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Celso a page
Celso R. Rangel, a sopho-
more home-schooled stu-
dent, served as a page for
State Representative Bill
Eickmeyer, D-Belfair, to-
ward the end of the recent
legislative session. Celso
is a son of Tonya and Cel-
so C. Rangel of Shelton. In
his work as a page, he was
assigned a variety of leg-
islative duties.
Shelton identified as 'financially
distressed' for clean water funds
The Washington Department
of Ecology invites the public to
comment on a list of 48 projects it
proposes to award approximately
$109 million in loans and grants
to improve and protect water
quality.
Eleven of the 48 projects worth
$25 million are proviso projects
based on directives and appro-
priations from the Washington
Legislature. Local projects up for
loans from the Centennial Clean
Water Fund, the Nonpoint Source
Program and the Water Pollution
Control Revolving Fund are:
Rustlewood Wastewater
Treatment. Proposed is a 20-year
loan of $1.6 million for improve-
ments to a facility that is under a
compliance order by the state. Be-
cause this is classified as a "hard-
ship" to residents of Rustlewood,
no interest would be charged.
The Belfair Water Reclama-
tion Facility. Proposed is a 20-
year loan of $3,033,500 to Mason
County for project design at an
interest rate of 3.1 percent.
The Basin 5 Sewer Rehabili-
tation Project. Proposed is a loan
of $1 million to the City of Shelton
for design of a sewer system serv-
ing the downtown area that would
reduce the problem ofstormwater
leaking into pipes and inundating
the treatment plant during heavy
rains. It would be a 20-year loan
at an interest rate of 3.1 percent.
Shelton Wastewater Treat-
ment Plant. Proposed is a loan of
$1,390,850 to the city for design
of improvements to its facility.
The loan would be for 20 years at
an interest rate of 3.1 percent.
Shelton is among six locali-
ties identified as "financially dis-
tressed," a label that qualifies the
city for a share of $24.7 million in
grants and loans. The other finan-
cially distressed communities are
Brewster, Warden, Friday Har-
bor, Toppenish hnd Coulee City.
The proposed projects will help
improve and protect water qual-
ity for human health, aquatic life,
fish habitat, recreation and other
important uses.The array of proj-
ects eligible for funding includes
programs to improve on-site sep-
tic systems; projects to restore
streamside vegetation and reduce
agricultural impacts; low-impact
stormwater projects; and imple-
mentation and outreach activities
to clean up specific waters on the
Three will get Hanna scholarships
intern with the Mason County
Health Department.
Kristina Fox, who plans to
attend Central Washington Uni-
versity and study elementary
education. She received a $2,000
scholarship. She has a 3.13 grade-
point average. While at SHS,
Kristina participated in Key Club,
Climber Crew, Spanish Club, Pep
Club, golf and basketball teams,
Big Buddies and the National
Honor Society. Her community
activities included Mason County
Forest Festival Royal Court and
volunteer, Miss Mason County
volunteer and Kings cheerleading
competition team coach.
Shilo Henderson, who
plans to attend the University of
Washington and become a high-
school teacher. She received a
$1,000 scholarship. She has a
3.85 grade-point average. While
at SHS, Shilo participated in Key
Club, Honor Society and its ex-
ecutive board, Climber Crew, Big
Buddies and renaissance leader-
ship and was Associated Student
Body treasurer. Her community
activities included volunteering
with the SOCK (Save Our Coun-
ty's Kids) mentoring program and
youth group.
The scholarships, presented to
SHS seniors who plan to enter
careers in education, are given in
memory of Doug Hanna, a long-
time teacher and swim coach in
Shelton.
Three Shelton High School se-
niors have each been awarded
p oug Hanna Memorial Scholar-
ships.
The SHS recipients include:
Brett Riley, who plans to at-
tend Central Washington Univer-
sity and study elementary educa-
tion. He received a $3,000 schol-
arship. He has a 3.12 grade-point
average. Brett participated on the
baseball and basketball teams and
in Key Club and Spanish Club at
SHS. His community activities in-
cluded 4-H, parks and recreation
referee and coach, assisting with
summer youth basketball camps,
4-H camp counselor and volunteer
S()CK gets group hug
(Continued from page 19.) to the problems of our day, raised
state's list of polluted waters.
The Department of Ecology
accepts applications for projects
from cities, counties, tribes, con-
servation districts and other pub-
lic entities and qualified not-for-
profit organizations. Projects are
up for funding in fiscal year 2008,
which begins July 1, 2007 and
ends June 30, 2008.
Of the approximate $109 mil-
lion for 48 proposed activity and
facility projects, $41 million
comes from the Centennial Clean
Water Fund, $1.9 million from the
Nonpoint Source Program, and
$66 million from the Washington
State Water Pollution Control
Revolving Fund.
The Centennial Clean Water
Fund provides low-interest loans
and grants for wastewater treat-
ment facilities and grants for ac-
tivities to reduce nonpoint sourc-
es of water pollution. Nonpoint
pollution comes from many differ-
ent, hard-to-trace sources with no
obvious point of discharge.
The State Revolving Fund
provides low-interest loans for
wastewater treatment facilities
and related activities to reduce
nonpoint sources of water pollu-
tion. The Nonpoint Source Pro-
gram provides grants to reduce
nonpoint sources of water pollu-
tion.
Public comment on th
posals will be accepted
June 21. A public meeting0k
will begin at 10 a.m. on ::i !
day, June 7, in Room 1 at .
Placid Priory, 500 College
NE in Lacey. Interested
may send e-mail commente ,
Nejedly at jnej461@ecY:"
or call him at 360-407-650°'
City may change
its building code.
The Shelton City C
considering adopting the t
Model
tions of the National ,.,il
and the Washington State
ing Administrative code am
ments.
The 2(
tion codes will be
state of Washington as
Copies of the
codes are available
viewing between 8 a.m.
in the Community and
Development
Shelton Civic Center,
Cota Street.
Those with questions
Kelly Mayo, the city's
ficial, at 432-5175.
I
I
WOOD MADE EASY..._.
Encore Non-Catalytic Wood Stove
Top loading
Easy ash handling
Only .7 grams emission
- at a Great Price!
HERIlrA6E,i0000
PIIHIJICE SHOPtB. INC.
77g-3088 19410Viking Ave.NW. Poulsbo (Across from Poulsbo RV)
" 4090 W. St. Hwy. 16 Bremqwton (At Gorst on Waterside'
www.heritagefireplaceshop.com
mainstream institutions," McKay
said. "We build on each other in-
stead of negating each other."
As he tells it, integral think-
ing flows both ways, with SOCK
influenced by the delegation from
Seattle and the delegation influ-
enced by the people they met at
SOCK. The latter include Bott-
man and Sheldon, board members
of SOCK, the kids who hang out
there and Mason County officials
who support the nonprofit organi-
zation.
"WE'RE COMING here to be
vulnerable to it and be changed by
it," McKay said.
Integral thinkers make vigor-
ous use of the Internet, posting
blogs and notices from hither and
yon. Clifford has postings on Af-
rican Integral, while Leahy and
Teague have postings which de-
scribe their philosophies. Ken Wil-
bur, the pioneer of thi approach
Hood Canal
June 4-8
MONDAY: Breakfast: Breakfast pizza,
fruit, juice, milk. Lunch: Toasted turkey
& cheese sandwich, celery with peanut
butter, cantaloupe, pears, fruit snacks,
milk.
TUESDAY: Breakfast: Yogurt, string
cheese, fruit, juice, milk. Lunch: Chicken
fajita, rice pilaf, mixed vegetables, pine-
apple tidbits, spice bar, milk.
WEDNESDAY: Breakfast: Pancake, sau-
sage on a stick, fruit, juice, milk. Lunch:
Teriyaki dippers, aloha roll, peaches,
fortune cookie, milk.
THURSDAY: Breakfast: Cold cereal,
graham cracker, fruit, juice, milk. Lunch:
Wiener roll-up with mustard, potato
wedges, apple, orange, corn chips,
milk.
FRIDAY.' Breakfast: Egg patty, hash
browns, sauge, fruit, juice, milk. Lunch:
Sloppy Joe, baked beans, banana, fruit
roll-up, milk.
Sponsored by: A
WEST COAST BANK
Hoodsport
N. 24341 Hwy. 101 877-5272
the bar of integral revelations to
a new height with an extension
Internet posting about a series of
grand real seizures that began on
December 5 of last year and that
almost took his life. He wrote:
"My tongue was nearly bitten
off in several places, and it was
swollen to the extent it completely
filled my mouth - basically it was
the size of a tangerine, making
intubation necessary for me to
breath," adding later: "The one
lingering problem is that I have
one hell of a lisp. I'm told that it
will continue to significantly im-
prove; the tongue is so highly vas-
cular that it has a high degree of
healing capacity."
UNOCAL 76 PRODUCTS
*Motor Oils and Hydraulic Oils
* Industrial Lubricants
*Automotive Oils
* Metal Working Fluids
* Greases and Gear Oils
* Solvents, Antifreeze
* Cutting Oils
racing
*Job Site High-Volume Commercial Diesel Fueling
* Pump Repair, Tanks, Nozzles, Grease Guns
* Heating Oil Delivered
* Furnace and Stove Oil, Kerosene
Located at Sanderson
Industrial Park
0
United Way of Mason County wishes to thank the.
following businesses and/or their employees for their
generous contributions to our annual campaign:
Alaska Airlines
Alpine Way Retirement Apartments
Ameriprise Financial
Anchor Bank
Area Agency on Aging
Bank of America
Behavioral Health Resources
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Boeing
Catherine Wolf, CPA
CFC
CFD
Chauffeurs, Teamsters & Helpers Local No. 52
City of Shelton
Digital Printing
Foss Maritime Corporation
Fred Meyer
Gillis Auto Center
Grapeview School District
Green Diamond Resource Company
Haney Truck Lines
Heritage Bank
Hood Canal School District
Hoodsport Family Clinic, PS
IBM Employees & Retirees
Island Enterprises, Inc.
Kellogg's
Key Bank
Key's Community Leadership Gift Program
KMAS Radio Station
Lakeland Men's Golf Club
Lumbermens
Manke Lumber Corporate
Maple Glen Assisted Living
Mary M. Knight School District
Mason County Employees
Mason General Hospital
McDonald's of Lewis County (Shelton)
Morgan-Stanley
Morrissette & Associates
Nationwide Insurance
North Mason School District
Office Supply Store
Olympia Federal Savings
Olympia Oyster Company
Olympic Panel Products
Our Community Credit Union
Peninsula Community Credit Union
Pioneer School District
PUD #3
Qwest
Rainestree, Inc.
Rob Wilson-Hess
Shelton Family Medicine
Shelton Publishing, Inc., (Journal)
Shelton School District
Simpson Door
Simpson Timber
Skokomish Tribal Council
Squaxin Island Tribe
State Farm Companies Foundation
Sunlight Woodenworks, Inc.
Tupper's Floor Covering
WalMart
Washington Federal Savings
Washington Mutual
West Coast Bank
Weyerhaeuser
A Special "thank you" to all
our Individual Donors!
Give the United
United Way of Mason
The Collier Building
428 W. Birch, Suite 1
Shelton, WA 98584
(360) 426-4999
O
What Matters
This ad was paid for by
United Way
Board of Directors
Page 20 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, May 31,2007
Celso a page
Celso R. Rangel, a sopho-
more home-schooled stu-
dent, served as a page for
State Representative Bill
Eickmeyer, D-Belfair, to-
ward the end of the recent
legislative session. Celso
is a son of Tonya and Cel-
so C. Rangel of Shelton. In
his work as a page, he was
assigned a variety of leg-
islative duties.
Shelton identified as 'financially
distressed' for clean water funds
The Washington Department
of Ecology invites the public to
comment on a list of 48 projects it
proposes to award approximately
$109 million in loans and grants
to improve and protect water
quality.
Eleven of the 48 projects worth
$25 million are proviso projects
based on directives and appro-
priations from the Washington
Legislature. Local projects up for
loans from the Centennial Clean
Water Fund, the Nonpoint Source
Program and the Water Pollution
Control Revolving Fund are:
Rustlewood Wastewater
Treatment. Proposed is a 20-year
loan of $1.6 million for improve-
ments to a facility that is under a
compliance order by the state. Be-
cause this is classified as a "hard-
ship" to residents of Rustlewood,
no interest would be charged.
The Belfair Water Reclama-
tion Facility. Proposed is a 20-
year loan of $3,033,500 to Mason
County for project design at an
interest rate of 3.1 percent.
The Basin 5 Sewer Rehabili-
tation Project. Proposed is a loan
of $1 million to the City of Shelton
for design of a sewer system serv-
ing the downtown area that would
reduce the problem ofstormwater
leaking into pipes and inundating
the treatment plant during heavy
rains. It would be a 20-year loan
at an interest rate of 3.1 percent.
Shelton Wastewater Treat-
ment Plant. Proposed is a loan of
$1,390,850 to the city for design
of improvements to its facility.
The loan would be for 20 years at
an interest rate of 3.1 percent.
Shelton is among six locali-
ties identified as "financially dis-
tressed," a label that qualifies the
city for a share of $24.7 million in
grants and loans. The other finan-
cially distressed communities are
Brewster, Warden, Friday Har-
bor, Toppenish hnd Coulee City.
The proposed projects will help
improve and protect water qual-
ity for human health, aquatic life,
fish habitat, recreation and other
important uses.The array of proj-
ects eligible for funding includes
programs to improve on-site sep-
tic systems; projects to restore
streamside vegetation and reduce
agricultural impacts; low-impact
stormwater projects; and imple-
mentation and outreach activities
to clean up specific waters on the
Three will get Hanna scholarships
intern with the Mason County
Health Department.
Kristina Fox, who plans to
attend Central Washington Uni-
versity and study elementary
education. She received a $2,000
scholarship. She has a 3.13 grade-
point average. While at SHS,
Kristina participated in Key Club,
Climber Crew, Spanish Club, Pep
Club, golf and basketball teams,
Big Buddies and the National
Honor Society. Her community
activities included Mason County
Forest Festival Royal Court and
volunteer, Miss Mason County
volunteer and Kings cheerleading
competition team coach.
Shilo Henderson, who
plans to attend the University of
Washington and become a high-
school teacher. She received a
$1,000 scholarship. She has a
3.85 grade-point average. While
at SHS, Shilo participated in Key
Club, Honor Society and its ex-
ecutive board, Climber Crew, Big
Buddies and renaissance leader-
ship and was Associated Student
Body treasurer. Her community
activities included volunteering
with the SOCK (Save Our Coun-
ty's Kids) mentoring program and
youth group.
The scholarships, presented to
SHS seniors who plan to enter
careers in education, are given in
memory of Doug Hanna, a long-
time teacher and swim coach in
Shelton.
Three Shelton High School se-
niors have each been awarded
p oug Hanna Memorial Scholar-
ships.
The SHS recipients include:
Brett Riley, who plans to at-
tend Central Washington Univer-
sity and study elementary educa-
tion. He received a $3,000 schol-
arship. He has a 3.12 grade-point
average. Brett participated on the
baseball and basketball teams and
in Key Club and Spanish Club at
SHS. His community activities in-
cluded 4-H, parks and recreation
referee and coach, assisting with
summer youth basketball camps,
4-H camp counselor and volunteer
S()CK gets group hug
(Continued from page 19.) to the problems of our day, raised
state's list of polluted waters.
The Department of Ecology
accepts applications for projects
from cities, counties, tribes, con-
servation districts and other pub-
lic entities and qualified not-for-
profit organizations. Projects are
up for funding in fiscal year 2008,
which begins July 1, 2007 and
ends June 30, 2008.
Of the approximate $109 mil-
lion for 48 proposed activity and
facility projects, $41 million
comes from the Centennial Clean
Water Fund, $1.9 million from the
Nonpoint Source Program, and
$66 million from the Washington
State Water Pollution Control
Revolving Fund.
The Centennial Clean Water
Fund provides low-interest loans
and grants for wastewater treat-
ment facilities and grants for ac-
tivities to reduce nonpoint sourc-
es of water pollution. Nonpoint
pollution comes from many differ-
ent, hard-to-trace sources with no
obvious point of discharge.
The State Revolving Fund
provides low-interest loans for
wastewater treatment facilities
and related activities to reduce
nonpoint sources of water pollu-
tion. The Nonpoint Source Pro-
gram provides grants to reduce
nonpoint sources of water pollu-
tion.
Public comment on th
posals will be accepted
June 21. A public meeting0k
will begin at 10 a.m. on ::i !
day, June 7, in Room 1 at .
Placid Priory, 500 College
NE in Lacey. Interested
may send e-mail commente ,
Nejedly at jnej461@ecY:"
or call him at 360-407-650°'
City may change
its building code.
The Shelton City C
considering adopting the t
Model
tions of the National ,.,il
and the Washington State
ing Administrative code am
ments.
The 2(
tion codes will be
state of Washington as
Copies of the
codes are available
viewing between 8 a.m.
in the Community and
Development
Shelton Civic Center,
Cota Street.
Those with questions
Kelly Mayo, the city's
ficial, at 432-5175.
I
I
WOOD MADE EASY..._.
Encore Non-Catalytic Wood Stove
Top loading
Easy ash handling
Only .7 grams emission
- at a Great Price!
HERIlrA6E,i0000
PIIHIJICE SHOPtB. INC.
77g-3088 19410Viking Ave.NW. Poulsbo (Across from Poulsbo RV)
" 4090 W. St. Hwy. 16 Bremqwton (At Gorst on Waterside'
www.heritagefireplaceshop.com
mainstream institutions," McKay
said. "We build on each other in-
stead of negating each other."
As he tells it, integral think-
ing flows both ways, with SOCK
influenced by the delegation from
Seattle and the delegation influ-
enced by the people they met at
SOCK. The latter include Bott-
man and Sheldon, board members
of SOCK, the kids who hang out
there and Mason County officials
who support the nonprofit organi-
zation.
"WE'RE COMING here to be
vulnerable to it and be changed by
it," McKay said.
Integral thinkers make vigor-
ous use of the Internet, posting
blogs and notices from hither and
yon. Clifford has postings on Af-
rican Integral, while Leahy and
Teague have postings which de-
scribe their philosophies. Ken Wil-
bur, the pioneer of thi approach
Hood Canal
June 4-8
MONDAY: Breakfast: Breakfast pizza,
fruit, juice, milk. Lunch: Toasted turkey
& cheese sandwich, celery with peanut
butter, cantaloupe, pears, fruit snacks,
milk.
TUESDAY: Breakfast: Yogurt, string
cheese, fruit, juice, milk. Lunch: Chicken
fajita, rice pilaf, mixed vegetables, pine-
apple tidbits, spice bar, milk.
WEDNESDAY: Breakfast: Pancake, sau-
sage on a stick, fruit, juice, milk. Lunch:
Teriyaki dippers, aloha roll, peaches,
fortune cookie, milk.
THURSDAY: Breakfast: Cold cereal,
graham cracker, fruit, juice, milk. Lunch:
Wiener roll-up with mustard, potato
wedges, apple, orange, corn chips,
milk.
FRIDAY.' Breakfast: Egg patty, hash
browns, sauge, fruit, juice, milk. Lunch:
Sloppy Joe, baked beans, banana, fruit
roll-up, milk.
Sponsored by: A
WEST COAST BANK
Hoodsport
N. 24341 Hwy. 101 877-5272
the bar of integral revelations to
a new height with an extension
Internet posting about a series of
grand real seizures that began on
December 5 of last year and that
almost took his life. He wrote:
"My tongue was nearly bitten
off in several places, and it was
swollen to the extent it completely
filled my mouth - basically it was
the size of a tangerine, making
intubation necessary for me to
breath," adding later: "The one
lingering problem is that I have
one hell of a lisp. I'm told that it
will continue to significantly im-
prove; the tongue is so highly vas-
cular that it has a high degree of
healing capacity."
UNOCAL 76 PRODUCTS
*Motor Oils and Hydraulic Oils
* Industrial Lubricants
*Automotive Oils
* Metal Working Fluids
* Greases and Gear Oils
* Solvents, Antifreeze
* Cutting Oils
racing
*Job Site High-Volume Commercial Diesel Fueling
* Pump Repair, Tanks, Nozzles, Grease Guns
* Heating Oil Delivered
* Furnace and Stove Oil, Kerosene
Located at Sanderson
Industrial Park
0
United Way of Mason County wishes to thank the.
following businesses and/or their employees for their
generous contributions to our annual campaign:
Alaska Airlines
Alpine Way Retirement Apartments
Ameriprise Financial
Anchor Bank
Area Agency on Aging
Bank of America
Behavioral Health Resources
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Boeing
Catherine Wolf, CPA
CFC
CFD
Chauffeurs, Teamsters & Helpers Local No. 52
City of Shelton
Digital Printing
Foss Maritime Corporation
Fred Meyer
Gillis Auto Center
Grapeview School District
Green Diamond Resource Company
Haney Truck Lines
Heritage Bank
Hood Canal School District
Hoodsport Family Clinic, PS
IBM Employees & Retirees
Island Enterprises, Inc.
Kellogg's
Key Bank
Key's Community Leadership Gift Program
KMAS Radio Station
Lakeland Men's Golf Club
Lumbermens
Manke Lumber Corporate
Maple Glen Assisted Living
Mary M. Knight School District
Mason County Employees
Mason General Hospital
McDonald's of Lewis County (Shelton)
Morgan-Stanley
Morrissette & Associates
Nationwide Insurance
North Mason School District
Office Supply Store
Olympia Federal Savings
Olympia Oyster Company
Olympic Panel Products
Our Community Credit Union
Peninsula Community Credit Union
Pioneer School District
PUD #3
Qwest
Rainestree, Inc.
Rob Wilson-Hess
Shelton Family Medicine
Shelton Publishing, Inc., (Journal)
Shelton School District
Simpson Door
Simpson Timber
Skokomish Tribal Council
Squaxin Island Tribe
State Farm Companies Foundation
Sunlight Woodenworks, Inc.
Tupper's Floor Covering
WalMart
Washington Federal Savings
Washington Mutual
West Coast Bank
Weyerhaeuser
A Special "thank you" to all
our Individual Donors!
Give the United
United Way of Mason
The Collier Building
428 W. Birch, Suite 1
Shelton, WA 98584
(360) 426-4999
O
What Matters
This ad was paid for by
United Way
Board of Directors
Page 20 - Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, May 31,2007