Page 14 The INDEPENDENT, February 18, 2010 Give input on fairgrounds by Feb. 19 Visitation Rummage Sale March 4-6 Washington County would like to hear from the public by February 19 about a revised agreement draft between the Board of County Commission- ers and the Washington Coun- ty Fair Board. Based on input from the public, changes have been made to the draft agree- ment that would: • Identify general interest ar- eas to be represented in Board appointments, • Change the Fairgrounds “Coordinator” to Fairgrounds “Manager,” and • Clarify that access will be provided to the Fair Board and groups who participate in the annual Fair event during inter- im (non-Fair) times of the year. The primary goal of the re- vised agreement draft contin- ues to be that of strengthening the Fair event held each year at the 101-acre County Fair Com- plex property located at the in- tersection of NE Cornell Road and NE 34th Avenue in Hills- boro. Other provisions of the re- The 25th annual Visitation School Rummage Sale will be held March 4-6 in the Harris Parish Center of Visitation Catholic Church, 4285 NW Vis- itation Rd., Forest Grove. The event starts with an ear- ly bird sale, March 4, from 7:30 - 9:00 a.m. ($5 entrance fee). vised, draft agreement that would remain the same in- clude: • Strengthening partnership and collaboration among the Board of Commissioners, Fair Board, Fair Boosters, county staff and other interested par- ties; • Clarifying Fair Board and county roles and responsibili- ties and formalizing channels of communication and collabora- tion; • Focusing energy, passion and expertise of the Fair Board on the production of the Fair event; • Optimizing operational effi- ciencies and leveraging the re- sources, staff and expertise of Washington County; and • Forming and staffing an ad- visory committee to the Board of Commissioners to provide input for updating and imple- menting the Fairgrounds Mas- ter Plan, Fairgrounds Capital Projects Plan and other major site-related initiatives. Members of the public are You can help Wash. Co. veterans Veteran Services of Wash- ington County is looking for two volunteers able to contribute five hours of time a week to help old paper files become electronic data. The agency is part of the County’s Department of Health and Human Services. The Ser- vice Coordinators who work there help returning veterans and their families receive all the benefits promised them when See Veterans on page 21 welcome to review the updated proposal and send written com- ments by February 19 to the Board of County Commission- ers. Please visit www.co.wash- ington.or.us/fair for background and to download a form to sub- mit written testimony. Regular hours are 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. On Saturday every- thing will be on sale at half- price, with a $3 bag sale from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. For more information visit the website www.vcsknights. org or call the school at 503- 357-6990. Many named to Banks HS Honor Roll The following students were named to the Banks High School academic Honor Roll for the 2009-10 first semester. *Denotes 4.00 GPA for this se- mester. Students are listed al- phabetically by first name. Freshmen – Addison Brown- ing*, Alaura King*, Arlana Daskalakis*, Aubrey Rue*, Bri- an Lacock, Chelsea Dunthorn*, Christopher Munjar*, Claire Herinckx, Courtney Engeseth, Cuyler Dimeo-Ediger, Emily Cackler*, Emmitt Vandehey, Eric Sommerfeld, Jalen Todd, Jessica Beatty, Johanna Blake*, Jordin Duyck, Kaylin Vandomelen*, Kiana Shurts*, Laura White*, Louis Fowler, Makayla Murry*, Matthew Borchers*, Megan Sprute, Michaela Shurts*, Miriam Gib- son*, Riley Gerlinger, Saman- tha Duyck*, Samantha Haren*, Sara Reaser, Sierra Bloomer, Stefani Evers*, Thomas Blat- ner, Tucker Sahnow, and Wyatt St Marie. Sophomores – Alan Jordan*, Alexander Heath*, Alexandra Chave*, Ashley Vandecoever- ing, Austin Soper, Beatrix Nor- gren, Bonnia Helm*, Chelsie Bunn, Daniel Louis*, Devin Wyckoff*, Emily Meeuwsen*, Franklin Browning, Jacob Lyda*, Janet Sanchez-Reyes*, Jena Holderman, Jessica Bon- nett*, Jordan Trout, Joshua Sladden*, Kaitlin McGinnis, Kaitlyn Cole, Kajsa Bradley*, Keith Spiering, Kyle Douglas, Kyle Selfaison*, Maggi Castel- lanos, Marla Gooding*, Melissa Masters*, Mitchell Evers*, Mol- ly Miller, Morgan Stone, Natalie Larsen, Odalis Avendano*, Sa- vannah Lyda, Shea Rue, and Zinaida Polushkin. Juniors – Allison Hancock, Allyson Philippi*, Amy Brown- ing*, Arley Sanchez, Brandon Meier, Caroline Momah, Chel- sea Matthews*, Colby Seyferth, Connor Reynolds, Deven Mur- ray, Evan Reisinger, Felicia Wilson*, Garrett Soper, Jessica Markham*, Kaitlin Sommerfeld, Kathleen Woodruff, Kiciah Gib- son*, Leean Pallett, Linus Nor- gren, Marcus Malouf, Mark Acosta, Matthew Hidalgo, Matthew McCourt, Maxwell Edison*, Megan Chalupsky*, Megan Nielson*, Robert Huey, Samantha Elwood, Terry Sand- strom, Tiegan Williams, and Trask Bowden. Seniors – Andrew Jimenez, Brock Markham, Cecelia Can- netti*, Christopher Shaw, Christy McCarthy, Danielle Lorenz, DeeJay Pickar, Ferdi- nand Wessels, James Reaser, Jared Acosta*, Jennifer Helm, Jessica Selfaison, Kalin Morris, Kelsee Miller, Kimberly Duyck, Megan Merritt, Monique Mat- ney*, Rebecca McCollum, Shaylin Roberts, Sierra Silver*, Stefanie Spady, Stephen Clink, Tasha Lyda, Tiara Herr*, and Zackery Evers*. School Board told cost of JV sports Meyers ‘ Auto Body,Inc 503-429-0248 493 Bridge St, Vernonia, OR From page 12 board conducts an annual eval- uation of the superintendent. Foster told the board that he had no problems with the process used last year, and board member Kathy Edison described the evaluation tool in use, which was developed by the OSBA. Board members Norie Dimeo-Ediger and Laurie Schlegel agreed to begin Fos- ter’s evaluation this month. Richard Bowden did not attend the meetings. Completed forms will be collated by Moore for discussion during the March workshop. Responding to concerns ex- pressed by Dan Streblow at the January board meeting, Foster passed out an analysis of costs for junior high sports. As it be- came clear that costs for junior high JVII volleyball and basket- ball (boys and girls) could be covered with relative ease by a combination of increasing pay- to-play fees by $25 and volun- teer coaching, Moore asked the board if they could agree in principal to raise athletic fees from $100 to $125 per sport. Dimeo-Ediger clarified that this was not an agreement in ad- vance to funding junior high sports. Schlegel raised the question of raising fees across the board for all activities and athletics. Though there was some agreement, no decision was made and Foster said that he would report current partici- pation fees for student pro- grams at the next meeting. Foster presented the board with a revision of budget princi- ples at the workshop. Originally adopted to guide decisions un- til the end of the 2009 funding biennium, this defining docu- ment helped administrators and board members shape de- cisions through a financial cri- sis not anticipated in 2005. Foster briefly explained that he retained the previous four ar- eas of relevance (Finance, Buildings and Grounds, Stu- dent Achievement, and Com- munication) and created a sep- arate area for technology. Fos- ter said that he added specific language about maintenance and upkeep. Board members discussed the principles and Foster will bring an updated statement to the next workshop. Moore won- dered if the budget principles was a place for the board to make a philosophical state- ment favoring direct and active counseling and support. In his view the relative lack of such support throughout the school experience is the fundamental difference between public and private schools.