❘ / SIUSLAWNEWS ❘ @ THESIUSLAWNEWS SATURDAY EDITION STUDENT EXCELLENCE ❘ JUNE 6, 2015 ❘ $1.00 Royal affair INSIDE — A10 SPORTS — B SERVING WESTERN LANE COUNTY SINCE 1890 FLORENCE, OREGON Adventure in the great outdoors Revived Outdoor Adventures education program includes more students and experiences PHOTOS BY JACK DAVIS/SIUSLAW NEWS Students from Siuslaw School District join together to kayak, hike, fish and learn in a four-day outdoor program sponsored by the district and the Girl Scout Camp at Camp Cleawox. B Y J ACK D AVIS Siuslaw News M ore than 200 Siuslaw elemen- tary and middle school students got to experience first-hand just how exciting and fun education could be when they attended the second annual four-day Outdoor Adventurers camp put on by the Siuslaw School District and held at the Girl Scout Camp at Camp Cleawox . This is the program’s second successful year after several years’ forced hiatus due to educational budget cuts. The new pro- gram, under the direction of Outdoor Adventures camp coordinators and Siuslaw schoolteachers Andy Marohl and Ben Wells, has expanded the scope and goals of the original Outdoor Education program. Outdoor Education, the predecessor of Outdoor Adventures, was only for sixth- graders. The new program includes sev- enth- and fifth-graders with a focus on peer mentoring, building inter-class relation- ships and respect. The program included a four-day out- door experience that included fishing, hik- ing, kayaking, archery, games, Native American culture and Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Math (STEAM) education at 18 different learn- ing stations located throughout the camp. “Our biggest theme is peer mentoring,” Wells said. “We are trying to create posi- tive relationships between our fifth and seventh graders at the end of the year so at the very beginning of next year, when they are eighth- and sixth-graders, they will have bonded.” See OUTDOOR 9A Closing the doors for the last time Siuslaw School District bus drivers retire with a total of 56 years experience After 33 years of driving for Siuslaw School District, Linda Westlund and Sharon Waite, B Y J ACK D AVIS Siuslaw News PHOTOS BY JACK DAVIS/SIUSLAW NEWS Linda Westlund (above) and Sharon Waite (right) both retire from driving school buses for Siuslaw School District this Wednesday with the close of the school year. with 23 years experience, close the doors on their careers at the end of this school year. Westlund has driven the Sea Lion Caves route for her entire 33 years. The route takes her as far north as Muriel O. Ponsler Memorial State Scenic Viewpoint. Through the years she has driven more than one genera- tion of several local families. “I have guys that are teach- ers in the school that used to ride my bus,” Westlund said. In addition to bus driving, Westlund operated Chocolate Sins, a bakery, “I’ve baked wedding cakes for 68 of my kids,” she said with a hint of pride. Westlund saw her job as more than just transporting children to and from school. “She really did care about the kids,” said Noland Huntington, former school bus driver trainer and supervisor, “She took the extra effort to challenge them, hold them accountable. And she reward- ed them too, like when she would take the activity trips. She would bake cookies for the kids when they went on the trips.” “But they had to earn them,” Westlund said. Waite has driven the same kindergarten and North Fork routes for the last 10 years. She plans to spend more time with her grandchildren and working in her garden now that she is retiring. See DRIVERS 9A Budgeting for a successful city Florence City Council approves $33,877,033 budget for 2015-16 B Y C HANTELLE M EYER Siuslaw News F INSIDE lorence City Council approved Florence’s $33,877,033 budget for the 2015-2016 fis- cal year at its June 1 meeting. Interim finance director Andy Parks worked closely with staff, the budget committee and former finance director Erin Reynolds, who is now city manager. Ambulance . . . . . . . . . . . . . Classifieds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Church . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A2 B6 A6 A4 Councilor Joshua Greene said, “Great job staff. We had a great work session. You made it really helpful for us to see how all the parts connected. I just commend you on where we’re going.” “We’ve said that we’re a city in motion,” said Mayor Joe Henry. “We’ve kind of been a city on hold for several years, with mainte- nance and park and a number of other things, and now there is a whole new level of excite- Courts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A2 Sideshow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B5 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B Weather Data . . . . . . . . . . . A2 THIS WEEK ’ S ment in all our departments. “Everybody is just really excited, and the council is excited that we’re able to do some of these things that we haven’t been able to do in a number of years. It’s just a great budget and a great effort on everybody’s part.” Greene agreed. “ The community will get to see that a lot of things are happening because of the staff and how they figured out ways to find money, like SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY 65 52 65 52 66 51 64 51 WEATHER Full Forecast, A3 for the Rhododendron Drive Multi-Use Path. ... They’re working at it in every way,” he said. “It certainly has been a team effort and is much appreciated,” Reynolds said. In addition to the budget, they also approved extended worker’s compensation for the city’s volunteers. Reynolds said, “Our volunteers are impor- tant, and we want to make sure they’re safe while they’re working for us.” S IUSLAW N EWS 125 TH Y EAR ❘ I SSUE N O . 45 C OPYRIGHT 2015 CYAN MAGENTA YELLOW BLACK THESIUSLAWNEWS . COM