Vernonia's voice. (Vernonia, OR) 2007-current, May 21, 2015, Page 3, Image 3

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    welcome
may21
2015
Vernonia’s Determined Recovery Winds Down
By Scott Laird
 
Any Vernonia resident who was 
here  on  December  3,  2007  and  experi-
enced  the  flood  will  most  likely  never 
forget  that  day,  although  many  of  us 
would like to.  
 
Several  recent  events,  one  at  a 
Vernonia  City  Council  meeting,  one  at 
the Vernonia  Schools  campus,  and  one 
all the way in Klamath Falls, were a re-
minder of just how far this community 
has  come  since  that  bleak  December 
day over seven years ago.  These events 
were  an  indicator  that  the  community 
may finally be ready to put the flood and 
the recovery behind us and move ahead.  
 
I  remember  in  the  early  weeks 
of  the  recovery  effort,  Jim  Tierney  of 
Community  Action  Team,  a  key  orga-
nizer of not just the initial recovery ac-
tivities  but  the  entire  long  term  effort, 
telling me that the recovery of the com-
munity would not be complete for sev-
eral years, maybe as many as five years.  
I couldn’t believe it... that our communi-
ty would still be struggling several years 
later  through  the  turmoil  and  strife  we 
were experiencing right then.
 
But  here  we  are,  almost  eight 
years later and the recovery effort is fi-
nally winding down.  We  just saw the 
final building of the FEMA buyouts, the 
Vernonia Senior Center, demolished.  
 
Tierney  attended  the  Vernonia 
City  Council    meeting  on  April  20  to 
provide a report on the over-all flood re-
covery effort in Vernonia and Columbia 
County.    Tierney  gave  a  breakdown  of 
the over $47 million dollars in funding 
and services that was funneled into the 
community.
 
Included  in  that  sum  was  over 
$37 million in FEMA and other govern-
ment  funds that went towards assisting 
109  homes  and  several  other  essential 
service  projects,  including  $16  million 
for the school buyout.  Homes and busi-
nesses were  either raised, floodproofed,  
or  purchased  and  demolished,  perma-
nently protecting or moving them above 
or out of the flood zone. That $47 mil-
lion sum also included almost $6.5 mil-
lion in loans, $2.5 million in faith based 
group  labor  that  assisted  with  renova-
tions and repairs, as well as $1 million 
in flood insurance payments, donations 
from foundations and corporations, and 
volunteer labor.  
 
As Tierney pointed out in his re-
port to City Council, that in addition to 
the  funding,  loans  and  volunteer  labor, 
a key component of the recovery effort 
was  the  volunteers  who  immediately 
stepped  up  the  day  follwoing  the  flood  
to begin gathering data and information 
from property owners who had been ef-
fected.  
 
After  the  flood  in  1996  only  a 
handful  of  homes  received  assistance 
and  were  raised  or  bought  out.    In 
2007, organizers were determined to as-
sist  more    members  of  the  community.  
By  immediately  gathering  informa-
tion from effected families, flood relief 
workers were able to stay in contact and 
assist  community  members  throughout 
the process of applying for and receiv-
ing  funds  to  make  repairs,  raise  their 
homes  or move.  They used the data to 
put pressure on government agencies, to 
show  the  need  for  relief  funding,    and 
rally political champions to the cause of 
rebuilding Vernonia.  
 
And  it  worked.    Vernonia  be-
came a cause and received the ongoing 
attention  and  assistance  of  governors, 
state agencies, local legislators, business 
leaders  and  regular  citizens,  leading  to 
a recovery effort that is now used as an 
example  by  FEMA  and  others  around 
the world.    
 
One  of  the  largest  projects  to 
come  out  of  the  flood  recovery  effort 
was  obviously  the  construction  of  the 
new school campus.  On May 9  the Ver-
nonia School District celebrated a land-
mark and the attainment of a long time 
goal,  when  they  unveiled  two  plaques 
designating  the  school  campus  facility 
as  LEED  Platinum  and  Green  Globe 
certified.
 
The  Vernonia  Schools  campus 
is the first and only K-12 school in the 
nation to receive LEED Platinum status.  
The LEED  green building rating system  
is the recognized standard for measuring 
building sustainability around the world 
and  was  a  goal  of  the  school  construc-
tion  project  from  the  very  beginning.  
The Green Globe designation was icing 
on the cake for a project that was deter-
mined to set itself apart and be an indi-
cator of a paradigm shift in the Vernonia 
community.  
 
The  new  school  campus,  a 
model  for  rural  sustainability,  as  well 
as  the  school’s  commitment  to  a  natu-
ral resource based education,  is another 
indicator that the community is moving 
forward.    The  Vernonia  School  Board 
committed  to  that  vision  of  rural  sus-
tainability when they embraced the plan 
to  construct  a  LEED  Platinum  worthy 
facility,  and  remained  determined  to 
see that vision through to the end of the 
project.    The  ceremony  on  May  9  was 
an  indicator  that  the  community    had 
achieved another goal on its way to re-
covery.  
 
To complete this recovery tale, 
Vernonia even has a piece of orchestral 
music  composed  in  its  honor.      Nate 
McCroskey-Izzett,  began  composing  a 
piece of music three years ago while still 
a student in Vernonia.  McCroskey-Izzett 
is now a senior at Mazama High School, 
and  has  completed  Vernonia Overture 
for his senior project.  The instrumental  
piece is dedicated to the Vernonia com-
munity  and  McCroskey-Izzett’s  fellow 
Vernonia classmates, and expresses the 
beauty  of  the  region,  the  devastation 
and grief  experienced by the residents 
from the flood,  and the resiliency of the 
community as they rebuilt the town and 
constructed the new school building.  
 
McCroskey-Izzett  is  the  son  of 
former  Vernonia  band  instructor  Rob 
Izzett, and conducted the Klamath Falls 
Community  Band  as  they  performed 
his piece for the first time ever in early 
April.  
 
I’d  like  to  think  that  having  a 
piece of music composed and performed 
about  this  flood  event  might  be  one  of 
the final pieces to our recovery effort. 
 
This community has shown re-
siliency and determination at every turn 
as they fought to save the town, rebuild 
the  school,  and  continue  to  move  for-
ward.  There have been many heroic ef-
forts both large and small along the way. 
 
The  City  traded  their  sports 
fields to the School District for construc-
tion of the new campus and then had to 
wait several years for the demolition of 
the  old  school  and  construction  of  the 
new fields.  Citizens took it upon them-
selves  to  construct  new  baseball  fields 
just  south  of  town  on  a  weed  strewn 
patch  of  property  so  local  kids  would 
have a place to play.  
 
The  Vernonia  Health  Center 
took the funds from their FEMA buyout 
and used it to jump start a million dollar 
private fundraising campaign to build a 
new health care facility out of the flood 
zone.  
 
When the Senior Center facility 
was torn down last month, one of the fi-
nal pieces in the recovery effort, the se-
niors were resourceful and found ways 
to  continue  providing  services  to  their 
client base. 
 
 The list goes on and on.  
 
While the new Senior Center fa-
cility still needs to be built, it would be 
hard  to  bet  against  that  eventuality    in 
this town so full of determined and reso-
lute citizens.  
3
Publisher and Managing Editor
Scott Laird
503-367-0098
scott@vernoniasvoice.com
Contributors
Chip Bubl
Tobie Finzel
Karen Kain
Dr. Carol McIntyre
Aaron Miller
Shannon Romtvedt
Grant Williams
Melissa Zavales
Photography
Scott Laird
Karen Kain
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PO Box 55
Vernonia, OR 97064
503-367-0098
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