtown more often, so LOTT has already lifted and waterproofed some of its critical equipment.” 

“Do Olympia, LOTT and the Port need to consider moving or retreating from some infrastructure and operations? Other cities at sea level or built on fill show that we will have no choice but to consider these options. Many in Northern Europe have developed floating buildings. Does it make sense for Olympia to approve traditional construction where flooding is likely, in the lifetime of proposed buildings? We started some important conversations that will be continued. 

“It was disappointing to see no material from the Port of Olympia…. Should the Port increase global warming and sea level rise with fracking sands, or decrease warming by supporting renewable energy infrastructure and job creation? Voters will have a clear choice in the fall port commissioner election,” said Zita.

Above: Allen Miller contributed his opinion on a yellow sticky note at the City of Olympia's community meeting on sea level rise planning Tuesday night. It reads: Dredging Capitol Lake every decade for flood control is much less expensive than removing the tide lock and returning to mud flats.

Allen Miller is a candidate for Olympia city council position #5, an open seat. Two other candidates are also in this race.

“This is certainly the most important environmental issue the city faces.  I remember learning about the greenhouse effect in 5th grade….One of the reasons I led the effort to get the Olympia Metropolitan Park District established was to raise the revenue to buy LBA Woods, the Capitol Center Building and the 'Big W' trail,” said Miller.

“The 'Big W' trail from West Bay marina to Percival Landing, along the Port Peninsula, and up to East Bay will give us the opportunity for public access to the shoreline while protecting downtown from sea level rise by building the trail at elevation.

“The best available science from Evergreen State College professors Oscar Soule, David Milne, and the late Kaye V. Ladd shows that retaining the tide lock and dredging Capitol Lake will be best for water quality, sediment management, and wildlife, while also providing flood control in downtown and the North Capitol Campus. 

“I foresee a Capitol Lake management committee forming with the State, Port, Squaxin Tribe, Thurston County, Olympia, and Tumwater as members which will work together to manage the Lake and Deschutes watershed into the future.

“The State Environmental Policy Act will require us to consider the alternatives including a retreat from downtown.  The preliminary information shows that the environmental and economic costs of retreat will be much greater than providing downtown with more flood control, but a cost/benefit analysis will need to be part of the process under SEPA,” said Miller.

City of Olympia councilmember Clark Gilman is running to retain the seat to which he was appointed in 2016, Position 4, and has a challenger.

Soon after Gilman was appointed, he famously "threw the skunk on the table" at the council’s dramatic study session on sea level rise in February 2016 by questioning the assumption that downtown should be saved.

Little Hollywood asked Gilman after the meeting if he still felt that a strategic retreat should be on the table and explored.

“There were several important questions raised this evening. Most valuable to me were the comments about who should be considered a stakeholder or a recognized organization. I appreciated Judy Bardin's suggestions that we should broaden our outreach and consult with groups who represent social equity, environmental, and community economic development concerns,” said Gilman.

“Seeking reelection has not changed my deeply held understanding that the forces of the river and the ocean are mighty and that our best approach to sea level rise is to harmonize waterfront development with those powerful forces.

“I intend to listen and actively participate as a member of Olympia's Land Use and Environment Committee throughout the sea level rise planning process. My position at this point is that it makes practical sense to protect buildings currently in use through their likely useful lives.

“I don't see the community value in advocating for additional residential or commercial development on the port peninsula. I think it makes sense to apply our policy and incentive influence to encourage investment and revitalization on higher ground,” said Gilman.

Above: Renata Rollins, right, visits one of the storyboard stations explaining the City of Olympia's sea level rise plans at a community meeting on Tuesday night.

Renata Rollins is a candidate for City of Olympia council Position 6, currently held by Jeannine Roe. There is one other candidate in this race.

“We need to have all options on the table. By limiting the scope of the discussion, we can’t be sure we’re going to make the right plan, in terms of the environment and the financial/economic costs to the community, said Rollins.

“I also think it would behoove us to plan further than 20 years. We have 100-year sea level projections already, and we know sea level will continue to rise for centuries even if we make drastic CO2 reductions today. The question of whether a particular action is cost-effective depends on the time scale we’re looking at. Defense might seem to pay off in the short term when compared against costs such as relocating LOTT and other downtown development. But over 100 years? 500 years? Besides, hopefully by then we’re using composting toilets and other sustainable wastewater filtering/treatment methods, making LOTT at its current scale obsolete.

“The fact is, our downtown has been fighting the wisdom of a natural system since the settlers first began to fill the Salish Sea. We take the first step to addressing sea level rise in a realistic way by acknowledging this fact. Doing so doesn’t negate the real sentimental value downtown has for many of us, nor the significant financial investments made there by public and private entities, including our friends and neighbors. It costs nothing to acknowledge the wisdom of natural systems. And it opens the door in the present vantage point to understanding our past and envisioning our future in alignment with this wisdom.

“Rather than fighting sea level rise, we can take it as an opportunity to build a resilient community in the face of climate chaos. Perhaps instead of one town “center” we need the neighborhoods to have their own central social and economic hubs, residential options for all incomes and families, and urban farms to guard against food system instability - a development that will be needed as Washington’s fastest-growing city. 

We need a plan for emergency services to reach all parts of the city even if downtown streets are flooded. We need to move toward a more ecological plan for our wastewater, including significantly reducing wastewater, rather than depending on an Old World solution like LOTT.

The creative and practical possibilities for responding to sea level rise are exciting. And I say this as someone who loves downtown and has been emotionally invested in it for years. As someone who loves downtown Olympia, I really feel the folks who have made significant investments here. I think it’s only right to reframe the discussion and center the need for a longer-range sea level rise plan, over 100 years, and to choose the best and most cost-effective course of action from that data,” said Rollins.

Little Hollywood has written extensively on downtown Olympia sea level rise issues, flooding incidents, the management of Capitol Lake, current sea level rise projections for Olympia with maps and photos. Go to Little Hollywood, http://www.janineslittlehollywood.blogspot.com and type key words into the search button.

Olympia Plans for Sea Level Rise


Above: Community concerns regarding the City of Olympia's plan to address sea level rise are written on yellow sticky notes, reduced to the length of a tweet, at a community meeting Tuesday night. 

By Janine Gates
Little Hollywood

The City of Olympia is about to embark upon a very traditional planning process to address the most critical environmental issue threatening the city's very existence: sea level rise.

At a community meeting at the Olympia Community Center Tuesday evening, the city revealed a schedule of activities spearheaded by the city, the Port of Olympia, and the LOTT Clean Water Alliance. 

The process is expected to take 18 months.

Omnipresent yellow sticky notes were made available to capture and reduce community concerns to soundbites.

City staff also encouraged the public to place little colored coded stickers on a map of downtown Olympia to indicate answers to typical softball questions: “Where have you seen coastal flooding in Olympia in the past?” and “What are your favorite shoreline areas?” and “What features do you like?”

About 40 people were in attendance.

Andy Haub, director of water resources for the City of Olympia, began his presentation with an explanation of how, in 2010, the Olympia city council committed to protect downtown and its infrastructure.

Most notably, this includes the Budd Inlet Treatment Plant, located in downtown Olympia, which treats the region’s 12 million gallons of wastewater per day. Valued at $500 million, relocating the plant would cost an estimated $1.2 billion.

Built on fill about 100 years ago, the area of the Port of Olympia, the seventh largest marina in the state, is also expected to be dramatically impacted by just one foot of sea level rise.

“The time is now, and we’re vulnerable….The future doesn’t feel that far away anymore,” said Haub. 

Susan Clark, project manager for the city’s sea level rise plan, outlined how the plan will be developed and engages the public.

The city has hired an international engineering firm, AECOM, to help implement the plan.

“At $250,000, the planning process reflects the next step. It is not the end point of sea level rise planning….We want to get this right. It’s too important not to,” said Clark.

She said that over 20 internal working groups are working to develop a framework for the plan. The groups include staff from many departments, including parks, transportation and emergency management, along with elected officials.

An inventory of assets will be conducted, including open space, from the Fourth Avenue Bridge and the isthmus to East Bay and Marine Drive. Private property on East Bay and West Bay will not be included. Then, a vulnerability assessment on those assets will be conducted.

The final step will develop adaptation strategies such as tide gates and retrofits to existing buildings.

The city says it will conduct focus groups with the business community and others, including three workshops, the first to be held in October. The idea is to wrap up the plan by December 2018.

The city has a new electronic newsletter addressing sea level rise planning issues.  Community members can self-subscribe to it at olympiawa.gov/subscribe

Above: The city is looking to cutting edge sea level rise planning efforts currently underway around the country. It is particularly looking for guidance from the San Francisco Sea Level Rise Action Plan and the Marin Shoreline Sea Level Rise Vulnerability Assessment. The draft Marin Ocean Coast Sea Level Rise Adaptation Report is currently out for public review, said Susan Clark, project manager for the City of Olympia's sea level rise planning efforts.

Several audience members expressed their displeasure with the Port’s contract with Rainbow Ceramics and continued acceptance of ceramic proppants. Others wondered where the funding was going to come from to protect downtown.

Rueben Males was disappointed with the region’s approach to sea level rise planning, and said so at the meeting. He has started an organization called Jobs in Renewable Energy, a non-profit cooperative whose purpose is to incubate worker owned cooperatives.

He said he wants the Port of Olympia to be part of the climate solution, and not the problem, by initiating job creation to renewable energy and promoting the local sale of locally produced electricity.

He suggested that the Port of Olympia host the space necessary for a solar farm at the port district's airport property and/or for a solar farm at the port property on Budd Bay.

Community member Judy Bardin, along with several others, was disappointed that the city has apparently still not reached out to local environmental organizations for their assistance and guidance on sea level rise issues.

“Stakeholders are taxpayers,” she said. In April, after the last community meeting, Bardin provided the city a comprehensive list of local organizations to contact.

When asked what organizations the city has consulted with to date, Haub responded that he has met with the city’s Planning Commission and two Rotary groups, and the Coalition of Neighborhood Associations.

“We need to define what downtown means to us…We can’t capture it all, I’m sure. Give us suggestions and a venue and we’ll be there,” Haub responded.

Local attorney Charlie Roe, father of Olympia city councilmember Jeannine Roe, said that one of the requirements of stated law within the state's Shoreline Management Act is that one option needs to be no action. He asked if the possibility of no action on sea level rise has been ruled out.

“The state is providing some guidance on climate change and sea level rise but it is not a clear mandate. We see this as a local initiative...we have chosen to incorporate it into the city’s version of the Act, requiring setbacks along the shoreline…Unfortunately, to be candid, the guidance from federal and state government is very limited these days and we need to move forward,” responded Haub.

Little Hollywood has written extensively on downtown Olympia sea level rise issues, flooding incidents, the management of Capitol Lake, and current sea level rise projections for Olympia with maps and photos.

Recent articles include “Olympia Starts Sea Level Rise Planning” at http://janineslittlehollywood.blogspot.com/2017/04/olympia-starts-sea-level-rise-planning.html and “Olympia’s Sea Level Rise Plan Begins with Port, LOTT” at http://www.janineslittlehollywood.blogspot.com/2017/04/olympias-sea-level-rise-plan-begins.html

For more articles, go to Little Hollywood, http://www.janineslittlehollywood.blogspot.com and type key words into the search button.

Above: Former City of Olympia councilmember Karen Messmer was happy to express a few opinions about the city's sea level rise plan using several yellow sticky notes at Tuesday night's community meeting.

Friday, June 9, 2017

Mount Rainier: Cell Service at Paradise?


Above: Visitors at Paradise Inn at Mount Rainier National Park relax in front of the fireplace on Thursday evening. The National Park Service has drafted an environmental assessment for the possibility of installing cellular service equipment at Paradise. The public is invited to comment on the proposal.

By Janine Gates
Little Hollywood

MOUNT RAINIER NATIONAL PARK – Visitors from around the world come to Mount Rainier National Park to see and climb The Mountain, hike the trails and other nearby peaks, or camp in the wilderness. 

Most are there to appreciate the area's natural sounds and beauty, and escape day to day routines, news alerts, and other hassles of modern life.

There is no cell service at Paradise. 

During the day, the Henry M. Jackson Visitor Center offers a deli, a book and gift shop, educational displays, a movie explaining the features and history of the park, weather information, and more. Brochures are provided in multiple languages.

In the evening, folks gather around the two massive fireplaces inside the historic Paradise Inn, listening to the fire crackle and pop. Some read a good book, or quietly listen to pianist Bill Powell play classic selections, as he has for the last seven seasons.

Others play board games or strike up pleasant conversations with staff and strangers. Chatting in hushed tones, all seem to enjoy the cozy ambiance and quiet camaraderie.

When you get back on the road, you can honestly say you didn’t hear about President Trump’s latest tweet. You can tell your boss you were out of range. You didn't hear about your friend’s relationship breakup, and in a worst case scenario, you may also not have heard that there was an emergency back home or a death in the family.

Being so out of touch could soon change and the National Park Service (NPS) wants your opinion about it.

The NPS is considering the issuance of permits to Verizon Wireless, T-Mobile and AT&T that would allow those companies to provide cellular service in the Paradise area.

The NPS is required by the Telecommunications Act of 1996 to consider all applications for the installation of wireless communication facilities on NPS lands.

In its environmental assessment, the NPS is considering two alternatives: a no action alternative and an action alternative. Under the no action alternative, cellular service would not be provided at Paradise.

Under the proposed action alternative, cellular equipment would be installed in the east and west attics of the Visitor Center with antennas mounted and concealed on the gabled ends of the building.

The park service will evaluate the two choices and their potential issues and impacts to the park’s resources, values, and visitors. Comments that provide corrections or suggestions to improve the alternatives or the environmental analysis would be most helpful, said a press release issued on June 5.

Comments may be made online at: http://parkplanning.nps.gov/paradisecellular or mailed to: Superintendent, Mount Rainier National Park, 55210 238th Avenue East, Ashford, Washington 98034.

The comment deadline is July 19. 

Above: In an aerial view of Mount Rainier, the predicted coverage by Verizon Wireless is explained in its analysis dated April 8, 2016. The red colored areas indicate the best indoor and outdoor cellular coverage at and around Paradise. The green colored areas indicate poor indoor and average outdoor coverage, and the blue colored areas indicate poor indoor and outdoor coverage.

Above: If needed, three pay phones are located at Paradise Inn near the registration desk. A dollar in change gets you ten minutes for a national call. Pre-paid phone cards are available in the gift shop. Armed with a fistful of quarters, this man from Tampa, Florida was making a call to his family. Asked his opinion about the proposed cellular coverage at Paradise, he said he did not want it. He said he and his family were looking forward to playing a game of Scrabble.

Many visitors who arrive at Paradise are surprised that there is no cellular service.  After a few attempts and expressions of disbelief, they realize it’s true, unless they hike up the mountain a little ways and hope to catch a rogue wave, or head down.


While cell phone coverage could improve visitor safety and communications amongst park service staff, Little Hollywood randomly chatted with several visitors about the proposal, and could find no one who wanted the coverage.

A man in his 20s with an open laptop said he already knew there wasn’t service, and downloaded “half the internet” before he arrived.

Another man with a laptop said that he had plenty of cached files to keep him busy, and didn’t want cellular coverage. When pressed about its possible availability for safety concerns, he said that the closest he’s come to an emergency is when he arrived at the Inn on the night of the presidential election and informed staff and fellow visitors that Hillary Clinton had lost.

“People were devastated. That felt like an emergency!” he laughed.

His wife agreed.

“There are plenty of safety signs and barriers telling me where I can’t go,” she said.

Wendee and Ed Vogel, of Merrimack, New Hampshire, are staying at Paradise Inn for a couple of days, and have already visited several places throughout the Northwest. They stayed in Olympia on Wednesday night and will be taking a river cruise on the Columbia River next week.

Last week, they stayed in the Olympic National Park at Kalaloch and have appreciated being away from televisions and telephones. Both expressed opinions against the proposal.

“This is nature! I think it would be weird if there was cell phone service. I like being off the grid for a while,” said Wendee Vogel.

Her husband, a software engineer, agreed.

“It’s good to be away from the internet. It’s not like they’re losing business without it,” said Ed Vogel, referring to the park service administration.

The couple admitted that in the case of a family emergency, they did forget to leave an itinerary telling their loved ones where they were and where they were going. 

Above: Frank and Patti Helling of Fresno, California. Helling has portrayed the life and work of naturalist John Muir for 36 years. Muir ascended Mount Rainier in 1888. After his visit, Cloud Camp was renamed Camp Muir, and Muir was instrumental in the establishment of Mount Rainier National Park. 

Frank and Patti Helling of Fresno, California are also staying at Paradise Inn for a couple of days, visiting Mount Rainier National Park for the first time. They are on vacation in Washington State to visit their grandson’s graduation in Woodland. 

Helling has portrayed the Father of the National Parks, naturalist John Muir, around campfires at Grant Grove in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, and for Road Scholar, formerly Elderhostel, for 36 years. 

“I started portraying Muir when I was a substitute teacher in junior high schools. It would be an all-day birthday party for Muir, and I’d tell stories and teach the kids about his life,” he laughed.

After being told of the park’s proposed cellular service, Helling says he remembers when, a few years ago, Verizon Wireless put a cellphone tower on Park Ridge above Kings Canyon Visitor Center in Grant Grove. 

“It hasn’t been a big deal - it’s not a big ugly thing,” he said. The 80 foot tower was put into an area that was already an established telecommunications site.

Then, perhaps suddenly wondering what John Muir would think of the proposal, Helling paused, looking deep in thought.

“On the other hand, I’m not a user of social media, but I know a lot of people would be on their devices if the park had cell phone service.”


Then, Helling spread his arms upward toward the rafters of Paradise Inn, adding with expression, “They would miss all of this!”

Above: At Paradise, the snow begins to fall as a father and son take in the beauty of Mount Rainier National Park on Friday.

Monday, May 29, 2017

Memorial Day 2017


Above: A Memorial Day ceremony was held in the Capitol Rotunda on Monday. The event was open to the public. From left to right, at the podium, is William Doucette III, chair of the Thurston County Veterans Council, Major General Mark Stammer, DCG, I Corps, City of Tumwater Mayor Pete Kmet, City of Lacey Mayor Andy Ryder, and City of Olympia Mayor Cheryl Selby.

By Janine Gates
Little Hollywood

Memorial Day is a day to remember those who paid the ultimate sacrifice during times of war or conflict.

At a ceremony Monday sponsored by the Thurston County Veterans Council in the Capitol Rotunda, those who served in each military branch were acknowledged, stories were told, and tears were shed.

City of Tumwater Mayor Pete Kmet presented a poignant story about his father, Michael, who was stationed in Australia and New Guinea during WWII.

Like most servicemen, Kmet said, his father said little about his service history.

“On one of our early Saturday morning fishing trips, I asked my dad if he had ever been in combat. He said that no, he hadn’t, but had come close once when the Japanese attacked the base he was working on,” said Kmet.

“The only reason the Japanese didn’t reach his position was because a young private had almost single handedly stopped the attack by staying at his machine gun post when everyone else had retreated. The young man was only a teenager and had died during his effort and received the Medal of Honor for his sacrifice,” the elder Kmet told his son.

Based on that little bit of information, Kmet decided to do some research, and discovered that the young man was Nathan K. Van Noy, Jr., nicknamed Junior, born in Grace, Idaho.

Seven months after he was drafted and entered the service at age 18, Van Noy was wounded in action, but refused to be evacuated. A few weeks later, in October 1943, Van Noy was stationed at his post in New Guinea when the Allies were attacked. 

Van Noy remained at his post, ignoring the calls of nearby soldiers urging him to withdraw, and continued to fire with deadly accuracy. He expended every round, and was found covered with wounds, dead, beside his gun. 

Kmet said his father visited the site of the carnage after the attack.

“I could tell by the way he told me his brief story that he held this young soldier in the highest regard. You know, my dad never talked much about his service. Now I think I understand why just a little bit more,” said Kmet. He urged those who served to share their story with family and friends.

“Whether you were on the front lines or not, they will be forever grateful in knowing a little bit more about their family history,” he said.

With a resolution passed by the Thurston County Commissioners earlier this week, Commissioner Bud Blake announced that Thurston County was designated a Purple Heart County, in honor of those who have sacrificed for our country.


Above: Hundreds of members of Rolling Thunder prepare to hold a ceremony at the Washington State Vietnam Veterans Memorial on Monday. Rolling Thunder is a national nonprofit with 90 chapters throughout the United States who are united in the cause to bring full accountability for prisoners of war and missing in action of all wars. 

Monday, May 22, 2017

Mount St. Helens Offers Life Lessons


Above: A careful peek beyond the rim and into the crater of Mount St. Helens on May 19, 2017. Mount St. Helens, “Lawetlat’la,” pronounced Lah-weight-LOT-la, is translated as “smoker,” in the Cowlitz Indian language. Amongst the clouds, Mount Rainier can be seen in the distance.

By Janine Gates
Little Hollywood
http://www.janineslittlehollywood.blogspot.com

Almost everyone of a certain age in the Pacific Northwest remembers where they were when Mount St. Helens blew on May 18, 1980.

I was in Seattle in our apartment on Beacon Hill, talking with my mom in her bedroom. We felt the earthquake and the lamp on her desk headed my way.

For thousands of years, Mount St. Helens has been a central place in the culture and mythology of the Cowlitz and Yakama Tribes, where resources were gathered and young people were sent to test themselves.

With a few members of the Olympia Mountaineers this weekend, I had the opportunity to test my preparation skills and endurance for the 12 mile roundtrip hike to its 8,366 foot summit.

Starting at the winter route trailhead near Marble Mountain Sno-Park at 5:00 a.m., it quickly became a glorious, sunny day that required ample water, food, and sunscreen. 

Glissading down thousands of feet was a thrill, and helped shave time off on the way down. Snowshoes were helpful to deal with the slushy portions.

In 2013, the area of Mount St. Helens above the tree line, just over 12,000 acres, was designated on the National Register of Historic Places as a Traditional Cultural Property of the Cowlitz and Yakama Tribal groups.

More than 80,000 properties are listed in the National Register of Historic Places, but only twenty-three, such as Gettysburg, are traditional cultural properties. Mount St. Helens is only the second such listing in Washington. The first was Snoqualmie Falls.

“Protection of our cultural resources is one of the most important things we do. The listing of Lawetlat’la as a Traditional Cultural Property honors our relationship with one of the principal features of our traditional landscape. For millennia, the mountain has been a place to seek spiritual guidance. The mountain has erupted many times in our memory, but each time has rebuilt herself anew. She demonstrates that a slow and patient path of restoration is the successful one, a lesson we have learned long ago,” wrote Bill Iyall, chair of the Cowlitz Tribe, in the Tribe’s 2013 fall newsletter.

Iyall's words became newly relevant to me as I tested my mental and physical abilities, thought of loved ones, and made new friends along the way. Like Mount St. Helens, I'm always changing and growing.

Above: Glissading down Mount St. Helens was a blast!

Thursday, April 27, 2017

Take Your Daughter/Son To Work Day


By Janine Gates
Little Hollywood



Above and Below: Evergreen State College Chief of Police Stacy Brown plays catch with children of college employees on Red Square Thursday afternoon. Thursday was Take Your Daughter/Son to Work Day. 

Brown, a 2006 Evergreen graduate, had over 20 years’ experience with the Lewis County Sheriff’s Department before accepting her current position in January.