T h e C o m m u n i t y N e w s pa p e r November 2020
IN THIS
ISSUE
of
P o i n t R o b e rt s , W a s h i n g t o n
www.AllPointBulletin.com
Turn back your clocks when you go to bed on October 31.
Lower service levels requested, page 2
FREE
Six-word memoirs, page 8
ECRWSS PRSRT STD U.S. Postage PAID Permit No. 14 Point Roberts, WA 98281 Postal Patron Local
Point Roberts community is asked to aid transplant effort By Meg Olson Point Roberts fire chief Christopher Carleton and his wife Pamela are asking for help from the community after she suffered from liver failure in late September. “We don’t know what the future holds and we can use all the support and prayers people can give us,” Carleton said. After five weeks in the hospital, Pamela will be discharged soon and her condition managed as an outpatient while they work through the transplant process and wait for an available liver. The couple, whose five-year anniversary is coming up on November 6, will need to remain in the Seattle area so she can access critical medical care. Chief Carleton will be commuting back and forth to work after returning from a period of time off. Carleton said he was looking at transplant centers all over the country trying to get her the critical procedure as soon as possible, as other centers may be able to offer transplants in half the time than what average in the Seattle area. “I’m doing all I can to save my wife,” he said. “There are a lot of moving parts and it’s hard to put them all together.” In addition to medical costs not covered by insurance, there will be housing, travel and other associated costs on her road to recovery. As of October 29, 447 individuals or groups had donated over $75,000. To donate, please visit bit.ly/2Hz8Y7p.
s Pamela and Christopher Carleton.
All Point Bulletin
e PB
WEEKLY NEWS BULLETIN
s Observing social distancing mandates, the annual apple pressing festival still managed to produce gallons and gallons of fresh juice Photo by Annelle Norman on September 27. From l., Leigh Moorhouse, Tom Kelley and Rhiannon Allen press on.
WUTC approves drop in curbside pickup rates By Meg Olson The Washington Utilities and Transportation Commission (WUTC) has approved a tariff revision that will result in a small drop in garbage rates in Point Roberts. The tariff revision comes out of the second of two compliance filings Freedom 2000 LLC, doing business as Cando Recycling and Disposal, was required to submit in the wake of Whatcom County’s adoption of an ordinance establishing mandatory garbage and recycling collection in 2018. The compliance filings were required to allow adequate analysis of revenue streams under the new system and ensure rates were equitable to both the company and consumers. The company’s first filing in 2019, based on six months of financial data, resulted in
Join Our Mailing List!
no change to rates, but WUTC analysts did note garbage rates might be too high while recycling rates were too low, regulatory analyst Greg Hammond told WUTC commissioners at their October 29 meeting. “This filing uses 12 months of data and would correct the discrepancy between garbage and recycling rates,” he said. In its August 27 compliance filing, based on a full year of financial data, Cando had proposed almost doubling monthly recycling rates from $5.28 to $9.14 for every-other-week pickup and decreasing baseline garbage pickup rates from $11.68 to $8.37. The proposed changes were based on a decrease in garbage disposal costs for the company and a revenue deficiency in their recycling operation. Overall, they would have represented a 56 cent per month increase to residential custom-
(See WUTC, page 3)
Online
allpointbulletin.com facebook.com/allpointbulletin
SHARE WITH YOUR FRIENDS!
Get the latest POINT ROBERTS news every week sent directly to your inbox! SIGN UP AT www.allpointbulletin.com/newsletter
Inside
Church ............................................. 13 Classifieds ......................................... 12 Coming Up ....................................... 13 Crossings ............................................ 6 Garden .............................................. 10 Obituaries ......................................... 14 Seniors, Library ............................... 13 Tides ................................................. 14