Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader
Wednesday, December 27, 2017 • A 5
The big – and little – stories of 2017 LEADER STAFF NEWS@PTLEADER.COM
cargo jet and is a flight instructor, owns the five-seat single engine Beech Staggerwing, built in 1937. Bow said he was taking the plane out for a warm up and it had fuel but that the fuel wasn’t getting to the engine.
Stories. There are so many of them every day that sometimes we lose track of where we’ve been. There were big and little stories in 2017, some that impacted all of us and some that impacted a few only briefly. Stories matter because they inform us and help us decide our future. As we head into 2018, we thought we’d remember some of the stories that affected the community this year.
Dem chair resigns weeks after election Linda Mederios Callaham announced she was resigning as head of the Jefferson County Democratic Party after being elected in a controversial vote Dec. 4. The Jan. 26 meeting, set for the Tri-Area Community Center, had to be moved across the street to the Chimacum High School auditorium because so many people wanted to talk about that as well as actions taken by President Donald Trump.
January
700-plus housing units in PT planning hopper Boom times are back again for the residential construction industry and it could lead to more than 700 new housing units in Port Townsend in the next few years. If all the proposals become reality, it could represent a 17 percent increase in the city’s housing capacity. “It’s of a scale that we have not seen before since I’ve been here,” said City Manager David Timmons. “It’s going to challenge [city staff], in a good way. Another twist with the housing projects: All of them are being promoted by local people. By June, all of those projects were on the backburner.
Minimum wage goes to $11 per hour January 1 saw Washington state’s minimum wage increase 16.15 percent, from $9.47 per hour in 2016 to $11 per hour in 2017. It’s a move that some in Jefferson County are afraid could indirectly harm the very same struggling employees, it’s intended to support, by hampering their employers.
County relies on Ludlow residents as monitors One estimate was that 1,000 people showed up Saturday, Jan. 21 to join in the Port Townsend Womxn’s March. The crowd filled the area surrounding Haller Fountain and spilled out onto Taylor Street and up Washington Street. Photo courtesy Bob Page
Teaming up for mental health care
Women, men join Women’s March
Jefferson Healthcare and Discovery Behavioral Healthcare are eyeing funding to build an outpatient mental health facility that could have transitional housing in the same building. “We’re going to develop and submit a proposal that has outpatient health services on the ground floor and on the second and third floor, transitional housing,” Jefferson Healthcare CEO Mike Glenn told commissioners. Glenn told commissioners that he and Adam Marquis, executive director of Discovery Behavioral Healthcare – previously known as Jefferson Mental Health Services – are watching Gov. Jay Inslee’s proposed budget to see what money might be available for such an innovative project.
First, there was one bus. Then there were two buses. Then three. Now there are four buses of women and men from Jefferson County heading to Seattle Jan. 21 to march in solidarity with the Women’s March on Washington, taking place that same day in Washington, D.C. There are also men and women from Jefferson County heading to the D.C. event, which is timed to take place on the day after the inauguration of Donald J. Trump as the United States’ 45th president.
February
Hoist fails, boat dangles Mike Deach expected to be
halfway home to Lopez Island by noon on Monday aboard Bernice, his 60-foot commercial fishing vessel that had been three weeks in the Port of Port Townsend Shipyard. Instead, he was sipping coffee and waiting for his boat to be returned to the yard after the port’s 75-ton mobile hoist failed while preparing to lower Bernice at the Boat Haven. The boat dropped about 15 feet in two increments, bow-down in the water but without hitting the concrete pier. No one was hurt.
Vintage aircraft ditches in bay A Beech E-17L, based at Jefferson County International Airport, made a water landing in Discovery Bay around 2:35 p.m. Jan. 24. Jeff Dow, a former flight engineer on cargo jets who now flies a commercial Boeing 767
Jefferson County is relying on property owners in Port Ludlow to help monitor timber activities of the Port Ludlow Associates (PLA) while expecting PLA to follow through with a pledge to inform the county of any harvest plans 30 days in advance if the harvest meets certain criteria. Those expectations emerged during a two-hour public presentation Jan. 25 by Jefferson County Administrator Philip Morley, Jefferson County Commissioner Kathleen Kler and PLA President Diana Smeland on a recent settlement agreement between the county and PLA over timber harvesting.
Brinnon man charged with assaulting deputy Glen Jones of Brinnon was to be arraigned Feb. 3 in Jefferson County Superior Court with two counts of first-degree assault with a deadly weapon stemming from a Jan. 29 vehicle chance that ended with Jones being See REVIEW, page 6▼
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