Yelm Issues: September 2006 Archives

September 30, 2006

ANOTHER ACCLAIMED YELM AUTHOR

This writer had the pleasure of meeting Yelm author Dianne Bunnell recently and desired to share her book The Protest on this blog. This is quoted from her interview on Beyond the Ordinary.

"Dianne Kosdrey Bunnell author of The Protest a fictional novel 'inspired' by the real life highjacking of her daughters.

Dianne, a magna cum laud graduate from Whitworth College with a BA in English and her teaching credential from St. Martin's College, taught high school English during the ten years of writing of The Protest.

A great story, beautifully written and full of understanding. It is about experiencing and turning that experience into wisdom, about pain and conquering, joy, and becoming. Dianne lived this wisdom throughout the real experience she wove into her book, and because she lives forward life is indeed very good today. Listening to Dianne is an inspiration ... in so many ways!"

Dianne's website is The Protest.org.

September 29, 2006

LOCAL HAPPENINGS!

1. LOCAL COMEDIENNE VANDA MIKOLOSKI PERFORMS
"...is a renowned stand-up comic and speaker whose passion is personal growth and development. Vanda's work is a delightful, irreverent romp down her twisted spiritual path. The concept "enlightenment" is fascinating to her. Vanda's stand-up comedy deals with the human predicament, inquiring into the nature of being a human being, the trap of it all and the absurdity of it all."
Vanda and Friends Comedy Show
Monday, October 9th, 7:30pm at Lacey's Ricardo's Restaurant.
$15 online at www.vanda.us Click on “SCHEDULE”
$20 at the door ~ 413-9995 for reservations Ricardo's Restaurant website .



Vanda Mikoloski
Photo from Vanda's website, taken by Guustaaf Damave

2. REMEMBERING KEN MEADOWS
A celebration of Yelm resident Ken Meadows is open to the public on Sunday, October 1st at 1pm
at the home of Dr, Andrew Iverson, 14233 Yelm Highway. Call 458-5885 for details.
Mr. Meadows passed away August 30th.

3. AWARD WINNING AUTHOR BETTYE JOHNSON'S BOOK SIGNING
Award-winning author Bettye Johnson will be reading an excerpt from her book Secrets of the Magdalene Scrolls followed by a question/answer session
Sunday, October 1st at 2pm at Yelm's Timberland Library.
Bettye will be available to sign books previously purchased and will have copies of her books available for purchase. This event will be videotaped for future use. There is no charge for this presentation.

September 28, 2006

WHY PAY AN OUTSIDER WHEN YELM IS FILLED WITH TALENT?

This writer recently asked Yelm city official Shelly Badger about the make-up of the Yelm Economic Development
Committee (EDC) in the wake of several EDC references at City Council meetings. I did not delve further into Yelm's EDC until last Tuesday's Council meeting when my eyebrows were raised as the City Council authorized $17,700 to create a "collateral marketing piece" to promote Yelm as an attractive business environment. Based on my extensive marketing/sales background, "collateral marketing piece" means brochure and/or website to me.

Now, I am sitting in this meeting thinking,
"What is this city doing paying the Thurston County Economic Development Council (EDC)
this kind of money essentially for a marketing brochure when this area has many talented and experienced people that would serve this city in this capacity, if asked."

So, I called city hall to request the members list of Yelm's EDC, which includes:
Mayor Ron Harding, local contractor and lifelong Yelm resident
Grant Beck, Yelm City Staff Development Director
Shelly Badger, 20+ year veteran on Yelm City Staff & Yelm City Administrator
Cecelia Jenkins, Executive Director of the Yelm Chamber of Commerce
Steve Ruff, Miles Sand & Gravel and Yelm Chamber of Commerce President
Glen Cunningham, local contractor, Yelm Chamber Board member and Yelm Planning Commission Chair

I wrote an email to Shelly Badger and copied the Mayor and Grant Beck after the Council meeting raising this issue and Mayor Harding responded that Yelm's EDC members are appointed by him.
No disrespect intended Mr. Mayor, however the makeup of the Yelm Economic Development Committee (EDC) encompasses little or no sales, marketing, economic development, advertising, and/or corporate experience out in the world, IMHO. Mayor Harding stated, "Each of the backgrounds that you feel should be present on this committee is already present."

I ask, "Where are citizen appointments and participation from a broad cross-section of this community?"
Mayor Harding, Ms. Jenkins, Steve Ruff, & Glen Cunningham serve on both the Yelm EDC & the Yelm Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors. Therefore, the Economic Development of this community is limited to the same people on the Chamber Board and Yelm's EDC.
While I applaud the service by these fine people to the city, there is no infusion of fresh new ideas and experiences. No wonder the city must hire out its marketing; local talent is not utilized, so the City Council chooses to use taxpayer money for an outsider to promote the wonderful aspects of our city.

Were Yelm's EDC to have members appointed with such experience, I am sure they could develop a marketing/sales strategy that would cost the city a minimum and be more effective, since they live here; people like real estate entrepreneur Cynthia Schmier, Investment Manager Gene Heuschel II, and internet website marketer Luke Sutton are a few of the talented locals that come to mind.

What do you think?
$17,700 too much for a Yelm marketing/sales brochure?
Should Mayor Harding add to Yelm's EDC appointments from outside the usual group?



Yelm Mayor Ron Harding
Photo from City of Yelm website

September 27, 2006

MAYOR PRO-TEM EXPRESSES CONCERN OVER UPCOMING CITY BUDGET

At the close of the City Council meeting last night, Mayor Harding asked the Council
for any closing comments.
This writer heard Mayor Pro-Tem Bob Isom state that Yelm was no longer a small "penny-ante town"
and that would be made very apparent with the city's upcoming 2007 budget. He expressed his concerns
about the size of the budget saying he was a "fiscal conservative." Mayor Harding smiled and brushed aside his remarks stating "All is well and the city has plenty of money to handle everything for several years." The Mayor continued saying to Mr. Isom that Isom expressed these concerns last year about next year's budget and we're on the threshold of that discussion. Mr. Isom was not moved and still echoed his unease.
The 2007 City of Yelm Budget Work Sessions are open to the public and are scheduled to be held in City Council Chambers at 4pm on each Tuesday in October (3, 10, 17, 24, & 31).
Further, city hall department heads will present the City of Yelm Budget forecast for 2007 -2011 plus a 2006 revenue update tonight at 5pm in City Hall's Council Chambers.
This writer agrees with Mr. Isom; we're no small town anymore and officials/citizens must realize that this is a growing city and deal with the budget and city affairs in a big city context.

Besides the local newspaper reporter, a newly appointed Planning Commission member,
a Thurston County EDC presenter and some high school students auditing the session for their
class, this writer was the only citizen in attendance. HMMM!
Lack of citizen involvement here in Council issues is not a compliment to this city and must change, as well.


Yelm City Council member Bob Isom
Photo from City of Yelm website



AUTUMN WEATHER HERE BREAKS RECORD

Yes, Olympia Regional Airport recorded a record high of 81 degrees on September 26.

September 26, 2006

AREA AUTHOR INTERVIEWED FOR JAPANESE TV DOCUMENTARY

Local resident John Glennie was interviewed in Yelm last week for a TV documentary slated for Japanese television.
Mr. Glennie was owner and Captain of the boat the Rose-Noelle when it capsized. His book chronicles the 119 days he and his crew spent adrift at sea that commanded the unofficial world's record for survival in a cold climate. The book is titled The Spirit of the Rose-Noelle.

Another book describing the story is
Capsized/the True Story of Four Men Adrift for 119 Days
"From Publishers Weekly
After four months adrift in the South Pacific in 1989, the survivors were in such relatively good health that at first their story was disbelieved. Though upside down and half-submerged, their boat was well made. Its captain, John Glennie, a shrewd old salt, and his three companions--including Nalepka, an Outward Bound guide and the sole American--had originally set out from New Zealand for Tonga, and after capsizing they made living quarters in a compartment in the hull the size of a double bed with 18 inches of head- room. Nalepka tells how they caught fish and rigged a rain-collecting contraption, but he focuses most on the changing relationships among the men as they coped with stress and were forced to become a team to survive. Glennie lost his macho authority, the tentative Phil Hoffman, a heart patient, grew surer, and a loving tenderness developed between Nalepka and Rick Hellreigel, a young man with a brain tumor. Aided by Callahan (Adrift), Nalepka tells an intriguing tale of personal victories claimed from disaster. Illustrations not seen by PW
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc."

September 25, 2006

YELM AREA COMMUNITY CENTER COULD USE YOUR HELP

Yelm Adult Community Center (YACC) volunteer Anita Marriott is assisting the YACC to survey the local population ages 50-65 to determine how the community center can best serve this group.
Says Ms. Marriott, "The YACC has the potential to be a wonderful resource and a meeting place to bring people together in the Yelm community. The new facility is a blank page to be written on by members of the community. It can be whatever we want it to be. We are looking for suggestions and feedback from our target audience. We are considering offering classes, book clubs, lecture series, and trips. I have created an online survey that I would appreciate your help in distributing."
The YACC Survey Link.

September 22, 2006

FORMER AREA RESIDENT TELLS OF BATTLE FOR HIS LIFE ON KING 5 TV

King-5 TV's Jean Enerson filed this report about former Yelm area resident Sam George earlier this summer.

"In September of 2004, three co-workers were having fun on jet skis on Lake Sammamish – until two of them collided.

Sam George was hit from behind at full speed.

'I was thrown forward into the water and wound up face-down unconscious in the water,' he said. 'The paramedics thought I wouldn't make it.'

Broken bones were the least of his problems.

'By the time I got to Harborview I had lost in the neigborhood of two-thirds of the blood in my body,' he said...

He was also bleeding internally, but an IV given in the field may have saved him.

'What's so critical with this study is that the fluid has to be administered as early as possible. To really be effective it has to be the first IV fluid the patient gets,' said Dr. Eileen Bulger.

That fluid is a concentrated dose of saline with or without dextran, a sugar. It's a formulation already used in 14 European countries, but has yet to receive FDA approval...

Harborview is about to launch a much larger study that will involve 10 hosptials (sic) in the U.S. and Canada. It will include brain injury as well as trauma patients."

University of Washington owns and operates Harborview Medical Center, one of the finest trauma care centers in the Northwest.
The Harborview study information.

Sam works at Microsoft and has been instrumental in the development of the Tablet Avalon Platform, for which he has a blog.
"In this episode Peter Loforte and Sam George talk about the purpose, scope, and motivating features of the Tablet PC operating system and the applications that run on it. They show real code examples of what it takes to build a Tablet PC application from scratch using Visual Studio.NET," quoting this Microsoft interview from September 25, 2003.

Congratulations, Sam, for your perseverance, good humor and being an inspiration to others on this, the 2nd anniversary of your life-changing event. And to you and your wife Cortney, pregnant at the time of the accident, on the birth of your daughter.

September 21, 2006

JEAN MARIE CHRISTENSON SWEEPS PRIMARY

Area resident Jean Marie Christenson made history as she moved forward from Tuesday's Primary as the
1. leading vote-getter for this district.
2. leading vote-getter in both Pierce & Thurston counties.
3. candidate that beat the incumbent on both of the above.
The results are from the Washington Secretary of State's office, though the results are not yet certified.

Congratulations to Jean Marie and her team!
Now on to the November General Election....

Jean Marie Christenson, Democrat - Candidate for State Representative, District 2, Position 1


Photo courtesy of Stephany Ray,
Professional Photographer and Webmaster of MastersConnection.com

September 20, 2006

NISQUALLY TRIBAL LEADER RAISES ALARM AT LACK OF AWARENESS OF ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES

Nisqually Tribal Elder Billy Frank has developed quite a reputation for his stewardship of Nisqually Valley environmental issues and has been acknowledged for his decades of work to educate the public. Mr. Frank wrote a column in the September 15 edition of the Nisqually Valley News titled "Being Frank - Be motivated by 'the map'". Mr. Frank states:
"If you see me speak these days, chances are you'll see "the map."

For many years, I've scrawled little maps on napkins and place mats in conversations over coffee to help demonstrate the challenges salmon have to face to migrate between the Pacific and their streams of origin.

In most of those cases, the sketchy little maps did seem to help enlighten individuals to the expanding environmental challenges we all face in the Pacific Northwest. They have been good tools to demonstrate challenges tribes face in maintaining their culture, livelihoods and identity as a people.

Today, even with greatly reduced fishing, those challenges are far tougher and more plentiful than ever.

No napkin or place mat map will hold all the problems.

A recent public opinion poll, which revealed that 80 percent of the people here think Puget Sound is healthy, made the need for public education more than evident. But how can so many people be convinced to open their eyes to the truth about Puget Sound?
We've published tons of newsletters, sent out thousands of news releases, sponsored public forums, invested in television specials, set up exhibits and produced curricula for the schools - all saying that pollution and habitat destruction are big problems, and that everyone who lives here has a responsibility to help deal with them.

Needless to say, the results of the public opinion poll were disappointing.

So what can we do differently?"

See the full transcript of Mr. Frank's column online.

"Billy Frank Jr., a Nisqually Tribal Elder, has been Chairman of the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission (NWFC) for 22 years and has played a central role in securing fishing rights for Native American groups," quoting Stewardship Partners.

The Olympian reported this in August of this year,
"Five species of Puget Sound salmon and the orca are listed under the federal Endangered Species Act. Overall, 1,000 Puget Sound species are in decline.

'There's no steelhead and no wild coho salmon anymore,"'lamented Nisqually tribal elder Billy Frank Jr., executive director of the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission. 'And the orca whale - he's starving to death.'"

The Nisqually River Council of which Mr. Frank is a contact:
"The original objective of the Nisqually River Council was to bring together diverse stakeholders to develop and implement a Nisqually River management plan that would protect the river and its fish. Over the last 20 years, the council has implemented most of that plan and, upon its completion, will continue to work to resolve divisive issues surrounding timber harvesting, land use, salmon recovery, and water allocations. The council is also evolving to protect, not only ecosystem health, but also local economic vitality."

The Institute for Tribal Government
says this of Mr. Frank.

[Ed. Note: At what point is the Nisqually Tribe's objectives and stewardship of the Nisqually Valley going to be
challenging to the unbridled growth of the central Valley's largest city, Yelm? What say you?]



Nisqually Valley Tribe's Billy Frank
Photo from Institute for Tribal Government website

September 19, 2006

AREA RESIDENT CHOSEN FOR AIRLINE HONOR

Local area resident Danielle McCarter has been selected by Northwest Airlines, Inc. to manage their new Reservations facility in Singapore for 5 weeks beginning in October.
Danielle states, "I am really excited to work on the project there!"
Danielle is currently the Manager of Northwest's Seattle Reservations Call Center handling calls from all over the western USA. Danielle met her husband-to-be Dave at the Seattle Res. Center, as well.
Congratulations on both, Danielle!

"Northwest Airlines is the world's fifth largest airline with hubs at
Detroit, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Memphis,
Tokyo and Amsterdam, and approximately 1,400 daily departures...

This October, on the first of the month, we'll celebrate our 80th
birthday, and like most octogenarians, we can't resist the opportunity
to look back on some of our favorite memories. In the eight decades
since Colonel Lewis H. Brittain flew the first Northwest biplane,
carrying mail from the Twin Cities to Chicago, NWA has been a frequent
pioneer in the advancement of commercial aviation:

* We pioneered the northern "Great Circle Route" to Asia, flying
DC4s through the wintry Arctic skies on our way to becoming the
first U.S. airline to serve China and other Pacific markets. In
fact, next year will mark the 60th anniversary of our first
service to Asia.
* We introduced new technologies in the air and on the ground;
Northwest pioneered the first clear-air turbulence forecasting
system in 1957. We remain a leader in turbulence prediction,
providing warning services to other airlines.
* We were the 1989 launch customer for Boeing's 747-400 "jumbo jet."
The increased range and capacity of this aircraft brought the
world closer together than ever.

And our best years are yet to come," quoting NWA President & CEO Doug Steenland.
Happy Birthday, Northwest!

Northwest Airlines & Seattle have been linked together since 1933 when Northwest began commerical airline service. On May 31, 1945, a Northwest Airlines DC-3 inaugurated transcontinental service when it departed Sea-Tac for New York City. Further, in 1949 Northwest Orient Airlines began nonstop flights from Seattle to Japan.



NWA's Danielle McCarter poses in Singapore with her hometown newspaper, the NVN
Photo courtesy Mrs. McCarter

September 18, 2006

AL GORE BRINGS HIS "CLIMATE CRISIS" MESSAGE TO THE NW

'An Inconvenient Truth' is still playing in Seattle theaters, and now Seattleites can see the star — former Vice President Al Gore — in person. He'll give a presentation and discussion of the film and best-selling book at 8 p.m. Oct. 23 at Key Arena," quoting the Seattle Times.

Tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. Monday [Sep. 18] ; $25-$45 (206-628-0888 and at all Ticketmaster locations).

An Inconvenient Truth made news here when Yelm Cinemas carried the film during the Ramtha School of Enlightenment Summer, 2006 Retreat and school officials reserved the theaters for private screenings for 1,200 students patronizing the local cinema, as reported in The Olympian.

Further, Mr. Gore made a presentation at New York University School of Law today and said,
"Many scientists are now warning that we are moving closer to several 'tipping points' that could - within as little as 10 years - make it impossible for us to avoid irretrievable damage to the planet's habitability for human civilization." Gore proposes ending the payroll tax: "For the last fourteen years, I have advocated the elimination of all payroll taxes - including those for social security and unemployment compensation - and the replacement of that revenue in the form of pollution taxes - principally on CO2."

September 17, 2006

LOCAL WRITER MAKES IMPACT WITH NEW PUBLICATION

Local writer Cate Montana is making news as she announces the October start-up of her new publication
The Global Intelligence. Cate is publisher and says:
"Working as a journalist with the filmmakers of the movie What the BLEEP Do We Know!? I have had the great good fortune to talk with many leaders in the Global Transformation Movement like Deepak Chopra and David Simon, John Hagelin, Neale Donald Walsch, Barbara Marx Hubbard, and many others. As I reported on different organizations’ efforts, I was surprised how little information sharing there was even between groups with a similar focus…The Global Intelligencer is one small piece of the puzzle. Its mission is to serve as an information clearinghouse for topics concerning individual, social and global transformation, making it available on a monthly basis to a maximum number of people worldwide. If this appeals to you, please subscribe. It’s free."

Beyond the Ordinary says of Cate:
"From journalism into television production as a videotape editor, working up to the first female technician hired by NBC for live remote sports telecasts, and a really fun career as a freelance editor and slo-mo sports replay technician that lasted 14 years. Abandoning television, Cate worked part-time as a carpenter, while writing articles for newpapers and magazines. The search for wisdom included two husbands, a Masters Degree in Psychology, studies at Esalen Institute in California, and finally, the Ramtha School of Enlightenment from 1989 to 1998."

The Yelm Community Blog wishes Cate well in her new endeavor- lots of fun, laughter and satisfaction!


Cate Montana
Photo from Beyond the Ordinary.net

September 16, 2006

YELM REAL ESTATE NETWORK MILITARY OUTREACH PROJECT

This posting at the request of the Yelm Real Estate Network:

"A LITTLE BIT OF HOME"

Col. Johnson of the Washington National Guard spoke at a recent meeting of the Yelm Real Estate Network regarding an opportunity to help the troops that are away from their family, friends and communities. We will be sending various items to our troops in the Iraq and Afghanistan areas and will be shipping donated items to the soldiers of the Washington National Guard and also one of the Stryker Brigades. Currently the Washington National Guard has 3 units in Iraq, Afghanistan and surrounding areas. Col. Johnson spoke of the benefits to the troops' morale when they receive items from home (apparently Starbucks coffee is one of the great favorites!) and are pleased to see our donations and community support! We can make a difference! Together with the Family Services Unit, we will be sending the items listed below. We will be accepting donations until October 19th.

Here are the drop off points in our area:

Signature Service Real Estate, 302 Binghampton St, W, Rainier (opposite Rainier Market)
Olympia Real Estate, 1110 Algiers Rd, Suite D, Yelm (near Pizza Hut)
LandAmerica Transnation, 1010 Algiers Rd NE, Yelm (near Sunbirds)
Pioneer Title Company, 525 Pear St SE, Olympia
Realty Executives, 8640 Martin Way, E, Ste A, Lacey
Versata Home Loans, 4405 7th Ave SE, Ste 100, Lacey

The items happily accepted are:

Birthday/Holiday greeting cards to send to loved ones.
Letters of encouragement
DVD movies and music CDs (old and new - no VHS tapes, please)
Holiday decorations
Phone cards
Sports equipment (softballs, mitts, soccer balls, Frisbees, footballs, etc.)
Manicure kits (nail/toe clippers, files, etc.)
Chewing gum and candies (non melting kind)
Homemade goodies (cookies and candies in Ziploc bags)
Boot inserts (D.r Schultz type, etc.)
Recent magazines and joke books and calendars (People, Sports Illustrated, etc.)
Local Newspapers (even week-old ones)
Hand sanitizer (tissues)
Dental products (toothbrushes, dental floss, etc.)
Assorted toiletries (the sample/hotel size are great)
Beef Jerky (they love seeing local meats)
Coffee (Starbucks, Seattle's Best - again local products are the best loved)
Items unique to the local area (applets, etc.)
Back packs and purses
Games and decks of cards
Ziploc bags (quart and gallon - the sand gets in everything)
Lotions, cologne, perfumes, makeup, etc.

All donations are very much appreciated! Thank you so much for all your support!
If have any questions, please call Katie Brobeck (YREN Military Liaison)
360.790.9643
or email info@signatureservice.com


Yelm Real Estate Network

September 15, 2006

AREA ACTRESS ON CNN'S LARRY KING LIVE TONIGHT

Area resident Linda Evans has been very active for over 17 years on Nisqually Valley issues. Now, she is taking on a new challenge as she moves from television and movies and onto the stage. She & her co-star Joan Collins speak about their roles in LEGENDS! and other issues with CNN's Larry King TONIGHT.

The previously taped interview will air TONIGHT on LARRY KING LIVE at 6:00pm PDT and 9:00pm PDT and Midnight PDT on CNN.
If you missed the interview, see the transricpt here.


"'Larry King Live' is CNN's longest-running interview program. Premiering in June 1985 with its now-famous mix of interviews and topical discussions, the show features guests from across the gamut of business, entertainment and politics. Across the nation and around the world, viewers have made "Larry King Live" a part of their nightly television routine. Telecast each weeknight at 9 p.m. ET, the program also features phone calls from viewers around the globe. CNN's "Larry King Weekend" airs every Saturday and Sunday at 9 p.m. ET," quoting CNN.

LEGENDS opened in Toronto on September 12th.
If you are going to be in Toronto, get your tickets here.
Checkout the offical LEGENDS! website. Turn up your volume.



Joan Collins & Linda Evans
Photo from Mirvish.com, Toronto theater tickets site


Another Yelm-area resident, JZ Knight made news today with the opening of a second JZ Rose store in Bellevue Square.
"JZ Rose, formerly The Outback Boutique [Yelm, WA.] opened in 1990 and has proven to be a unique and innovative store located in a small community in Washington State. Our exclusive and exquisite inventory has continued to draw people from all over our state. We went online in 1997, and due to the welcoming response we have received over the years, are continually expanding our unique collections available on the web. Our intent is to make available, in one place, products that add beauty and quality to our ever so busy lives," quoting the JZ Rose site.



JZ Knight
Photo from JZK, Inc. email

YELM AREA MOVIE PRODUCER PUBLISHES 3 NEW CHILDREN'S BOOKS

Yelm area movie producer Betsy Chasse is again using her talents by creating children's books and a website for them:

"Life is an awesome journey, and 2004 was the beginning of new adventures for me. In 2004 I gave birth to two babies. In February, What the BLEEP Do We Know!?, a film I co-created, opened in a west coast movie theater [Yelm Cinemas] and began its three year national and international release. In April, I gave birth to my most precious gift – my daughter Elorathea.

I learned so much about myself while making the film. Now I continue to learn as I watch my child grow. She amazes me with her wisdom and pure joy, her endless amounts of love, and her boundless curiosity.

While traveling around the world with the release of What The Bleep!?, many parents approached me and asked what they could read or show to their children that would reflect their innate power to create. I searched high and low for books and videos with these themes, and while I found several books, I didn’t find any videos.

As a result, I now have a third baby! Elora Media is taking its first steps into the world this year, presenting three delightful and inspiring new books. Soon we will be offering spiritually oriented, motivational books, videos, and music for children of all ages – adults included!

Children’s minds are open and imaginative. If we journey together as unlimited creators the gateways of possibility will never close for them or us."

Betsy's Elora Media is offering readers of the Yelm Community Blog a 10% discount off any purchase made by October 15th, 2006. Enter coupon code SK906 at checkout.

Further, local artist Gary Craig has co-written and illustrated three new children's books published by Elora Media that inspire and delight early readers:

I Can Be Anything - Creative Activity Book

You Can Be Anything

Where Does The Sun Go?


The Yelm Community Blog wishes Betsy and Gary much fun and success in their new endeavor.



Elora Media creator Betsy Chasse
Photo from the What The Bleep website

September 14, 2006

YOU ASKED FOR IT - LOCAL BUSINESS GOT IT!

Due to your requests, Yelm Cinemas Manager Howard Christian has announced that the independent hit film
Who Killed The Electric Car? is coming to Yelm Cinemas on September 22.
Let's see this film here so our local cinema will see the revenue potential with these kind of titles and bring more indy films!
Spread the word. Bring you family and friends.

"It was among the fastest, most efficient production cars ever built. It ran on electricity, produced no emissions and catapulted American technology to the forefront of the automotive industry. The lucky few who drove it never wanted to give it up. So why did General Motors crush its fleet of EV1 electric vehicles in the Arizona desert?

WHO KILLED THE ELECTRIC CAR? chronicles the life and mysterious death of the GM EV1, examining its cultural and economic ripple effects and how they reverberated through the halls of government and big business," quoting the Sony Pictures Classics synopsis.



Yelm Cinemas at twilight
Photo from the Yelm Cinemas website

September 12, 2006

LOCAL DAIRY PRODUCTS TAKE TO THE AIR

This writer noticed and verified that Wilcox Farms dairy products are served on all Alaska Airlines flights out of Seattle.
This locally owned and operated Roy, WA. company has been family owned and operated since 1909.

Seattle-based Alaska Airlines flights serve such distant destinations as Orlando, Newark, Washington, D. C., Boston, Dallas, Chicago, Denver, Miami, Mexico, California, Alaska, & Canada carrying local products. You can purchase Wilcox Farms products at your local supermarket.

September 9, 2006

LATE DELIVERY by Guustaaf Damave

On September 9 Yelm celebrates it's third annual Patriot Day. I offer the story below as a small token of my gratitude to all American Patriots.

I grew up in the Netherlands. I must have been around ten years old when we did a project at school about World War II. That evening after dinner, my father was heading for his favorite couch when all of a sudden he stopped, not sure if what he saw was really there, or if his imagination was playing tricks on him. As a fine artist, his visual sense highly acute, he saw what others might have missed. There it was on the floor, the faint outline of a swastika. To him this was the symbol of evil. He paused.


Hitler and other Nazis wearing swastikas

For the school project I had drawn and cut out a swastika and spray painted it. I hadn't realized that an ever so slight outline had been left behind on the floor. I explained to him what had happened and his anger quickly disappeared. He sighed as he sat down and began talking, his voice slightly louder and in a tone that my many siblings and I all recognized as the beginning of a story. In the blink of an eye we all gathered around him. As the sun was setting in the background over the river Spaarne he began.

To my father telling stories came as easy as breathing and many a night we were hanging on his every word as he told about his travels to France, Spain, Greece, and many other far away places. He told us how, sometimes unable to speak the local language, he communicated with his sketch book, drawing pictures of what he wanted. Often people eagerly exchanged his drawings for the things they represented. He also told us about the time he arrived in a small village in the country side of Morocco when the people were so excited to see a foreigner that they started bringing things out from all of their houses and put together a feast right in the middle of main street. Other times he would take us along into dark and mysterious adventures that would have us yell out at the top of our voice when he impersonated the cries of a hideous monster that he had just described. Sometimes my mother told him to go a little easier on the scary stuff because my younger sisters were too afraid to turn off the light in their bed room afterwards.

This time it was different. His tone was a little more matter-of-fact. He was a little more serious. He told us about a monster that was uglier than any in his horror stories. That night I got a first hand history lesson beyond anything that I would learn from a school project. So let me retell it in my own words.


My parents: Poppe and Tine Damave around the time they got married

Shortly after my father, a fine artist, and my mother, a competitive diver and swimming instructor, got married, the Nazis invaded Holland. As foreign invaders and occupiers they ruled the country with arrogance and brutality. The only ones more hated than the Nazis were the Dutch collaborators that helped them implement their regime and hoped to gain from it. As the war went on, the Germans started rounding up the Jews to put them in concentration camps, and later they started rounding up all able bodied men to be recruited in the German army, or work in their ammunition factories. The only way to escape this was to disappear. And so my father built a false wall in his house to create a small invisible room for himself. He only left the house on moonless nights. The dark provided excellent cover because the Germans had ordered all windows to be perfectly sealed and forbade the use of street lights. This was to deny the pilots of the British bombers any navigational clues on their way from England to Germany.

Although the Germans seemed invincible, their brutality and arrogance inspired an underground uprising throughout Europe, known as the Resistance. My father became part of the Resistance using his skills as an artist to forge the ID cards that the Germans required the people to carry. He became a skilled forger using, for example a simple blue pencil to draw the German stamps. He told to us that one of his tricks was to add a faint second outline as if the stamp had bounced off the paper. The false IDs were used by people to get to freedom.

Towards the end of the war the Resistance focused on maintaining morale. One of the ways this was done was to help the people prepare for the arrival of the liberating armies, mostly American. For this purpose the Resistance created a welcome card to be handed to the friendly troops. I used one of those cards for my school project and was surprised to recently find it in a box of photographs.


The card printed by the Dutch Resistance

I thought about how the card had made the opposite journey of those American soldiers as it traveled with me from the Netherlands to the United States. How close it now was to some of those WWII heroes that it had been intended for all those years ago. It became crystal clear to me that I had to let this little card fulfill its destiny. And I knew just the guy to give it to.

Not long before, my wife Mayra and I had visited with Don and Char Miller. Don had told us then about his years in the service as a communications officer. He was stationed in the Pacific, mostly sending and receiving encrypted messages.


The author and Yelm City Councilman and WWII veteran Don Miller

By giving this card to Don, I thank all of those brave men and women that played their part in beating the Nazis, in particularly the 6000 that gave their lives liberating the Netherlands in doing so. They helped create a world where most of us are free to follow our spiritual persuasion; a world where I am free to travel to a small American country town, home of a most unusual school, to follow mine.


Guustaaf Damave

September 8, 2006

SAY GOODBYE TO LOCAL PHONE CO. & HELLO TO LARGE CONGLOMERATE

"You may have heard that YCOM Networks are becoming known as FairPoint Communications! Our Customer Sales & Service Representatives and Technicians are all the same folks you've known for years. Our roots continue to run deep. As FairPoint Communications, we are ensuring that we will continue to grow strong together.

You are invited to come celebrate with us! Join us in celebrating our long history and the opportunities we have to grow together. Stop by and see us at 106 2nd Street, behind our main building, in Yelm, from 12pm-4pm on Friday, September 15th. We will have FREE hot dogs and pop, fun and prizes! The first 50 people get a free tree sapling. We look forward to seeing you!" quoting their emailer.

September 7, 2006

NVN: "CITY OF YELM APPROACHING SERIOUS CRISIS"

The Nisqually Valley News printed in-full this writer's Letter to the Editor in their September 8, 2006 edition.
The text is printed here. What do you think?

Dear Editor,

Your August 25th editorial “Give City of Yelm credit for credit that’s due” was very timely since I did attend the August 21st Planning Commission Public Hearing for the Comprehensive Plan Update, was one of two people who commented on-record and provided a detailed written explanation of my remarks the next day to the Planning Commission & your reporter covering the hearing. My comments appear to have been the catalyst for your editorial since your reporter attended, took extensive notes and publicly announced on-record she was from the NVN, asking questions for clarification. Since there was no story printed in your paper about the Planning Hearing, your readers were given no coverage or context as to why you wrote the editorial.

I am all for giving the City of Yelm credit where credit is due, however resting on those laurels when the city is approaching a crisis with the convergence of traffic, water, flooding and quality of life issues is unwise. For example, there has not been an update of the Yelm Vision Statement of 1995 since its inception, a plan that was to be updated every 5 years.

In the Planning Hearing, I requested that the Comprehensive Plan be updated as follows:

A. All traffic studies should address that the Y3 Loop will not be operational for at least 9 years (2015), instead of the present process of including Y3 capacity to achieve compliance. The Y3 can not be used in any traffic analysis until it is operational, which is consistent with the language of the Comprehensive Plan. Even with an added center turn lane, there is still only one through traffic lane in each direction on Yelm Avenue. The turn lane adds minimal capacity on the main thoroughfare and does not improve conditions beyond level of service F. Hence, the even greater volume of traffic that will soon be generated by Wal-Mart and the new housing developments has not been truly been mitigated.

B. Incorporate a separate section dealing with shallow groundwater hazards and related flooding. The City of Yelm staff dealt with a number of high groundwater and drainage issues with last year’s heavy rains. These rains are showing themselves to be more frequent than originally estimated. The present approach for handling shallow groundwater rise has been totally inadequate.

C. Developer's Impact (Mitigation) Fees are going to have to be dealt with more aggressively. The impact/mitigation fees were a good idea and I applaud the City of Yelm for embracing them in 1995. However the City was following the general trends of area jurisdictions and the process has not been updated here since that 1995 adoption. With all of the approved growth, the process does not address the introduction of additional loads in substandard Level of Service F areas. For example, a city could easily add more traffic to a Level Service A roadway, justifying one level of impact fee. However the mitigation fees need to be adjusted to be much higher when adding high volumes of traffic to current Level Service of D or F roadways (the Yelm Avenue/SR507 Corridor). I provided written details to the city planning officials and your reporter that Wal-Mart Traffic Studies had to rely on the Y3 Loop to achieve compliance with operating standards to mitigate their traffic, a Loop that does not currently exist and will not for years. The City taxpayer (not Wal-Mart) will end up paying for road widening of Yelm Hwy and continuing streets construction to accommodate Wal-Mart generated traffic, since those vehicles will have no Y3 Loop for years and be forced onto city streets. The city mitigation fees did not require Wal-Mart to cover this condition adequately.

D. A developer should pay fully for road improvements necessitated by their projects as is the case with other major jurisdictions in Thurston County, rather than allowing partial funding through a developer-requested, taxpayer-financed LID.

All of these items, plus the comments from the other speaker of record were not reported in your newspaper, subjects that will affect this city for years to come.

Thank you for allowing me to update these important details.

Steve Klein

cc: City of Yelm Planning Commission

The Editor's response:
"The article on the planning commission hearing appeared on page A3 of the Sept. 1 edition of the Nisqually Valley News [the 2nd edition after the Monday, August 21 hearing].

September 6, 2006

WHAT WE ALREADY KNOW -- A RECORD DRY SUMMER!

The record books indicate what we already knew:
Puget Sound is well into the driest summer on record.
From Jeff Renner's blog (KING-5 TV News Staff Weather Reporter):
"...from the solstice to present, SEATAC airport has recorded only 0.07" of rain. That puts this summer firmly in first place. Second place belongs to 1951, which recorded 0.31" over the same period, and third place to 1960 with 0.38"." scroll to August 21, 2006.

KOMO-TV4 in Seattle is reporting the following:
"Remember our near-record 27 straight days of rain in January? With our sunny day Saturday, we've just brokoen one of that record's counterparts, although granted, it's a bit obscure. Saturday, Aug. 26, marks the 71st consecutive day of getting 0.05" of rain or less. (That's typically about a two hours of light "Seattle rain" in the fall and winter.) The last time we've had a significantly rainy day was June 16th...
The 71 days breaks the all-time record set from June 23rd to August 31st in 1967. The record could end up getting as high as 76 or 77 or more before it finally ends.Aside from the 0.05" or less streak, we are also on pace to be the second-driest July-and-August in history. So far, we've accumulated 0.07" since July 1. (Actually, that goes back to June 17). The driest July/August was, you guessed it, 1967, when we only received 0.03" of rain. Obviously, they got at least 0.05" on Sept. 1, so summer ended with a vengeance then."

As of today, September 6, we're still making records everyday with no rain and no rain in sight until maybe September 9!

September 4, 2006

AREA PIANO COMPOSER TO PERFORM IN SEATTLE

Whisperings Solo Piano Radio present Joe Bongiorno performing live in concert Saturday, November 4th at 7:30 pm in Meydenbauer Center, Bellevue. This writer has known Joe and his family for 20 years and has seen Joe evolve into an accomplished pianist, composer, and audio engineer. Joe's piano music is entirely original. All tracks were composed, recorded and mastered by Joe at his private Mellow Sounds studio in suburban Seattle. You can listen here to samples of Joe's music. Joe's story tells how he has developed his unique talents.
Joe's mother Madeleine and sister Maddy live here in the Yelm area. Many of you know Maddy as that smiling waitress at Annie's Bistro in Yelm. Stop in for great food and ask for Maddy!

Further, Joe is now General Manager of Piatti Italian Restaurant in Seattle's U-district. Stop in and tell Joe you read about him in Yelm's Community Blog!


Joe Bongiorno

Photo credit: MellowSounds.com

September 3, 2006

TO CITY OF YELM STAFF: AN IDEA WHOSE TIME HAS COME

Dear Mayor Harding, Yelm City Council, Planning Staff & Yelm Planning Commission,

In case you do not read the Seattle newspapers, here is an idea whose time has come.
What say you?

Don't you think Yelm could use a fresh approach as quoted below, as you continue to:

A. Approve more and more development; more traffic, more housing, more noise, more pollution, more demand on our water resources.
B. Are on the threshold of 8,000 more car trips a day with the soon-to-open Wal-Mart Super Center, in a town already gridlocked many afternoons.
C. Rely on a Y-3 Loop for traffic mitigation -- a road a decade away from fruition, if at all.
D. Continue to herald your band aid fixes such as a center turn lane and a new side street, without adding any extra capacity; same one lane in and same one lane out.
E. Allow a taxpayer-funded-LID and future road improvements to be borne by your citizens, rather than having mitigation fees that take into full account all development generated expenses that impact the city, which should be paid in full by the development.
E. Continue to permit Grade F to be the norm for some Yelm traffic intersections.

The Seattle Times reports in the September 2nd edition:
"State Secretary of Transportation Doug MacDonald wants to move beyond bureaucratese ... to fresh ideas for solving transportation problems and is putting up $1,000 of his own money to reach that goal. It's called the $1,000 Doug MacDonald Challenge, sponsored by the national Transportation Research Board, an organization with the National Academy of Sciences. The idea of generating new transportation ideas from the public with a contest came to him while he was sitting around one day.
'Every time we pay consultants, we get the same old ideas, the same old graphs and charts,' MacDonald said. 'Maybe there's a better plan to get new ideas, so I decided to make a modest personal contribution in hopes of stirring up interest. 'I am fascinated by how we are going to get the public's enthusiasm about the fact we can keep highways moving so we actually get more use out of highways. In a line of stalled traffic, you don't get much production of the highway. Everyone wins when the lanes move.'"

To quote Nisqually Valley News Publisher & Managing Editor Keven Graves in his August 28th editorial,
"Give City of Yelm credit for credit that's due"
this writer absolutely agrees. However there is much work that needs to be done to accommodate all of the growth aprroved here. Let's not rest on our laurels while this City is fast approaching a crisis with the convergence of traffic, water and quality of life issues here.

Mr Graves states, "While the City of Yelm is often the target of criticism from various factions of the community, there are times when "atta boys" are in order."

This writer asks, "Why do city administrators & you complain that my comments and others are negative, rather than seeing that all of us are in this together with a desire to preserve this beautiful place we all call home and that we stand up and share, bringing forth concerns, observations and ideas?"

We care just as much as you do!

Doug MacDonald certainly welcomes public input. How about Yelm officials?
This writer and his wife will hereby donate $1,000 to the City of Yelm with "the idea of generating new transportation ideas from the public for a contest" to solicit enthusiasm, ideas and input from our local citizens, like Mr. MacDonald.

Do you accept?

September 2, 2006

THURSTON COUNTY PROGRESSIVE NETWORK - YELM CHAPTER

"Thurston County Progressive Network (TC Pro-Net) is a network of organizations, businesses, and individuals committed to a future rooted in ethics and humanity. A common set of values guide us as we conduct our daily lives and business pursuits. We believe that individual success can not be achieved at the expense of the Common Good. Our members are many and diverse and serve this greater cause through a variety of pathways. We invite you to learn more about us and attend any of our community events. Visit us at www.tcpronet.org to learn more. See the expansive list of community groups, businesses, and individuals working for a better world, and see how you can plug in!"

"Join your community (and bring a friend) to PROGRESSIVES AFTER HOURS (Yelm Chapter) monthly social, networking, and good old time progressive activism! The road ahead is long and winding…let’s have some fun along the way! Now in Yelm …every First Friday of the Month at the Blue Bottle Espresso. Since the 1st Friday in September is a holiday weekend we will meet the following Friday, Sept. 8 – mark that date."