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Summer finally warming up Peninsula C10

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS July 24, 2016 | 75¢

Port Townsend-Jefferson County’s Daily Newspaper

Wage raise heading to Nov. 8 vote

Honoring traditions

I-1433 would phase in minimum pay hikes PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

KEITH THORPE/PENINNSULA DAILY NEWS

Theresa R. Lehman, a member of the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribal Council, left, greets a collection of canoes at Jamestown Beach on Friday.

Paddle to Nisqually makes final area stops BY CHRIS MCDANIEL KEITH THORPE

AND

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — Paddlers in the 2016 Canoe Journey are expected to depart Port Townsend for Port Gamble today. The exact time of departure

was being determined Saturday evening, said Sonja Elofson, Lower Elwha Klallam tribe Canoe Family coordinator.

Skipper’s meeting “Each night they have a skipper’s meeting where the people who are directing the canoes”

review weather forecasts and tide schedules to determine when would be the best time to leave, she said. North Olympic Peninsula tribes began joining the Paddle to Nisqually on July 8, as the Quinault left their shores. TURN

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STEVE MULLENSKY/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Members of the Port Townsend High School football team lend a hand and transport the tribal canoes to higher ground during the tribal canoe journey stop at Fort Worden State Park on Saturday.

f approved, Initiative 1433 would raise the statewide minimum wage to $13.50 an hour, bumping it up to this level over four years.

I

OLYMPIA — The state’s voters will decide in November whether to raise the minimum wage. The Secretary of State’s office announced Friday that supporters gathered enough valid signatures for the measure to make the Nov. 8 general election ballot. The state Elections Division completed a random sample of the 345,907 signatures submitted by the initiative backers and determined that the measure easily exceeded the bare minimum of 246,372 valid signatures needed to qualify for the ballot, said David Ammons, office spokesman. Secretary of State Kim Wyman said a random sample of more than 10,000 signatures showed most were valid. The rejection rate, for duplicates or invalid signatures, was 15 percent, lower than the average error rate of 18 percent, Ammons said.

The measure also would provide paid sick leave to employees who don’t currently have it. Employers would have to provide one hour of paid sick leave for each 40 hours an employee works. Ariana Davis, a grocery worker from Renton who is the sponsor of I-1433, said last week that “this initiative is going to change the lives of every worker in Washington.” “Passing 1433 is the right thing to do for our economy and for our jobs,” she said. Critics say the measure, if approved, could hurt small businesses.

Raise wages

Groups opposed

If approved, Initiative 1433 would raise the statewide minimum wage to $13.50 an hour, bumping it up to this level over four years. The increase would be phased in starting next year, when the statewide rate would increase to $11 an hour. It would increase to $11.50 in 2018, $12 in 2019 and hit $13.50 an hour in 2020. Washington’s current minimum wage is $9.47 an hour. The rate is adjusted each year for inflation as measured by the Consumer Price Index for the past 12 months.

Several business groups, including the Association of Washington Business, the Washington Restaurant Association, and the Washington Farm Bureau issued a written statement Wednesday stating their opposition to the initiative and expressing disappointment that “a thoughtful middle ground” could not be found through the legislative process. Previous bills on the minimum wage, including one to raise the statewide wage to $12 an hour, never gained traction in the Legislature. TURN

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PT gets its own song in ‘City of Dreams’ Upcoming performances planned BY JESSE MAJOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND –– Port Townsend now has its own song, thanks to a Port Townsend resident and his award-winning sister. Jerry Osborne and his sister Devon Dawson, the singing voice of Jessie the Yodeling Cowgirl in the movie “Toy Story 2,” wrote the western swing song together earlier this year and are preparing for two concerts in Port Townsend the first week of August. “I just woke up one morning and heard the song ‘Seattle’ by Perry Como, and thought, you

know, most of the bigger cities in the country have a song somewhere along the way about that city,” said Osborne, who hosts a show on KPTZ Radio 91.9 FM in Port Townsend. “I thought, well, small towns don’t get songs written about them.”

City of Dreams The city had long been nicknamed City of Dreams, so Osborne already knew the title of the song. The trick was coming up with the lyrics. So he called his sister and got her on board with the idea.

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Dawson holds a Grammy participation certificate for her part in the Walt Disney CD, Woody’s Roundup, which won Best Musical Album for Children at the Grammy Awards in 2001. A couple of days later, on April 19, Dawson recorded the first demo and sent it to her brother for his approval. Though Osborne has extensive experience in the music industry, he himself is not a musician. Osborne has worked in radio since 1962, has written more than 200 music-related books and is a syndicated columnist through USA Today. “City of Dreams” is the first song he has actually participated Award-winning singer Devon Dawson, left, and musician in writing. Jessie Robertson have recorded a new song about Port

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INSIDE TODAY’S PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 100th year, 175th issue — 5 sections, 62 pages

BUSINESS A10 B5 CLASSIFIED COMMENTARY A12, A13 C6 COUPLES C8 DEAR ABBY C9 DEATHS A13 LETTERS A4 NATION A2 PENINSULA POLL *PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

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