PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. Postage Paid Vernonia, OR 97064 Permit No. 37 Vol. 26, No. 3 THE INDEPENDENT The Voice of the Upper Nehalem River Valley for Over 25 years Merkley meeting set in St. Helens Rummage sale, car wash for band tour The Vernonia High/Middle School Band is holding a rum- mage sale and, weather permit- ting, car wash on Saturday, February 5, 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. in the school cafeteria. All proceeds will go to sup- port the band for their Spring Break 2001 tour. During Spring Break, 33 middle and high school students will be on a three-stop, charter bus, concert tour in California. The Vernonia band will be joined by 11 stu- dents and the band director from Molalla High School. The Vernonia Community PTA is one of the tour sponsors. February 3, 2011 G-P grant adds $50,000 to Vernonia school project Georgia-Pacific Wauna Mill Manager Mike Tomkins, State Senator Betsy Johnson, Vernonia school principal Aaron Miller, Columbia County Commissioner Tony Hyde and G-P Public Af- fairs Manager Kristi Ward at the January 31 presentation of a $50,000 “check” to the Vernon- ia school project. Oregon Senator Jeff Merkley will hold town halls in Lincoln, Tillamook, Clatsop and Colum- bia Counties this week. He will update constituents on his work in Washington, D.C., and answer their ques- tions and invite their sugges- tions about how to tackle the FREE challenges facing Oregon and America. “Traveling across Oregon and meeting with residents in every county is crucial to help- ing me advocate for all Orego- nians,” Merkley said. “I invite all residents of Lincoln, Tillamook, Clatsop and Columbia Coun- ties to come and discuss how we can create jobs, strengthen Oregon, and put America on the right track.” In 2008, Merkley pledged to hold town halls in each of Ore- See Merkley on page 4 A $50,000 Georgia-Pacific community investment grant was presented, January 31, to the Vernonia school district to help with construction of the new school. This grant brings the fundraising effort to over 80 percent of the funds needed to complete the $38.2 project to replace three flood-damaged schools with one building out of the flood zone. That building will house kindergarten through high school students. The announcement of the grant took place at Georgia-Pa- cific’s Wauna mill in Clatskanie. Grade school principal Aaron Miller accepted the check on behalf of the Vernonia School District. Columbia County Com- missioner and Vernonia resi- dent Tony Hyde, and State Senator Betsy Johnson, among others, attended the event, which also included a tour of the mill’s biomass boiler. “We are a timber community, and it is rewarding to see a tim- ber-based organization like Georgia-Pacific step up,” noted Hyde. “Their investment in the future of Vernonia demon- strates the best of our commu- nity, and of our neighbors’ spirit of compassion.” Five Georgia-Pacific facili- ties contributed to the $50,000 grant: Wauna Consumer Prod- ucts Mill in Clatskanie; Camas Consumer Products Mill in Ca- mas, Washington; Toledo Con- tainerboard Mill; Coos Bay Lumber Mill; and the Philomath Lumber Mill. “This is our most significant donation ever,” said Kristi Ward, G-P Public Affairs Manager. A New Tool for Job Seekers V ERNONIA S CHOOL D ISTRICT E DUCATIONAL P ROGRAMS See Page 4 Thursday, Feb. 10 • 6:30-8:00 p.m. • Middle School Bldg. T OWN H ALL M EETING Clothing drive to aid VHS students An effort is underway to start a clothing closet at Vernonia High School. Bring clothes to the covered playshed on Satur- day, February 12, from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., or call 503- 429-3521 by Feb. 11 for pick- up. Like-new clothing and for- mal wear for both girls and boys is requested. An OOOPS! moment occurred January 23 when this house stuck on the green bridge while it was being moved. Bridge St./Hwy. 47 was closed briefly, until the problem was solved.