Broadway Rose Theatre Presents a Minnesota Musical Comedy

Broadway Rose Theatre Company continues its 2022 Season of Live Musicals with Don’t Hug Me, a Minnesota musical comedy. Preview performance is Thursday, April 14, with opening night on Friday, April 15, and performances continuing through May 8. Evening performances are Thursday through Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. Matinees are at 2 p.m. on Saturday and Sundays (no performance on Easter). Performances are held at The Broadway Rose New Stage located at 12850 SW Grant Avenue in Tigard. Tickets are priced from $30 to $50 for adults (depending on date). Tickets in the upper section for ages 6-18 are $20 and ages 19-35 are $25. Discounts are available for groups of 10 or more. $5 tickets are available for Oregon Trail Card holders through the Arts for All program. For a full listing of show performances or to order tickets visit www.broadwayrose.org, call 503.620.5262, or visit the box office at 12850 SW Grant Avenue, Tigard.

Oh, for cryin’ in yer snow shoes! It’s the coldest day of the year in Bunyan Bay when a slick karaoke salesman arrives at the town bar and turns the locals’ lives upside down in this “terrifically silly” (LA Weekly) romantic comedy. With over-the-top songs like “My Smorgasbord of Love,” “Upside Down in My Pickup Truck,” and “He Wore a Purple Tux,” you’ll be laughing ‘til the spring thaw!

Don’t Hug Me takes place in Bunyan Bay, Minnesota. Cantankerous bar owner Gunner Johnson wants to sell the business and move to Florida. Clara, his wife and former Winter Carnival Bunyan Queen, wants to stay. Bernice Lundstrom, the waitress, wants to pursue a singing career. Her fiancé, Kanute Gunderson, wants her to stay home. It’s a battle of wills, and when a fast-talking salesman, Aarvid Gisselsen, promises to bring romance into their lives through the ‘magic’ of karaoke, all heck breaks loose! It’s Fargo meets The Music Man (without the blood or the trombones). 

Don’t Hug Me is part of a season of belly laughs,” says Artistic Director Sharon Maroney. “It’s wacky and kitschy and different than anything we’ve done before. I’m looking forward to our audiences laughing together this spring.”

Music by Paul Olson with book by Phil Olson. The Broadway Rose production will be directed and choreographed by Dan Murphy with music direction from Jennifer Ackerman. The creative team includes Bryan Boyd (Set Designer), Larry Larsen (Lighting Designer), Annie Kaiser (Costume Designer), Emily Wilken (Prop Designer), Brian Karl Moen (Sound Designer), and Jessica Junor (Production Stage Manager).

The cast comprises Matthew H. Curl, Clara-Liis Hillier, Peter Liptak, Kevin-Michael Moore, and Elizabeth Young.

For more information on Broadway Rose’s Covid Policy, please visit www.broadwayrose.org/company-updates.

Broadway Rose’s 2022 season is funded in part by the Regional Arts & Culture Council, the Oregon Arts Commission, and the City of Tigard. The Title Sponsor is Pearson Financial Group and Neil Kelly is the production sponsor.

Charlie Sitton’s life mirrors the ‘farm to table’ movement

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Back in the 1980s, Charlie Sitton was concentrating on playing basketball and planning a career in the NBA. But his family had 2,000 acres of farmland outside Carlton, where he grew up, so he could always turn to farming as a back-up career.

Sitton stands at the reception desk inside Tualatin’s Century Hotel ready to welcome guests.
Sitton stands at the reception desk inside Tualatin’s Century Hotel ready to welcome guests. Barbara Sherman/Tualatin Life

Then fate intervened as Sitton’s basketball career was coming to an end: He met and married his wife Tracey, whose dad Don Roberts is a Northwest developer/builder with experience building and running hotels. “I married into the hotel business,” said Sitton, explaining that the two men were looking around for a hotel site to develop when during a stop at the Tualatin Wells Fargo, Sitton learned about the Commons being developed.

Starting in the early 1990s, the City of Tualatin, working with private partners, developed the 19-acre Tualatin Commons centered around the Lake of the Commons, which replaced the odor-producing Blue Mountain pet food plant.

“We decided to jump on it,” he said of building the Century Hotel. “The city put in the building pads and parking lots, and we were here every day during the construction of the hotel. We initially opened the Century Hotel with 40 rooms.

“Then an opportunity came along to develop a restaurant next door, and Bill Hayden was the consultant. The first restaurant operator fell through, so Bill got the job and ran it for 22 years. We also added 30 hotel rooms above the restaurant.”

Sitton and Roberts ran the restaurant for the past year, retaining the name, until the decision was made to close and refurbish it before opening with a new operator, hopefully in May. Mark Byrom, the owner of Urban Restaurants, will run the new restaurant while retaining the former staff.

Hayden’s closed at the end of February, and that last week patrons returned to reminisce and enjoy one last meal. “One couple said, ‘Our first date was on those two bar stools,’ and other couples came to eat at their favorite table,” Sitton said. “Hayden’s was a great gathering place.

“Mark owns half a dozen restaurants and has been bugging me for years to take over Hayden’s. He’s excited about taking it over. But after being open for 23 years, it needs a major overhaul. Mark’s a visionary and is looking into having live music and holding weddings at the restaurant, which will be called Brix Tavern South. He will be serving breakfast, lunch and dinner seven days a week.”

An added bonus for hotel guests is that they will be able to get breakfast at the restaurant, and room service will be provided as well. “That separates us from the other stand-alone hotels,” Sitton said. “I’m just the landlord, but I’m excited about the relationship we have.”

“Farm to table” is currently a popular concept, but for Sitton, it also describes his life (except for the basketball detour). Growing up on the family farm, he knew all about growing food, and now he has been involved in the restaurant business for 23 years.

Sitton’s family roots go deep in Oregon history. He is a fourth-generation Oregonian, with his ancestors coming West on the same wagon train as the “Father of Oregon,” John McLoughlin, and settling in the Willamette Valley. And now Sitton’s daughter and son are part of the fifth generation.

But basketball was his passion in his earlier life. He played basketball at McMinnville High School when his team won the state championship in 1979. He joked that during his stint at Oregon State University from 1980-84, he technically earned a degree in general studies, “but I majored in basketball.”

Sitton was named All-American twice, chosen for the All-PAC-10 three times, and in 1983 won the title of Oregon State University’s Most Valuable Player.

After OSU, Sitton was the Dallas Mavericks’ second-round draft pick but after playing one year, broke his thumb in his second year, side-lining him for the rest of the year. He next played three seasons in Italy, “and then I bounced around in France,” he said. Back in the States, Sitton tried out for two NBA teams before switching to the hospitality business.

After his basketball career was over, Sitton had the option of working on the farm (his family owns two Century farms), where currently family members raise red clover, grass seed, wheat and alfalfa hay, plus there is an acre of pinot grapes that Sitton planted. “But McMinnville was a nice place to get out of,” he said.

Turning reflective, the Century Hotel co-owner who works alongside his wife in the business, said, “I grew up here, and I am fortunate to be home every night. We’ve had great support from the people here, and I’ve enjoyed it. It’s been a good run. But it’s time to start stepping away.”

But he lamented that “it’s tough to run a business in Oregon, and it’s getting harder. But as much as I whine and sniffle about it, Oregon is a great place to live.”

Tualatin Lions Easter Egg Hunt Returns April 16th!

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The Tualatin Lions Club and the Easter Bunny are both excited to announce the happy return of the Tualatin Lions Easter Egg Hunt at 1 p.m. on Saturday, April 16, 2022, at the beautiful Tualatin Community Park, 8515 SW Tualatin Road, Tualatin.

After staying safe for the past two years, the grand old Tualatin Lions Hunt will follow its normal format with four (4) rounds of hunts for the following age groups: Toddlers-2’s (with minimal help from adult relatives); 3’s & 4’s’, then 5’s & 6’s and finally, the big sibling 7’s & 8’s. Each hunter only needs to find a few eggs that they will turn over to scouts from Troop 530 and the Tualatin Venture Crew for individual sacks of tasty Easter Candy. Each hunt area will have up to two “special” eggs that those lucky hunters can turn in for big, special prizes from the Lions and Scouts.

The Easter Bunny, who likes the Tualatin Lions hunt above all others, will be at Community Park at noon to take pictures with hunters and their families. The Tualatin Lions will be on hand with their famous popcorn/soda/water sales and to help guide families around the hunt.

Hunters should bring their own containers for the 2-3 eggs they collect. Anything will work as an “Easter Basket” for this event.

The Tualatin Lions will happily accept non-perishable food, personal hygiene items or cash donations to benefit our neighbors in need through the Tualatin Schoolhouse Pantry.

The Tualatin Lions, the Scouts from Troop 530, and the Venture Crew are ready to welcome families and generations of Easter Egg Hunters back to this fun, traditional community event that’s been taking place since 1973. 

The Tualatin Lions Club is always a welcome place for anyone interested in volunteer service in their community and can be reached at tualatinlions@gmail.com

When Diet and Exercise Fail…

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You go to the gym. You eat healthy. So why do you still struggle with cellulite?  Where did that pooch come from? 

In the past, people looked to highly invasive and painful options like liposuction or skin removal surgery to achieve their dream bodies. 

Not anymore.  Fresh out of Europe, body contouring is the next big trend for aesthetics – now you can achieve surgical-like results without surgery or pain. 

Body contouring encompasses a wide variety of well-known and safe technologies including ultrasound, radiofrequency, vacuum therapy, Cryo therapy, LED Lipo Laser Sculpt, and electric muscle stimulation.  Clients can shape and mold their bodies, while enjoying relaxing treatments, that allow them to resume normal activity immediately after. 

The important question is – is body contouring right for you? Read below some frequently asked questions about body contouring and you’ll see, that yes, it’s right for almost anyone!

Do treatments hurt or leave lasting side effects?

Most treatments are very relaxing and have no uncomfortable sensations. Some can cause some discomfort during treatment, but have very little lasting pain or side effects when the treatment has finished. The most normal side effect is a small amount of redness in the treatment area.

Are the treatments safe?

Yes! While most of these treatments have only been recently been introduced in the U.S., many of these treatments have been used since 2005 and people have been safely and successfully treated in over 50 countries over the past 9 years. 

Does body contouring work on higher BMI or very loose skin? 

Yes!  It’s important when pursuing a facility that provides body contouring, that they can provide a multitude of technologies that can work with all shapes and sizes.

What areas can be treated?

Body contouring can treat a wide variety of areas and concerns with great success: non-invasive, non-surgical versions of the facelift, neck lift, liposuction, tummy tuck, front and back of thigh slimming, arm slimming, muscle toning, non-invasive Brazilian Butt Lift, breast lift, acne controlling treatments, and scar and stretch mark therapy.

How long will results last?

The results are easily maintained, especially when combined with exercise and proper nutrition. Some technologies provide permanent fat reduction solutions that can mimic the same effect as liposuction. However, we cannot stop the natural aging that affects your appearance and skin. For this reason, we recommend maintenance visits, especially concerning skin tightening. 

Book a free consultation today to find out how Aesthetic Body Design can help you achieve your aesthetic goals.

Tualatin News In Brief

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Tualatin Food Pantry Appoints Executive Director

The Tualatin Food Pantry (TFP), which also operates under the name Tualatin School House Pantry, has named Danielle Schneider as its first Executive Director.

Danielle Schneider
Danielle Schneider

Schneider’s extensive background in nonprofit leadership combined with her commitment to community-based organizations, will help to further advance the mission of TFP. She most recently served as the Executive Director for the Blosser Center for Dyslexia Resources where she was instrumental in leading the Center through the pandemic and improving the organization’s financial position.

“The TFP Board was very impressed with the skills, experience, and passion for service that Danielle brings to the pantry,” shared Mike Shiffer, TFP Board Chair. “We look forward to the leadership that Danielle will provide to our volunteers and clients as we work with her going forward to feed hungry neighbors in a caring way.”

Schneider assumed the role on January 18. She is responsible for the professional management of the organization. Schneider will also lead fundraising efforts as well as marketing and community engagement initiatives.

“This is a very exciting time for TFP, and I’m delighted to be able to help grow the organization to continue to serve our most vulnerable neighbors,” says Schneider.

Prior to the Blosser Center, Schneider worked for more than a decade as a fundraiser for the Portland State University Foundation and Open School. She serves on the Board of Directors for Abby’s Closet and the Dance Drill Coaches Association of Oregon and is former Board Member for Camp Fire Columbia.

12 Members of Drug Trafficking Organization Indicted for Distributing Counterfeit Oxycodone Pills Containing Fentanyl, Laundering Proceeds

12 people are facing federal charges for conspiring to distribute counterfeit oxycodone pills containing fentanyl in the Pacific Northwest, and laundering millions in drug proceeds.

According to court documents, beginning in fall 2021, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agents based in Portland began investigating a drug trafficking organization led by Luis Antonio Beltran Arrendondo, 32, of Las Vegas, who was suspected of importing counterfeit oxycodone pills containing fentanyl and heroin from Mexico into California, and transporting it to Oregon and Washington State for distribution. Arrendondo formerly resided in Oregon, but later relocated to Las Vegas with his significant other and accomplice Jacqueline Paola Rodriguez Barrientos, 41. Barrientos was also indicted as the chief money launderer for the Arrendondo organization.

As the investigation continued, agents interdicted couriers transporting fentanyl pills and heroin to Oregon. They executed search warrants in Hillsboro, Portland, Tualatin, and Wilsonville, Oregon; Fresno and Hawaiian Gardens, California; and Las Vegas. In total, these enforcement actions resulted in the seizure of approximately 115,000 counterfeit oxycodone pills suspected to contain fentanyl and stamped “M/30”, 41 pounds of methamphetamine, and more than 57 pounds of heroin.

A parallel financial investigation revealed that Barrientos laundered money generated by the Arrendondo organization through the Mazatlán Beauty Salon in Tualatin, Oregon and by buying real estate. The real estate purchases were made with cashier’s checks funded by large cash deposits. Currency Transaction Reports generated by several banks showed that Barrientos made frequent cash deposits ranging from $10,000 to more than $373,000 into accounts held in her name or the name of her salon. These deposits totaled more than $3.5 million during a 9-month period in 2021. Since February 2021, members of the Arrendondo organization purchased a total of nine residential properties in Oregon and Nevada with an estimated total value of more than $4.6 million. All nine properties were purchased outright with no mortgages.

On February 17, 2022, DEA agents arrested Arrendondo and Barrientos at their Las Vegas residence. Agents found and seized two luxury vehicles, several loose receipts documenting high-end retail purchases, credit card statements documenting more than $16,000 spent on tickets to attend a professional boxing match, and other evidence memorializing the couple’s high-end lifestyle.

On March 15, 2022, Arrendondo and Barrientos made their initial appearances in federal court. Both are in custody pending trial. All ten of Arrendondo and Barrientos’ co-conspirators have been arrested and are also pending trial in the District of Oregon.

Acting U.S. Attorney Scott Erik Asphaug of the District of Oregon made the announcement.

This case was investigated by DEA with assistance from the FBI, Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), IRS-Criminal Investigation (IRS:CI), Tigard Police Department, and Oregon State Police. It is being prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Oregon.

An indictment is only an accusation of a crime, and defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

Opioid abuse affects communities across the nation. Provisional data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) indicate that there were more than 100,000 drug overdoses in the U.S. during the 12-month period ending April 2021, an increase of nearly 29% from the previous 12-month period. Synthetic opioids (primarily fentanyl) accounted for more than three quarters of these deaths. Drug overdose continues to be the leading cause of injury or death in the U.S.

Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid 80 to 100 times more powerful than morphine and 30 to 50 times more powerful than heroin. A 3-milligram dose of fentanyl—a few grains of the substance—is enough to kill an average adult male. The availability of illicit fentanyl in Oregon has caused a dramatic increase in overdose deaths throughout the state.

If you or someone you know is in immediate danger, please call 911.

New Tualatin children’s librarian recommends imaginative books for early readers

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When Alec Chunn first fell head over heels for library life, he thought he’d make a career of curating picture books and hosting story times with the tiniest patrons.  

But Tualatin’s new children’s librarian said it’s the older young readers he works with now who really inspire him.

When his focus shifted while running a reading group from elementary schoolers, it wasn’t the first time life surprised him. As an undergraduate, The Southeastern Washington native thought he was headed in a different direction when he stumbled into his passion. 

“I came to libraries by accident,” he said. “I was studying theater education in college and took a class on children’s literature that basically changed my life.”  

From there, it was all about the library.

Chunn boarded an eastbound train to Boston, where he picked up graduate degrees in Library and Information Science and Children’s Literature at Simmons University before returning to the Northwest to work as an AmeriCorps early literacy mentor.

He comes to Tualatin fresh from a five-year run with Eugene Public Library where he created school-age programming and coordinated outreach efforts to local schools and professional development for teachers.

“As a youth librarian, I feel that it’s my job to advocate for youth in the community. Youth and their families should feel ownership and investment in library spaces and programming. I want the library to feel like a safe place and a fun place, too,” he said. “I think our teen librarian Aimee Meuchel has done a great job of cultivating that sense with teens through the teen space and programming.”  

It’s something he wants to replicate for grade-schoolers.

Chunn, who’s spent most of his life in the Northwest, says he was excited to make the move to Tualatin with his partner late last year. The couple had been eyeing the Portland area for a couple of years.

“We’re looking forward to having your new blood, your new energy in creating programs where we can get back together more,” Mayor Frank Bubenik told him at a recent City Council meeting.

This spring he’s virtually visiting fourth-grade classrooms as part of a program that puts library cards in the hands of every Tigard-Tualatin student and he hopes his excitement is infectious.  

By teaching kids about everything their new cards can do, Chunn wants to let them in on a not-so-secret secret he learned long ago. “There truly is nothing more magical than a library card.” 

Alec’s Picks:

For early elementary readers: Battle of the Bad-Breath Bats by David Bowles.

Cousins Malia, Ivan, and Dante are visiting their aunt Lucy for the summer. But on their way to Gulf City’s water park, they get lost on 13th Street. Only it’s not a street at all. It’s a strange world filled with dangerous beasts! Will the cousins find their way back to Aunt Lucy’s house?

Alec says: “It’s the first in a series called ‘13th Street’ that’s a great blend of funny and a little frightening. It’s also great for readers just starting to read independently but who aren’t ready for longer chapter books”

For older elementary readers: Amari and the Night Brothers by B.B. Alston.

A quest to find her missing brother leads Amari Peters to compete for a spot in the Bureau of Supernatural Affairs. She’s certain the secretive organization holds the key to locating Quinton—if only she can wrap her head around the idea of magicians, fairies, aliens, and other supernatural creatures all being real. 

Alec says: “It’s the first in a trilogy and it’s a perfect book for fans of Harry Potter that feels a bit more current and contemporary. Plus, it’s going to be a movie!”

What Alec is looking forward to at the library: “I’m excited to kick off a new graphic novel book group for grades 4-7 called GNG. We’re going to read a graphic novel each month, then meet in Zoom to do an activity together and draw in the artist’s style.”

Prescott Bluebird Recovery Project Seeks Volunteers

Maybe you’ve driven by the wooden bird houses that are mounted on power poles and fence lines and wondered about them.

Many of these are bluebird boxes placed by the Prescott Bluebird Recovery Project (PBRP). PBRP was founded in the 1970s to restore the Western Bluebird in portions of Clackamas, Marion, Multnomah, Washington, and Yamhill counties. The major reasons for the decline of the Western Bluebird are loss of habitat, competition from non-native house sparrows and starlings, and reduction of insects due to the use of pesticides.

Last year, over 1400 bluebirds fledged from PBRP boxes. This number was down from previous years, due in part to last year’s extreme heat wave. Still, volunteers reported bluebirds that made new nesting attempts and had success with second clutches.

PBRP is a non-profit organization that relies on volunteers to monitor the bluebird boxes. Monitoring consists of weekly visits to each box on a monitor’s route from early April until late August. During the visit the monitor observes the box, watching for bluebirds or other bird species. Monitors learn when it is appropriate to open the boxes to check on nesting activity and eventually count eggs and hatchlings. These observations and counts are recorded and compiled at the end of the season. Monitors work with team leaders who conduct field training and answer questions.

Every year, some of the volunteers retire or relocate leaving some routes without monitors. PBRP is looking to recruit some new volunteers to monitor those existing routes. This year they will be hosting a Zoom meeting for anyone interested in volunteering. The meeting will be Saturday, March 5th at 10 am. To register for the Zoom meeting, please visit prescottbluebird.com.

Bridgeport Elementary Community Garden

The Bridgeport Elementary Community Garden was established in 2016 with a combination of hard work and vision by a dedicated group of teachers, parents, and community volunteers. The garden has been cultivating good things ever since. 

The garden is now fully equipped with 18 irrigated raised beds. We grow zucchini, tomatillos, green beans, potatoes, squash, lettuce, peas, tomatoes, carrots, beets, basil, sage, mint, kale, chard, peppers, sunflowers, onions, & garlic with the help of our partners at Neighbors Nourishing Communities who provide 70% of our seeds. In just 5 years the garden has produced over 2600 pounds of food that have been donated to Packed with Pride, Tualatin School House Pantry, and the Backpack Program and offered to students at the school cafeteria on the garden tasting table.

The garden’s mission is to provide hands-on real life garden/environmental science experiences in an outdoor setting to the students at Bridgeport Elementary and to provide fresh healthy produce to our community members who experience food insecurities. To carry out its mission the garden relies on modest fundraising efforts, generous donations, and grants to carry out its good work. Some of our past donors include: The Home Depot, Conrad Lumber, Lowes, New Seasons, Costco, Bi-Mart, Penelope Mangum and Girl Scout troop 10689, and Eagle Scouts: Liam, Whitt, Quinn Thompson, and Lucas Williams. 

A small but mighty crew of teachers and parent volunteers continue to keep the garden growing. We have also welcomed work crews from local businesses (such as New Seasons) to help us with projects like building and staining the fence and spreading gravel. 

Our students are active in the garden, too. They help grow garden starts in their classrooms each year for a spring Garden Start Sale and they learn about and participate in all aspects of the garden in our garden after school club. 

We have community garden beds for rent as well as an adopt-a-plot program that runs through the summer and allows for our school and community members to reap and share the bounty from our harvest in exchange for their work weeding and maintaining beds. 

We are very excited about our 2022 goals which include growing 650 pounds of food to donate to our community and continuing to shepherd the final permitting and building of our 960 square foot greenhouse. 

A greenhouse of this size is as unique as it is awesome to find at an elementary school community garden. We are deeply grateful to Chad Darby from Neighbors Nourishing Communities, who helped us secure the $30,00 in grant funds from Grinnell College to make the greenhouse dream a reality. Once the greenhouse is built, it will accommodate a full classroom as well as support us growing crops for donation as well as sales to help continue to fund the garden. 

Come get your fingers dirty with us! We’d love to have you join our efforts. We seek volunteers to serve on the Garden Committee’s executive board including: social media chair, event planner, fundraising coordinator, after school garden club leader, and summer care coordinator. Contact bridgeportelementarypto@gmail.com for more details. 

Do you or someone you know want to support the good work we are doing at the Bridgeport Elementary Garden with a financial or in-kind donation? We are currently raising funds for and/or seeking donations for our general fund as well as specifically to help us pay for an 8×12 shed. To donate contact bridgeportelementarypto@gmail.com.  

We are also eager to connect companies with paid volunteer hours and gift matching programs. Please contact bridgeportelementarypto@gmail.com for more details. 

The Bridgeport Garden Committee would not be possible without the time and talents of some amazing people. Our thanks to Jessie Chaney, Maria Reed, Meghan Pfieffer-Hoyt, and Miriam Marx (Bridgeport Elementary teachers) and Leah Findtner, Robert Kellogg, Jamie Flicker, Matt Borgman, the Hannam family, the Madrigal family, the Curtis family, and Maxine Chaney (Bridgeport Elementary parents) for your hard work and dedication. 

What are neuromodulators?

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Tualatin Life sat down with Dr. Laura Lewman of Lumera Regenerative Medicine to talk about one of the most popular aesthetic procedures, neuromodulators. 

TL: What are neuromodulators?

LL: Neuromodulators are substances that temporarily stop the communication between nerves and muscles, and therefore relax the muscle they are injected into. They are injected with tiny needles into the desired area, which has the effect of softening fine lines and wrinkles and restoring a smooth, youthful look. There are currently four neuromodulators on the market in the United States: Botox, Dysport, Jeuveau, and Xeomin. 

TL: Why are these treatments so popular? 

LL: Because they work! You can have a neuromodulator appointment at lunchtime and go back to work without anyone knowing. I suspect that now, with so many working from home and staring at themselves in virtual meetings all day, people are noticing the signs of aging more often, and seeking out these treatments. 

TL: What areas can be treated?

LL: The most common areas that we treat with neuromodulators are frown lines, forehead wrinkles, and crow’s feet. Other treatment areas include bunny lines (lines on the upper nose from crinkling), down-turned mouth corners, the jawline for facial slimming, and a “lip flip” for subtle lip enhancement. 

TL: Are neuromodulators just for women?

LL: Definitely not! Men get wrinkles and fine lines as they age too and therefore can also benefit from neuromodulator treatments. 

TL: My friend said she gets 36 units – what does that mean?

LL: Neuromodulators are dosed and priced by the unit. A great injector will determine dosage on a very individualized basis by studying your facial anatomy, how much movement you have, where you are in the aging process, and what your goals are. It’s unlikely you and your friend would receive the same dose. Dose largely determines how long the treatment will last – too few units and the treatment effect may wear off much more quickly. Typical doses range from 20-64 units. 

TL: How long does it take to see results?

LL: With all the neuromodulators on the market, you may start seeing results in a few days, but it takes up to 14 days for results to be fully achieved. 

TL: How long do results last?

LL: On average, a neuromodulator treatment will last 3-4 months. To maximize results and prevent wrinkles and lines from re-forming, it is ideal to get re-treatment every 3-4 months rather than waiting for the effects to fully wear off. 

TL: Am I going to look completely frozen?

LL: Only if you really want to. Most people prefer to preserve a little movement and expression and this can be achieved easily by using appropriate doses. 

TL: Are there any side effects? 

LL: Every procedure has side effects, but neuromodulators have an excellent safety profile. The most common side effect is that you’ll love it so much you’ll never want to go without it again! But in all seriousness, you may have mild bruising, swelling, or redness after injection. Some people get a mild headache. Asymmetry and drooping are uncommon and can largely be avoided with proper technique.  

TL: Any parting words?

LL: It’s important to see an experienced injector who treats you as an individual rather than doing the same cookie-cutter treatment on everyone. You will get the best results from a provider who takes the time to listen to and really assess you, and uses neuromodulators as just one tool in their facial rejuvenation tool box!

Learn More About Neuromodulators

Visit Lumera Regenerative Medicine’s Site

Tualatin City Council considers franchise for Ridwell recycling service

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The city of Tualatin is exploring formalizing its relationship with Ridwell, a Seattle-based subscription service that’s already collecting hard-to-recycle items from households in the community.

Want to recycle clear plastic clamshells, household batteries, fluorescent bulbs or Styrofoam? None of these items are currently collected by franchised garbage and recycling companies.

According to a staff report, Ridwell is currently operating in Tualatin without official licensure or regulatory approval to do so. 

Ridwell recently applied for a permit to operate a solid waste recycling facility in Portland and is waiting for a decision on that from DEQ and Metro. The company has approximately 20,000 customers already in the Portland area. 

In a Nov. 12 letter to Caleb Weaver, vice president of public affairs, Tualatin City Manager Sherilyn Lombos wrote, “A franchise agreement appears to be the best path forward to doing business in Tualatin. We invite (Ridwell) to reach out to the City to explore options through the City’s franchise process.”  

This is how it works. Ridwell supplies customers with a white metal box to place at or near their front door, for collection of select items. Five canvas bags–marked for light bulbs, household batteries, threads, plastic film, and a monthly featured item–are provided as well.  

Reusables, accepted for the benefit of charities at a scheduled time, have included items like jeans, children’s books, electronics, holiday decorations, and winter coats. 

The cost of this subscription is $12 to $16 per month, depending on the customer’s commitment. One year prepaid, for example, is $12 per month. Additionally, plastic PET clamshells are $1 per bag, florescent tubes are $4 each and polystyrene (Styrofoam) is $9 per bag.  

Every two weeks an employee drives up in a van and collects the recyclables from the customer’s front porch. Those recyclable and reusable items are collected, sorted and distributed at the company’s warehouse in Portland.

At a Tualatin City Council work session on Jan. 24, Weaver gave a presentation.  What follows are comments, questions and answers from that work session.

Councilor Valerie Pratt: I’m wondering if your company is looking at the cost of recycling materials and the transportation cost of recycling and carbon emissions, assuming your fleet isn’t electric?

Caleb Weaver: We’re running one vehicle through the neighborhood every two weeks. So our carbon footprint is much less than everyone in the neighborhood driving to a recycling event or location. Regarding the cost of materials, we don’t make money off of the items we recycle. Households subscribe—that’s how we make our money. It’s not reliant on materials.

Pratt: What about people who live in apartments or others who don’t have the extra cash for your service?

Weaver: Ridwell serves single-family homes as well as multifamily units. We have relationships and agreements to serve apartment complexes as well. For low-income residents, we have a scholarship fund available that we and others contribute to.

Pratt: We have an exclusive franchise agreement with garbage and recycling company. Wouldn’t allowing Ridwell to operate violate that franchise agreement?      

Weaver: The garbage hauler that has that contract doesn’t compete with us. We’re not competing with recycling services and landfill haulers. We are in support of local policies that have oversight. Garbage haulers are not providing this service. We are complementing their services. We are accepting items that haulers themselves have said are difficult to recycle.  Don’t need this.

Councilor Maria Reyes: This is a different model than waste management. We need a new way of thinking. This is a great service, which is good for our environment. Why aren’t we allowing that?

Weaver: It’s an optional service we want to provide. Yes, it’s a different approach and model. 

Councilor Bridget Brooks: As a social worker, I’ve been impressed by the reusable items that have been donated (by Ridwell) to Community Warehouse we are working with here. This is a wonderful community service. Can you provide receipts for charitable contributions?

Weaver: Yes. 

Brooks: How many employees do you have? 

Weaver: We have about 50 employees in the Portland area. Most of them are drivers or work in our warehouse. We are paying people above minimum wage, and it is hard work, so we appreciate what they do for us.  

Council President Nancy Grimes: I’m concerned about licensing and oversight. I would like to see a franchising agreement with Ridwell and our other partners. Are other councilors interested in that approach? We are short-handed without a city attorney. We need to think about a regulatory framework for this service. 

Weaver: We are happy to work with you on regulations, whether it is a permit or dropbox franchise. 

Reyes: This is part of our environmental goals. We have to look at the code. Because times have changed. I have been at home more than ever the past two years. I see how much trash is generated. What am I going to do with all this stuff? Sometimes we tend to rush things and never get back to them. But this issue I care about. I want to be sure we continue this discussion.

Mayor Frank Bubenik: What I am waiting for are Metro and DEQ’s decision. How are they going to rule? It’s possible they could deny their permit. Overall, I think this was a terrific introduction to Ridwell and we’ll need to discuss our options with staff. And that may need to wait until we have a new city attorney. We’ll circle back to have this discussion. And we’ll be back in touch.

One Rotarian’s International Diplomacy

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Barbara Lauritzen was a busy Tualatin resident, and then in 2003, she joined The Tualatin Rotary Club. Her high school daughter had been chosen as a foreign exchange student, and Barbara would enter the hectic and rewarding world of international diplomacy…one high school student at a time!

Barbara has hosted eight students from eight different countries: Mexico, Argentina, Thailand, Austria, Italy, Brazil, Japan and Germany. She took the role of “host mom” seriously. These students spent a school year at Tualatin High School, and Barbara managed their day-to-day necessities, schoolwork and entertainment. Her international diplomacy was bound with joy and many long-term connections.

Twenty years later, Barbara is still in contact with “her kids.” She has been to Buenos Aires to attend her Argentinian daughter’s wedding. She was hosted in Rome by her Italian daughter. While attending a Rotary Conference in Europe, she was able to see her Mexican daughter, who was currently living in Strasbourg, France. She reconnected with her Japanese daughter while visiting other students in South Korea. Barbara keeps up with the changes in their lives as they move on from high school, college, marriage and even parenthood. Every student has shared cultural awareness and international knowledge with the Lauritzen family. Understanding others is the first step to international peace.

Rotary has a way of finding the right people to volunteer for the right positions. Barbara moved on from hosting students to managing their stays. She took over the Foreign Exchange Program for the Tualatin Club. She was tasked to recruit students to go on long- and short-term foreign exchanges. 

Club work led to more responsibilities as Barbara became a country officer. She has worked with students from all around Oregon and students from Czechia, Slovakia, Austria, Germany and Switzerland. In a recent interview, Barbara explained, “I was in charge of all the paperwork for the student leaving Oregon and the student entering from another country. I worked getting visas and all necessary arrangements for international travel. I connected with Rotary counterparts in other countries. I was the counselor for the high school students. I was making sure that they were where they needed to be, that they were doing what they needed to do and that they had all the support they needed to succeed. Exchange students represent their countries and Rotary to the world. They are sixteen and seventeen years old. They take on a huge responsibility and I needed to make sure they were learning, happy and expanding their horizons.”

Rotary is an international support group. When a Tualatin High School exchange student had a serious accident while visiting San Francisco, Rotarians in the area sprang to action. They provided homestays for a chaperone to remain with the student. They helped her host mom travel to San Francisco and provided her with lodging. International Rotarians assisted the student’s parents with travel from India and a home while they were visiting their daughter. For almost one month, Rotary members did all that was needed to allow for a full recovery for the student.

In January, Barbara attended a weekend conference with the students from Oregon who will be going on exchange in the fall. She met those who will be placed in her countries. She is excited to be sending kids off on their journey of international discovery. She is and will remain a true diplomat.

If you are interested in Rotary’s high school foreign exchange program or just curious about The Rotary Club, visit tualatinrotary.org, and a member will welcome you with care and possibly some international flair!

Some Superheroes Have Gardening Skills…

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It’s sometimes easy to lose sight of the fact that heroes are all around us in our community, going out of their way to help others every day.  The skill that some of those heroes have is a green thumb, cultivated from many trials and errors.  And they wear their cape in the front and call it a gardening apron! What do these hero gardeners do for our community? They provide thousands of pounds of fresh local organic produce for families in our community that are struggling with food insecurity, all grown in their own gardens. 

Neighbors Nourishing Communities (NNC) is a local Tualatin non-profit that provides free plants, seeds, and education to gardeners that commit to donating 20% of what they grow to help local families in need. And many of our gardening neighbors donate much more.  As we head into our 9th year this year, we wanted to recognize some of our award winners (superheroes) from our community last year. These are gardeners that donated the most within one of four categories: a new member, a veteran member, a business, and an institutional partner.

Golden Trowel Winner: Hannah Collinsworth 

Hannah Collinsworth
Hannah Collinsworth

Hannah was a new member last year. She began gardening in 2017 with a few simple plants. She and her husband have turned their yard into an amazing garden with vegetable, herb, and flower beds. Like many of us, Hannah grew up seeing her mother garden and now she has become an active gardener herself. I asked her why she decided to garden with NNC and she said, “When I learned about NNC I loved the practicality of it…a simple concept that fulfills an extremely important need.”  We are so happy to have Hannah helping address hunger in our community and we look forward to seeing her at some of our group events this year.

Rusty Trowel Winner: Jo Hibbitts

Jo Hibbits
Jo Hibbits (left)

Jo is a veteran gardener with NNC and wins the Rusty Trowel award year after year. (Careful Jo, Hannah’s coming for it!) From her garden she donates 400 lbs or more of produce every year, which she takes to the Tualatin Schoolhouse Pantry.  Jo has been with NNC since almost day one, so in that time she’s donated thousands of pounds of produce.  Last year Jo felt that visitors to the Tualatin Schoolhouse Pantry could be cheered up with bouquets of flowers in addition to produce.  Flower arrangements are not the sort of thing you can afford when you are struggling to get food so this was a fantastic idea. Jo has an amazing cut flower garden and we continually learn new gardening knowledge from her. 

Sodbuster Award: Lynn Bertelsen and Tualatin Park Veterinary Clinic

Lynn Bertelsen
Lynn Bertelsen

When NNC was first getting started we needed so much help. Lynn was one of the first people to reach out to me in Tualatin and ask me how he could help. Ultimately he decided to take his business lawn, located near Tualatin Community Park, and turn it into a garden. NNC helped him build raised garden beds and fill them with soil. Since that time, Lynn and the staff at Tualatin Park Veterinary Clinic (TPVC) have donated almost 800 lbs of produce each year, sometimes more. Many people comment that they don’t realize TPVC even has a garden there, which a testament to how much you can produce in a small yard.  The staff at TPVC have really been supportive of the garden and have taken things a step farther. The clinic also started several years ago with collecting donated pet supplies to take to the Tualatin Schoolhouse Pantry so that pet owners could also feed their pets. This is another fantastic idea and I’m so thankful we have such generous people in our community.

Hoe Lotta Help Award: Hilltop Community Garden

Hilltop Community Garden is located at Hilltop Community Church in Tualatin. This is one of the few community gardening spots in Tualatin and for a small fee to cover maintenance, a raised bed can be obtained.  You do not need to be a church member. In addition to providing gardening space for community members, the garden also has some areas where produce is grown simply for donation.  Hilltop regularly donates 2,500 lbs or more of produce each year to the Tualatin Schoolhouse Pantry, about a third of which is grown from plants and seeds that NNC provides. We are all very lucky to have institutions like this in Tualatin, not only because of their donation, but also because of the community connections that they create among gardeners and volunteers. More of this please! Other institutions that have won this award in the past include Resurrection Catholic Church and Bridgeport Elementary School Community Garden. All three are NNC gardening neighbors and significant donors of produce to the Pantry. 

You can be a gardening superhero too!

If you are interested in joining with NNC this year, you don’t need special skills and a large garden space. We’ve had members that have had only a few pots on a deck. Our unofficial mantra is, “If you only donate one vegetable, that’s one vegetable somebody wouldn’t otherwise have had.” It all counts. If you are a business that is interested in setting aside part of your property for gardening, I’m sure your employees would enjoy it and we’d be happy to help you get started. Please call Chad Darby at 503-523-7142. If you are an individual or family that would like to garden this year with NNC, our free plant and seed handout will be the first weekend in May. Please register as soon as possible so we have some sense of how many plant starts to have on hand. You can register at www.neighborsnc.org. Once you register we will provide you the details on time and location.

Dramatic Coastal Landscapes on display at the Tualatin Library

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On March 4th, the Living Room Gallery in the Tualatin Public Library will host a new art show featuring gorgeous watercolor paintings by Harold Walkup, a signature member of the National Watercolor Society, the Northwest Watercolor Society, Western Federation of Watercolor Societies, and the Watercolor Society of Oregon. Harold is a nationally recognized award-winning artist whose works hang in public and private collections throughout the U.S. and around the world. His works have also been featured in “American Art Collector Magazine” (2014) and can be seen in Earthworks Gallery, Yachats, Oregon, and Valley Art in Forest Grove, Oregon.

Harold Walkup
Harold Walkup

I first became acquainted with Harold’s work through WSO where I saw it, and, quite simply, it took my breath away. He describes his landscapes as “moody,” and he plays with strong lights and darks, texture, and color to achieve highly atmospheric and expressive paintings that invite the viewer into the story. That is important to him—to connect with his viewers.

Harold says he doesn’t have a list of things you can’t do in watercolor. He elaborated, “You do whatever the painting needs. When I teach, for every question a student asks me, the answer is yes. When they say, ‘Can I…?’ the answer is always yes.”

As Winter Fades
As Winter Fades

Watercolor has a bad reputation as a difficult medium because it is hard to control. On the other hand, those who have devoted themselves to painting will tell you, of all media (oil, acrylic, and watercolor), watercolor is in many ways the most flexible and full of possibility. Harold shared a favorite quote by Wolf Kahn, who said, “The best control is no control.” Letting go when painting often takes a leap of faith, and after that, there is no going back. Harold’s paintings demonstrate the best of this philosophy put into practice. His technique is loose and full of flow, and while his paintings are the essence of unrestrained color-mixing and movement on the paper, there is intention, mastery, and control of all elements necessary for a great painting.

Edgewater Sunset
Edgewater Sunset

When I met with Harold to discuss the installation of his show, he shared a story about a year he spent with his wife in Valencia, Spain. He quickly fell in with local artists who adopted him as a colleague and friend. He also became a cultural ambassador when asked to demonstrate his painting techniques at a meeting where a translator helped to communicate his process in words as he painted in front of them. The organizers expected twenty or so people. Seventy-three artists attended and watched in awe. After the demo, Harold was barraged with questions. They had never seen an artist mix colors on the paper before. Our humble American artist changed how his new friends thought about painting. Since 1913, the Valencia Watercolor Society has only added one painting per year to its permanent collection, and Harold was honored in 2015 to be asked for his demonstration piece to be included in this collection.

Vail Pass
Vail Pass

You will love seeing the paintings in this exhibition because they are dramatic and fresh. Harold says, “I try not to do the same things everybody else does,” which probably explains all his awards. He takes the ordinary and makes it extraordinary and unforgettable. This show will run through to the beginning of June. Plan to say hello to Harold at a “Meet the Artist” informal reception on Saturday, March 12th in the gallery space from 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm.

This program is sponsored in part by the Tualatin Arts Advisory Committee. If you would like to learn more about this program, contact Angela Wrahtz at angela.wrahtz@comcast.net. If you are interested in acquiring any of the paintings in the show, please contact the artist at haroldwalkup@gmail.com or www.artbyharold.com.

City of Tualatin awards Climate Action Plan contract

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In a move aimed at decelerating climate change, Tualatin has tapped a team of four firms led by the Eugene-based Good Company to inventory local greenhouse gas emissions and chart a course for reducing them.

City Councilors voted unanimously last month to award Good Company with a $280,000 contract as part of the city’s Climate Action Plan. The project will also include Stafford Hamlet.

“Key deliverables from the consultant team will include first and foremost a greenhouse emissions inventory report and supporting documentation,” Tualatin Management Analyst Maddie Cheek explained. “This piece is really important because it will help us understand where our carbon emissions are coming from and how much we are currently emitting.”

Good Company, which has conducted more than 200 similar inventories and drafted climate action plans locally for Beaverton and Milwaukee, estimates it will take 14 months to collect the data and develop a plan for curbing emissions through behavior changes and updated technology.

“A key thing here is giving everyone a to-do list,” says Good Company founder and principal Joshua Proudfoot. “It’s not a ton of rocket science, it’s just a ton of process.”

The goal is to snap communities out of climate change denial by breaking down behavioral change into concrete, manageable steps because the idea of global warming is so big and abstract people avoid thinking about it.

And while most people defer to planting trees or shifting to solar power as the solution, slashing emissions has the biggest, quickest impact.

“We’re getting purely into the emissions that force the atmosphere to hold more heat and heat up the whole planet,” Proudfoot said.

The resulting data will additionally address emergency weather preparedness by planning for extreme weather phenomena like wildfires, landslides and flooding triggered by climate change.

“What we try and do is paint that picture of tomorrow clearly,” Proudfoot said.

“Their data can pinpoint problem spots, like intersections that consistently flood, so those areas can be slated for redesign and added to future capital improvement campaigns.

That’s one pathway toward action. Fixing stuff so we can deal with smoke or flood or whatever it is. And then the mitigation side is: Can we switch to renewable energy? Can we get more electric vehicles? Can we do more energy efficiency? There’s kind of these two big worlds we’re going to put down in your plan.”

Roughly half of the $280,000 budget is earmarked for community outreach to survey the community in both English and Spanish. Portland-based firms JLA Public Involvement and Izo, which specializes in Latinx outreach, will work with the community to understand how people live and ensure the mitigation plans fit Tualatin’s lifestyle.

“Part of that is going to be really trying to pull out some of those personal stories from people, like how do they move around the city? What do they do at their jobs? What are their daily lives like? That way, when we start talking about mitigation options, it feels to them and realistic.’’’ Said Jessica Pickul, JLA Senior Program Manager. “For this to work, it has to make sense to the people who live here.”

Though every community is a little different, the culprits are typically the same. Think fossil fuels and energy production.

“We know where to look. Could give you a list of best practices now, but we have to scale them,” Proudfoot said. “In most every community, the thing you’re going after is gasoline, diesel and electricity depending on where it’s generated.”

Good Company was selected from eight project bids.

Proudfoot praised the city for its thorough research, noting that Tualatin is the only city that’s surveyed other clients for feedback and perspective on working with them.

tualatin equity comittee project timeline


Volunteers needed for Equity Committee Planning Group

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The city of Tualatin is looking for a wide, diverse team of volunteers for a temporary planning committee being formed to draft the blueprint for a new Tualatin Equity Committee that will focus on strengthening relationships with the community and lowering barriers to public participation in government.

“The more the merrier,” said Tualatin Community Engagement Coordinator Betsy Rodriguez Ruef, who’s leading the effort. “We’re encouraging anyone interested to apply, in particular members of the BIPOC Community.”

This ad-hoc planning group, which is expected to meet for six two-hour sessions beginning this spring, will use existing data about the community and review City Council initiatives to determine the size, scope and meeting format of the new Equity Committee, and deliver its recommendation to City Council later this year.

“I’m pretty excited to be launching this,” Mayor Frank Bubenik said, adding ideas for the Equity Committee are already in the hopper waiting for its formation.

“One of the things we’re going to be tasking this group with is drafting a Land Acknowledgement,” he said.

Tualatin is on the land of the Atfalati, also known as the Tualatin Kalapuya or Wapato Lake Indians, who originally lived in about two-dozen villages in the Willamette Valley, throughout most of Washington and Yamhill Counties.

The city already has a draft land acknowledgement statement submitted by community members ready for review.

Planning committee applications are open until March 11, and being accepted by any way that works for you.

“We’re trying to make it as easy as possible for members of the community to apply,” Ruef said. Adding, “You can submit video, audio, you can take a picture of the application and submit it that way, a singing telegram, however you want to do it is good.”

For more information visit www.tualatinoregon.gov/citycouncil/equity-committee-planning-group.

For questions or to apply directly contact Betsy Rodriquez Ruef: email bruef@tualatin.gov; call or text 971-645-1723

Paper application can me turned in at the Tualatin Library, 18878 SW Martinazzi Ave.

COVID Hasn’t Stop CERT Training

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Thanks to the City of Tualatin and our wonderful CERT Trainers, you can learn how to prepare for an emergency and volunteer to help the community when a catastrophic disaster hits.  How?  By signing up for CERT training.  All training is free.  Thanks to the City of Tualatin, members of the CERT team receive free basic backpack kits, radios and other equipment.  Class space is limited.  

To sign up, email Membership Director Brian Fant at info@TualatinCERT.org.

Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) training is a national program designed to prepare Tualatin’s residents and company employees to help themselves, their families and neighbors in the event of a disaster. Trained instructors guide participants through a FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency) course covering basic skills that are important to know in a disaster when emergency services are not available.  Our teams are organized by neighborhoods and CIOs (Community Involvement Organizations).

Volunteers completing this course will receive CERT equipment, and instruction to respond to an earthquake or other emergency during a pandemic using social distancing and protection equipment.  You will so become a member of the Tualatin CERT Team.

COVID and physical distancing measures currently limit our ability to meet in-person.  Our Spring 2022 Basic 9-week CERT Course starts Tuesday, March 1 from 7 to 8:30 p.m. via Zoom.  Zoom sessions repeat every Tuesday evening from 7 to 8 p.m. for 7 sessions followed by 2 in-person exercises from 8 am to Noon on April 16th and April 23rd. 

The companion online self-study course is offered through the University of Utah.  Online topics are:

  • Disaster Preparedness 
  • CERT Organization
  • Disaster Medical Operations
  • Disaster Psychology
  • Fire Safety and Utility Controls
  • Light Search and Rescue
  • Terrorism and CERT

If you can’t attend a full CERT-Ready session, Tualatin CERT also offers a two-hour Tualatin Neighborhood Ready presentation via Zoom, to help your neighborhood get better prepared.  To request a presentation for your neighborhood, contact Barbara Bracken at TualatinReadyMYN@gmail.com.

The Early Bird gets the Pre-Order

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Inspiration flows, but the words run dry. The sentences and half-formed thoughts in my head cannot quite find themselves strung together on the page. How I yearn for a rubric, a prompt, or a viewpoint to argue. The struggle of creativity, what could possibly be important enough to share with others? There have been many new memories, house adventures, and beautiful customer interactions that I could talk about, yet none of them quite seem to fit.

These days, it feels like I wake up every morning with more things to do and less time to do them. It is somewhat organized chaos. Everything is in motion, full steam ahead on a half battery. Sometimes it feels like there is not a day where nothing goes wrong, and everything gets completed. Yet, there is a whisper of a blooming sensation around me, a grand awakening of sorts. It is a call that I know many of you are beginning to hear yourselves. The emotions that are borderline overwhelming, building to a secret that has been bursting all around us: spring is almost here. And for some of us, it has already started. 

While my calendar says that spring will not arrive until Sunday, March 20, 2022, the feelings and day-to-day activities lead me to believe something entirely different. Maybe it’s the weather, suspiciously sunny days… frosty mornings that warm-up and develop into crisp afternoons before settling into a quiet evening that just breathes lighter. Or, it could be the steady trickle of people coming into the store, looking for something fresh, something colorful. A powerful combination of scenarios that build to a silent shout, I need to get planting, because if spring is coming, then summer will not be far behind.

I can feel the anxiety and confusion that spring brings battle with the joy and relief that winter is ending. Then again, it could be that the washer is re-washing the same load again because I wear the same three outfits for medium cold in the shade yet warm in the sunny weather. It is a feeling of exhaustion that I cannot quite explain. Spring for me is a transition season, a time spent out in the greenhouse prepping for summer annuals. Yes, the planting process starts the first week of February. Hours spent last summer selecting and ordering plants that have arrived as little seedlings ready to be planted into our passion baskets. 

These days, my mom and I spend most of our time in the greenhouse with racks of fresh plants. A sea of green that requires a strong memory and name association as we select plants that will grow to complement one another. Is blue, blue, or is it more purple? While purple is magenta and burgundy is none of the above. Do not mix pink with red, and white is never really white, but all white is the best combination. The repeated rules and names shouted across aisles would sound like gibberish to anyone who stumbled upon our process. This whole experience for the first number of weeks is a touch stressful, and this is my first season working full-time. 

The Garden Corner has implemented a genius online pre-order system to soothe the chaos while pleasing the masses. It allows our customers to go online and select the colors of their choice. As the orders come in, we magically process that information and create a basket that is specific to our customers. There are both seasonal favorite combinations and custom options, ensuring that there is a basket color combination of their choosing. Baskets are individually processed, and plants are personally selected by yours truly and my mother, who has been planting baskets for years. The two of us work together to plant all the baskets for city accounts and the baskets we carry in the store. The primary restraint on getting baskets ready for summer is time. To have these plantings ready first of the season, they need to be made soon. Make my life, and yours, easier by getting your pre-order early! 

While spring continues to approach, I hope that everyone enjoys this wonderful weather and takes a break to go outside and breathe the fresh air. Find some color, change your view, relax in the moment of spring, knowing that working hard behind the scenes is summer. The next step is always coming, so enjoy the moments of peace while they are here and use that time to make one less thing for yourself come the summer’s surprise. As for myself, I will be chugging along working hard on creating that summer surprise that will be here sooner than you know! 

Mask & Mirror Presents a Comic Thriller with Twists and Turns: Deathtrap!

Mask & Mirror Community Theatre continues its eleventh season with the exciting comic mystery thriller Deathtrap, by Ira Levin. The show runs Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 and Sundays at 2:30 from March 4 through March 20 on The Main Stage at Rise Church (formerly Calvin Presbyterian Church) located at 10445 SW Canterbury Lane in Tigard. Tickets remain affordable: $17 Adults; $14 Seniors/Students/Members/Military; $12 Under age 10; $12 Groups of 10+. Tickets are now available for purchase online at www.MaskandMirror.com

Unknown dramatist Clifford Anderson has sent a copy of his new play Deathtrap to award-winning Broadway author Sidney Bruhl for constructive criticism. Sidney, who has been without a success to his credit for some years, devilishly plots with his reluctant wife Myra about how best to plagiarize Deathtrap. When Clifford visits Sidney to discuss the play, events take a sinister turn. Deathtrap will keep you guessing – and laughing.

Director Tony Broom says “Sometimes a show sticks with you.  While in high school I saw the film version of Deathtrap with Michael Caine and Christopher Reeve. Then I played the character Sidney a few years later, and now I finally have the chance to direct it.  I feel very fortunate to work with actors I’ve been wanting to work with for years and also to bring some new faces to the Mask & Mirror stage.  Despite its macabre subject matter, the thing that I’m enjoying most is the humor in the script.  There are scares and surprises but plenty of laughs too.”

Mask & Mirror Community Theatre is now in its 11th season of presenting high quality and affordable live theatre to the citizens of Tigard and Tualatin – using all-volunteer actors, stage crew and administrators. 

Participation and membership in Mask & Mirror is open to all. We value diversity and welcome experienced performers as well as theatre “wannabes” – we’ll train you!

Broadway Rose offers Kids’ Spring Break Camp

Broadway Rose Theatre Company’s week-long program provides kids in 3rd, 4th, and 5th grade a fun and welcoming environment to explore the magic of theatre! 

Students will gain theatrical experience in vocal harmonies and solos, basic choreography, character development, and more while gaining self-confidence as a performer and creating bonds with fellow students through team-building exercises. 

Campers will learn five to six numbers from various musicals, and the camp will culminate with a showcasing of skills on the last day of class. No prior experience is necessary.

Kids’ Spring Break Camp

When: March 21 – 25, Monday through Friday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Where: Tigard Grange – 13770 SW Pacific Hwy, Tigard, OR 97223

Tickets: Grades: 3, 4, and 5 | Tuition: $200. For information visit www.broadwayrose.org/2022-education.

Tualatin City Council Grapples With New Zoning Requirements

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A zone change request meant to pave the way for infilling more than 100 new units in the Tualatin Heights Apartments has become the city’s first trial of a recently adopted land use ordinance that relaxes restrictions on multi-family housing development.

Last month at a hearing to rezone Tualatin Heights held during the Jan. 24 City Council meeting, Frank Angelo of Angelo Planning Group, speaking on behalf of property owner United Dominion Realty, presented a conceptual plan that would add two new buildings to the complex located at 9301 SW Sagert St. 

“Infill on the existing site could provide 116 units, which would address the deficit you currently have in the residential medium-high designation,” Angelo said, referring to 2019 housing analysis that identified a medium-high density housing shortfall of 109 units and about 7 acres.

If approved, the change will shift Tualatin Heights zoning designation from medium-low to medium-high density, allowing it to expand by nearly 50 percent from a 10 unit per acres 224-unit maximum to 15 units per acre and 336 total units.

While the city Planning Commission recommended greenlighting the change, City Councilors ended the hearing after nearly two hours of testimony and discussion without a decision, instead opting for a continuance.

“The housing needs analysis is a goal, and it’s a target that the Council set that the Council is striving to meet,’ said Tualatin Assistant Community Development Director Steve Koper. “I think it’s clear that we’ve identified a couple of the conceptual plan criteria and provided findings that proposal meets the criteria.”

Tualatin Heights residents, the complex’s neighbors along SW Sagert St. and City Councilors voiced concerns that additional units will compound existing parking problems. Residents also worry green spaces and storage would be lost.

Under HB 2001, Council can only deny the request if it deems rezoning the property is not in the best public interest, a task that could prove difficult and which could be appealed to the Oregon Land Use Board of Appeals.

In an attempt to help ease housing shortages around the state, the bill requires cities of more than 25,000 to amend codes that inhibit construction of multi-family housing.  

“From a purely legal perspective, if you are going to find this is not in the best interest of the public, then I think you have to articulate very specific reasons why that standard is not met,” City Attorney Chad Jacobs advised. “It’s not an easy standard. We’re going through things for the first time under HB 2001. Lots of cities are struggling with this, and I can’t promise you how LUBA’s (Oregon Land Use Board of Appeals) going to rule on that if there is an appeal filed.” 

City Councilor Maria Reyes spoke in favor of approving the request, saying the need for housing is greater than the potential problems.

“To me, what matters is that someone is inside a home warm with food, and then the rest will be fine,” she said. “I guarantee you that’s how my community thinks. That’s how my mom and I and new immigrants think.”

A few Tualatin Heights residents voiced opposition, citing existing issues with parking and garbage and recycling areas.

“Was there any thought put into the recycling and the garbage waste management portion of the facility at all,” asked resident Scott Bauer. “Currently, we have a decent compactor and about seven recycling bins. Every garbage day, you can barely get into the area to even recycle or put your garbage in the trash.”

Even if the zoning change is granted, additional units aren’t a done deal. 

The conceptual plan Angelo presented is an early-stage rendering of one possible expansion and not the subject of the hearing. If the complex is rezoned, development plans will still be subject to passing an architectural review in a separate process before construction could begin.

Multiple councilors voiced concerns ranging from increased traffic and proximity to a school to impacts on quality of life for current residents to affordability. 

At press time, the complex had about a half dozen available 2 bed/2 bath apartments listed between $1599 and $1814. 

Councilor Christen Sacco called the decision one of the most difficult she’s faced.

“We have a huge housing crisis in our area,” she said. “At the same time, there are concerns about losing storage, green spaces and parking. We want to maintain a decent quality of life for everybody and not leave people behind.”

Neighbors along SW Sagert say they’re already struggling with the impact of overflow parking from the complex, which they say monopolizes the spaces in front of their homes, clogging the street, leaving little room for their garbage and recycling cans.  

“We have folks that are blocking driveways. We have folks that are blocking the actual mailboxes. We have folks that are blocking trailers trying to get out. It’s been an ongoing problem, and it’s just getting worse and worse.” Says Jim Keil, who’s lived across the street for seven years. 

Tualatin Heights has 457 parking spaces for its 220 units. One space is included in the rental agreement, with another available for $25 a month. According to Bauer, the fee and the lack of visitor parking drive tenants and their guests onto the street.

Earlier this year, Keil and other neighbors took their grievances to the city, which in turn conducted a parking study last July. 

On street parking issues, there’s a relatively easy solution. 

“We could fix the issue for the residents across the street pretty easily with a permit area,” said Mayor Frank Bubenik. The city already has a permit-only area around Tualatin High School and another near the Hazelbrook apartment complex.

Despite misgivings about rezoning, Oregon HB 2001 leaves City Council little room for decision making. 

“HB 2001 kind of handcuffed us,” Bubenik said. “The purpose was to increase density and remove arbitrary standards so that cities couldn’t just block things they didn’t like. Not that this is what’s happening here, but this is the first instance when we’re going to start seeing the impact of HB 2001.”