PAGE A6, KEIZERTIMES, SEPTEMBER 11, 2015 Bay honored as champion agent Brandon Bay has been distinction in providing “ex- named a Championship agent ceptional service to customers by Farmers Insur- and commitment to ance. Bay owns a furthering the goals Farmers agency in and standards’ of the Keizer. company.” “I want to con- “This honor is gratulate Brandon a business career for his achievement. highlight and I feel On behalf of Farm- fortunate to repre- ers, we are proud to sent such a fi ne or- bestow the honor of ganization,” said Bay. being a Champion- “I share this recog- ship agent to him,” nition with my en- B. Bay said Roy Smith of tire offi ce team who Farmers Insurance. focus on helping ev- Bay was selected for a ery customer each and every number of criteria including day.” Shred day Saturday Oregon State Credit Union in Keizer will hold a free shred day on Saturday, Sept. 12 in the Safeway parking lot at 4990 River Road. The annual event allows the public to shred documents and paperwork to protect their identity from thieves. The event will run from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Suggested items to shred include outdated documents (old checks, forms or state- ments with personal informa- tion). Shredding will take place on site. For more information visit oregonstatecu.com. Family, gym tell different stories the conversation changed when she told Blevins that was not the case with her daughter and friends. “The representative become combat- ive when I informed him that contract law prohibits business from binding mi- nors to contracts,” Melinda wrote in her complaint. “Apparently I was then able to cancel her ‘contract’ but when I asked for a refund of the $58.90, he refused.” In an interview with the Keizertimes, Byron said he also visited the gym and talked with Blevins. “My daughter went over there and a guy talked about year-long memberships,” Byron said. “They couldn’t do it since they were not 18. The girls all signed up and the guy they talked to said they could back date it.” Like his wife, Byron said his discussion didn’t go well. “The guy was very argumentative,” he said. “It was to no avail. I asked for a re- fund for some of my daughter’s account. I tried to explain it was a minor. He basi- cally told me it was none of my business.” Blevins, however, has a much different account of the conversation. “I’ve been doing this a long time, and he was the most inappropriate person I’ve had to deal with,” Blevins said of Byron, adding that the father claimed he was with a daily newspaper and gave him three minutes to produce a refund. “We don’t By CRAIG MURPHY Of the Keizertimes Local parents are upset about their un- derage daughter being allowed to sign up for a gym membership without parental consent and fi led a complaint with the state following two interactions with a manager at the gym. That manager, however, has a much different story to tell. Melinda and Byron Loosli said an employee at Edge Training and Fitness, located at 3850 River Road North, il- legally signed their 16-year-old daughter and friends to year-long contracts in the spring. Melinda fi led a complaint with the state Department of Justice and provided a copy of the complaint to the Keizertimes. After fees were taken from her daugh- ter’s checking account in March and April, Melinda wrote that nothing else happened until August, when the gym took $58.90 from the account. “When she contacted the gym on Aug. 10, 2015 to ask for a refund she was told they would not do so and that her contract runs until March 2016,” Melinda wrote. Melinda said she visited the gym on Aug. 19 and talked to a person later iden- tifi ed as Mark Blevins, the general man- ager. Blevins informed Melinda a minor could become a gym member if a par- ent was present. Melinda said the tone of KEIZERTIMES/Craig Murphy A complaint has been fi led with the state about Edge Training and Fitness, but gym management disputes the claims.. try to do anything underhanded at all. There was an honest mistake made. Members sign themselves up. I can’t control it if someone enters the wrong information. (The daugh- ter) signed herself up, without our knowl- edge. Unless there’s an issue, we don’t know about it.” Blevins said he took action once made aware of the issue. “I canceled the contract immediately when it was brought to my attention,” Blevins said. “They wouldn’t listen to me. I told the parents we can come to an understanding and said your daughter paid for the services she received. She used the gym a lot. We wanted to work it out with both parents. 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