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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS January 11 11,, 2016 | 75¢
Port Angeles-Sequim-West End
Eye on Olympia
Olympic love letter
Schools funding tops list for pols Lawmakers start in session today BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
DANA WU
Filmmaker Eliza Goode shoots the sunset at Third Beach for her Olympic National Park movie, “The Smell of Cedars Steeped in Rain.” The short film will screen Tuesday in the Little Theater at Peninsula College.
‘Smell of Cedars’ film pays homage to national park Work to be screened Tuesday at college’s Little Theater in PA BY DIANE URBANI
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — The movie is not long, but its maker sought to go deep. Eliza Goode’s film, a visual love letter to Olympic National Park, will light the big screen in the Little Theater at Peninsula College, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd., this Tuesday evening.
Along with a performance by the Bellingham band Rabbit Wilde, it’s January’s episode in the “Perspectives” speaker series, which the park will present free to the public at 7 p.m. Creating the film and premiering it in a particular way have, for Goode, been the realization of one fond hope after another. The Missoula, Mont., native had always heard about Olympic National Park. So, while completing a master of fine arts degree at Montana State University in Bozeman, she got in touch with Kathy Steichen, then the park’s chief of interpretation and education. Goode wanted to make a movie
about the beaches, the trees, the mountains — and how it feels to stand still among them. Steichen said “yeah, you’d be very welcome to come and do that,” recalled Goode, who proceeded to film many hours — more than 1,000 video clips — during October 2014 and in January 2015.
Immersion in park The edited result is “The Smell of Cedars Steeped in Rain,” 12 minutes and 25 seconds of immersion in the wild ridges, shores and forests of the 922,651-acre park. TURN
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PORT ANGELES — Olympic Peninsula lawmakers will begin a 60-day legislative session today with an eye to education reform and projects specific to the 24th Legislative District. State legislators hope to use the short session — a biennial budget was passed last year — to address the McCleary decision, a Supreme Court ruling that said the state wasn’t spending enough on basic education. “What we’re hoping to do is end up with some kind of bipartisan bill that sets in Hargrove place a process that will actually allow us to pass ALSO . . . legislation in 2017, the bud■ Real ID, get year, to solve the prisoner McCleary issues,” said state releases also Sen. Jim Hargrove, legislative D-Hoquiam, whose 24th priorities/A5 District covers Clallam and Jefferson counties and much of Grays Harbor County. “We’re hoping to get that done.” The Legislature is being fined $100,000 per day for failing to fund public schools under the McCleary order. A bipartisan plan to finish paying for basic education by a court-imposed 2018 deadline could halt the sanctions on the Legislature, said Hargrove, a veteran lawmaker and lead budget writer for the Senate Democrats. TURN
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Police, Salvation Army clear encampment Homeless had gathered in PA lot BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — The Salvation Army, with the aid of police, has cleared out a small camp of transients squatting in a parking lot south of the nonprofit organization’s church building at 206 S. Peabody St. “It has been a real popular spot for the last six months to a year to camp out [especially] after we closed the shelter, and even while the shelter was closing,” Salvation Army Major John Tumey said Thursday evening. The Salvation Army’s temporary homeless shelter at 123 S.
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Peabody St., was closed Oct. 1. Tumey said that people began squatting in the 10-stall parking lot and in a recessed area to the southwest that is not visible from Peabody Street. “They chose to sleep in our parking lot, which for a while was okay, but then it started getting worse and more people started coming,” Tumey said. The transients were familiar with that location because the Salvation Army used to serve food out of the adjacent gymnasium, Tumey said. The camp grew to about 15 to 20 people in late December and
early January, Tumey said. That is about the same number of homeless who had been staying in the shelter across the street before it closed. The squatters were mostly living in vans in the parking lot, and tents in the recessed area, Tumey said. “I think we had about five vehicles up here which had about three to four people in them each,” he said. “And then there were three to four tents down on the southwest corner.” The Salvation Army began looking into cleaning out the area after receiving complaints from CHRIS MCDANIEL/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS area residents and business ownMajor John Tumey of the Port Angeles Salvation Army ers, Tumey said.
stands in a now empty parking lot where a group of
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CAMP/A6 squatters were recently cleared.
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