Dec. 1, 2012 QVPR

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Our Neighbor Don Bunch Page A2

❂ Proudly Serving Quincy, George, Crescent Bar, Sunland, Trinidad and Winchester ❂ Thursday, December 1, 2011 • Quincy, Washington • Volume 63, Number 24 • USPS No 453-080 • 12 pages • www.qvpr.com • 75 cents

It’s time for Christmas cheer in Quincy Holiday fun starts this weekend in the Quincy Valley Staff report The Christmas season is coming to the Quincy Valley in a big way this weekend with several events and opportunities to give. Community Christmas Toy Drive The Community Christmas Toy Drive begins this week. Trees with envelopes that have information about a needy child in the community are up at St. Pius X Catholic Church, Rob’s Video, Studio 90, Key Bank, Washington Trust Bank, Gates True Value and Ace Hardware. To participate in the drive, select an envelope and purchase a gift for the child, then deliver the gift to Key Bank by Monday, Dec. 16. Money for the drive can also be donated to Key Bank, and

volunteers to help deliver the toys will be gladly welcomed, said organizer JoAnn Alvarado. For information, call the bank at 787-1526. Alvarado added that no new names can be added to the list of the approximately 200 children selected for the toy drive. Faith Community Church Bazaar The Quincy Faith Community Church will hold a Christmas Bazaar from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the church at 1005 10th Ave. SW, across from the hospital. The bazaar will feature crafts and goodies from local vendors. For information, call 237-3204. Please see Christmas page A6

Chuck Allen/Post-Register

The Giving Tree at Key Bank is ready with names of children needing toys. Toy drive volunteers include (from left) JoAnn Alvarado, Amie Durfee, Carrie Durfee, Jamie Nguyen, Eva Young, Tammara Green and Janice Stephens.

70th Anniversary of Pearl Harbor

Billings, state cuts concern hospital

When the bad news came first

QVMC board talks financial issues By Chuck Allen editor@qvpr.com

Reynolds recalls false report that her husband was killed at Pearl Harbor By Chuck Allen editor@qvpr.com

Dec. 16, 1941 is a date that will live in infamy for Joan Reynolds. That’s when she received a telegraph relaying the news that her husband of almost one year, Homer Reynolds, was lost in action during the Japanese Imperial navy’s surprise attack on Pearl Harbor nine days earlier. Homer, a nine-year veteran with the US Navy, was serving on the USS California, a battleship anchored in Pearl Harbor’s Battleship Row, that fateful Sunday morning. Joan said her Homer, who was a gunner’s mate, was sitting on

the ship’s deck reading the newspaper when the first wave of Japanese dive bombers and torpedo planes arrived over Pearl Harbor on the Hawaiian island of Oahu. During much of the attack, Homer was assigned to man a motor launch to ferry California crew members from the shore. For three days after the attack, the California’s crew tried to save the ship, which was struck by two torpedoes and a bomb, but the damage was too great and the pumps keeping it afloat were shut off. The California sunk into the harbor’s muddy floor with only the superstructure exposed. Please see Reynolds page B6

billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Up for grabs in this application round is about $535 million, with the Port of Quincy asking for roughly $30 million for terminal improvements. So far, more than 1,000 applicants (cities, ports, highway

Looming state budget cuts, a ballooning number of debts sent to collections and billing complaints from two customers added up to a somber Quincy Valley Medical Center board meeting on Monday, Nov. 28. The meeting opened with two customers, Shana Moloso and Roxie Pilliar, describing the frustrations they have had with the company QVMC uses to do its billing. Moloso said she worked with QVMC’s billing department to make a monthly payment for expenses not covered by insurance. She makes the payments each month, but still receives notices from the billing company, Computer Programs and Systems, Inc., stating that she will be sent to collections if she doesn’t pay the balance owed. The bills are also unclear and not itemized, Moloso said. “I don’t know how much I owe this facility,” she said. “Every statement gives another balance.” She said she has talked with the billing company and hospital personnel about the situation, but the notices keep

Please see Port page A6

Please see Hospital page A6

Chuck Allen/Post-Register

Joan Reynolds holds the telegraph she received that falsely declared her husband, Homer, was lost in action during the Dec. 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. She learned a week later that her husband was still alive.

Port district makes pitch for Intermodal facility grant By Mike Irwin

Wenatchee World Rail shipments out of Quincy are chugging along so well that the Port of Quincy is already pushing for expansion of its 18-month-old shipping terminal. A bunch of bigwigs — legislators, business own-

ers, civic leaders — have sent letters to the state Department of Transportation urging the agency to steer some grant dollars straight down the track (woo! woo!) to Quincy. The so-called TIGER grant (Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery) is federal money channeled through the DOT from the $787

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