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New parks commissioner appointed
By Rodika Tollefson
KP News
At their February meeting, the Key
Peninsula Metropolitan Park District commissioners
appointed Greg Anglemyer to fill the seat vacated in
late December by Paula DeMoss. Anglemyer, selected out
of three applicants (one of whom subsequently withdrew),
will serve until the end of 2007 and must run for
re-election in November to keep the seat.
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Anglemyer |
A relative newcomer to the Key
Peninsula, Anglemyer has already been volunteering in
the community as a math mentor for Communities in
Schools-Peninsula and on the board of Friends of Key
Center Library. He said he has been following KPMPD
events in the newspaper, and when he read about the
opening in the Key Peninsula News, he decided to apply.
“It seems there was some
dissatisfaction… and some controversy going on. I
thought, I’m a new face and come without any
preconceived ideas about what’s going on,” he said.
Anglemyer’s background includes
working for Boy Scouts of America and in healthcare
marketing. He owned and operated a successful Tacoma inn
for about a decade before retiring with his wife, Becky,
to the Key Peninsula. The couple looked all over
Washington, Oregon and British Columbia for a rural spot
on the water. “I feel people in this area know what they
like for a lifestyle, even as we grow,” he said. “Parks
are part of that growth.”
Anglemyer is the second
commissioner to be appointed to an unexpired seat.
DeMoss’ resignation was preceded last year by the
departure of Jerry Schick, who cited dissatisfaction
with the district’s management practices as well as
frustration over controversy brought by the
commissioners’ decision to allow a stipend. DeMoss, on
the other hand, said her decision was based on having to
shift focus on her family and two jobs, and said she
remains a park district supporter. Both DeMoss and
Schick were commissioners under the now-dissolved KP
Parks and Recreation District, which preceded the KPMPD.
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