The
INSIDE Bluebirds are back
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Holiday bazaar
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Crime briefs
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www.islandsweekly.com 360-376-4500
Annual Craft Fair Sat., Dec. 6 10 am-3 pm and Sun., Dec. 7 10 am-3 pm Come join us for a wide array of arts and crafts from all islands.
Any questions, call Kathy or Sydney 468-2233
Islander
Resort
Family owned since 1997
Lopez Holiday Bazaar Sat., November 29 10 am to 3 pm Lopez School Gymnasium Featuring Many Exciting Quality Arts & Crafts Fantastic raffle prizes, including many gift certificates from local shops & restaurants, multiple overnight getaways & diverse professional services. Delicious Food • Bake Sale • Santa Photos Contact Candice at 468-2678 for more info.
Proceeds benefit the Lopez Preschool
Community Community Shakespeare’s Shakespeare 13th 11th Annual Annual Fall Fall Festival: Festival AS YOU LIKE IT
The Tempest (appropriate for all ages)
Nov. 7, admission by donation, Nov. 19 12 noon & 7:30 p.m. 12at noon & 7:30pm Admission Nov. 8-9-10By atDonation 7:30pm. Students $10,at Adults $15 Nov. 20-21-22 7:30 p.m. Tickets online at $15 Students $10, Adults Lopezcommunityshakespeare.org, Center for Community & the Arts Also at Paper Scissors Rock Tickets: communityshakespeare.org Remaining seats sold at 6pm at the door: and at Paper Scissors Rock Lopez Center for Community & the Arts
Paper Scissors on the Rock Holiday Open House Sunday, Nov. 23rd 11am til 3pm Please Join Us! We will be closed on Saturday
Islands’ eekly W
VOLUME 37, NUMBER 46 • NOVEMBER 18, 2014
Baby orca whale, first in two years, presumed dead By Scott Rasmussen Journal editor
Only seven weeks after its celebrated arrival, the first newborn in nearly two years to join the population of endangered killer whales that makes their summer, seasonal home in the San Juans is now missing, and presumed dead. The Center for Whale Research confirmed that the baby, L-120, first identified Sept. 6 off the west side of San Juan Island, was nowhere to be seen when its mother, L-86, along with other members of L-pod, were recently photographed in the waters of Juan de Fuca Strait. “L-86 was seen and photographed on Friday, Saturday
Contributed photo / Carrie Sapp
Missing and presumed dead, L-120 swims alongside its mother, L-86, shortly after its birth in early September. The first southern resident born in two years was last seen more than seven week ago. and Monday, all without L-120,” Center for Whale Research Ken Balcomb said. Balcomb maintains the disappearance of another calf and the absence of newborns underscores the plight of the orcas, whose numbers continue to plummet. The decline coincides with the once-abundant salmon runs off the Pacific Northwest and Canada, Chinook in particular, the primary source of
prey of the resident whales, dwindle to historic lows. The population, 78 whales in all, is at a 30-year low. “Thirty years ago, there were anywhere between
This announcement about a date and time for the meeting follows Larsen’s previous announcement about the Navy’s decision to hold this additional public meeting. The Navy had indicated it likely would hold the meeting on Friday Harbor, but has chosen Lopez Island instead. The meeting is
Wednesday, Dec. 3, 3 – 6 p.m. at Lopez Island Center for Community and the Arts. The Navy is currently performing an Environmental Impact Study on the effects of a potential increase in the number of Growlers operating at NASWI. The EIS will incorporate five different scenarios, ranging from 82
three to nine babies each year,” he said. An abundant food source is critical for survival of a SEE WHALE, PAGE 8
Navy to hold a public meeting on Lopez to discuss Growlers
Submitted by the office of Rick Larsen
Rep. Rick Larsen, WA-02, announced today that the Navy will hold a public meeting on Dec. 3 on Lopez Island to listen to citizens’ comments about EA-18G Growler operations at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island (NASWI).
Applying for or Renewing Apple Health Insurance? The Lopez Island Family Resource Center staff is available to assist uninsured islanders navigate the WA State Health Benefit Exchange and to assist with renewals for people already enrolled. Please call us for an appointment at 468-4117.
Open Fri & Sat 7am-5pm Sun 7am to 4 pm Thru Nov 30th Holly B's Cookbook, Holiday Stollen, Gingerbread People, Granola, Holly B's Coffee Beans and Holly B's T-shirts make wonderful gifts to give or send.
Many Thanks for a terrific 2014 season!
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planes to a maximum of 118. The Navy held public meetings the last week of October in Coupeville, Oak Harbor and Anacortes for people to share their views with Navy leadership. The public comment period for the EIS also has been extended, and will be open through Jan. 9. “I recently heard from residents on Lopez Island about their concerns regarding jet noise and the number of Growlers stationed at NASWI. I asked the Navy to include the San Juan Islands in the EIS process, and I appreciate the Navy expanding its outreach to include this community. I remain committed to making sure NASWI remains a premier Navy asset, as well as to finding solutions to reduce the noise impacts on local communities,” Larsen said. The Navy has also added an additional public meeting in Port Townsend. For additional info, visit www. whidbeyeis.com.
Community Calendar
WEDS, NOV 19 THEATER: The Tempest, 7 p.m., Lopez Center for Community and the Arts. Admission: by donation. Runs until Nov. 22.
THURS, NOV 20 MEETING: The Scoop on Scoping, 5:30 - 7:30 p.m., Lopez Library. How to write “Scoping Comments” for the current Navy proposal to add up to 36 more Growlers to the 82 already based at NASWI. The Quiet Skies group will be available to help you write effective comments for the current Environmental Impact
Date changes for food distribution Dates for food distribution on Lopez are no longer Nov. 28 and Dec. 25. The new date is Nov. 21 and Dec. 25 at Grace Church, 1 – 2 p.m. For more information, call 468-3477.
Statement. The new Navy Scoping brochure, sample comments and research documents will be available. There’s a rumor there may be Growler cookies! For more info, www. whidbeyeis.com and www. quietskies.info. MEETING: OPALCO Board of Directors Regular Meeting, 8:15 a.m., location: TBD. MEETING: Lopez Solid Waste Disposal District Managing Board Meeting, 3 - 5 p.m., Lopez Fire Hall. The meeting should last about two hours and the public is invited to attend and participate.
SAT, NOV 22 EVENT: Village Lighting Work
Letters
to the Editor
Don’t attack, be civil
Lopez Island AA Meetings:
We recently underwent a national election with possible negative consequences. A disturbing aspect of
Mondays - 7:30 p.m. at the Children’s Center Wednesdays - 4 p.m. Women’s meeting at the fellowship hall at Grace Episcopal Church Saturdays - noon at the Children’s Center Call 468-2809
our election system is the increasing use of attack ads. These ads usually criticize some aspect of a particular individual without any substantive comments about the attacker.
Carol Weiss, MA Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist
Adult and Senior Psychotherapy Parent Guidance
Party (Volunteers Needed!), 11 a.m. - 2 p.m., the Village. We need your help in decorating Village Park and the Ferry Landing. Please volunteer your time to help decorate on Saturday, Nov. 22 at 11 a.m. Meet in the park. Dress warmly and bring gloves! Hot chocolate and treats for those who help. If you can’t help physically, financial assistance is always welcome to help purchase lights! You can send checks to the Chamber. Business owners – we have some volunteers who will assist in putting your lights up on your building – contact the chamber (you supply the lights).
Letters to the editor must be no more than 350 words in length and must be signed by the writer. Include address and telephone number for verification purposes. Anonymous letters will not be published. Send your letters via e-mail to: cbagby@islandsweekly.com.
It is a poor way to gain a following but, unfortunately, it often works because it appeals to people’s basic instincts. Name calling should not be a part of a civilized debate. Those of us who feel strongly about an issue have to endure mud-slinging tactics by others. This is childish and regressive and should have no place in such a tight-knit and car-
Jungian Dreamwork
Al-Anon:
Mindfulness Psychology 468-3571
Saturdays - 9:30 a.m. at the Children’s Center, Lopez. Call 468-4703.
TUES, NOV 25 MEETING: Lopez Village Planning Review Committee, 10:15 a.m. - 12:30 p.m., Lopez Library. The LVPRC is using community input from planning workshops to develop draft plans for community review. They are working to develop an Urban Growth Area Subarea Plan. Barbara Thomas is the chairperson. Other members include Annie Albritton, Sandy Bishop, Dan Drahn, Nancy Greene, Madrona Murphy, and Dennis Ryan. They invite everyone to participate in the development of the subarea plan and regulations. These regular meetings are open to the public.
ing community as ours but, unfortunately, it is present. The islands, Lopez included, are a microcosm of the nation at large. This includes the negative aspects as well as the positive ones. We like to think of ourselves as a progressive community but, naturally, there are those among us that would drag us back to a bygone era. If we are to maintain some semblance of civility we must recognize this and try to not let it shape our way of life. JACK M. PEDIGO Lopez Island
35 years experience Zen meditation and mindfulness practitioner UW Geriatric Mental Health Certificate
SEE LETTERS, PAGE 3
Lopez Business Hours Galley Restaurant Open at 8 a.m. Full menu until 8:30 p.m. every night Short-list menu after 8:30 p.m.
Lopez Islander Breakfast
The Love Dog Cafe Southend Restaurant
www.galleylopez.com 468-2713
www.lopezfun.com 468-2233
www.lovedogcafe.com 468-2150
Just Heavenly Fudge Factory
May this food nurture Open 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. your Body and Sustain Saturday Sunday 8:30 Closed Tues. & Wed. Beer-Wine-Great Food your spirit! Lunch daily 11- 4:30 p.m. Delicious Baked Goods Dinner daily Mondays We are closing the cafe Daily Specials, Deli To Go Items 4:30 - 9 p.m. Sunday Senior Day 15% off December 15th. Come Down to the South Thursday End & See What’s Cookin’! Lopez Island Creamery, Cones, Join us for a meal 4:30 - 10 p.m., Friday Shakes, Floats, Sundaes during the coming weeks Southend General Store Saturday Winter Hours 7:30 to 7:30 to help us in saying Featured Fudge Good Affordable Food everyday Fresh, Local, Fantastic Great Sports Lounge Specials goodbye. Pumpkin Pecan Pie Thursday-Saturday 12-8 Brunch 11-2
Publisher
360.376.4500 Colleen Smith Armstrong publisher@islandsweekly.com Editor 360.376.4500 Cali Bagby cbagby@islandsweekly.com Circulation Manager 360.376.4500 Joanna Massey jmassey@soundpublishing.com Display Advertising 360.376.4500 Cali Bagby cbagby@islandsweekly.com
Your online source…www.islandsweekly.com
The Islands’ Weekly • www.islandsweekly.com • November 18, 2014 – Page 2
southendgeneralstore andrestaurant.com
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Graphic Designers 360.378.5696 Scott Herning, ext. 4054 sherning@soundpublishing.com Kathryn Sherman, ext. 4050 ksherman@soundpublishing.com Classified Advertising 800-388-2527 classifieds@soundpublishing.com Mailing/Street Address PO Box 758, Eastsound, WA 98245 Phone: (360) 378-5696 Fax: (888) 562-8818 Classifieds: (800) 388-2527
justheavenlyfudge.com
SAT, NOV 29 EVENT: Fundraiser for the Lopez Children’s Center, Santa photos at the Preschool Bazaar from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Get your child’s or pet’s or family’s or friend’s picture with Santa on Saturday, Nov. 29 at Lopez School. EVENT: Jingle Bell Dinner, 6 p.m., Lopez Center for Community and the Arts. 6th annual Jingle Bell Dinner. All proceeds to benefit Lopez Island Hospice and Home Support. Tickets in advance: $50. Available from: Paper Scissors on the Rock.
SJ school drug policies in need of change By Kathleen Bartholomew Special to the Weekly
I made a terrible mistake. I knew my child’s friends and where she was every minute of the day. But I made a bad assumption. I thought she was safe at school. I was wrong. This erroneous assumption has put my loved one on an entirely different trajectory, introducing her to a world of drugs at 14. How can a straight– “A” student’s promise of a bright future be suddenly altered just weeks after high school has started? What are the conditions the adults around her support or ignore that allow this to happen? When we legalized marijuana for adults, did we intend to extend that to our children as well? If so, no need to read on. A student with low selfesteem and a high need for being accepted was easy
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Copyright 2012. Owned and published by Sound Publishing Co. Periodicals postage paid at Friday Harbor, Wash. and at additional mailing offices. Annual subscription rates: In County: $52/ year, $28/6 months. For convenient mail delivery, call 360-376-4500. The Islands’ Weekly was founded in 1982 and is based on Lopez Island. The Islands’ Weekly is published every Tuesday and is mailed to homes and businesses in the San
SEE POLICIES, PAGE 8 Juan Islands. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Islands’ Weekly, PO Box 758 Eastsound, WA 98245-0758. Member of Washington Newspaper Publishers Association, National Newspaper Association.
Western bluebirds sucessfully take flight Contributed photo / Kelsey Green
By Kelsey Leigh Green Special to the Weekly
Western bluebirds
Late this past July, the last two Western Bluebird juveniles successfully fledged and the San Juan Islands Western Reintroduction Project wrapped up for another field season. As we now move into autumn, small flocks of bluebirds can still be seen roaming the island prior to their migration to southern wintering grounds. A partnership of the American Bird Conservancy, Ecostudies Institute and The San Juan Preservation Trust, the goal of the project is to reestablish and monitor a viable breeding population of Western Bluebirds through a combined program of reintroduction, population monitoring and outreach. A big “thank you!” goes out to all who were involved this year; many folks helped out the project by hosting aviaries and nest boxes, reporting bluebird sightings or allowing me to access their property to monitor nests or check and mark their nest boxes. The project, launched in 2007, experienced many successes in the first five years of the project. Due to extremely wet and cool summers of 2010-12, however, the population decreased; a pattern observed in other bluebird populations in the Pacific Northwest. To address this decline, this year the team execut-
ed emergency translocations of three family groups from larger populations near Corvallis, Ore. and Olympia, Wash. at Joint Base Lewis-McChord militar y installation. While there was some mortality during the season, the project also experienced success, as we happily watched many fledglings take flight. The overall success of these additional management efforts will be apparent next spring when the number of returning bluebirds is determined. In addition to these efforts, a new phase of the project commenced this year: locating and cataloguing the existing nest boxes on the island. This assessment effort will help us evaluate the nest box program and pave the way to improve monitoring efforts in the years to come through volunteer participation. As most of the quality bluebird nesting habitat is on private land, landowner and community involvement is absolutely critical to the success of the project. Western Bluebirds are thrushes, often identified by their bright blue plumage and distinctive call. Preferring open habitats for foraging, they can often be seen in areas with scattered trees, especially oak groves,
and mid-story perches, such as fence lines. On San Juan Island, bluebirds are often spotted on Cady Mountain and at American Camp early in the season as they migrate in, and most commonly choose nests in the San Juan Valley area. Calls from islanders who spot bluebirds are very helpful for monitoring purposes. Contact Kathleen Foley at 378-2461 or kathleenf@sjpt.org or Gary
Slater at 213-8829 or glslater@ecoinst.org for more info, to report a sighting or to see if your property is suitable for hosting a nest box. Green came to San Juan Island last spring as the technician on the Western Bluebird Reintroduction Project after finishing her master’s degree in geoscience from the University of Edinburgh, Scotland.
Error by assessor creates budget blues By Scott Rasmussen Journal editor
Island Rec is due to take a big hit to its bottom line in the wake of an error by the county assessor’s office in calculating three year’s worth of property tax revenue for the park and recreation district. Assessor Charles Zalmanek took responsibility for the error, saying that he inflated the Island Rec property tax rate by mistake. Island Rec received a total of $377,192 in excess revenue because the assessor adjusted its levy rate to a mark above the maximum amount approved by voters, which escalated over three year’s time to 24 cents per $1,000 of assessed value instead of staying fixed at its 17-cent ceiling. Island Rec officials were notified of the error Nov. 6, Zalmanek said, and have been discussing the consequences and alternatives along with the assessor
LETTERS CONTINUED FROM 2
Grateful to have your vote of confidence Thank you San Juan
since that time. “Island Rec’s levy ends next year and they’ve been discussing what to ask from the voters for a levy renewal,” he said. “That conservation could become a lot more complicated because of my screw up. I guess if they’d asked for 24 cents in 2010, and got it, they’d be in fine shape. But that’s not the case.” Unlike most property tax levies, the rate of Island Rec’s, similar to that of San Juan EMS, does not “float” up or down in order to generate a predetermined amount. It remains locked and fixed at a certain rate, and the amount of revenue it generates can fall along with an overall decline in property value within the district. Like all other levies, it can only increase by 1 percent a year, however, plus the value of new construction. “The board was shocked and disappointed by this news,” Island Rec Director
Sally Thomsen said in a Nov. 9 press release. “Rebounding from this recent development, Island Rec’s board is looking into how best to continue providing its parks and programs that are an integral part of this community.” Thomsen noted that Island Rec’s property tax levy also generates income to supplement the Friday Harbor High School sports program. Voters approved an increase in the park and recreation district levy in 2009 and roughly 41 percent of the revenue it collects now helps fund high school sports. Following consultation with the state Department of Revenue, Zalmanek said Island Rec’s levy will be lowered in 2015 and the amount of revenue will fall from this year’s $605,000 to $305,000 in 2015, the final year of its six-year levy. What’s more, Zalmanek, who noted that state auditor also missed the error in
County for your vote of confidence. I am pleased and proud to continue to serve as your County Clerk. I enjoy my work and am dedicated to maintaining the reliability of the Superior Court records, as well as fulfilling all of my office’s statutory
and mandated duties. The clerk’s office is always open to assist you. Look for the sign above our door with the little red airplane. JOAN P. WHITE, COUNTY CLERK San Juan Island
2001, said that Island Rec will also have to pay back the “over-collected” amount of revenue, $377,192. He said state law will allow that payback to be done over time to help soften the financial hit the agency is now preparing to absorb. Zalmanek said that it may be more urgent than ever for the Island Rec Commission to ask voters for help in solving its revenue woes in 2015.
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1111 32nd St., Anacortes • (360) 293-8088 The Islands’ Weekly • www.islandsweekly.com • November 18, 2014 – Page 3
Lopez Preschool Annual Holiday Bazaar coming up The holiday season is a time for spending time with friends, listening to music, eating a smorgasbord of delicious food, shopping for holiday gifts and visiting Santa with your children and grandchildren. All these activities and more are happening the Saturday after Thanksgiving, Nov. 29, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m., at the Lopez Preschool Annual Holiday Bazaar in the Lopez School gymnasium. A featured event for over the last 30 years, the bazaar offers a variety of thoughtful, finely made local gifts, delicious food, photos with Santa and a raffle featuring over 40 fabulous prizes.
“The bazaar is the main fundraiser for the co-operative preschool”, says Preschool President Candace Downey. All proceeds go toward operating costs, providing scholarships to families in need and classroom enrichment activities and materials. Many studies have shown that quality preschool significantly improves student performance in the formal education system. Lopez is fortunate to have such a program affordable for all islanders. Preschool is the first step in setting students up for educational success. Every bazaar vendor donates a significant portion of proceeds to the preschool.
Contributed photo
The Saturday after Thanksgiving is the Lopez Preschool Annual Holiday Bazaar. All funds raised by the raffle and food sales go directly to the preschool. There will be over 60 vendors at the bazaar offering amazing homemade goods, local products and fine arts and crafts. The event will have something that suits everyone’s fancy. On top of that, the festive atmosphere can put even The Grinch in a holiday mood. Volunteers set up and bedeck the gym in jolly and bright decorations. Live entertainment is provided by Doug Poole, Chris Aiken and
Kevin Sullivan. Raffle prizes include on- and off-island overnight stays, gift baskets of
Crossword Puzzle Across 1. Daisylike bloom 6. Fluffy mass suspended in liquid 10. "All ___ are off!" 14. Freetown currency unit 15. Change 16. Leaf-stem angle 17. New Orleans-style musical groups 19. Half-rotten 20. Blue 21. Drawn tight 22. Baby "breakthrough" 24. "___ on Down the Road" 25. Member of the middle class 26. Perfect likeness (2 wds) 30. Call off 31. Barely gets, with "out" 32. Density symbol 35. Bow 36. "___ moment" 37. Arabic for "commander" 38. "Fancy that!" 39. Doctor Who villainess, with "the" 41. Andy Warhol style (2 wds) 43. Boater's units of length (2 wds) 46. Dark-colored beef (2 wds) 48. Flock member 49. Most chilling 50. Double 51. ___ cross 54. Brio 55. Massive herbivorous long-
local food and gifts, passes to Teatro Zinzani, the Experience Music project, the Woodland Park Zoo and the Whale Museum, massages, facials, hair styling, an oil change, dog grooming, dental care and gift certificates to numerous local and off-island businesses. This year’s gift certificates feature John Howe steakhouse, Paper Scissors on the Rock,
Ivar’s restaurant, 10 yards of topsoil, the South End General Store and many, many more. Raffle tickets may be purchased at the Lopez Village Market most weekends and from any parent with a child in preschool. You can also buy raffle tickets at the bazaar. Come support the Lopez co-operative preschool and your local businesses!
Notice of the Intent to Adopt an Election Resolution. The San Juan Islands Conservation District intends to have a meeting on Wednesday, November 26, 2014, 8:30-10:00 a.m., at 530 Guard Street, Friday Harbor, WA, at which the date, time, place and manner of the 2015 annual election will be set.
Sudoku
8. "That's ___ ..." 9. Halloween wear 10. Good-for-nothing (2 wds) 11. Releasing heat 12. Church donation 13. More cunning 18. So-called "royal herb" 23. "-zoic" things 24. Carve in stone Down 25. Mountain ___ 1. Priestly garb 2. "Buona ___" (Italian 26. Heroin, slangily 27. Reduce, as greeting) expenses 3. Contemptible one 28. Causing fire 4. "Star Trek" rank: 29. Photo finish? Abbr. 5. Affirm in a new way 33. Bring on 34. Crumbs 6. Married German 36. "Don't bet ___!" (2 women wds) 7. Advanced tailed dinosaurs 58. Enrich, in a way 59. A bunch of 60. Bind 61. Eye affliction 62. "For Your ___ Only" 63. Corporate department
The Islands’ Weekly • www.islandsweekly.com • November 18, 2014 – Page 4
37. "Beowulf," e.g. 39. Regrets 40. Simultaneously (3 wds) 41. Everyday 42. Menacing 44. Recantation 45. Inevitably 46. Cambodian cash 47. Enthusiastic approval 50. Air 51. Drudgery 52. A chip, maybe 53. A Swiss army knife has lots of them 56. Chipper 57. Chain letters? (acronym) Answers to today's puzzle on page 8
Fill in the blank cells using numbers 1 to 9. Each number can appear only once in each row, column, and 3x3 block. Use logic and process of elimination to solve the puzzle. The difficulty ranges from 1-5 (easy) 6-10 (moderate) and 11-15 (hard). Today’s puzzle is level 10. Sudoku and Crossword answers on page 8
Sheriff’s log
Museum mayhem, illegal hunting and bicycle theft Oct. 15: A burglary was reported at the Orcas Island Historical Museum in Eastsound. A number of display artifacts were taken, along with retail items. •Deputies responded to the Orcas Island Animal Shelter on a disturbance call. A woman came to claim her dog that had been picked up the previous day. After learning there were fees pending, she pushed her way into the facility, damaging property and taking the dog. • A 25-year-old Friday Harbor man was arrested
after being stopped driving a vehicle that left the scene of a disturbance on Roche Harbor Road near University Road. Oct. 16: Lopez deputies responded to a domestic disturbance. The dispute was verbal only, and no crime was committed. One party was transported to a friend’s house to prevent a flare up. • A 51-year-old Eastsound woman was arrested for DUI after a single vehicle crash on Lopez Island. No other people or vehicles were involved in the crash.
• A 56-year-old Eastsound man was arrested on several charges after refusing to leave a bar and then fighting with employees and others that removed him from the premises. Oct. 18: A 37-year-old Lopez woman was arrested on an outstanding warrant for failing to appear in court. • A bicycle was reported stolen from the owner’s carport in Eastsound. • A 35-year-old Oregon woman visiting Lopez suffered an accidental gunshot wound when a loaded pistol in her bags discharged as
Final 2014 election results San Juan County voters have approved a renewal of the Proposition 1 levy lid lift. The renewal will end in 2020 and produce the same amount of revenue as the current levy, which is set to expire in 2015. The measure earned 61.74 percent and 4,732 yes votes out of 7,664 total. The levy is 18 cents per $1,000 assessed value. The amount generated is 20 percent of the county’s general fund property tax. The money will go toward senior services on all three major islands; Washington State University extension programs; operation of county parks; support for county fair; public health services on all three islands; work release program; victim services;
2014 ELECTION
emergency management ser vices; maintenance of county buildings and grounds and Islands’ Oil Spill Association equipment assistance. Orcas Island voters approved Orcas School District’s facilities and technology modernization levy at 64.85 percent. The levy is for 2015 through 2020 to provide $500,000 for each of the six years for a total of $3 million. The tax rate is expected to be 23 cents or less per $1,000 assessed
value. In other election news, the following candidates won in contested positions: • Rick Larsen, Congressional District 2 U.S. Representative, 69.04 percent. • Kristine Lytton, District 40 State Representative Position 1, 70.21 percent. • Joan White, San Juan County Clerk, 68.4 percent. • Rhonda Peterson, San Juan County Treasurer, 55.21 percent.
2014 ELECTION
the bags were being handled. The wound was nonlife-threatening. She was flown to a mainland hospital for treatment. • A two-vehicle collision occurred on Crow Valley Road, Orcas Island when a vehicle stopped for a deer crossing the road and was rear ended by a second vehicle. No injuries were reported. Oct. 19: A 34-year-old Lopez man was arrested for DUI and a hit-and-run after an early morning collision
that sheared a utility pole. The man was located at his home by deputies. • A 34-year-old Eastsound man was arrested for an outstanding arrest warrant after a report of a man sleeping on the property at the Orcas Library. The man was also charged with possession of methamphetamine. •A 21-year-old Marysville man was cited for Hunting with a Centerfire Rifle on the Turtleback Preserve on Orcas Island. Oct. 20: A business
Thrift Shop’s annual Christmas sale The Lopez Thrift Shop is ready to conduct its annual Christmas sale which will be held on Saturday, Dec. 6 at the school multipurpose room from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. The sale is a widely anticipated annual event which began in 1986 and is always held on the first Saturday of December. The volunteers have set aside the best of the donations which were received from our community during the past year. Those donations have been processed and prepared for the sale. Items include kitchenware, linens, clothing, jewelry, crys-
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CHRISTKINDLMARKT 28th-30th
December CHRISTMAS LIGHTING FESTIVAL 6th-7th, 13th-14th and 20th-21st “IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE” 6th-7th, 12th-14th and 19th-21st
CHRISTMAS IN THE MOUNTAINS 5th, 11th and 14th
Bill Moody
Come in for your FREE LUNCH! Galley Restaurant
MARLIN HANDBELL RINGERS 1st, 7th-8th
January
KD
BAVARIAN ICEFEST 17th-19th
Septic Service New Septic Installations Licensed & Bonded
We will promptly return your call! WWW.ISLANDSWEEKLY.COM
BRONN AND KATHERINE JOURNEY CONCERTS 2nd-4th, 8th-10th
year in a row to receive this accolade.
Annual and P.O.S. Septic Inspections
468-2735 – Keith Davis
Lopez residents serving our Lopez neighbors – you can count on us.
tal/glassware, antiques, games, puzzles, toys, books, Christmas decorations and a wide variety of gift items appropriate for all ages. The proceeds of the sale are always returned to the community through the annual grants given the following March to qualifying Lopez nonprofit organizations. The sale is a festive event where you will see all of your friends, explore the tables full of nice merchandise and have a good time. Come and join us again this year.
November
Lopez library gains another star The Lopez Island capita use. Due to their usage per Library ranks as a “Star Librar y,” according to capita of their collection, the national publication programs and computers, Lopez is one of four librarLibrary Journal. The LJ Index is a mea100% recycled pixels.ies to receive this honor in surement tool that com- Washington state this year. Seattle Public, Sno-Isle pares U.S. public libraries with their spending peers and King County are the based on four types of out- others. This is the library’s fifth put measures of their per
dispute at a Lopez Island marina over unpaid moorage fees was resolved after a brief contact by a deputy. • Vandalism at the West Side Preserve was reported. Damage to signage and graffiti had occurred. • A rural San Juan island resident reported damage to fencing protecting newly planted landscaping. Oct. 21: Deputies responded to several reports of trees and lines down on San Juan, Orcas and Lopez Islands.
Everyday I’m Yodelin’ You’ll come for a taste of a Bavarian holiday. You’ll leave with so much more. From the village of lights to the holiday concerts and plays, it’s the perfect escape from the everyday.
leavenworth.org | 509.548.5807
The Islands’ Weekly • www.islandsweekly.com • November 18, 2014 – Page 5
Crime briefs Sheriff deputy hits pedestrian with car
subsequently released with minor injuries and returned home. The county’s accident reconstructionist conducted a preliminary investigation of the accident scene and the involved vehicle; the case remains open pending further investigation to be conducted by an outside agency. Further information will be provided following the investigation.
On Sunday, Nov. 9, at approximately 6:10 p.m. a San Juan Deputy was involved in a motor vehicle accident at the intersection of Spring Street and Second Street knocking an adult male pedestrian to the ground. The pedestrian was taken to the hospital immediately after the incident and
L OPEZ ISLAND
San Juan man to pay $10K in restitution for blows to the face
On the heels of serving a 15-month prison sentence for felony burglary, a San Juan Island man was ordered to pay $10,000 to a crime victims fund and serve out the remainder of a jail term on work crew after pleading no-contest to an unrelated crime, punching a
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man twice in the face. On Oct. 24, Travis James Webster, 27, pleaded nocontest in San Juan County Superior Court to one count of third-degree assault, a gross misdemeanor. He was ordered to pay $800 in fines and fees, and $10,349 in restitution to the state crime victims fund, and was credited with having served part of a jail term, the rest of which he will be allowed to serve out on work crew. Prosecutors charged Webster in early August with one count of seconddegree assault, a Class B felony, for striking a man of similar age in the face at a late-night gathering at a Blair Avenue apartment in May 2013. At the time the charge was filed he was nearing the end of a 15-month prison sentence for felony burglary. He pleaded no-contest to the lesser offense as part of a plea deal, according to court documents. By pleading no-contest, known as an Alford plea in Washington state, a defendant does not admit guilt to the crime of which he or she is charged, but acknowledges that if the case went to trial they would likely be convicted. According to court documents, Webster struck the
man in the face over a $50 drug debt and with such force that the repeated blows broke the man’s jaw. His injuries required multiple surgeries to mend. The victim reportedly delayed notifying authorities about the assault for seven months for fear of retaliation. Webster, also known as Travis White, is one of two men convicted a year ago of breaking into the Friday Harbor apartment of an acquaintance in mid-July 2013. In pursuit of prescription drugs at the time, they both wore masks. They were identified by the couple whose apartment they broke into when an altercation involving all four broke out and the two would-be robbers were unmasked. The two then fled the scene. A year ago in November, Webster was sentenced to 15 months in prison after pleading guilty to felony burglary. His accomplice, Taiya Autumn Speed, was also sentenced to 15 months in prison.
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LOPEZ ISLAND CHRIST THE KING COMMUNITY CHURCH, There’s Always a Place for You! CTK gathers at 10:00 a.m. in the school multi-purpose room at 86 School Road. Come as you are! More info at www.ctkonline.com/lopez. Email: lopez@ctkonline.com Phone: 888-421-4CTK ext. 819. GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH, welcomes you to worship with us on Sundays at 10:00 a.m. Fisherman Bay Road at Sunset Lane. 468-3477. Everyone welcome! COMMUNITY CHURCH, Please join us Sun. mornings. Adult Bible study, 9:30. Worship Service, 10:30. Nursery (birth3 yrs) and Jr. Church (4-12 yrs) provided during worship service. Small groups meet throughout the week. 91 Lopez Rd., in the village. Pastor Jeff Smith 468-3877. www.ourlicc.org. LUTHERAN CHURCH IN THE SAN JUANS (ELCA) Please join us for worship and children’s Sunday School at 9:00 a.m. in Center Church on Davis Bay Road. Also in Friday Harbor at 11:00 a.m. in St. David’s and in Eastsound at 1:15 p.m. in Emmanuel. Pastor Beth Purdum, 370-0023. QUAKER WORSHIP GROUP Meetings will be Sundays at 10:00 a.m. at the home of Ron Metcalf, 6363 Fisherman Bay Road. Children’s program. Everyone welcome. Phone 468-2129. Email: lopezfriends@gmail.com. ST. FRANCIS CATHOLIC CHURCH Come worship with us at Center Church on Davis Bay Rd. We welcome you to join us for Mass at 10:30 a.m. on Saturday starting April 12. Call 378-2910 for Mass times on San Juan and Orcas Islands.
felony charge, possession of methamphetamine. On Oct. 24, Stanley Vincent Sing pleaded not guilty in San Juan County Superior Court to one count of possession of a controlled substance, methamphetamine, and was released on $10,000 bail pending trial, which is slated for Dec. 15. The 34-year-old was taken into custody on the morning of Oct. 19 outside the library in Eastsound, where he had reportedly fallen asleep. He was wanted by local authorities for failing to appear in court two weeks earlier in connection with the prior felony assault conviction at the time of his arrest. He was taken into custody without incident. According to prosecutors, Sing had several baggies containing methamphetamine in the front pocket of his jacket when deputies arrived at the library, at about 9 a.m. They reportedly found a case for sunglasses nearby that contained glass pipes that were lined with charred residue. Sing served a four-month sentence after pleading guilty in August 2013 to one count each of felony assault and misdemeanor theft following a confrontation in early July of that year with a grocery store worker over shoplifting. He reportedly pulled a knife on the employee, who followed him outside the store, threatened the man and then fled on foot. He was taken into custody a short time later after deputies found him hiding in the brush at Crescent Beach. Three months ago, he was ordered to serve one week in jail for failing to comply with court orders by undergoing a substance abuse evaluation. A warrant was issued for his arrest Sept. 26 for failing to appear in court. – Scott Rasmussen
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LOCAL PRIVATE INVESTOR loans money on real estate equity. I loan on houses, raw land, commercial property and property development. Call Eric at (425) 803-9061. www.fossmortgage.com
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Real Estate for Rent San Juan County WEST SIDE FRIDAY HARBOR
WATERFRONT APT. Fully furnished. Newly remodeled w/ spectacular views of the water from every window. Separate entrance. Quiet location at the end of the lane, water only 30’ away! Makes this a hiker, kayaker or bird watchers paradise. Eagles and Otters are part of the local crowd. Comfortable w/ heated floors & lots of windows. Newly painted. Granite tile bath with jacuzzi tub. Large bedroom with large closet & king bed. All new kitchen. Open dining & living areas. Laundry available. No smoking or pets. Includes utilities, wi-fi, cable TV, phone, $1300/mo (year-round). 360-378-8332.
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REPORTER The Grays Harbor Publishing Group on Grays Harbor, Wash., has an opening for a full-time reporter with an emphasis on local sports writing. We’re looking for someone to produce clear, brightly written high school prep sports stories relevant to real people reading us in print, on our website and in social media. Ability to take photos is necessary, as is familiarity with social media. Grays Harbor is on the Washington Coast, an hour from the Olympic Rain Forest and two hours from Seattle. Benefits include, but are not limited to paid vacation, sick and holidays, medical, dental and life insurance, and a 401(K) plan with company match. Send a cover letter, resume and writing samples to: hr@soundpublishing.com All qualified applicants will be considered for employment. Qualified applicants selected for interview will be required to complete an application. The Daily World is an equal opportunity employer.
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IF YOU USED THE BLOOD THINNER XARELTO and suffered internal bleeding, hemorrhaging, required hospitalization or a loved one died while taking Xarelto between 2011 and the present time, you may be entitled to compensation. Call Attorney Charles H Johnson 1-800-535-5727 PROMOTE YOUR REGIONAL EVENT for only pennies. Reach 2.7 million readers in newspapers statewide for $275 classified or $1,350 display ad. Call this newspaper or (206) 634-3838 for details.
ISLAND PETS lost/ found. On Lopez call Jane 360-468-2591; Joyce, 360-468-2258; Sheriff’s Office 360-3784151. Lopez Animal Protection Society, PO Box 474, Lopez, WA 98261. On Orcas call 360-3766777. On San Juan call the Animal Shelter 360378-2158
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Firewood, Fuel & Stoves
Notice to Contractors Washington State Law (RCW 18.27.100) requires that all advertisements for construction related services include the contractor’s current department of Labor and Industries registration number in the advertisement. Failure to obtain a certificate of registration from L&I or show the registration number in all advertising will result in a fine up to $5000 against the unregistered contractor. For more information, call Labor and Industries Specialty Compliance Services Division at 1-800-647-0982 or check L&Is internet site at www.lni.wa.gov
NOTICE Washington State law requires wood sellers to provide an invoice (receipt) that shows the seller’s and buyer’s name and address and the date delivered. The invoice should also state the price, the quantity delivered and the quantity upon which the price is based. There should be a statement on the type and quality of the wood. When you buy firewood write the seller’s phone number and the license plate number of the delivery vehicle. The legal measure for firewood in Washington is the cord or a fraction of a cord. Estimate a cord by visualizing a four-foot by eight-foot space filled with wood to a height of four feet. Most long bed pickup trucks have beds that are close to the four-foot by 8-foot dimension. To make a firewood complaint, call 360-9021857. agr.wa.gov/inspection/ WeightsMeasures/Fire woodinformation.aspx
stuff PAINTINGS for Sale by Northwest School Artists. I buy and sell paintings by NW Artists, including Paul Horiuchi, RIchard Gilkey, Z.Z. Wei, Kenneth Callahan, Guy Anderson, & Mark Tobey. Call Bill 360298-5802 or visit www.artofthenorthwest.net
PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICES MANAGER.
NO MINIMUMS – NO RESERVES Public Auction 9AM - Wed & Thur, Nov. 19-20. Preview 8-5, Nov. 17-18. Contents of Safe Deposit Boxes. 18226 68th Ave NE, Kenmore, WA. Picasso Sketchbook; Silver; Gold; Coins; Proof Sets; Currency; Pocket Watches; Jewelry; Gems; Antiques; Comics; Sports Memorabilia; Much More. Bid Live or Bid Online. Terms: Cash, Cashier’s Check, MC/Visa Cards ONLY. Persons Under 12 not Admitted. Illustrated Brochure. James G. Murphy Co., 425-4861246, www.murphyauction.com
For a detailed job description and application, visit www.sanjuanco.com or call 360-370-7402. Screening begins 11/26/2014. EOE. Find your perfect pet in the ClassiďŹ eds. www.nw-ads.com Employment Transportation/Drivers
DRIVERS – No Experience? Some or LOTS of experience? Let’s Talk! No matter what stage in your career, its time, call Central Refrigerated Home. (888) 793-6503 www.CentralTr uckDr ivingJobs.com Get the ball rolling... Call 800-388-2527 today.
AKC WEST HIGHLAND White Terriers. These puppies are beyond cute and full of “Westitude�. They are healthy, lively puppies from sweet, loving parents. We are experienced breeders with 35 + years experience. Ready to go to their new homes Dec. 7 for the discriminating buyer. $1200 each. Rochester. Call now 360-273-9325. BORDER Collie pups, ABCA registered. Black & White. Ranch raised, working parents. 1st shots & worming. Males $500 Females $600. 509-486-1191 www.canaanguestranch.com
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AKC GOLDEN Doodle Retriever Puppies. Non shedding males & females. Highly intelligent, cute and wonderful with children. Parents & grand parents on site. Wormed & shots. Not just a pet, but one of the family! $1,000. Call Chris 360-652-7148.
CHIHUAHUA Puppies, call for pricing. Financing Available. Adult Adoptions also. Reputable Oregon Kennel. Unique colors, Long and Short Haired. Health Guaranteed. UTD Vaccinations/ wormings, litter box trained, socialized. Video, pictures, information/ virtual tour: www.chi-pup.net References happily supplied! Easy I-5 access. Drain, Oregon. Vic and Mary Kasser, 541-4595951
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F-1 LABRADOODLE Puppies born 10/2. All of our puppies are home raised and socialized with children of all ages. Puppies will be ready to be placed in new homes Nov. 22, 2014. Dew claws removed, vet checked, shots & worming are all up to date. Accepting deposits now. $1300. Call now, before their gone 425-327-8360 tnrranch@wavecable.com www.tnrranch.com
Ready Now for their forever homes. AKC & registered Standard Poodle Puppies. Black, Brown & Red. Healthy & well socialized. Great temperaments and personalities. Parents are health tested. Micro chipped. $1,1000. www.ourpoeticpoodles.com or call 509-582-6027
Newfoundland’s Purebred with champion bloodlines. Very Healthy & quick learners, beautiful. These are a large breed. Both Parents on premises 425.239.6331 What better Christmas than a loving companion
Purebred mini Australian Sheppard puppy’s, family raised. Aussie are sweet, smart, loving. 1st shots, wormed, dew claws & tails removed. Many colors. Parents are our family dogs and on site. $450 & up. 360-261-3354
Need to sell old exercise equipment? Call 800-388-2527 to place your ad today. The opportunity to make a difference is right in front of you. Recycle this paper.
YORKSHIRE Terriers, AKC puppy’s. Sire championship lineage. Ready for their new homes Nov. 10th. Parents on site, should be no bigger than 4-5 LBS. All shots, wormed, health verified. Females starting at $1,150. Males starting at $875 425530-0452 (Marysville)
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OPALCO offers employees a unique working culture where member service is combined with stateof-the-art technology. Employees work in a high-energy environment where creativity, innovation and teamwork are supported and encouraged. Employees have the opportunity to learn and grow, LQFOXGLQJ WUDLQLQJ RQ WKH ODWHVW WHFKQRORJLHV 23$/&2 RIIHUV JUHDW EHQHĹľWV LQFOXGLQJ KHDOWK FDUH coverage, vacation and sick leave, pension, 401K match, competitive salaries and holiday leave.
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Experienced Network Engineer with overall responsibility for all information technology services WKDW VXSSRUW 23$/&2Ĺ‘V HOHFWULFDO VHUYLFH EXVLQHVV DQG WKH GHVLJQ FRQĹľJXUDWLRQ DQG XWLOL]DWLRQ RI 23$/&2Ĺ‘V JULG FRQWURO EDFNERQH PXOWLSOH WHFKQRORJLHV EXLOW RQ D ĹľEHU RSWLF EDFNERQH 7HFKQLFDO analytical and interpersonal skills are required. Responsibilities include, but are not limited to: DQDO\]LQJ GHVLJQLQJ LQVWDOOLQJ FRQĹľJXULQJ PDLQWDLQLQJ DQG UHSDLULQJ RI QHWZRUN LQIUDVWUXFWXUH DQG application components.
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DIVORCE $155. $175 with children. No court appearances. Complete preparation. Includes custody, support, property division and bills. BBB member. (503) 772-5295. www.paralegalalter natives.com legalalt@msn.com ClassiďŹ eds. We’ve got you covered. 800-388-2527
COMMUNICATION SPECIALIST – EASTSOUND
‘13 KUBOTA TRACTOR L4600/DTF. 10 hrs total time $29,000. Front end loader with turf tires and sunshade. 7’ Landpride Brush Hog and an AM/FM radio. Always covered and well maintained. Call before this great deal is gone John 713-515-0034. Located San Juan. (manufacture photo is pictured).
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Experienced communication professional to implement a broad range of communications and outreach strategies including website development and maintenance, publications, media relations and member correspondence. Creativity, problem solving, teamwork and excellent writing and editing skills a must. Graphic design, video editing and photography skills a plus.
HEAD ACCOUNTANT – EASTSOUND
Experienced Head Accountant with at least seven years experience in accounting and a proven track record as a supervisor of professional support staff. Minimum requirements include a bachelor’s GHJUHH RU HTXLYDOHQW LQ DFFRXQWLQJ DQG FXUUHQW GHVLJQDWLRQ DV D &HUWLžHG 3XEOLF $FFRXQWDQW Successful candidate must be able to obtain a valid CPA license in the state of Washington. DownORDG D GHWDLOHG MRE GHVFULSWLRQ DW ZZZ RSDOFR FRP WR OHDUQ PRUH $OO SRVLWLRQV DUH RSHQ XQWLO žOOHG 7R DSSO\ SOHDVH VXEPLW DQ 23$/&2 HPSOR\PHQW DSSOLFDWLRQ \RXU SURIHVVLRQDO UHVXPH FRYHU OHWWHU and references to Bev Madan, 183 Mt Baker Road, Eastsound WA 98245 or bmadan@opalco.com. OPALCO is an equal opportunity employer.
THE ISLANDS’ WEEKLY • WWW.ISLANDSWEEKLY.COM •
November 18, 2014 -
PAGE 7
By Shona Aitken Special to the Weekly
POLICIES CONTINUED FROM 2
prey for upper-classmen who supplied marijuana at lunchtime. All freshmen are a vulnerable group as they transition to high school; it is our responsibility as parents and leaders to provide the safest conditions possible during this phase. Drug use in and during school hours must be addressed if we are ever to meet our most funda-
mental ethical obligation to keep our children safe. Without a strong counter to the blaring culture of drug permissiveness in our youth, any parent’s ability to stem the tide of early drug usage and to provide reasonable conditions for good choices will be severely challenged. For starters, San Juan School District’s open campus policy for freshman must be repealed. School policies on drug use and bullying are ineffective. These well-thought-out
Contributed photo / Wolf Hollow
Right: A barred owl.
after dark please remember to drive slowly and carefully and LOOK OUT FOR OWLS and other wildlife such as deer and raccoons. If you do hit an owl or other wild creature, call Wolf Hollow immediately (3785000) so we can provide help as soon as possible. If it’s after hours, our answering machine will provide the pager number for the staff member who is on call that night. Call that number and punch in your phone number when prompted, so we can get back in touch with you for details. In the case of a badly injured deer, it is best to call the sheriff’s department at 378-4151. As the daylight hours grow shorter in winter it is especially important
to drive cautiously in the mornings and evenings when nocturnal wild crea-
tures are active and often need to cross roads in their search for food and shelter.
intentions mean nothing to me – they can’t erase the past or pave the way to a better future. When I notified a coach of marijuana use in students playing extra-curricular activities I was told, “The policies don’t allow us to infringe on individual rights and do drug testing.” Since when do minors’ rights supersede parental responsibilities to protect our youth until they are physically capable of recognizing the consequences of their own actions? Hallway signage mocks the current reality: “Drug Free Zone.” It’s not that you can’t use drugs at school, the reality is simply that you can’t get caught using them. And the saddest part of all is that this is nothing new.
Denying this reality makes us all complicit. While the goal is not to protect our children from ever being exposed to drugs, and the strong make wise choices, in the end peer pressure is too powerful a force to resist, especially in a small community where the threat of ostracism from the group leaves no other options. Better policies would help establish the conditions for success while the frontal cortex’s of youth are still developing. A study directed by the National Center for Education Evaluation of over 4,700 high school students involved in extracurricular activities found that students reported less substance use when subjected
to random drug testing. Without consequences and with ineffective policies, drug use among juveniles will proliferate in our state. Our policies are useless. Parents are naïve to think their children are safe, and administrators are powerless without community support. The current system is so miswired that faculty can be searched and tested at any time – but not students. Am I the only one who finds this fact disturbing? Every single one of us has a role to play. We need courageous leaders who have the wisdom and insight to acknowledge that our current policies on juvenile drug use are inadequate, administrators, teachers and coaches who
Puzzle Answers
WHALE CONTINUED FROM 1
newborn killer whale, as calves nurse on its mother’s milk for about a year, Balcomb said. Listed endangered in the U.S. in 2005, the southern residents consist of three tightly knit clans, known as J, K and L pods. The population was afforded protection under federal law in the footsteps of a 20 percent decline in the mid 1990s. As of 2010, the population totaled 87 animals. The southern Residents are designated endangered by Washington The Islands’ Weekly • www.islandsweekly.com • November 18, 2014 – Page 8
PRSRT STD US POSTAGE PAID SOUND PUBLISHING 98204
Last Friday evening we received an after-hours page from someone who had seen an owl sitting by the side of Lampard Road, on the outskirts of Friday Harbor. They called Wolf Hollow because it was still there when they came back half an hour later. By the time our staff member arrived, the owl had moved off the road and was struggling in the bushes nearby, unable to fly away. Given its location and condition, it had almost certainly been hit by a car. In the past few weeks we have received six owls that have been struck by vehicles. Why so many owls? At this time of year it is dark when most people are driving home from
work, or to and from evening activities, so there is a lot of traffic on the roads when owls are hunting, resulting in many being hit by cars. Owls may be too focused on a mouse moving in the grass to notice the oncoming vehicle, or they can be dazzled and disoriented by bright headlights. The owls we have cared for recently have ranged in size from a tiny saw-whet to larger barn and barred owls. Two had relatively minor injuries and were able to be released after a few hours or days, but others had more severe problems and are still in our care. The owl from Lampard Road, a large female barred owl, has an injured eye so we don’t know how long it will take her to fully recover. When you’re driving
ECRWSS POSTAL CUSTOMER
Look out for owls
Islands’ Weekly PO Box 758 Eastsound, WA 98245
Guest Column
state and in Canada as well. L-120 was the first addition to the southern resident orcas since August, 2012, the third calf of L-86, a 23-yearold female. L-86 is also mother of a 10-year-old male, L-106, and its second offspring, L-112, also known as Sootke, died in early 2012 of injuries to tissues in its skull resulting from a massive pressure trauma of an unknown cause. The death of L-112, an otherwise healthy three-year-old, led to a highprofile necropsy and speculation among many that its injuries may have been caused by ammunition training off the coast of Washington state by the U.S. or Canadian Navy, near the mouth of Juan de Fuca Strait.
require random drug testing, parents who demand drug free schools and citizens who understand that improvements simply cannot happen without additional dedicated resources. Without this concerted effort, it will only be a matter of time before we will all feel the effect of this downward spiral. Editor’s note: Random Drug testing is illegal in all Washington state schools. For info on Orcas and Lopez school policies, visit www. orcasislandschools.org or www.lopezislandschool.org.
Donated to the Friday Harbor Whale Museum, the skeleton of L-112 remains on display. “We haven’t treated these magnificent orcas well at all,” Orca Network’s Howard Garrett said in the wake of L-120’s disappearance. “As a society we are not successfully restoring this orca community despite the many warnings and legal declarations.” Co-director of the Whidbey Islandbased marine mammal advocacy group, Garrett said the Salish Sea’s resident orcas will likely vanish in the coming years unless the region’s salmon runs, the killer whales primary source of sustenance, are restored and protected.