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Group goes ‘splish-splash’ to raise some cash
By Kristen Pierce
KP News
Liz Hoeppner really enjoys helping out Peninsula High
School students. She has been volunteering for the PHS
Track Team as the S.A.V.E. thrift store volunteer
coordinator since 2005 while her children attended the
school. Her daughter, Jenny, graduated in 2004, while
her son, Greyson, will graduate in 2007.
S.A.V.E.
is located on Purdy Lane, just below the high school.
The name is abbreviated for Seahawk Academic and
Vocational Education. PHS actually owns the property so
overhead costs are low, enabling most of the profit to
go to a scholarship committee that oversees a
scholarship program for seniors. Volunteers, including
students, parents and friends, provide most of the
manpower in the store. Over the years, the profits have
provided hundreds of thousands of dollars in
scholarships to PHS students seeking higher education.
The students must participate for 10 or more hours for
approximately one month to acquire their certificate of
participation. In addition to receiving a scholarship
reward, they learn retail sales skills and gather
community service credit. Every senior who has a
scholarship notebook receives some type of scholarship
reward.
“I think it’s a fantastic program
for the children,” said Gloria Bowman, one of the
assistant managers of the store. Bowman has been
involved with the store for many years. Although her
daughter graduated in 2001, she is compelled to remain
working in the store.
S.A.V.E. will celebrate its 20th
anniversary this summer. Manager Kris Hohensee plans to
have various special sales throughout the month of July.
The highlight of the celebration will be on Saturday,
July 15, with a special sale offering hundreds of books
at very low prices. Everything in the store will be
discounted, and complimentary refreshments will be
offered to shoppers.
Besides the profits from the thrift
store, Hoeppner plans to try a new approach for raising
funds for the track team. With weather warming up, she
is organizing a car wash. The perfect place seemed to be
at the Harvest Time Country Store in Wauna, which allows
people to hold fund-raising car washes in the parking
lot. Many churches, schools, and other organizations
have benefited from their generosity.
Students, family, and friends are
welcome to participate in the fund-raiser, which will be
held on two Saturdays, July 22 and 29. The profits will
go to the graduating seniors of 2007.
“It’s very rewarding to work with
other volunteers because they are very caring and
generous people,” Hoeppner said. She plans to continue
to volunteer her time for PHS throughout the following
school year and most likely even after her son graduates
in 2007.
Based on Hoeppner’s plans, it seems
that July will be a great month to thrift shop, save
money, and get the car washed, all for the great cause
of helping out with the futures of young adults.
The new resolution prompted
Gallacher, who reports to the five commissioners, to say
in an interview, “We’re going to have to revisit the
budget. The commissioners attend two meetings a month —
three to five or six hours apiece. They also have other
things that come to them from me. Fire district
commissioners are paid for their meetings — and other
county elected officials have small stipends. My hope is
they (the commissioners) don’t take the full amount;
there is nothing in the budget for it. But they should
be paid. If we had to pay someone to put in the amount
of time they spend on parks issues, it would cost a lot
more (than what they’re allowed to take). There has to
be some value attached to that.”
The actual budget to minimally run
Volunteer Park, and bare-bones maintaining of Home Park
and Rocky Creek Conservation Area since the district’s
inception in March 2004, is as follows: 2004 annual
(rounded) total: $67,500 with monthly average of $9,600;
2005 annual total: $122,600 with monthly average of
$10,200; 2006 to date: $49,800 with monthly average of
$9,900.
Pierce County is currently enjoying
the greatest increase in retail sales tax since 1990,
(up 11.3 percent, according to Washington State
Department of Revenue), which is reflected in the
increase in the KPMPD’s share of the zoo/trek tax. The
park district’s challenge is that the district’s
population is growing, and with it, park usage. The
commissioners are intent on land-banking more property,
which, according to Ed Taylor, an audience member at the
May 22 meeting, “can be done in a way that doesn’t cost
any money — if you do it right.”
Current parks have plenty of
deferred maintenance, while the budget stays virtually
the same. “Parks are important for economic development
of an area,” Gallacher said. “People don’t always want
to pay for them, but they want them. Sometimes you have
to pay for what you want.”
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News, all rights reserved.
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