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Senior Times - April 2023

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DELIVERING NEWS TO MID-COLUMBIA SENIORS SINCE 1982

April 2023

Vol. 11 | Issue 4

TUESDAY, APRIL 18 Sports 9 A.M. − 3 P.M. Southridge & Events Complex

Seniors celebrate return, reopening of their West Richland center By Kristina Lord

kristina@tcjournal.biz

The buzz of cheerful chatter, funny one-liners and laughter filled the West Richland Senior Center on March 14. It had been a long time since the modest building at 616 N. 60th Ave. overflowed with so many people. The senior center shuttered at the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic three years ago. “It’s been a few years since I’ve seen this hall full,” noted West Richland police Chief Thomas Grego. Since word got out about the reopening celebration, Bill Larsen’s email inbox has been full. He is the West Richland Senior Association’s new president. “There’s been an outpouring of interest about when and where and how to get involved,” he said. More than 60 people attended the

reopening celebration, which included lunch donated by Guardian Angels Homes. The senior association’s new board gave speeches, introductions and history lessons. Elected officials celebrated their senior population, and fire and police personnel shared safety tips. Larsen said he hopes seniors will be able to rekindle their friendships and make new ones. It’s the reason Patty Hamilton, 67, showed up. “I have nothing to fill my day up. I wanted to get in with the seniors and do what they do,” she said. Debbie Schutz, 63, agreed: “I have nothing to do.” The board encouraged anyone wanting to stay at the center after the luncheon to pull up a chair and help uSENIOR CENTER, Page 2

Photo by Kristina Lord Seniors stuff chocolates into Easter eggs for West Richland’s annual Easter egg hunt on April 8. The seniors volunteered to help after attending the March 14 reopening celebration of the West Richland Senior Center, which had been closed since the beginning of the pandemic.

Woodcarvers share their craft with home-schoolers By Kristina Lord

kristina@tcjournal.biz

Dean Herigstad’s hands can coax beautiful shapes out of a block of wood. It’s a skill he’s happy to share with others. The retired carpenter from West Richland enjoys teaching others the craft, so when a home-schooling group asked if he and his fellow woodcarvers would be willing to sit alongside young people to teach them, there was no hesitation. “They’re great. We’ve had 16

home-schoolers through and seven have come back consistently,” he said. They meet up at the Keewaydin Community Center in Kennewick. John Moreno of Pasco, a retired middle school teacher, said he’s enjoyed teaching the home-schoolers, calling them motivated and polite. With the youngest member of their woodcarving group at age 66, Moreno and Herigstad say they worry about whether the younger generation will follow in their footsteps. “We don’t want to see it die with us,” Moreno said.

The formal woodcarvers group, Tri-Cities Woodcarving Club, was a registered nonprofit but the pandemic forced it to disband. “We couldn’t sustain the membership,” Herigstad said. In 2013, there were 86 members. Today there are about 25 left. But those who carve still enjoying meeting up and have three standing drop-in meetings a week. It’s informal but a nice chance to get together to work on projects, Herigstad said. “It’s rewarding to take a raw piece of wood and turn it into something. It’s relaxing – the simple pleasure of

doing it,” he said. The connection between this older generation and the younger one has been a joy to watch, said Dedra Maxwell, a home-schooling mom who helped to organize families interested in learning the carving craft. “Our seniors are precious parts of our community who sometimes get a little neglected, but to be able to bring them together with children is wonderful on many layers,” she said. “I’m hoping this continues and grows.” uWOODCARVERS, Page 2

INSIDE THIS ISSUE

For 4 years, letters intended for Kennewick were mailed to Tehe, Washington

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MONTHLY QUIZ

Plans underway to open new food co-op store in Richland

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What month and year was Big Pasco decommissioned as a naval air station? ANSWER, PAGE 9

PLEASE DELIVER TO CURRENT OCCUPANT Senior Times 8524 W. Gage Blvd., #A1-300 Kennewick, WA 99336

PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE PAID PASCO, WA PERMIT NO. 8778


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