Northwest labor press. (Portland , Ore.) 1987-current, July 20, 2007, Page 2, Image 2

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    Let me say this about that
—By Gene Klare
Construction unions voice support
for liquefied natural gas terminal
Company pledges to
sign a project labor
agreement if Bradwood
Landing terminal is built
Spotlight on Stammer
ANITA M. STAMMER, 61, basks in the Labor Hall of Fame spotlight in this
edition of the Northwest Labor Press. She is the retired executive assistant of Port-
land-based International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Local 48 and
is a former member of Office and Professional Employees Local 11. She was voted
into the Hall of Fame by delegates to the sponsoring Northwest Oregon Labor Re-
tirees Council, which is affiliated with the NW Oregon Labor Council, AFL-CIO.
Mrs. Stammer is married to Roger D. Stammer,
also a retired member of IBEW Local 48. He spent
his career working in electrical equipment manu-
facturing plants.
ANITA MARIE TEEPLE was born on May
28, 1946 in Portland. Her father, Herman R. Teeple
Jr., was a World War II veteran who was a member
of IBEW Local 48, and her mother was the former
Betty Gill. Her father later became business man-
ager of Local 48 and subsequently moved up to be-
coming an IBEW international representative. Her
parents are now deceased. Her father was in the La-
bor Hall of Fame.
Mrs. Stammer and her brother, Greg Teeple, are
the third generation of Teeples who are union mem-
ANITA STAMMER
bers. Greg, a former business manager of Local 48,
is an international representative for the IBEW sta-
tioned in California’s East Bay Area. Their paternal grandfather was Herman
Teeple Sr., a business agent for Cooks & Assistants Local 207, now part of UNITE
HERE Local 9.
AFTER GRADUATING from Grant High School in Northeast Portland,
Anita Teeple attended Portland State College, which later gained university status.
In 1964 she was employed as a secretary at IBEW Local 49, which represented
workers in manufacturing plants and at radio and television stations. In that job, she
joined Office and Professional Employees International Union Local 11 and later
was elected its sergeant-at-arms. Anita and Roger Stammer were married in 1965
In 1967 the IBEW assigned Mrs. Stammer to handle the operations of Local
2281 out of her home, which enabled her to work and still look after her two chil-
dren, a son, Jay, and a daughter, Jennie. Local 2281 members were employed in a
plant that made electrical water heaters. Locals 49 and 2281 were later merged
into Local 48.
ANITA STAMMER made her next career move in 1984 when she was hired
as a secretary in Local 48’s office. Next came a job as executive assistant to Local
48’s business manager, she was appointed to that post by Jerry Bruce when he was
elected as the union’s business manager. To hold that job she joined the IBEW and
took a withdrawal card from OPEIU Local 11. Anita retired in 2006, as did Roger.
Their home is in the town of Clackamas.
The Stammers’son, Jay, is vice president of the First Independent Bank in Van-
couver, Wash. Jay and his wife have a son, Cole, 9, and a daughter, Ava, 6. The
Stammers’ daughter, Jennie Roth, is a secretary for the Pacific Northwest District
Council of Carpenters in Kent, Wash. She is a member of OPEIU Local 23 of
Tacoma. Jennie is the fourth-generation union member in the family. Her husband,
Steve Roth, is a teacher and the football and baseball coach at Olympia High
School. The Roths, who live in Olympia, have two children, Kaylie, 7, and Caden,
3.
THE STAMMERS spend time in the LaPine area in Central Oregon, where
her parents had lived in retirement. Herman and Betty Teeple had built a riverside
home there and also built a second home for use by their daughter and son when
they and their families came to visit. Both homes now belong to Anita and her
brother, Greg. Herman liked the area because it offered fishing and hunting op-
portunities and because while in the U.S. Army in World War II he had trained in
ASTORIA — Members of the Co-
lumbia-Pacific Building Trades Coun-
cil showed their support for the Brad-
wood Landing liquefied natural gas
(LNG) terminal at a public hearing
July 10 at Astoria High School.
Thirty members of various unions
from both Oregon and Washington
were present at the hearing and repre-
sented groups such as the Plumbers
and Pipefitters, Electrical Workers,
Sheet Metal Workers, Cement Masons
and Laborers.
“Our affiliates have worked with
NorthernStar to make this a safe and
secure project, and we made that fact
known to the Clatsop County Plan-
ning Commission,” stated John
Mohlis, executive secretary of the Co-
lumbia Pacific Building Trades Coun-
cil. “We’re hopeful that the Commis-
b h
m k
sion realized that this project is about
good jobs for the county and the re-
gion. Bringing family-wage jobs to
Clatsop County will be a huge boost
for the people of the community.”
According to a study by University
of Oregon professor Dr. Phillip
Romero, an LNG facility providing
natural gas to the Pacific Northwest
will help increase household income
by between $51 million and $215 mil-
lion, and increase employment by
5,100 to 20,300 jobs.
“The Bradwood Landing facility
will help protect the industrial base of
our region from foreign competitors,”
Mohlis said. “Bradwood provides an
important competitive edge for re-
source-based manufacturing jobs such
as pulp and paper and food process-
ing.”
The owner of the Bradwood Land-
ing project, NorthernStar Natural Gas,
recently signed a memorandum of un-
derstanding (MOU) with the Colum-
bia-Pacific Building Trades Council,
solidifying a project that has had
Bennett Hartman
Morris & Kaplan, llp
Attorneys at Law
union support from its earliest stages.
The MOU states that the contractor
chosen by NorthernStar to build the
project will negotiate a project labor
agreement (PLA) with the Columbia-
Pacific Building Trades Council. The
PLA insures that a highly-skilled local
workforce will be employed to build
the project, and that they will earn
good wages, as well as health, pension
and apprenticeship benefits, Mohlis
said.
The Bradwood project will employ
between 350 and 500 construction
workers to build docks for LNG ships,
natural gas holding tanks and infra-
structure, including administration
buildings.
The hearing was called by the Clat-
sop County Planning Commission to
review the proposed zoning of the
LNG import terminal located along
the Columbia River, roughly 20 miles
upriver from Astoria. The project will
utilize the former site of the Brad-
wood lumber mill, which ceased oper-
ation in 1965 after more than 100
years.
If zoning changes are approved by
the Clatsop County Planning Com-
mission, the project will continue on
toward both the state and federal ap-
proval processes, where labor support
is expected to be strong.
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PAGE 2
NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS
JULY 20, 2007