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About Vernonia's voice. (Vernonia, OR) 2007-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 7, 2016)
january7 2016 VERNONIA’S volume10 issue1 free reflecting the spirit of our community www.vernoniasvoice.com Cattails and Herons: Gifts, Dolls and More Holce Donation Identifies Often Missed Strategy A new store has opened in downtown Vernonia featuring an eclectic mix of gifts and antiques along with an amazing and assorted doll collection, all of it for sale. Allyson and Keith Cam- eron opened Cattails and Herons just before Christmas at 866 Bridge Street, filling the empty storefront and adding more flavor to the Verno- nia shopping district, centered in the 800 block of Bridge Street. “We’ve really been wel- comed by Vernonia and want to thank the community for helping us get started” said Allyson. Cattails and Herons has a bit of a museum feel with half of the store filled with the doll collec- tion that Allyson’s mother, Kathleen Tiffney accumulated over her life time. Tiffney is now 91 years old inside 3 storm report 4 california avenue project 7 where do you read the voice 10 vhs winter sports report and in poor health and Allyson is looking to share the collection with others by making the dolls available for purchase. In addition to the dolls, the Camerons are also selling another long time treasure, Keith’s collec- tion of license plates from around the country. Keith has hundreds of vehicle tags, some dating back to the teens and 20s, from every state. “Keith probably knows anything and everything you could think of to ask about license plates,” says Ally- son. “They are actually much more interesting than you might imagine.” The plates make unique gifts and are reasonably priced. Allyson suggest- ed a framed plate from the year and state of someone’s birth as a won- derful surprise for that person who has just about everything; she said if Keith doesn’t already have a 1962 from Pennsylvania in his collection, he most likely can find one. In addition to the two sets of collectibles for sale, Cattails and Herons also has a wide variety of other items, including some nice antique furniture, an assortment of jewelry, home and kitchen decor, and even some regional sports gifts for Ducks, Beavers or Seahawks. Allyson and Keith both grew up in Vernonia about a half continued on page 9 The recent donations by Evelyn Holce and Randy Holce to the Vernonia Education Foundation’s Sports Initiative helped identify a great, and often overlooked, way for some people to donate to causes while receiving tax benefits for themselves. The $120,000 donation by the Holce family will help build a new baseball field at the Vernonia school campus. Randy Holce explained that both he and his mother Evelyn took advantage of a tax provision that allowed them to donate appreciated securities, in the Holce’s case, stocks, directly to a charity without paying capital gains taxes, as you would if you sold it first then contributed the cash. You can also donate bonds or mutual fund shares directly and receive the same benefits. By following this strategy the donating party eliminates capital gains taxes and increases the amount they are able to donate to a charity. But that’s not all. It also increases your itemized deductions you can claim on your taxes because you can generally deduct the fair market value of the stock, bond or security at the time of the donation, not the lower amount that you paid for it originally. According to an article in Fidelity Viewpoints this is one of the most advantageous tax strategies available to people who include charitable giving as part of their financial planning. The Vernonia Education Foundation has established an account to accept donations of stocks and bonds directly, making the process easy and quick. According to Fidelity Viewpoint, donating assets that have appreciated over the long term is a highly effective tax strategy for eliminating capital gains taxes, especially for people with investments that have increased in value over time. As an example, suppose you purchased $20,000 worth of stock in a company 20 years ago. Today those shares are worth $50,000, meaning a $30,000 taxable long term capital gain. continued on page 6 Like Deer, We Run Life is a search for that which we thirst By Paul Pastor The hoof prints were fresh. Tracks of three deer, come down to Rock Creek to drink. They were only an hour or two old, their delicate edges barely eroded by the rain. They looked like dozens of hearts, stamped in crossing lines to the water. They had walked single-file, favoring the tree line, then leaped from the safety of the winter trees onto a rock spit jutting into the deep stream. I, barely 16, followed the tracks onto the bare stones. The water ran dark and frigid around the pile of rock. It undercut roots of the leaning trees, making hollow pumps and gurgles, drums and watery voices underground. I stood until I was soaked and shivering, staring as rain endlessly whispered into the rushing stream. *** As I wrote last month, the people and places of Vernonia shaped me, body and soul. But in spite of the influence it had in my life, I technically only lived in town for three years; formative years, though—15, 16, 17. I ruffle a box of old photos, looking for snapshots of these years. From half my lifetime away, I see a search, sometimes even frustration in my teenage eyes. There were seven of us in my family, stacked like tinned fish into a 600 square foot mill house at 348 C Street. It sat on a hillock above Rock Creek, almost in view of the river. I walked down to it every day, often for hours. “A boy’s will is the wind’s will,” Robert Louis Stevenson wrote, “and the thoughts of youth are long, long, thoughts.” My will was windy, my thoughts were long. The water brought many of them, and carried many more away. How often I wished to follow them. I felt sometimes (in spite of all the water) that I lived in perpetual thirst. Thirsty for new sights, new ideas, new experiences. A thirst for meaning, for adventure. For great things. I think most big kids from small places can relate. Who hasn’t felt that thirst as a young heart, wondering what might be waiting for us in some other there, some other then, some other how? continued on page 13