Vernonia's voice. (Vernonia, OR) 2007-current, September 27, 2011, Image 1

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    september27 2011
V E R N O N I A’ S
reflecting the spirit of our community
Town Hall Provides
School Project
Updates
inside
8
ridge
riders
9
spider
talk
10
student
volunteer
volume5    issue18
Sentry Constructs Flood Wall
A Town Hall Meeting, organized by the Vernonia 
School District , was held on September 13, 2011 at the 
Vernonia School Cafeteria.  Over fifty people were in at-
tendance for the evening meeting.
 
The meeting provided updates on the fundraising 
efforts and the construction of the school campus.  A team 
from Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) was 
on hand with plans for the improvements to OR Highway 
47,  also  called  Bridge  Street,    and  Missouri  and  Texas 
Avenues.    The  community  was  also  introduced  to  Kurt 
Lango of Lango Hansen, the firm that has been chosen to 
create a design for the new Spencer Park at the site of the 
current schools. 
 
Another Town Hall has been scheduled for Octo-
ber 20, 2011,  specifically to receive community input for 
the design of the new Spencer Park.
 
Construction of the School campus continues on 
schedule, with the new campus expected to be open for 
students in the fall of 2012. 
 
ODOT representatives provided a detailed design 
for  the  Highway  47/Bridge  Street  improvements,  which 
are being paid for with a $3.9 million grant from ODOT.  
The design calls for the widening of the highway on either 
side of Missouri Avenue, which will be the main access 
street leading to the new K-12 school campus.  There will 
be a left turn lane added in the north bound direction of 
Highway 47 for motorists turning onto Missouri Avenue.  
The plan includes wider sidewalks  and bike lanes on both 
sides of the highway with the south sidewalk being wid-
ened to ten feet. The marked crosswalk at Texas Avenue 
will be removed to encourage  use of the new crosswalk at 
Missouri Avenue.  The new crosswalk at Missouri Avenue 
will  include  better  illumination  for  pedestrians  crossing 
the highway and  Rectangular Rapid Flashing Beacons to 
alert drivers to pedestrians.
 
Missouri Avenue will be widened to include a ten 
continued on page 10
free
 
If you stopped by to shop,  
or even just driven by the Verno-
nia  Sentry  Market  recently,  you 
couldn’t  help  but  notice  the  con-
struction  happening  around  the 
building.    If  you  haven’t  already 
asked  then you are probably won-
dering, “What are they doing?”
 
What  they  are  doing  is 
constructing  a  flood  wall  to  help 
keep  out  water  in  the  event  of 
a  future  flood.    In  December  of 
2007 the Sentry Market had over 
twenty-two inches of water inside 
the  store,    causing  hundreds  of 
thousands  of  dollars  in  damages 
to  their  stock.  In  1996  there  was 
over seventeen inches of water in 
the store.
 
“It  is  nothing  special—
it’s just a wall to keep the major-
ity of the water out,” says Sentry 
owner  Randy  Parrow  about  the 
flood wall.   “We figure there will 
be  some  leakage  somewhere--
we’ll  have  a  pump,  squeegee  it 
to there and  pump it out.  But we 
hope we’ll  just be dealing with an  
inch or two of water.”
 
The  flood  wall  will  be 
four  feet  at  its  highest  point  and 
consist  of  sealed  cement  blocks 
that will encircle the entire build-
ing.    The  blocks  extend  under-
ground  one  foot  below  the  foot-
ings  of  the  building.  There  will 
be six openings to allow access to 
the building.  Those openings will 
be sealed with specially designed 
flood  gates--metal  doors  that  fit 
Bud Boldon of Bolden Construction in Forest Grove working on the
Sentry’s flood wall.
into the blocks and can be put in 
place  and  hand-cranked  tight  in 
case of a high water event.  
 
As  part  of  the  construc-
tion of the wall, new windows will 
be installed along the store front.  
The  bottom  sill  of  the  previous 
windows sat below the high water 
level—the  new  windows  will  be 
placed  above  the  top  of  the  new 
flood wall.  
 
According  to  Parrow  the 
building  will  also  be  receiving  a  
facelift  with  new  wood  siding,  a 
solid awning across the front, and 
an outdoor, covered shopping cart 
corral.  “Since we were doing this 
flood  wall  construction  we  de-
cided  it  was  a  good  time  to  do  a 
facade upgrade,” said Parrow. 
 
FEMA funds will pay for 
seventy-five  percent  of  the  cost 
for  the  flood  wall  construction.  
Parrow  estimated  the  cost  to  be 
around  $200,000.    “The  cost  of 
this  versus  building  a  new  store 
that  would  have  cost  millions—
we  felt  like  this  was  the  way  to 
go,”  explained  Parrow.    Parrow 
was  clear  that  the  FEMA  funds 
are only paying for the flood wall, 
they  are  not  being  used  for  the 
other building upgrades.
 
The project is being con-
structed  by  Five-Star  Builders.  
Bud Boldon of Bolden Construc-
tion  in  Forest  Grove  is  doing  the 
actual  masonry  wall  construction 
work.  
 
Parrow says the project is 
expected  to  be  completed  by  the 
end of October.
Providence Clinic Leaving Vernonia
Vernonia Health Center Board is Working on a Replacement Plan
By Scott Laird
 
According  to  a  flyer  being 
handed  out  at  the  Providence 
Medical  Clinic  in  Vernonia, 
Providence  Health  &  Services  is 
leaving Vernonia at the end of this 
calendar year.
 
“Currently, 
Providence 
has  no  plans  to  continue  clinic 
operations  after  the  end  of  the 
year,”  says  the  flyer  that  is  being 
handed to Providence patients at the 
Vernonia clinic. 
 
The  Vernonia  Health 
Center  Board  (VHCB)  owns  the 
building  and  provides  the  space 
for  Providence  to  provide  health 
care  for  the  community.  That 
building  was  flooded  in  2007  and 
the VHCB was mandated by FEMA 
requirements, as a vital community 
service,  to  move  from  its  current 
location.  
 
Since  the  Flood  of 
December 2007 the VHCB has been 
working  to  find  a  suitable  location 
and  sufficient  funds,  but  currently 
lacks the resources needed to move 
the clinic on their own.   
 
In 
September 
2010 
Providence said they were willing to 
help the VHCB in their relocation,  
offering  to  let  the  VHCB  keep 
equipment  currently  in  use  at  the 
clinic.    There  is  also  an  account 
controlled  by  Providence  that  is 
holding  approximately  $140,000 
that  was  collected  after  the  flood 
in 2007 to help Vernonia rebuild its 
health clinic.     
 
Gary  Walker,  Regional 
Director  of  Public  Affairs  for 
Providence  provided  additional  
information in a prepared response 
from Providence to questions about 
the split from the VHCB.
 
“These combined donations 
of  cash  and  equipment  have  a 
value  of  more  that  $200,000,” 
said  the  prepared  statement  from 
Providence. “We have not yet been 
notified  by  the  board  whether  the 
clinic  will  continue  in  operation 
or  shut  down  for  a  period  of  time.  
Once the board has an opportunity 
to finalize its plans, Providence will 
be working with the board and the 
community  to  determine  the  best 
ways  to  use  these  funds  to  help 
provide  a  place  for  a  sustainable 
clinic  operation  in  Vernonia  in  the 
future.” 
 
That still leaves a significant 
shortfall of funds needed to actually 
move the clinic facility. 
 
Last  summer    the  VHCB 
began  exploring  other  options 
and  developed  a  plan  to  become  a 
Federally  Qualified  Health  Center 
(FQHC).    In  the  fall  of  2010  the 
VHCB  made  a  grant  application 
to  become  a  FQHC  in  partnership 
with Coastal Family Health Center 
which  operates  a  medical  clinic  in 
continued on page 7