Whidbey Examiner, February 06, 2014

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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2014

VOL. 19, NO. 27

Council votes ‘yes’ to sheriff contract By Megan Hansen Editor

Coupeville Town Council approved an interlocal agreement with the Island County Sheriff’s Office last week for law enforcement services. The contract starts March 1. A motion to approve the agreement was passed by all council members with the exception of Molly Hughes, who was absent from the meeting. “We don’t take this decision lightly,” said Councilman Bob Clay.

See CONTRACT page 2

WGH hires new project manager for expansion By Nathan Whalen Staff Reporter

Whidbey General Hospital’s expansion has taken a step forward. The hospital’s board of commissioners approved an agreement in January with Marc Estvold to manage the project. Voters approved a $50-million bond in November. Estvold, who is based in Anacortes, recently managed expansion projects for Island Hospital and the Cascade Skagit Health Alliance. He will work for Whidbey General Hospital on a contract basis. The contract with Estvold will cap at $750,000 for the project, estimated to be completed in 2016. In an email, Whidbey General Hospital spokeswoman Trish Rose said that Estvold will be working on an hourly basis with the cap based on the multi-year life of the project.

See WGH page 2

Nathan Whalen photo

Coupeville High School senior Stephen Montano cuts a board that will be part of a time and range table that will be on display at Fort Casey State Park.

Student project aids Fort Casey By Nathan Whalen Staff Reporter

Thanks to the help of a few handy students, the gun emplacements at Fort Casey State Park are getting new equipment that will add to the historical feel of the park. Coupeville High School seniors in the woodworking class spent part of their school year making equipment that was used around the large, 10-inch guns on display. Visitors to the state park will notice the two guns, one in a firing position and one in a resting position. The students are building powder canisters, a time-and-range table along with a rammer head and a sponge head that were used in the gun barrels. Steven Kobylk, a volunteer at Fort Casey State Park and a field representative for the Coast Defense Study Group, said he noticed the students work in 2012 when Coupeville students teamed up with peers in Oak Harbor and South Whidbey to build a lantern housing at the Admiralty Head Lighthouse. After seeing the work, Kobylk came up with some projects that would help the park. “This would be a great learning opportunity,” Kobylk said. Senior Nick Streubel is working on a proj-

ect to construct powder casings for a six-inch shell. He is using casings that were normally used for a 155-mm howitzer. Kobylk said the only difference between the two items is their length. To come up with an accurate canister, Streubel has to cut one in half and then weld part of it onto another canister before it’s painted. “The project is really cool. I love that it’s for the community,” Streubel said. He hopes to have 15 built by the end of the school year. The canisters are part of Streubel’s senior project. Once he graduates, he is planning to attend Central Washington University and major in law and justice and finance. Fellow classmate Stephen Montano, who is also a senior, is building a time-and-range

table that was used to help track ships in Admiralty Inlet. The wood table, which has a grid outlining time and range along with a Tsquare, will measure 6 feet by 9 feet. He, along with classmate Devin Prescott, spend a class period measuring and sawing boards for the table. Gunner Langvold is building a rammer head and a sponge head that gun crews used to push shells into a barrel and to clean it of any burning embers. Tom Eller, who is woodshop teacher at the high school, noted the length of each piece of equipment — the rammer head is 179 inches long and the sponge head, which had to sweep the length of the barrel, was 460 inches. Fellow student Brenden Ameluxen Cole-

See STUDENTS page 2


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