PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. Postage Paid Vernonia, OR 97064 Permit No. 37 Vol. 26, No. 18 THE FREE INDEPENDENT The Voice of the Upper Nehalem River Valley for Over 25 years September 21, 2011 Town Hall gives school update This picture of the new Vernonia school was taken on September 19 and shows the ongoing progress as the builders prepare to finish the roof before the winter weather sets in. Veterans: Benefits & Job Fair, Sept. 28 Veterans and their families needing assistance are invited to attend a Veterans Benefits and Job Fair at the Willow Creek Center, 241 SW Edge- way Drive, Beaverton, from 10 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. on Wednes- day, September 28. Washing- ton County Disability, Aging & Veteran Services, WorkSource Employment Beaverton, and the Western Washington Coun- ty Employer’s Council are coor- dinating the hosted event. Veterans are unemployed in higher-than-average numbers locally and statewide, with more than 20 percent of veter- ans younger than 35 without jobs. The lack of jobs puts vet- erans at risk of becoming homeless quicker than veter- ans of any other era. It is esti- See Veterans on page 22 Vernonia School District 47J held a New School Town Hall on September 13 in the cafete- ria building. About 50 people attended to hear a presentation by the Ore- gon Department of Transporta- tion (ODOT) on the changes to Bridge St. and Missouri Ave. that will provide improved ac- cess to the new school. David Kim, ODOT Project Manager, presented a map showing what Bridge St. and Missouri Ave. will look like after the project is completed. Com- ing up the hill from the old schools, there will be a left turn lane from Bridge St. onto Mis- souri, with Bridge St. widened for this purpose. The extra space needed will come from the Vernonia Pioneer Museum and Vernonia Rural Fire Pro- tection District properties. Turns will still be possible, as now, onto Texas Ave. and Lakeview Ave. Missouri will have left and right turn lanes coming from the school onto Bridge St. A new, marked crosswalk will be on the east side of Missouri Ave. This will be an illuminated crosswalk sign with rapid flash beacons to alert drivers that pedestrians are about to use the crosswalk. There will also be a six foot bi- cycle lane on Bridge St. Missouri Ave. will be widened and will have parking on the west side only. The east side will have a planter strip and a wide sidewalk for pedes- Salmon Festival October 1 See page 24 for more information. Outcome of a log truck to log truck accident, on September 9, at the junction of Hwy 47 and Scappoose-Vernonia Rd. Two fully loaded log trucks, one driven by Larry Cave of Cave Trucking of Warrenton (not pictured) met up with this BMS truck, driven by owner Bill Mont- gomery of Gaston. Both lost their loads and Montgomery sustained non-life threatening in- juries. Hillsboro Towing handled the towing and Weller & Sons Trucking came out with self- loaders and picked up the logs. Final Vernonia First Friday September 30, 5 to 8 pm at Scout Cabin trians and bicycles. ODOT said work is expect- ed to begin next Spring and will be completed before school starts in September 2012. The ODOT work is being funded by a $3.9 million grant. Utility work will be done by the school district and city, not ODOT. School district Project Manager Steve Effros said the utilities need to be in place be- fore winter so system testing can begin at the school. It has not been decided if power will be underground or overhead. Work will start on the utilities this month or in October. The audience also heard that Lango Hansen Landscape Architects, of Portland, won the contract to build the new Spencer Park on the old school site. Kurt Lango told the audi- ence there will be, “A lot of op- portunity for input and for peo- ple to come together with ideas for this new space.” One member of the audi- ence asked, related to the funding for the new school, “Is there going to be enough mon- ey to finish this?” This was an- swered by State Senator Betsy Johnson, “I know in my heart we’re going to find the money.” John Donovan of the Metropol- itan Group, hired to raise the money for the school, said the fundraising is where we ex- pected it to be at this point and finished with, “This place is one of the places Oregon can stand together.” Reward amount raised in elk kill Oregon State Police (OSP) Fish & Wildlife Division troop- ers are continuing to ask for the public’s help to identify the sus- pect(s) responsible for the ille- gal killing of four elk found in See Reward on page 14 See page 22 for in- formation on Salmon Poisoning