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About Vernonia's voice. (Vernonia, OR) 2007-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 11, 2012)
september11 2012 VERNONIA’S reflecting the spirit of our community Mist-Birkenfeld Gets Fire Suppression Reservoir free volume6 issue17 First Day of School! By Scott Laird is the North Coast Basin Engineer who is overseeing construction of the project for the Natural Resources A new project that is nearly completed next Conservation Service (NRCS). According to Gray, the to the Mist-Birkenfeld Fire Station will provide the reservoir will be seven feet deep, and should take about local firefighters with a welcome, year-round, easily thirty days to fill once it is complete. After the pond accessible supply of water to fight fires. is full any overflow will spill into the natural channel The project, a 4 million gallon water reservoir below the dam and run into the Nehalem River. During set on private property owned by Bruce Fleming, the fish runs and warmer months of the year the water has been under construction for most of the summer. is bypassed around the reservoir to protect the fish. Property owner Fleming has been trying to build some kind of water pond for about ten years. The project has finally become a reality with the help of several governmental agencies and many others, all working together. Securing the funding for planning and construction took time and eventually was brought together through NRCS, which not only provided engineering and other Engineers and wetlands experts discuss the construction of the Fleming Pond that will technical support, but provide a year-round water source for the Mist-Birkenfeld Fire District. also some funding. Don Mehlhoff, NRCS Columbia Fleming is constructing the pond for his personal use to County District Conservationist, has been chaperoning water his cattle, but he has agreed to let Mist-Birkenfeld the process for several years and says he is relieved to Rural Fire Protection District (RFPD) have access to see the pieces fall together and the project unfold. the water supply for use in an emergency. Northwest Natural Gas provided a grant for “If you had asked me a year ago if I thought a major portion of the funding for the construction. this was actually going to happen, I would have told Kynsi Construction from Clatskanie is the contractor you I wasn’t sure,” said Mist Birkenfeld RFPD Chief, for the construction. David Crawford. “But we found the answers that we Mist-Birkenfeld RFPD is paying for and using needed to some issues and everything has just come volunteer labor to install a pumping system that will together. There is a lot of credit that can go around to a include two 750 gallon-per-minute electric driven lot of people for getting this done.” pumps to access the emergency water supply at two A man-made earthen dam at one end of the hydrants at the fire station. Chief Crawford estimates reservoir will create a water catchment barrier for the the cost for the pump system to be around $70,000 and natural stream bed that runs into the area. Roslyn Gray says his RFPD saved its Natural Gas royalty money inside 10 endless summer 11 fall sports preview 11 facilities facelift Students arrived for the first day of classes in the new Vernonia Schools on September 4, 2012. For more photos go to page 19. received over several years for the system. “It will be money well spent,” says Crawford. The permitting process for this type of construction is especially arduous and turned out to be one of the major stumbling blocks to getting the project started. Finding a way to get both the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the Oregon Water Resources Department to agree on regulations that both would approve took the help of Columbia County Commissioner Tony Hyde before the project could begin. The Upper Nehalem Watershed Council (UNWC) will provide assistance by maintaining a Meet Your Police: The Rookie, Brent Thompson By Scott Laird The Vernonia Police Depart- ment is staffed with three patrol of- ficers and a chief. Over the last few months, Vernonia’s Voice has taken time to sit down with the members of the VPD and publish profiles of the officers, giving the community a chance to “meet” them. In March we profiled Chief Mike Conner; in June we met officer Shawn Carna- han. This month we sat down to talk with first year officer Brent Thomp- son. Vernonia Police Officer Brent Thompson is a homegrown guy who grew up in Vernonia and has returned after four years of college to take his first paid assignment in law enforcement in his hometown. Thompson is a graduate of Vernonia High School, Class of 2007. He was a three sport athlete in football, basketball and base- ball. In baseball he was a four year letterman and in football he was named First Team All League his junior and senior years. He was selected to play in the Shiners All Star Game his senior year in La Grande. Thompson moved to Vernonia in 1996 right after the flood and graduated right before the Flood of 2007. He spent the next four years at Western Or- egon University where he majored in Criminal Justice with a minor in Homeland Security/Community Pre- paredness, graduating in 2011. He is continued on page 9 twenty-three years old, (he will turn twenty-four in September). “It’s nice to be on the other end and help people,” says Thomp- son when asked what he likes about continued on page 8