Veterans Life A Sound Publishing Monthly Magazine
November 2012
Kitsap Veterans Stand Down B
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In September multiple Kitsap agencies gathered to host the 2012 Fall Veterans Stand Down, which served 149 county veterans with access to services and a helping hand up.
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the number of Navy veterans at the stand down
the number of veterans “couch surfing”
133 the total number of honorably
17 the number of full-time
discharged veterans
employed veterans
50
the number of veterans with no job
17
the number of women veterans in attendance
14
the number of Native American veterans in attendance
25
the number of retired military veterans in attendance
27
the number of veterans without work for more than two years
80
the number of veterans without insurance
3
the number of veterans who spent the previous night on the street
81
the number of veterans who said they made less that $1,500 a month
12,491
$
the number of Kitsap County property tax dollars given to veterans in September through the county assistance program
34
the number of veterans who enrolled in VA Healthcare
Veterans
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VETERANS LIFE |
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77% of Crashes involved alcohol (2000 Crash Statistics) Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS)
Please Don’t Drink & Drive! This ad is placed in this newspaper as a courtesy for M.A.D.D.
Veterans Day tour A
s I write this, the first Pacific storm of the storm of the year is blasting the upper elevations in the Cascades and I can’t wait for Veterans Day, the official opening of my ski season. After years of pestering, Mount Rainier National Park lets veterans in for free on that day. As we know from talking with individual veterans, national days honoring them are often spent thinking of those who served alongside or things that happened then. This month’s cover pays homage to the first-generation honored by the Veterans Day we know it today – World War II veterans. Specifically, the cover celebrates America’s women veterans. The photo shows a group of nurses arriving in France two months after Operation Overlord took the beaches of Normandy. Notes from the National Archive say those nurses had three years’ service in England and North Africa under their belts before landing in France. They were already veterans of war by the time Operation Dragoon sent them 7,700 wounded Americans in one month.
world peace as declared by President Calvin Coolidge in 1926. With none in our Infantry Company killed, we will spend part of the day thinking about and praying for the families of the men we killed. It was indeed a list of individual ideas about honoring the past that eventually led World War II veteran Raymond Weeks to offer the version of Veterans Day that we know today honoring all those who have served, living or dead. Weeks’ idea came to fruition in 1947 with the first observance and was signed into law as a federal holiday, shortly after the Korean War went into cease-fire, by President Eisenhower. Since then, World War II veterans have been the standard for the national observance remembering all those who have served. However, by 2011 only about 21 percent of employers across the nation said they would observe the federal holiday. Honoring that first generation of Veterans Day veterans, reporter Chris Chancellor writes about an infantryman’s promise to God. In the Bond, Dennis Box shares a story from Philadelphia. I don’t expect skiing to become any kind of trend for national observance, but for Clay and I, the snowy Cascades will remain the farthest and fairest viewpoint from which to remember our war in the desert. Cheers to you all, Greg Skinner
INSIDE
Vietnam veteran finds success as an entrepreneur In the early 1970’s, at a time when more and more people were beginning to think that the fix was in for downtown Portland, Fred Scheffler and a few other movers and shakers thought otherwise.
Learning that his entire brigade was headed for an Iraq deployment while watching the news at home with his family was a shock for Sgt. Mark S. Traylor.
I have seldom written about my hitch in the Navy and never in any detail since I was honorably discharged on June 30, 1976.
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Port Orchard veteran learned of his deployment on the news
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This Veterans Day, as with much of the last decade, I will be skiing on one of the Cascade volcanoes and much of the five-to-seven hour climb will have us moving uphill at 11 a.m. and remembering. We will remember what happened with someone who was there when it happened. We will celebrate Veterans Day largely in its second incarnation, the pre-1945 fashion of Armistice Day, which was focused on
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NEWSROOM EDITOR Greg Skinner gskinner@soundpublishing.com SENIOR REPORTER KEVAN MOORE kmoore@soundpublishing.com REPORTER CHRIS CHANCELLOR cchancellor@soundpublishing.com
CIRCULATION CIRCULATION COORDINATOR NOREEN HAMREN nhamren@soundpublishing.com
Veterans Life is published monthly by Sound Publishing Inc.; Corporate Headquarters: 19351 8th Avenue, Suite 106, Poulsbo, WA 98370. SUBSCRIPTIONS: $24/year via USPS. Copyright 2012 Sound Publishing Inc
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New outpatient clinic for Bremerton in 2014 Fall 2008 KCVAB tells VA of trouble with the Bremerton CBOC 2008
Spring 2009 County Commissioners offer possibility of money and land 2009
Spring 2009 VA considers CBOC move
2010
Fall 2009 VA Asst. Dir. says sorry for lack of response, CBOC to move by end of 2011
By GREG SKINNER After years of inquiry and feasibility studies the Department of Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Regional Medical Center announced plans to open a new community clinic in Kitsap County by the end of 2014. The announcement came during the Kitsap County Veterans Advisory Board October meeting, which saw a large turnout of veterans sharing discontent over the current primary care clinic’s problems with medical staffing, services and the length of time taken to get a new clinic under way. At the moment, one doctor serves more than 3,000 veterans at the Bremerton Community Based Outpatient Clinic on Adel Ave. Chris Foster, the regional director of Community Based Out Patient Clinics, said that the VA will seek proposals from developers starting Oct. 15, 2013. Veterans can expect a clinic twice the size of the current one, he said. The CBOC provides primary care to about 3,500 veterans out of the 9,000 Kitsap County veterans enrolled in VA Puget Sound. The rest either don’t
OC works with poor veterans to clear financial obstacles By GREG SKINNER Most of the talk about new retraining money for older out-of-work veterans has focused on how fast the first 45,000 slots filled following its opening last spring. This week marks the start of the second fiscal year of the program with an additional 54,000 funded retraining slots at community colleges and technical schools across the country. Missing from the conversation is a financial
2011
Spring 2011 The KCVAB meets with VA representatives and staff from Senator Patty Murray’s and Congressman Norm Dicks’ offices in Bremerton.
use their benefits or travel to Seattle or Tacoma for care. More than 38,000 veterans live in Kitsap County. Kitsap County Veterans Assistance coordinator Leif Bentsen said the VA is expecting overall healthcare enrollment in Kitsap County to reach 12,000 with a CBOC caseload of 6,000 in the next five years as the Defense Department reduces its ranks by 1 million members. With numbers like those, a new facility is warranted, Bentsen said. According to Foster, the clinic will be in a leased building and perhaps include radiology services. There is no location yet, but foster said veterans can expect the clinic to be built anywhere between Bremerton and Poulsbo. Twice in the last several years, the lease at the current clinic location was extended while the VA considered its options, including a look at a joint clinic building with Naval Base Kitsap. Before hearing back from the Navy, VA representatives lauded a similar and successful clinic at Fort Richardson, Alaska.
Retraining sees slow start hurdle created when the Department of Veterans Affairs started the program without a plan to cover tuition up front for qualified veterans without financial means to begin. Among the local unemployed veterans between the ages of 35 and 60 signing up for classes at Olympic College under the Veterans Retraining Assistance Program some homeless and poor veterans didn’t have the estimated $1,500 upfront
Winter 2012 A second regional CBOC meeting with VA, Naval Hospital Bremerton, electeds, veterans in attendance.
Spring 2010 Advisory Board chair tells VA officials and Sen. Patty Murray’s office of difficulties recruiting doctors
money required to get started using the new benefit. VRAP is a collaboration between the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Department of Labor and is a provision of the Veterans Opportunity to Work to Hire Heroes Act of 2011, which Congress passed and President Barack Obama signed into law in November 2011. As of Monday, 62,000 applications were received by the Department of Veterans Affairs of which 49,000 were approved nationally. “We’re gratified that 45,000 unemployed Veterans can begin the retraining they need to compete for in-demand jobs,” said VA Undersecretary for Benefits Allison A. Hickey last week. “We’re going to maintain continued
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Spring 2012 VA public affairs says a stand-alone facility would be sought if joint clinic fails.
Fall 2012 VA announces timeline for standalone clinic
2012
Spring 2012 VA solicits project grant support letters.
Part of the delay came last January when the Navy announced their feasibility study showed positive results for a joint facility. The study was sent to the upper echelon Navy Bureau of Medicine for a decision. At that time VAB member Fred Scheffler called for support of an American Legion resolution seeking an immediate move to a new facility. Bentsen said that as of March 2012, the VA was still looking for grant money for a joint facility that would have been built off base. At that time, the VA also said they were preparing for an alternate scenario based on a standalone VA clinic. Foster said the Navy last month officially said no to the idea. Several on the VAB questioned the delay saying the Navy made their lack of interest in sharing clinic space known long ago. And, that Kitsap County leadership in 2009 offered potential financial help and land in a letter to the director of the VA, which saw no response. “The primary bones of contention have to do with improving services and the location of the CBOC, plus
Fall 2012 Navy says no
recent changes to the shuttle system that transports patients to the CBOC or American Lake and Seattle VA hospitals,” Bentsen wrote in a recent email blast to a list of 300 veterans across the county. Veterans in the gallery expressed some skepticism that the VA could turn a project such as a new CBOC from idea to operational in 16 months. Foster said Requests for Information (RFIs) and Request for Proposal s (RFPs) will be released through FedBizOps, the federal outlet for all government contracts. Bentsen said when the history of the “new clinic” is considered veterans have a legitimate foundation of discontent holding up their list of skeptical concerns. However, he said that at this stage he believes the new clinic will happen. Since the meeting last month the VA has been helpful and in almost daily communication about the CBOC and recent transportation issues, Bentsen said. “I think it will happen,” he said.
Veteran’s fund to be solvent through year’s end By GREG SKINNER One thing has been achieved by cutting the amount of county aid that veterans in financial trouble have access to, there will still be money to give a veteran on Christmas. That goal was articulated by the Kitsap County Veterans Advisory Board late last winter when they realized that the county’s veteran assistance fund would not have enough money to meet the growing need for help, under the guidelines. At the time, facing an increased need from vet-
erans as the economy continued to slide and a failed public vote to increase the property tax levy supporting the fund, the board recommended cuts as a way to help more veterans with less. Now, as the county works through the 2013 budget for adoption, nothing is expected to change in terms of dollars available. Without the change the fund would have run out of money for needy veterans by September, said Kitsap County Veterans Services Coordinator Leif Bentsen. He and the board recom-
mended last winter, when the monthly payouts hit $32,000, that the Board Of County Commissioners lower the amount of money a veteran could access from $1,200 each year to $900. “That’s why we made the change to lower income eligibility to 150 percent of the poverty level,” Bentsen said. Bentsen was hesitant to call the move a “success,” because less help is available per individual, but concedes that his plan worked. By June the VAB knew it would continued
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Tomb of the unknown rededicated By KEVAN MOORE Several hundred community members streamed into the Ivy Green Cemetery in early October to rededicate Bremerton's own Tomb of the Unknown Soldier following a massive cleanup led by citizens. The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Bremerton is a replica of the landmark at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia. Bremerton’s replica is one of only three such memorials in the United States. To those who hadn’t been to the cemetery in a while, the tomb and its surroundings would be nearly unrecognizable. Back in August, Bremerton resident Todd Best spearheaded a cleanup of the cemetery that involved
hundreds of volunteers and he’s been working ever since to make the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier a worthy memorial to those that have served this country and given the ultimate sacrifice. “We can’t forget those who have given us the freedom we sometimes take for granted,” Best said. “They’re laid to rest now, but we have to give them the respect they so richly deserve.” Best said he heard about the dilapidated condition of the cemetery from a friend and went to see things for himself. “I was mad,” Best said. “I spent all day pulling weeds, unearthing grave markers of veterans and I absolutely started crying. And I’m not an emotional guy. I realized I had not even made a dent and said this is going to take
a lot more people than just me. I was sad and ultimately mad, so I took my anger and ultimately turned it into motivation.” Best has been working non-stop ever since with a lot of help from area businesses and volunteers. In all, about $40,000 worth of materials have been donated and the amount of volunteer labor would easily take the “price tag” into six digits. “It’s not about me,” Best insists. “It’s about all of us. We all got this done together. I kept everything in motion and held it together, that’s all I did. I feel guilty taking credit sometimes over anyone else.” Best says that was especially true at the Aug. 4 cleanup, a day he says he will never forget, that featured more than 200 volunteers.
“This community’s amazing,” he said. “If you put a call to action out in this community, and people respect you, the people will come out and they will come out in force. If I could put one word on it, we unified the community that day. Everybody was one, it was like one big family. If we could have a day like that every day in Bremerton, we’d have the best city in the United States.” The effort to make the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier a world-class memorial involved a lot more than just pulling weeds and laying down new sod. A new concrete walkway to and around the tomb, which was treated to look more like granite, is in the shape of a ribbon. A raised, semicircular concrete seating area, featuring
the phrase “In Honor of the Unknown,” surrounds the backside of the tomb to allow for quiet contemplation. And new vegetation was installed to better screen a fence and homes adjacent to the cemetery. The updated memorial was designed by Joshua Fisher. Best said he is still working to secure seven commercial-grade flagpoles, one for each of the armed services and a flag recognizing prisoners of war and missing in action. The tallest pole will
fly the colors. Special lighting will also illuminate the flags at night. Best said that the rededication ceremony for the tomb was another emotional day. “There wasn’t a dry eye in the house,” he said. “It was really neat to see the whole community, from all walks of life, come together for a special day. It’s really important to me because this community has such a rich Navy heritage to be proud of.”
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Battlefield promise to God leads WWII infantryman to develop local Little League By CHRIS CHANCELLOR It’s a quiet ping, smooth and steady. It often is accompanied by the smile of a child when it leads to a hit. The volume represents the quiet happiness of Little Leaguers — and is worlds away from what longtime Port Orchard resident Art Mikelsen experienced more than 60 years ago. Serving in the Army’s 10th Mountain Division, a ski troop based in Italy, Mikelsen earned three Purple Hearts, three Bronze Stars — one for valor — the World War II Combat Infantry Badge, the Victory Medal, the Army of Occupation Medal, the American Campaign Medal, and the
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European-African-Middle East Campaign Medal. “There’s going to be differences that hopefully you can settle diplomatically,” said Mikelsen, when asked what war means to him. “It doesn’t always work that way — even within your family or within the community.” During one of those times when diplomacy was nonexistent, Mikelsen was injured by shrapnel. He said the medic just pulled the metal out and dumped sulfate in the hole and sent him back up to the front. Later, he would get shot in the stomach. “I’m damn lucky,” he said. “There were too many of my buddies that didn’t get out. I was running from foxhole to foxhole to resupply my
VETERANS LIFE |
ammo. They’d get blown up and their bloody bodies are splattering next to you and you survive. Why?” It is that question Mikelsen, now 88, often asked himself in the decades since the war ended. Why they all died and he survived? One thing the Army veteran knows is that he made a battlefield deal. “There were a couple times where I told God, ‘If you get me out of this I’m going to go home and do something good,” he said. “I live to that commitment.” When the war ended in 1945, Mikelsen returned to the area and took a job at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard. He worked as a nuclear planner and estimator supervisor until his
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retirement in 1980. And he wasn’t alone — he and wife Alice will celebrated their 67th wedding anniversary this year. With his return to the states came the time to find hobby. “Anything too noisy was out of the question,” Mikelsen said. “It didn’t take much more than a car backfiring. You hear a noise like that and you look for cover.” Perhaps it was just one death or maybe several of them, but it turned out too much for Mikelsen after the war. Hunting, once a favored activity, was no longer in consideration, and not just because the decibel reading a rifle pro-
duces. “I lost interest after I came back from the service,” he said. “I wasn’t interested in doing much killing.” Mikelsen, who graduated from South Kitsap Union High School in 1942, returned to baseball and found himself presiding over a local semipro league in the late 1940s that featured teams from Olympia, Shelton, Silverdale, Port Orchard, Poulsbo, Port Townsend and Port Angeles. Travel, particularly to the Olympic Peninsula in an era before the Hood Canal Bridge was built in 1961, was difficult. He said
the league had to make arrangements with the local ferry boat owner to get over and back, sometimes in the middle of the night. Involvement in the league had its advantages, though. “I pitched in that semipro league and played in the outfield,” he said. “I wasn’t a good ballplayer, but I was in charge, so I got to play once in awhile.” Mikelsen was also busy as a commander in the Veterans of Foreign Wars in 1950 when Al Farmer gave him a booklet called “This is Little League.” “I looked at that thing and I said, ‘Geez, this is something we’ve never had around here,’” he said. “The only things we ever had here were intramural programs up in the school and one American Legion team.” The first local Little League games began in 1951, and six years later Mikelsen was elected district administrator — a position he held until he retired 51 years later. When he started Little League in the area, the only others in the c ontin u e d
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Vietnam veteran finds success as an entrepreneur By KEVAN MOORE In the early 1970’s, at a time when more and more people were beginning to think that the fix was in for downtown Portland, Fred Scheffler and a few other movers and shakers thought otherwise. “Since he came to Portland three years ago
he has probably done more than any other single individual to reshape the business outlook for the core area,” wrote a staffer for the Oregonian newspaper at the time entitled, “Broker influences outlook of downtown.” Scheffler was only 33 years old. He was also fresh off multiple tours to
Vietnam where he says he “had a couple of mishaps and got banged up a little bit.” That, of course, is an understatement.
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I said, ‘you really need a new store’ and Bruce said, “You’re right, we do. Put one together.” Scheffler asked where they wanted the new store to be and Bruce Nordstrom got up and pointed to a block right across the street. Scheffler got to work. There were six buildings on the property with 334 leases and 20 separate ownerships. Scheffler optioned the whole block, negotiated all the leases and had an architect put together a model of the new store and met with the Nordstroms just 40 days later. He showed the Nordstroms what he had done and they excused themselves from the room, came back a few minutes later and agreed to the $8 million deal on the same night that they got the franchise agreement for the newly minted Seattle Seahawks. “There was no money, no federal money, no other crap involved,” Scheffler said. “It was just going out and getting it done. But you c ontin u e d
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get Goodwill into downtown.” The first major deal Scheffler worked on was to keep JC Penney downtown. There were 112 ownerships on a tiny piece of property and the deal took a lot of last-minute finagling to pull off, including a phone call from the governor to company officials in New York. “It was a really interesting deal,” Scheffler said. “You couldn’t do it today. That turned around the ebb and flow of downtown.” From there, Scheffler went to work on an even bigger deal with Bruce, Jim and John Nordstrom to build a new downtown store. “I had just come out of the military and hadn’t developed the lacquer or veneer that you need,” Scheffler remembers. “We were talking about the existing store and I said to Bruce — a great man, I’ll never forget him — I said, ‘This place is dog meat’ and the three brothers kind of looked at each other and
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Scheffler, who now lives on Bainbridge Island with his wife of 45 years, was shot down the length of his pinky and right hand while signaling other troops forward; he was shot in the leg and carries the slug and walks with the limp to show for it to this day; a Claymore mounted to a tree in the jungle exploded next to him and blew his helmet off, leaving him temporarily deaf and blind on his left side; and he crashed a light observation helicopter after drawing fire from the enemy so that soldiers on the ground could locate them and take that gun “without any complaints” from the enemy. When I first asked him how he got his Purple Heart, he asked me which one? “After the first one, it doesn’t make much difference,” Scheffler said. When Scheffler arrived in Portland as a young man, he went to work with Coldwell Banker at a time when “the town was falling apart at the seams” and “you couldn’t
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VETERANS LIFE | 7
Port Orchard veteran learned of his deployment on the news You receive it on Graduation Day. But it’s never handed to you. Because when it’s a degree from Columbia College, it’s a degree that demands effort and rewards hard work. That’s a notion our students at 18 campuses on military bases truly understand.
By JESSICA GINET Learning that his entire brigade was headed for an Iraq deployment while watching the news at home with his family was a shock for Sgt. Mark S. Traylor. “A great big shock,” he said. Within several weeks, the entire 81st Brigade of the Washington Army National Guard had orders to report to Ft. Lewis before leaving for Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Traylor was placed in the old World War II barracks on the North Fort, the same location where his grandfather stayed prior to heading off to battle in the now long ago war. A seasoned military man by the time he was sent to Iraq, Traylor had joined the Army in 1986, enlisting at the age of 17 with a signed release from his parents. Traylor had dropped out of school in Florida when he
was 16 and was the last 3B non-grad to join. Traylor described basic and advanced training as a whole new world. “Coming from small town life I ran into people of all nationalities and from all walks of life,” he said. He quickly learned to adhere to protocol delivered by instructors with gusto rather than take a ride against a wall locker. “Being young and dumb c ontin u e d
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RETRAINING CONTINUED FROM A4
the momentum of our outreach to make sure we get the maximum of 54,000 Veterans retrained in fiscal year 2013.” At a recent Kitsap County Veterans Stand down held in Bremerton, Olympic College Veteran Center volunteer Larry Cleman explained that the glitch in VRAP’s dispersal plan has surfaced locally. Some homeless and poor veterans seeking to take advantage of the program at O.C. cannot do so because they don’t have the money to pay tuition up front. Most will need $1,500 up front to pay for the 12 credit hours in approved curricula required by the program, he said. The program allows qualifying veterans to receive up to 12 months of education assistance equal to the current full-time Montgomery GI Bill – Active Duty rate of $1,546 per month. When that money actually gets to the veteran depends on the school. Olympic College only certifies student enrollment after 30 days in class. Olympic College Dean of Enrollment Services Dianna Larson said that the VRAP
program began with one component missing that would have addressed the specific issue faced by otherwise qualified homeless and poor veterans seeking access to their benefits. Originally the VRAP required the VA to have a plan for advance pay, she said. “The colleges are trying to fill in the gaps right now,” Larson said, “until the plan is established.” Matt McAlvanah, a spokesperson for Sen. Patty Murray, said that the senator recently intervened at Pierce Community College in Tacoma when the administration misread federal guidelines for veterans trying to enroll through VRAP. Murray, who chairs the Senate Committee on Veterans Affairs, is considered to be the primary force behind the overall legislation to improve employment prospects for veterans. McAlvanah Tuesday said the senator reached out to the VA on the matter and the VA assured her office that advance pay for the VRAP was now available. A spokesperson in the VA Seattle office was unable to say if advance pay was available this quarter. A recent excluded community colleges that offer c ontin u e d
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likely make it through he year. “There will be a small balance left,” he said. Even with this year’s reductions to the amount a veteran can access each year, the amount is still $100 more than was allowed in 2006 when the cap was set at $800. The money in the fund is available to qualifying veterans in need of help paying, among other things, housing, utilities, transportation and medicine. The aid is intended to act like gap insurance and cover a bad short-term situation faced by a veteran such as car repair so that a veteran can get to work or the doctor or cover a rent shortage. Raised by taxing county property at 1 and 1/8 cents per $1,000 of assessed property value, Bentsen said the veteran tax levy brought in a little more than $300,000 annually. Most of the money raised goes directly to needy veterans, the core service, but some does get spent on
staff and supporting the VAB, he said. The BOCC balanced the county’s general budget by taking more than $300,000 in “surplus” from the fund, which was allowable under state law. During the 2012 Legislative session, the Legislature killed a bill that would have removed the Veterans Assistance Funds from access by the county general fund and given counties the ability to move the levy up and down, within a range of about 27 cents, to cover needs of veterans.
As of September the Veterans Assistance Fund served 249 veterans out of 350 accepted applications so far in 2012. Of those, 151 veterans were new to the program. Assistance with rent and electricity bills in September were the largest needs, which took more than $9,000 of the $12,492 given out to the 24 veterans whose applications were accepted. Two applications were denied because the veterans were above the income level. The VAB said that no veteran was denied without referrals to additional resources. In keeping with the monthly statistics, rent and electric payments comprise the largest payouts
from the fund over the last nine months taking up $108,780 of the $162,358 paid out. By working with social service partners at Kitsap Community Resources the money levied gains added value. In September veterans received an additional 25 percent above the county’s $12,000. According to the Veterans Advisory Board, the dollar value of KCR referrals through September is $63,601. The value added amount gained from referrals outside KCR to date is an additional $58,000. Combined with KCR, the referral aid is more that $122,000 nearly doubling the tax payer contribution.
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state were in Kirkland and Richland. Until his retirement, Mikelsen was the only administrator District 2 ever had. Years after stepping down, he still volunteers with Little League. “I’m just there if someone needs me,” he said. “It keeps me active and knowledgeable about what’s going on. I miss the job, but I know that I’m old enough that I got out at the right time.” District 2 consists of several chapters — Bainbridge Island, East Jefferson, Gig Harbor American, Gig Harbor National, North Mason, Port Townsend, Sequim, South Jefferson, South Kitsap Eastern, South Kitsap Southern, South Kitsap Western and West Central. Before Mikelsen’s retirement, SK Western president Bob Showers lauded Mikelsen’s commitment to maintain a successful district. “I think he’s really
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I learned not to smart back to the drill sergeant and I learned real quick about wall-to-wall counseling,” he said. Traylor kept re-enlisting until 1996 when he left the service. The lure of the military called him back, however, and he re-enlisted in the Navy Reserve in 1998. Traylor served with the Seabees for several years until relocating to Washington State, where he joined the Washington Army National Guard as a tanker with Bravo Company. 1-303rd Armor. Traylor worked his way up the proverbial ladder, starting out as a loader and eventually becoming a gunner. “As an armored crewman on the Abrams M1A1 tank you become a close family, part of an elite group and esprit de corps among the other tankers and the mechanics,” Traylor said. In 2003 the entire 81st Brigade was informed that they would be activated for duty and deploy to the Middle East for an indeterminate length of time. According to the Department of Defense, Office of the Assistant
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molded District 2 into one of the best districts in the state,” Showers said. “He follows the rules, he expects everyone to do the rules and he tells you upfront what he expects out of you. He makes us stick to the rules and I think that’s what makes District 2 so successful.” It still is no comparison to the early years of Little League when he said the Cascade Mountains divided the state’s two districts, which left him in control of Western Washington. “As a district administrator, I had to come home from work and hit the highway down to Chehalis or Vancouver and speak to those people,” he said. “Then I would come home and go to work the next day.” The time commitment left him with one regret. “The whole program all these years has been hardest on my family because you have to give up a heck of a lot,” said Mikelsen, who has three children and many grandchildren and great-grandchildren. “A lot of times family
would have gatherings and you couldn’t be there, so it’s been harder on my wife and the family.” Mikelsen’s service extends beyond Little League. He also was a Port Orchard city councilman after completing his duty. Mikelsen said his greatest achievement in that role — or perhaps any — was getting water fluorinated. “We got together with all of the dentists in the community and they were very supportive. The opponents brought in people saying if we drank the water, we would all die. I would consider that my greatest accomplishment in doing well for the community. There’s a lot of kids that have pretty good teeth as long as they went to the dentist and did their jobs.” That is just one example of why Mikelsen is passionate about being involved in the community. “If people weren’t there to volunteer, we wouldn’t have anything,” he said. “Somebody has to do it.” As an example, c ontin u e d
Secretary of Defense, between September 2001 and November 30, 2007, a total of 202,113 National Guard Reserves were deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan. Traylor was one of 3,600 members of the 81st sent over to the war. At the time, the U.S. Army had 15 National Guard enhanced readiness brigades or “E-brigades.” Federalized in November 2003 to support Operation Iraqi Freedom, the troops deployed to the Middle East for a year from March 2004 to March 2005 – the first time the 81st Brigade served in active combat since World War II. “So we trained and trained. All the training consisted of infantry maneuvers and mock cities with insurgents,” he said. “We learned everything you could cram down our throats about the culture, doing vehicle searches, forced marches, weapons training for the desert - all in the middle of winter, pretty funny if you think about it.” Just before leaving for the Middle East, Traylor and his fellow Guardsmen were granted several days to relax. Many contacted loved ones. “Once we got in country we were placed in a blackout period for security reasons,” Traylor said.
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Once in Kuwait Traylor and several others from the platoon were selected to run a convoy into Baghdad. “Everyone thought we would be in tanks but I told them and the guys in my fire team that we are doing infantry work now and to just get used to doing it. They all said, ‘No, we’re tankers and we follow our motto – Death Before Dismount.’ Well, there went their motto.” Once in Baghdad the brigade was scattered to different areas. Traylor’s company was attached to the 1st Calvary in replacement of the 82nd Airborne where mortar attacks and sporadic gunfire made for a long deployment. “I can say this much, our area of operations and where we lived was the safest placed to be,”Traylor said. “It may not have been the most extravagant place to stay, and with three companies living in it – all men – it smelled.” A safe place because according to Traylor it survived a 500 pound bomb. Retraining Under “one of the greatest platoon sergeants in the world” came a creative retraining of the tankers into infantrymen as the 81st rotated for an infantry company when conducting mis-
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couldn’t do that today. You couldn’t get that done that way.” Even then, the odds against Scheffler were pretty steep. “I was a New York kid working for a California firm in Portland, Ore.,” he said. “You talk about having three strikes against you — don’t let the door hit you on the way out.” From there, Scheffler struck out on his own and built an industrial park in Tigard, Ore., and did a regional shopping center in Dover, Del., as a freelancer. It was around that time, Scheffler says, that he “got interested in solutions.” “The best way to make a small fortune in solutions is to start out with a large one and work your way from there,” Scheffler said. While working on the project to expand an industrial park with 56,000 square feet under roof, ecology officials tested some nearby soil next to a Burlington Northern rail line that was full of diesel sions and patrols in the area. “Being a fire team leader has a great responsibility and places a big burden on your shoulders,” Traylor said. “You want to take care of your guys. You want them to come home and when you hear of someone you know being KIA it takes a little part from you every time you hear it.” Traylor recalls several close calls but one in particular stands out. Traylor and a fellow soldier were pulling tower duty at night when his partner had to go and take a “class one download” and left Traylor to man the tower. Then a couple of RPG’s were fired at the tower. “The first one came right at the tower and I decided it was time to jump 25 feet out of it because I thought a broken leg over being blown up was a better way to go,” Traylor said. Traylor broke his ankle and compacted discs in his lower back and neck when he landed from the jump. The first RPG bounced off the top of the tower and a second one hit the side of the tower and blew up about a hundred yards away. “The funny part about this is that Cook came out of the crapper pulling his pants up, yelling, ‘Incoming,’” Traylor said.
contamination. “This ecology guy came out, a real nice guy, and he said, ‘Look, scoop this down to about 10 feet, take it to the landfill and put engineered fill in. I looked at him, and I can remember because it really got to me, and I said, ‘Isn’t that like putting a turd into a safe deposit box and telling your kids to take care of it in the next generation?’ “ As would happen again and again, Scheffler found a new interest. “So, I got interested in cleanup,” he said. “Thats what started the whole bioremediation (phase of my career). I went to the federal library and the only book I could find didn’t even spell it right.” Scheffler found a man in California who was going bankrupt but was working on soil cleanup using Icelandic kelp. “We treated the land and 45 days later the ecology people came out and said we must have made a mistake because you have no contamination,” Scheffler said. Scheffler then hooked up with a Washington compa-
ny developing oil spill remediation and then worked on air quality and finding solutions for dealing with volatile organic compounds. “You have to understand, I’m totally unqualified in just about everything I’ve ever done,” Scheffler said. “I don’t say that offhandedly because it’s the truth.” Scheffler’s latest work is centered on cyber technology. He’s working with economic developers in Georgia and here in Washington trying to find jobs for local veterans. He’s also involved in a solar technology company that can make solar power available, efficient and competitive. His passion these days is making sure that today’s veterans have a shot once they return home. “The treatment of veterans after Vietnam was a national disgrace — everything from Agent Orange on down to the processing of Veterans Affairs disabilities,” he said. “I look at what these guys are going through today, men and women coming back from Iraq and Afghanistan, and we can’t treat them that way. c ontin u e d
Along with his injuries from the jump, Traylor also wound up a casualty to kidney stones. “I ended up in a morphine state of mind and I can say that was one of the nicest stays I have ever had in a medical facility, even though I have no idea what happened over those three days.” When his wife found out he was in the hospital, she nearly had a nervous breakdown. Traylor is proud of his service to the United States. As an eyewitness to military and world history unfolding under his boots. There he saw the first vote of a new nation. Back home Traylor returned to the states in early 2005. He still misses the camaraderie of his unit so he looked around for the same. “I tried to fill the void with joining a motorcycle club but it was too much politics and not enough brotherhood,” he said. In 2011 Traylor and his wife went to the VFW 2669 in Port Orchard. There he started to come out of his shell and find a purpose in new life, his niche as a volunteer. Since joining the post, Traylor has helped to build the Veteran’s
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Recognition Wall in Port Orchard and assists other veterans in wading through the red tape to access their VA benefits. Today, Traylor stresses that the younger generation of veterans need to understand that the VFW is not an old man’s club. “There are younger combat vets in the VFW and when you start helping out other vets it is satisfying to the soul,” he said. Family support has played a big role in Traylor’s transition from combat zone to civilian life. “My wife is proud of my service and I am proud of hers because she served as an Army wife and I thank God every day for her.” Traylor, who currently works as a deputy in law enforcement for Pierce County, is in the process of changing careers by pursuing a degree in environmental studies. “I do miss my military life and I much prefer being in the service,” he said. “But we must all understand at some time in life we have to give it up and let the young men and women take over.” He encourages others to keep an open mind and offers a parting piece of advice. “Always thank a vet.”
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We’ve got to get out ahead of it. One of the things we’ve got to do is give them jobs and give them opportunity. And I don’t mean government jobs I’m talking about jobs in the private sector that they can build on. Just like guys that came back from World War II got coming out.” Scheffler grew up in New York and attended Catholic parochial schools before heading to the Pennsylvania Military College, the oldest of its kind in the United States, which is now known as Widener University and described by Scheffler as a casualty of the Vietnam War. His father was orphaned at 13 and never finished high school, but went on to earn an engineering degree and became very successful. “My dad told me, ‘Freddy, I couldn’t do it anywhere else. This country, our country, is special. What you got, you didn’t earn. I
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gave it to you and you’re on your own now and gotta go earn it yourself,” Scheffler said. Scheffler got his first job at 11 and worked as a paper delivery boy on a bicycle. He’s dug sewers, worked on road construction crews and all sorts of other jobs since then. “We’ve got a country that has so much potential,” Scheffler said. Scheffler’s mother came from a long line of New York City policemen. Her dad served on the NYPD for more than 40 years and dozens of his uncles and cousins were also NYPD cops. But Scheffler wasn’t interested in staying close to home. He joined the special forces and was sent to Korea and served in the DMZ “when Vietnam broke” and his orders changed. Once in country, he and only a handful of other
Americans recruited, trained and deployed irregulars in the Mekong Delta. “We ran seven-man teams in ambush operations beefing up the spirits of the local villagers because they were getting hammered by the VC,” Scheffler said “We created some havoc for the tax collectors and made life very unpleasant for them.” After Scheffler’s “leg got screwed up” he came back stateside and eventually fibbed his way through flight school because at 6’6” he was too tall and heavy to be a pilot. A colonel at his final physical exam asked him how he had made it that far in flight school and Scheffler told him that he “slouched.” The colonel was impressed and gave him a permanent height waiver and let the weight issue slide. Back in Vietnam,
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Scheffler flew with the Air Cavalry. “The purpose of the Air Cavalry was to make sure those kids on the ground didn’t step into something,” he said. “It was a lot easier to put a bird in the air to draw fire so those kids didn’t walk into it.” Scheffler said that crashes like his, where he flew under the tree canopy before getting “shellacked” and pulling up into a tree before crashing back onto the ground, were commonplace, everyday events. Scheffler eventually made his way back home and left the Army. “I got out of the military on a Friday and started with Coldwell Banker on a Monday,” he said. The rest, as they say, is history.
LITTLE LEAGUE CONTINUED FROM A10
Mikelsen reflected on his childhood teams that played on South Kitsap’s dilapidated fields. “I was the only boy in the family in Banner,” he said. “I used to play out in the cow pastures. Whenever I was going to get a baseball, I would either sew the baseball or tape it up. Same thing when you had a broken bat.” From cow pastures to groomed ballparks, his total involvement in youth sports led to much more for the league. The first of his many accolades came in 1978 when
Port Orchard named a field in his honor. “That was pretty nice,” said Mikelsen, who also has thrown out the first pitch for the Seattle Mariners, including the team’s home opener in 2003 to honor his military and Little League service. “I always said, ‘By golly, you’ve got a field named after you before you died. Usually, it’s a memorial. ‘” When Mikelsen reflects on his life — whether it derives from a ping or a violent explosion — he said he hopes people remember him for one thing. “I probably did what I promised to do during the war,” he said.
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SPACE FOR RENT Twelve Trees Business Park
hr@soundpublishing.com
hr@soundpublishing.com
Commercial Rentals Office/Commercial
OFFICE & WAREHOUSE
ADVERTISING SALES MANAGER The Port Orchard Independent is looking for an Advertising Sales Manager. Candidates must have strong leadership and people management skills. This is a working sales position; you will build and maintain local accounts. You should have a good understanding of all facets of newspaper operations with emphasis on sales a n d m a r k e t i n g . Yo u should also have strong Internet and social media skills and be wellsuited to working with government, community groups and clients in creating effective advertising. If you are creative, customer-dr iven, s u c c e s s - o r i e n t e d , we want to hear from you. Compensation includes salary plus commission and expense reimbursement. We offer excellent health and dental benefits, life insurance, paid vacation and holidays and a 401k with company match. We are part o f S o u n d P u bl i s h i n g ; Washington’s largest private, independent newsp a p e r c o m p a ny. E O E Please submit your resume and cover letter with salary requirements to
Carriers The North Kitsap Herald has openings for Carrier Routes. No collecting, no selling. Friday mornings. If interested call Christy 360-779-4464
INCOME OPPORTUNITY! The Bainbridge Island Review newspaper seeking quality motor route carriers. Thursday night delivery. No collections. Must be at least 18 years of age. Reliable people with reliable vehicle please call Brian. 206-842-6613
Employment General
Employment Media
MARKETING ASSISTANT Bainbridge Island Are you good at organization and customer service? Do you enjoy wor king with people? We are looking for someone with a dynamic personality to be part of our team. Must be able to work independently yet be par t of a team. Computer skills word & excel. Hours are negotiable. Please send resume to hr@soundpublishing.com or mail to: HR/MABI, Sound Publishing, Inc., 19351 8th Ave NE, Suite 106, Poulsbo, WA 98370
REPORTER Reporter sought for staff opening with the Peninsula Daily News, a sixday newspaper on Washington’s beautiful North Olympic Peninsula that includes the cities of Por t Angeles, Sequim, P o r t To w n s e n d a n d Forks (yes, the “Twilight� Forks, but no vampires or werewolves). Bring your experience from a weekly or small daily -from the first day, you’ll be able to show off the writing and photography skills you’ve already acquired while sharpening your talent with the help o f ve t e ra n n ew s r o o m leaders. This is a general assignment reporting position in our Port Angeles office in which being a self-starter must be demonstrated through professional experience. Port Angeles-based Peninsula Daily News, circulation 16,000 daily and 15,000 Sunday (plus a website getting up to one million hits a month), publishes separate editions for Clallam and Jefferson counties. Check out the PDN at w w w. p e n i n s u l a d a i l y news.com and the beauty and recreational oppor tunities at http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/section/pdntabs#vizguide. In-person visit and tryout are required, so Washington/Northwest applicants given preference. Send cover letter, resume and five best writi n g a n d p h o t o g r a p hy clips to Leah Leach, managing editor/news, P.O. Box 1330, 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 9 8 3 6 2 , o r e m a i l leah.leach@peninsuladailynews.com.
&INDĂĽIT ĂĽ"UYĂĽIT ĂĽ3ELLĂĽIT NW ADS COM Market Research Participants Wanted Need market research participants to evaluate local establishments. Apply FREE: shop.bestmark.com or call 800-969-8477 &INDĂĽ)T ĂĽ"UYĂĽ)T ĂĽ3ELLĂĽ)T ,OOKINGĂĽFORĂĽTHEĂĽRIDE OFĂĽYOURĂĽLIFE WWW NW ADS COM ĂĽHOURSĂĽAĂĽDAY Employment Marketing
MARKETING REPRESENTATIVE Kitsap County Are you good at organization and customer service? Do you enjoy wor king with people? This position requires both telephone and in p e r s o n s a l e s. I f yo u have a dynamic personality and enjoy working with people then this is t h e p e r fe c t p o s i t i o n . Salary plus commission. Please send resume to hr@soundpublishing.com or mail to: HR/MRNK, Sound Publishing, Inc., 19351 8th Ave NE, Suite 106, Poulsbo, WA 98370
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Employment Media
REPORTER
home services
The Sequim Gazette, a weekly community newspaper located on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington state, is acHome Services cepting applications for a Hauling & Cleanup full-time general assignment reporter. The ideal GOT CLUTTER? candidate will have solid WE TAKE IT ALL! repor ting and writing Junk, Appliances, skills, have up-to-date Yard Debris, etc. k n ow l e d g e o f t h e A P Serving Kitsap Co. Stylebook, be able to Since 1997 shoot photos, be able to 360-377-7990 use InDesign and con206-842-2924 tribute to staff blogs and Web updates. We offer Get the ball rolling... vacation and sick leave, and paid holidays. If you Call 800-388-2527 today. have a passion for comHome Services munity news repor ting and a desire to work in Landscape Services an ambitious, dynamic newsroom, we want to Countryside hear from you. E.O.E. Landscaping and Email your resume, covMaintenence er letter and up to 5 nonreturnable writing and Years of Happy, photo samples to
hr@soundpublishing.com Or mail to SQMREP/HR Dept. Sound Publishing 19351 8th Ave. NE, Suite 106, Poulsbo, WA 98370
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Miscellaneous
NEED CASH??
stuff Antiques & Collectibles
I Will Buy Your Maple Tree’s! If You Have 1 or 101. Give Us a Call. J & L Tone Woods Harold Kupers 360-508-1313 Tim Adams 360-827-2436
Musical Instruments
ANTIQUE bedroom set. Beautiful Lion’s Head, from the 1800s. Double bed and two dressers. $2500. Call (206)4087427, Vashon.
HAYNES FLUTE, solid silver, $1500 OBO. ROY SEAMAN wood piccolo with ster ling key s, $ 1 8 0 0 O B O. Both instruments professional quality. ExAppliances cellent condition. Loc a t e d i n Po u l s b o. MATCHING Washer and (360)394-1818 Dryer set, $355. GuaranUse our handy online teed! 360-405-1925 ad 24 hours a day form by clicking the “Place an adâ€? link at www.nw-ads.com to put an ad in the ClassiďŹ eds online and in your local paper.
flea market Home Furnishings
ANTIQUE WARDROBE Beautiful crown molding! 2 Pine front doors and Walnut sides! Two large storage drawers. 80� tall, and 45� wide. 20� deep which is perfect for hanging clothes. Excellent cond! Loving transpor ted from Minesota. $900. Bainbridge Island. Call Donna for an appointment to see this functional, gorgeous piece!! 206-780-1144. Must Sell! New NASA Memory foam matt. set. Full $375, Qn $400, King $500. New. 20 yr warr. Del. avail. 253-539-1600 --------------------------------Brand New Orthopedic matt. & box spring. Still in plastic. With warranty! Twin $175, Full $200, Queen $230, King $350. Call 253-537-3056 --------------------------------Factory Closeout BR set. Incl: bed, nightstand, dresser, mirror. Full/ Queen, $395. King, $495. 253-539-1600 --------------------------------NEW Microfiber Sectional. Scotch Guarded, pet & kid friendly. Only $499. 253-537-3056 --------------------------------New Adjustable Bed w/ memory foam mattress. List: $2800. Sacrifice, $950. 253-537-3056
pets/animals Dogs
AKC GERMAN Shepherd puppies, bred for sound temperament and train a b i l i t y. A l l G e r m a n bloodlines. Parents onsite and family raised. $900. 360-456-0362 AKC REGISTERED Lab Puppies. Over 30+ titled dogs in the last 5 generations. Sire is a Master Hunter and Cer tified Pointing Lab. OFA Hip and Elbows, Dews Removed, First Shots, Dewor ming. 6 Males (1 Black, 5 Yellow), 6 Fem a l e s ( 2 Ye l l o w , 4 Black). $750 each. Call Mike, 360-547-9393
Bottomless Garage Sale Ads All you can say and more! No word limit for just $37! Advertise your upcoming garage sale in your local community newspaper and online to reach thousands of households in your area. Call: 800-388-2527 Fax: 360-598-6800 or log on: www.nw-ads.com
GREAT DANE
Jewelry & Fur
Must sell Beautiful Ladies size 7 wedding ring. White gold band. Nice 1/2 karat surrounded by (4) 1/8 karat Diamonds. Total weight little over 1 karat. Paid $4,000 asking $2,000 OBO. Call 253-579-3460 Miscellaneous
1/2 OFF Glass w/ Purchase of Garage Door 1-888-289-6945
A-1 Door Service (Mention this ad)
A K C G R E AT D A N E puppies! Health guarantee! Very sweet, lovable, intelligent, gentle giants. Males and females. Now offering Full-Euro’s, HalfEuro’s & Standard Great Danes. Dreyersdanes is Oregon state’s largest breeder of Great Danes and licensed since 2002. $500 & up (every color but Fawn). Also; selling Standard Poodles. Call 5 0 3 - 5 5 6 - 4 1 9 0 . www.dreyersdanes.com MINIATURE PINSCHER Puppies For Sale. I have 5 adorable puppies waiting to come home with you. 3 Boys and 2 Girls. Tails cropped and Dew Claws removed. Bor n 07/30/12. Boys: $300, Girls: $400. Please call A m b e r To d ay a t 3 6 0 682-5030 or 775-4555979
NOVEMBER, 2012
| VETERANS LIFE
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RETRAINING CONTINUED FROM A9
associated degrees from VRAP was ruled last June to be in violation of the “spirit” of the legislation creating the program. Tonie Jeffrey is one such veteran whose seen the VRAP money delay issue firsthand. An Army veteran with two bachelors degrees from the University of Washington, she was one of the first to enroll in VRAP at O.C. last spring and plans
to use the program to get an associate’s degree in “information systems” to better her chances of reentering the workforce. Jeffery said that sometimes getting reimbursed can take two months. “It’s tough with the money,” she said. Other issues Jeffery has seen in the program are the way education payments are prorated and tied to a “day rate” that can negatively affect a student when the quarter only goes to Dec. 7. The rest of that month isn’t covered she said.
Randall Burgess, an Army veteran working in the Vet Corps program, said that some schools in the state certify enrollment on day one of classes, which gets the VRAP money moving faster. That difference is a big help to cash-strapped veterans the programs seeks to help, he said. “There is no holdup,” Burgess said. This fall, Olympic College’s student veterans enrolled under VRAP that faced that $1,500 financial hurdle, saw their financial aid “fast tracked” so that
Pell Grants would be available to cover tuition and books on day one of class this fall, Larson said. Larson said there were various ways for the up-front money required to enter O.C. to be taken care of, including special 10 percent and 15 percent tuition waivers for veterans that served in combat and for those who served supporting those in combat. Another solution is making three monthly $500 payments, she said. Cleman said that after the upfront tuition problem first surfaced, Larson “went to
bat” for the veterans at O.C. in order to find a solution for the VA gap. While it’s hard to say how many VRAP eligible unemployed veterans live in Kitsap County, nearly 1,200 sought the services of the county’s WorkSource office between Jan. 1 and the end of August. Margret Hess, director of WorkSource Kitsap County, said the numbers of veterans seeking direct help with their job hunts varies between 195 and 300 each month. “That’s not counting those who come in and use only
the resource center,” Hess said. An estimated 34,000 veterans of the eligible age live in Kitsap County. However, most pre-9/11 veterans have a higher employment rate than non-veterans of the same age. Larson said that between eight and 10 students are enrolled at O.C. this fall under VRAP, but that the program is catching on and expects that more will take advantage of the new program as they become aware.
USS TURNER JOY EXPERIENCE OUR ASLYUM!!! Event:
At:
October 26th & 27th: 6:30 pm to Midnight USS Turner Joy October 28th to 31st: 300 Washington Beach 6:30 pm to 10 pm Bremerton Boardwalk
Sponsors:
PATRIOT BREMERTON
Dogs
Bazaars/Craft Fairs Port Orchard
LABRADOR
garage sales - WA ADORABLE Chocolate Lab pups! Ready 10/20 for new homes! Great with young kids & other dogs, well socialized. Perfect for family pet, breeding or hunting. A K C r e g i s t e r e d , d ew claws removed & first shots. Loveable, loyal temperment! 4 females $550/ea. 2 males $500/ea. Clinton, Whidbey Island. Chris or Marcie 360-341-2136.
Bazaars/Craft Fairs
HOLIDAY BAZAAR. October 26th-27th, 10am6pm. October 28th, 10am-4pm. Par kwood Community Club, 3045 SE Madrona, Por t Orchard. Admission: FREE! (accepting nonp e r i s h a b l e i t e m s fo r South Kitsap Helpline). Gifts for all occasions!
Think Inside the Box Advertise in your local community newspaper, Little Nickel, Nickel Ads and on the web with just one phone call. Call 800-388-2527 or 800-544-0505 for more information.
COLBY UMC BAZAAR! Kitsap’s Destination Bazaar! November 2nd and 3rd. Fr iday, 9:30am 4pm; Saturday, 9:30am 2pm. Colby United Methodist Church, corner of Southworth Drive and Har vey Street. A ve r i t a bl e b o u t i q u e o f handmade items by our Womens Group. No Vendors. Kitchen Items, Baskets, Bake Sale, N e e d l e w o r k , D e c o r, Cards, Gifts. Hot Lunch Served Both Days from 11:30am to 1:30pm. Proceeds Benefit Missions. 360-871-3365. SONS OF NORWAY Ladies Club Scandinavian B a z a a r & B a ke S a l e. Sunday, November 4th, 11:30am-4:00pm. 1018 18th Street, Bremerton. Cookies, Needlepoint, Holiday Breads, Rosemaling. Questions? Call 360-373-1503, MonThurs 10am-3pm. S U Q UA M I S H C h u r c h Christmas Bazaar & Silent Auction. November 30th and December 1st, 9am-4pm. 18732 Division Ave, Suquamish. Handmade & Recycled Treasures, Swags, Soup & Pie, Too! 2EACHåTHOUSANDSåOFå READERSåWITHåONEåCALLå å
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VETERANS LIFE |
Bazaars/Craft Fairs
THE HANSVILLE Ar ts and Crafts Guild invites you to our Fall & Holiday Art & Crafts Tour. Friday & S a t u r d ay, O c t o b e r 26th-27th, 10am-4pm. Maps available at the Hansville Store and from any Ar t Guild member and Tour participants. Estate Sales POULSBO
OCT. 26 th -27 th ENTIRE Household Sells!!!!!!! Furniture, tools, garden equipment, small appliances & more! No clothing. Friday & Saturday from 9am to 4pm at 26535 Sanderling Place. Follow signs from HWY 3, North of Poulsbo.
4REASUREå(UNTING #HECKåOUTåOURå2ECYCLERå ADSåBEFOREåSOMEONEå ELSEålNDSåYOURåRICHES
Tickets:
306.792.2457
Bring a can of food and get $1.00 off Monday Military Day $5.00 with I.D. General Admission $10.00 Recommended for ages of 8 and older scariest ship ever NO REFUNDS!
Marine Sail
Automobiles Subaru
Sport Utility Vehicles Oldsmobile
12’3”x6’ GLEN EL Design Bobcat sailboat. Marconi sail, and electric outboard included. Handcrafted wood boat in good condition! $2,500 obo. Call 360678-6684.
2003 SUBARU Outback station wagon LTD, 6cyl automatic, 76,000 miles, new brakes and tires, regular maintenance w i t h r e c e i p t s , fo r e s t green. Runs like a dream. $12,000. Located on San Juan Island. (360)378-1888, (619)203-4313
2002 OLDSMOBILE Bravada Spor ts Utility 4WD, AT, 4 door. Crusie in style with this fully loaded equipment package! Sleek silver exterior with beige leather interior. Your saftey is complete with On Star option! Runs well! Only 122,000 miles. $3,500. Vashon Island. Call Bob 206-619-1453.
Automobiles Classics & Collectibles
1969 VW BEETLE. Pale Blue and is a Beauty. Original paint, 4 speed. Over $3,000 in reciepts. Fun to drive. Perfect for teenager looking for first car or VW Buff. Asking $8,000 OBO. 253-2171986 or 253-857-6162 after 5pm. Olalla/ Kitsap County area. Can email photos.
Add a photo to your ad online and in print for just one low price nw-ads.com 800-388-2527
Sell your stuff free in the Super Flea! Your items totalling Motorhomes $150 or less will run for free one week in your local community paper and online. Call today to place your ad 866-825-9001 31’ FLEETWOOD Storm Sport Utility Vehicles Jeep
Automobiles Ford
wheels Marine Power
17’ Glass Steury 1979. Solid boat! Comes with Tr a i l e r, S t r o n g 8 5 h p Johnson engine, brand new 9.8 Tohatsu motor, n ew f i s h f i n d e r, n ew electric down rigger, new electric wench, all new seats, and many extras. O a k H a r b o r. $ 2 5 0 0 . (360)675-1662
N OV EM B ER 2012
2003 FORD Taurus SE. Beautiful condition. Under 97,000 miles. All power, air conditioning. All the amenities of the SE model! Charcoal Grey Metallic. Near ly new Goodyear Radials. Babied with Mobile One. $5995 Firm. She’s Worth It! Compare with local dealers at $6600 to $7995. Whidbey Island. 360-279-1753
M OV I N G A N D M U S T sell our 2008 Jeep Wrangler! Black, 4 door, 4WD, power locks / windows, AC, locking gas cap, 3.8 V-6, 3 piece hard top, seat covers, alarm, mud flaps, sirus radio, sub woofer, bra / hood cover, step rails, tow package, EBS anti skid, beefy tires, chrome wheels, 49,000 miles. Ve r y g o o d c o n d i t i o n ! $22,500. Kitsap County. Cathy 360-981-3752 or cscottdo@hotmail.com
Fully Furnished in well cared for cond! Fully self contained! Extremely clean inside and out! Sleeps up to 4. Easy d r i v i n g w i t h b a ck u p camera. 2 TV’s (including King Dome satellite system), DVD player, radio & CD player. 2 tip outs. New engine 2010 with only 2,000 miles. $3,200 OBO. Oak Harb o r, W h i d b ey I s l a n d . 360-675-1172. Tents & Travel Trailers
1993 DODGE WITH Cummins Diesel Engine. Trailer package, club cab, camper shell, 112,000 miles. Second gas tank. 1999 34’ Kountry Star Trailer with slide, lots of storage, oak cabinets, corian kitchen counter, central heat and air, power ceiling vent with rain sensor, sleeps 4. Ever ything in good condition! $18,000 obo. Oak Harbor. 360-2791678.
Tents & Travel Trailers
2004 KOMFORT 25TBS in excellent condition! $ 1 2 , 9 5 0 . G a ra g e d o r covered when not in use with low miles (4 trips per Summer). Length: 26’x8’0”. Axles: 2. Weight: 6018 lbs. Slides: 1. Queen and 3 bunk beds. Sleeps 9. New tires with spare tire and carrier. Weight equalizing hitch with sway control bar. Power Tonque Jack. Four manual stabilizer jacks. Large awning, luggage rack and bike rack attachment. Air conditioner, furnace and lots of accessories. Great deal! Call 425445-0631 or email jfinan61@hotmail.com for more info. Currently located in Fall City, WA. 29’ ALPEN LITE travel t r a i l e r. S o l i d , c l e a n ! Comfor table walkaround queen size bed, kitchen and dinette, bathroom with shower, good storage areas, propane tank, some appliances will need replaced. Good condition! $3,500 / offer. 360-3769020. Orcas Island.
Use our handy online ad 24 hours a day form by clicking the “Place an ad” link at www.nw-ads.com to put an ad in the Classifieds online and in your local paper.
The Bond
lot·ter·y
interesting time. The way I ended up in the Navy was through the cache program. For a drafted guy like me who was in college, the cache program allowed us to finish the first year of college then choose the service to enter. The hitches were longer. As I remember, three years for the Army and four for the Navy, Air Force and Marines. I picked the Navy. I thought carriers were cool and hard to sink. Of course I didn’t know at that time I would get seasick in a bathtub. Some things end up weird. Seasickness was not to be a problem because after basic (July and August in San Diego - that was a treat) the Navy decided I should become a psychiatric corpsman. I apparently told someone I
An activity or event regarded as having an outcome depending on fate By Dennis Box
I
have seldom written about my hitch in the Navy and never in any detail since I was honorably discharged on June 30, 1976. I remember the date I left very well and the day I entered, June 29, 1972. I have often been asked how I ended up in the Navy. I usually respond by saying, “It’s the only lottery I have ever won,” which is true in a twisted way.
I was drafted in 1971 during the final years of the Vietnam War. At that time the lottery system was used for the draft or conscription. If I remember correctly, 1971 was the last time men were actually drafted, although the lottery continued until about 1973. For anyone around my age, we all have a clear memory of waiting for the number assigned to your 18th birthday to find out if who would be the winners. My number was of course,
one. It is the only lottery I have ever won or entered. I guess I learned my lesson on lotteries. As I remember, the lottery was in August. I was enrolled in my first year at the University of Washington and college deferments had been ended. I was living in an apartment on University Avenue next to the post office. I remember watching this massive group of students coming down the streets protesting the war. It was an
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Reach Dennis Box at editor@ bremertonreporter.com
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I met a lot of very smart and interesting people. A few of us from Philly have contacted each other as we’ve gotten older. I am probably easiest to find because I have been writing for decades and worked in the film business before getting into newspapers. I have thought about writing a book about the time. Maybe. I will say that during that four-year hitch, what I learned I have used nearly every day of my life since. I was not thrilled about winning the lottery at 18, but I can’t imagine what or where I would be today if I hadn’t won.
Dinner spend $25 take $6 off
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4 Cyl, Automatic, Low Miles, PW, PDL, Cruise, CD
was majoring in psychology at the U. I ended up serving as a psych corpsman at the Philadelphia Naval Hospital until 1976. It was a fascinating hitch. I had a very interesting job and the good fortune of finding out I did not want to enter that field after I was out of the service. I experienced my first real big city and saw the Broad Street bullies win the Stanley Cup. I still love hockey and cover it whenever I get the opportunity. There are many of those boys (today I know they were boys) who came through those T-11, T-16, T-14 wards I will never forget. I was fortunate to be in a hospital doing some groundbreaking work treating bipolar depression.
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For more information, please contact Sarah Miksa at 360.473.2826 or smiksa@olympic.edu www.olympic.edu/Students/WFDBS/WFD/AirWa The Air Washington Project is 100% funded (in the amount of $20 million) by a grant awarded under the Trade Adjustment Assistance Community College and Career Training Grants Program, as implemented by the US Department of Labor’s Employment and Training Administration. Olympic College does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, disability, sexual orientation, or age in its programs and activities.
N OV EM B ER 2012
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VETER ANS LIFE | 15