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More showers before the sun comes back B8

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS June 24-25, 24-25, 2016 | 75¢

Port Angeles-Sequim-West End | This week’s food program g money for OPMC raisin

new movies

ceiver Set your re -prog’ to ‘dream Page 6

Electronica in the woods

PENINSULA

Peninsula

The Receiver plays in Coyle Peninsula Spotlight INSIDE

THE RECEIVER

-prog” m “dream to perfor en the musical er is set rock cross betwe The Receiv progressive bed as a — descri “dream-pop” and Coyle as part of genres of p.m. Saturday inseries. — at 7:30 rt in the Woods the Conce

PENINSULA

DAILY NEWS

THE WEEK OF

THIS WEEK

DAILY NEW

’S NEW REA

S

L ESTATE LI

STINGS

Homes on the Peninsula market! See Page C1

, 2016 JUNE 24-30

Contestants set sail, paddle, float to Alaska

Truck bypass shown PA exit Council nixes Lauridsen route BY PAUL GOTTLIEB PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

The Port Townsend Police Department is considering charges against a helicopter that flew low over Port Townsend at the beginning of Thursday’s Race to Alaska. An hour after the race began, Team Noddy’s Noggins, below, was toward the rear but finished the race in the early afternoon.

Many complete first leg of race to Victoria on first day BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — The starting gun for the second Race to Alaska was fired at 6:05 a.m. Thursday. By 4:11 p.m., 47 contestants had safely arrived at the Port of Victoria, according to the event’s Facebook page. The 40-mile trip to Victoria was the qualifying leg of the race, sponsored by the Northwest Maritime Center of Port Townsend. Those who arrive by 5 p.m. today will proceed on the remaining 710 miles to Ketchikan, Alaska. TURN TO RACE/A5

PORT ANGELES — Long-held plans to turn Lauridsen Boulevard into a cross-town truck bypass exited this week from the city’s land-use plan. City Council members voted unanimously Tuesday to remove a policy from the comprehensive land-use plan that targeted the south Port Angeles thoroughfare for future, though unfunded, improvements to accommodate increased traffic. In approving the comprehensive plan revisions, council members also decided that crosstown truck-route improvements of any kind should not be given a high priority in the city’s capital facilities plan. The 212-page comprehensive plan contains land use, housing, capital facilities and utilities and public service elements, along with the transportation element that was changed Tuesday. The plan addresses how the city will accommodate a projected 5,000 new residents through the next 20 years.

Alternate route Establishment of a cross-town alternate route had been in the comprehensive plan since 1994. Lauridsen would have been improved to reroute downtown truck traffic that has waned compared to decades ago, when chains of logging trucks rumbled down U.S. Highway 101 to congested Front Street and reconnected with U.S. Highway 101 at Tumwater Truck Route. TURN

TO

BYPASS/A5

PT, PA shooting vigils touch hearts, minds Friends, strangers coming together BY LEAH LEACH PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — As the crowd began to disperse after the candlelight vigil in Port Townsend, Ellen Bonjorno felt a tap on her shoulder. “Those women are from Orlando,” the person said, pointing to four women at the edge of the group gathered on the Haller Fountain Plaza. “I went over and hugged them,” said Bonjorno, one of the organiz-

people who weren’t gay go there.” Another North Olympic Peninsula candlelight vigil for those ers of the June 14 vigil in memory who were killed at the Pulse of the 49 people killed June 12 in nightclub in Orlando is planned a mass shooting at a gay night- Saturday. club in Orlando, Fla. The Orlando women were in PA vigil Saturday Port Townsend on vacation, BonPort Angeles resident Shanee jorno said. They told her, “ ‘We happened Wimberly has scheduled the vigil to drive by and saw you were for 6:30 p.m. near the gate of the Coast Guard station on Ediz doing this, and we had to stop.’ “They were really touched that Hook. Wimberly, 24, feels it’s imporwe were doing that,” Bonjorno said, remembering it Wednesday. tant to create “a communal space” “They had at times been to that where people can “express condoclub,” she added. “They said lots of lences.”

“It’s the perfect opportunity to come together as a community,” she said. Both Wimberly and Bonjorno feel community gatherings to remember the deaths are important. After hearing about the shooting, described as the worst mass shooting in modern U.S. history, Bonjorno said, “I was like, well, we have to do something.” “It truly was an attack on LGBT people and/or Latino people,” said Bonjorno, who is a lesbian — “and you can put that in the newspaper.” She remembers enjoying danc661615972

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ing in clubs. To think of being out having a great time and then suddenly being killed was chilling. And she had met one of the women who died, Kimberly Morris, at the Michigan Womyn’s Music Festival last year. So Bonjorno and two others, Julia Cochrane and Jason Serinus, organized the Port Townsend gathering that Bonjorno estimates drew 150 people. The Port Townsend and Jefferson County Leader weekly newspaper estimated 200 attended, and KPTZ 91.9 FM said 500 were there. TURN

TO

VIGIL/A5

INSIDE TODAY’S PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 100th year, 150th issue — 4 sections, 46 pages

BUSINESS A10 CLASSIFIED C1 COMICS B7 COMMENTARY A14, A15 DEAR ABBY B7 DEATHS B6 HOROSCOPE B7 LETTERS A14 MOVIES *PS *PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

NATION/WORLD PUZZLES/GAMES SPORTS WEATHER

A4 C5 A11 B8


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