NORTH COAST THE DAILY ASTORIAN • MONDAY, APRIL 20, 2015 Literacy tutors honored Mary Lou Harlan Harlan, retired from the marines, has had several stu- dents during the last 10 years. Two students, a mother and daughter from Mexico, be- came citizens because of her tutelage. They have called upon her for various reasons over the past decade, when other questions and problems have arisen, even though for- mal tutoring activities had ended. Harlan helped empower the husband to understand his rights as a worker, and the fam- ily has sent other students to her for tutoring. One of these referrals is a student who just opened a successful business that employs four people. She worked with him for three years to improve his English. Her most current student is poised to enter CCC in the fall because of Harlan’s teaching. She also spent hours helping this student obtain her US passport, which was compli- cated because this student, an American citizen, was raised and schooled in Mexico. Photo courtesy of Clatsop Community College From left, Rolly Lindstrom, Marshall Tate, Donna Hill, Rosemary Baker-Monaghan and Eileen Purcell. All but Monaghan, the chairwoman of the Clatsop Community College Board of Directors, were honored Tuesday for their efforts as adult literacy tutors. sumed working with the wom- DQKH¿UVWPHWLQWKHGHOL7KH\ meet at the cannery where she Rolly Lindstrom works, because this employer Lindstrom is retired from a also supports her education. career in social work. She would like to eventually 2QH RI /LQGVWURP¶V ¿UVW enter college. students worked in a local Donna Hill market and deli. The employer Hill, retired, came to the requested help from the litera- cy program and paid for her to CCC literacy program with study English with Lindstrom experience as a reading tu- at the work site. Lindstrom tor in Portland. In Astoria, and his student centered their she worked with the Start lessons on cooking, and they Making a Reader Today used exotic cookbooks as (SMART) program and with Foster Grandparents, primar- their English-language texts. The student ended up LO\ UHDGLQJ ZLWK ¿UVW DQG working in a cannery — not second-graders. She had not on the production line, but in worked before, however, with human resources, hiring and English as a Second Language scheduling Spanish-speaking (ESL) students. +HU¿UVWORFDOVWXGHQWZDV workers. Lindstrom, a Russian a Spanish-speaking woman speaker, worked with a Rus- with a number of children liv- sian speaker across the river, a ing in Emerald Heights who worker from a Mexican restau- had no driver’s license. Hill rant and, for the last 2 1/2 agreed to meet with her in years, with a Spanish speaker her home. Hill said she soon who is working on English and learned not to assume any- the citizenship process. At the thing about her students, par- same time, Lindstrom has re- ticularly about what a student did or didn’t know. Hill said her reward for working with immigrant students comes from hear- ing their stories, which they were asked to relate in En- glish. Some of Hill’s notable student success stories in- clude a Portuguese-speaker who owns and operates an R\VWHU DQG VKHOO¿VK UHWDLO shipping company and who earned her citizenship, and another woman who runs a restaurant in Astoria. Donna’s newest student is an Arabic speaker whose family owns two businesses in town. Marshall Tate Tate is a retired pharma- cist with experience teaching future pharmacists at Oregon Health and Science Univer- sity (OHSU). He has tutored many students over the past decade, producing new U.S. citizens, empowering wom- en to gain independence and assisting immigrant business owners. He’s a long-term so- journer in Mexico and he has ZRUNHGGLOLJHQWO\WRJDLQÀX- ency in Spanish. Tate worked with a woman IRU¿YH\HDUVZKRZHQWIURP being able to say “hello,” “goodbye” and “where’s the milk” (she has kids to feed) to earning her U.S. citizen- ship. While learning English, VKH HDUQHG D *(' FHUWL¿FDWH in Spanish. Tate tutored her on the algebra portion of the test in Spanish. This winter, on an annual extended trip to Mexico, Tate met with a former student and continued to tutor her. His student’s goal is to take the Test of English as a Foreign Language and then become eligible to work as a border/ customs agent in the U.S. Tate has also tutored stu- dents remotely, both from across the river where he lives and from Mexico when he goes for months-long vis- its. He also uses Skype to fur- ther his own language learn- ing, conducting intercambios (exchanges), with friends and teachers in Mexico. &&&¿UHHQJLQHPDNHVGHEXW Clatsop Community Col- OHJH¶VGRQDWHG¿UHHQJLQHIURP WKH 3DFL¿F &RXQW\ :DVK Fire District 1 recently made its debut. The Fire Science program DW&&&XVHVWKH¿UHHQJLQHIRU training. CCC unveiled the engine with its new number, lettering, colors and logo at the Wednes- day high school job fair conduct- ed at the Clatsop County Fair & Expo Center The engine’s new graphics were designed and applied by Jeff Miller of Red Dwarf Graphics in Astoria. The CCC Fire Science pro- gram includes a less-than-one- \HDU&DUHHU3DWKZD\&HUWL¿FDWH in Fire Science and a two-year Associate of Applied Science degree in Fire Science. The pro- gram offers hands-on training for local structural and industrial ¿UHGHSDUWPHQWVDQGVSHFLDOL]HG Photo Courtesy of Clatsop Community College Clatsop Community College’s Fire Engine 2421 was a donation from Pacific County (Wash.) Fire District 1. training in U.S. Coast Guard-ap- proved Basic and Advanced 0DULWLPH )LUH¿JKWLQJ 2SSRU- tunities exist for high school students developing an interest in Fire Science and for veteran ¿UH¿JKWHUV Additional training en- KDQFHPHQWV WR WKH ¿UH HQJLQH will result from a special ap- peal conducted at the CCC Foundation’s Arts & Experi- ence Dinner and Auction Sat- urday. For information, con- tact 503-338-2306. ODOT plans tree planting along U.S. 101 CANNON BEACH — An Oregon Department of Trans- portation crew is planting trees and other plantings in an area along U.S. Highway 101 near Cannon Beach that was thinned in early March to re- move hazard trees. The work is scheduled for 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. April 28 and 29. Travelers should be aware of increased activity along the highway right of way and the public is encouraged to drive with caution through the area. The activity is scheduled to take place along U.S. High- way 101 from Ecola Creek Bridge at milepost 28.70 to Sunset Boulevard at milepost 29.48. The project is part of ODOT’s vegetation manage- ment of the U.S. Highway 101 corridor through Can- non Beach. Trees, shrubs and JURXQG FRYHUV LGHQWL¿HG LQ the Cannon Beach Forest Cor- & Present 102.3 fm ridor management plan that are better suited along ODOT highways will be planted. In early March, ODOT crews removed a number of alder trees that were identi- ¿HGDVKD]DUGRXVWRWUDYHOHUV and to the safe operation of the roadway. The tree thin- ning effort is part of a multi- year commitment to improve safety along this section of highway while addressing the guidelines of the Cannon Beach Forest Corridor vegeta- tion management plan. 3A Adopt-A-Garden program offered Clatsop Community College, with sponsorship from its Wellness Com- mittee, announces a new program to actively engage students, staff and commu- nity members in healthy outdoor activity that pro- motes community and helps beautify the college campuses. The Adopt-A-Garden program invites volunteers to select a landscape area on one of the CCC campus- es and maintain and beauti- fy that space during spring, summer and fall terms. Vol- unteers can also participate in the campuswide Spring Clean-Up Day, to be an- nounced soon. Those adopting an area are asked to maintain the space by weeding and pruning existing plants. Beds should be tended approximately every two to three weeks as needed. $QQXDO ÀRZHUV PD\ EH planted if approved by the CCC Facilities Department and removed at the end of the growing season. Only nontoxic substances may be applied, and access to water is very limited. Vol- unteers should plan ac- cordingly. The program is open to individuals and groups and volunteers will be recog- nized on the CCC website and in its Annual Report to the Community. For additional infor- mation, a map of avail- able spaces and volunteer forms, visit www.clat- sopcc.edu/community/ volunteer-opportunities or contact Patricia Warren at 503-338-2306 or pwar- ren@clatsopcc.edu Seaside recreation district invites public to meet executive director candidates SEASIDE — The public can meet the three Sunset Em- pire Park & Recreation Dis- trict executive director candi- dates Thursday. The district will hold a meet and greet event at the Bob Chisholm Community Center from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Thursday. $OO ¿QDOLVW FDQGLGDWHV IRU the position have been invit- ed. Their interviews with a technical panel and commu- nity panel are scheduled for earlier in the day, along with a facility tour. They are sched- uled to meet with the district’s board Friday. From a pool of about 40 applicants, the board nar- rowed the selection down to VL[ ¿QDOLVWV DQG WKUHH DOWHU- nates. Some candidates have withdrawn, but three will be interviewed Thursday. On April 1, the board also unanimously approved the Special Districts Association of Oregon to hire former dis- trict General Manager Mary Blake to serve as interim ex- ecutive director until the posi- WLRQLVSHUPDQHQWO\¿OOHG7KH board expects to make a hire by July 1. For more information, call the recreation district at 503- 738-3311 or visit www.sunse- tempire.com/ Registration deadline for May election is April 28 The Clatsop County &OHUNDQG(OHFWLRQV2I¿FH reminds local residents that April 28 is the deadline to register to vote in the May 19 special district election. Ballots for the election will be mailed out begin- ning April 29. The deadline to hand in or mail a registration form if you are registering WRYRWHIRUWKH¿UVWWLPHLV 5 p.m. April 28. To be eli- gible to vote, you must be an Oregon resident, a U.S. citizen, and be at least 18 years old by May 19. You must update your registration if you move or change your mailing ad- dress, change your name, or wish to change your SDUW\ DI¿OLDWLRQ 7KRVH who are updating their reg- istration have until 8 p.m. on the day of the election to do so. People can register on- line with the Oregon Sec- UHWDU\ RI 6WDWH¶V 2I¿FH DW www.sos.state.or.us/elec- tions. Voter registration forms can also be down- loaded from the “Clerk & Elections” page at www. co.clatsop.or.us or ob- WDLQHGDWWKH&OHUN¶V2I¿FH at 820 Exchange St., Asto- ria. The May 19 election features contests for seats on the Port of Astoria, Clatsop Community Col- lege and Sunset Empire Transportation District, as well as school districts, ¿UHGLVWULFWVDQGZDWHUDQG sewer service districts. For more information go to the “May 19 Special District Election” page on the Clatsop County web- site or call 50-325-8511. GO ONLINE www.dailyastorian.com W A NTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber N orth w es t H a rdw oods • Lon gview , W A Contact: Steve Axtell • 360-430-0885 or John Anderson • 360-269-2500 W ith this sw eet Spring Special, now m ight be the tim e to m ove to Suzanne Elise A ssisted Living the Classic Rock Station APRIL SPECIAL Quarterflash Call Sarah for details and a tour 503-738-0307 Friday, May 22 nd tic ke ts at the Liberty Theater t.com at Astoria es th e sw bo x et of fic e d an k Tic $ 100 MOVE-IN SPECIAL 101 F OREST D RIVE S EASIDE WWW . SUZANNE - ELISE . COM