Wednesday, January 25, 2012

in the Jan. 25, 2012 issue

Ballots in mail for school levy vote

La Conner School district is asking voters to approve replacement property tax levies to continue to support educational programs for children. The district’s property tax support expires in 2013 and voters will decide whether it can be extended through 2017. Ballots were mailed this week to the district 3,346 registered voters and votes will be tallied on Feb. 14.
The operating levy pays for instruction in foreign language, advanced math, music, drama and other courses that basic educational funding from the state does not cover. And the technology levy gives students have access to the latest developments in computers and other technology and provides a laptop computer for every student at the high school to use at school and home for the entire school year. 
School officials say they expect the amount the taxpayers pay for the schools to stay the same when the new levies take effect in 2014. Details in today's paper.

New state  boater fee would help local program
A proposal to enact a $1 surcharge on commercial and pleasure boat owners to fund the Washington Center for Marine Innovation at Skagit Valley College’s marine tech center in Anacortes.  
If the bill is passed, it would establish a marine innovation program through collaborative efforts of Bellingham Technical College, Skagit Valley College and Western Washington University and other public and private partners to promote new developments in design, manufacturing, and alternative fuel for watercraft and other aspects of the marine industry.
The bill would add a $1 surcharge on the current state vessel registration fee.
Presently, about a dozen La Conner High School students are bused to Anacortes each morning for marine technology instruction through the Northwest Career and Technical Academy.
The campus in Anacortes is owned by a consortium of kindergarten through 12th grade school districts, including La Conner. The building also houses Skagit Valley College’s marine tech program, as well as the Northwest Center for Excellence in Marine Technology and Manufacturing, which is a program the college oversees. Full story in today's paper.

Photo by Kirsten Morse
This is what La Conner kids did all last week while the schools were shut down and Washington Street was closed to motorists because of the heavy snowstorms.

Photo by Mickey Bambrick
The old school house on Valentine Road.

Photo by Kirsten Morse

Photo by Don Coyote
And finally, it was gone.

From the Police Blotter:
7:30 a.m.: Dunked dunk – A woman was arrested for driving under the influence after she drove her pickup truck into the water at the Conway boat launch. With the truck in the water, there was difficulty opening the doors. People nearby helped the woman out of the truck, and deputies, then escorted her to jail.

The paper is around town in the usual places today. Subscribers will get it in the mail. Call 466-3315 to subscribe.


Braves Sports, Jan. 25, 2012

Braves eagerly await pregame warmups
By Bill Reynolds
La Conner High hoop teams were on a hot streak before last week's major winter storms.
But now they could face some tough sledding ahead in terms of schedule changes made necessary when the cold weather forced postponement of slated games at Shoreline Christian and Mount Vernon Christian.
La Conner must play five league games in nine days to make up for previously scheduled contests wiped out by snowy and icy road conditions.
The La Conner-Mount Vernon Christian games have been reset for this Saturday, Jan. 28, with boys' junior varsity action tipping off at 4:30 p.m.
The girls' varsity game is to start at or around 6 p.m., followed 90 minutes later by the boys' varsity clash.
The La Conner-Shoreline Christian games have been rescheduled for Feb. 1, a rare Wednesday date, with the same boys' JV  at 4:30 p.m.;  girls' varsity at 6 p.m., and boys' varsity 7:30 p.m. rotation.
Neither Mount Vernon Christian nor Shoreline Christian has a girls' junior varsity team, according to La Conner head coach Scott Novak.
La Conner players are eager to hit the hardwood again, he said, with both teams sitting atop league standings.
The Braves were 8-0 in league play and 13-1 overall going into Tuesday's late home action with Darrington.
The Lady Braves sported a 7-1 league mark and 10-4 overall ledger entering their Tuesday pairing with Darrington.
The La Conner girls' lone league loss was a December setback on the road to the Lady Loggers.
After being rendered idle by the region's extended snowstorms, the term “pregame warmups” now takes on added meaning for the La Conner squads.
But Novak is confident both teams will be fired up, despite the grueling schedule ahead.
In addition to the makeup games, La Conner is also scheduled this Friday, Jan. 27,  at Orcas and at home Jan. 31 opposite Concrete.
La Conner hoopsters haven't spent the entire month sidelined, however.
Before the snow fell, La Conner players had once again taken part in the annual Bo Alleckson Memorial Hoop Classic.
The January tourney honors the memory of one of Novak's former students, who passed away in the 1990s, after having moved to California.
The event has grown to a 32-team, three-gym format, featuring boys' and girls' teams from the fourth through eighth grades.
"Our high school students work the scorer's tables," Novak said Monday, "with community members, coaches, and former players serving as game officials."
Many current La Conner High students played in previous Alleckson tourneys, he said.
"When it was a fifth and sixth grade boys' tournament," he said, "La Conner won the championship in back-to-back years."
Those teams included present Braves' players Landy James, Bobby Poulton, Spencer Novak, Tyler Howlett, and Jamall James.

 Photo by Karla Reynolds
La Conner native raises bar on national stage
By Bill Reynolds
The past year was an uplifting one for a former La Conner resident.
Mark Reynolds, 22, a junior at Tarleton State University in Texas, was recognized Saturday night in Oklahoma City as the Natural Athlete Strength Association's  2011 male Power Sports Lifter of the Year.
He received a large trophy and two wall plaques during annual awards ceremonies held at the Wyndham Garden Hotel near Will Rogers International Airport.
Reynolds ranked first in the event, which combines the curl, bench press, and deadlift, among more than 2,000 Natural Athlete Strength Association members nationwide.
"Mark is going to be one of our future greats, and he's already great," said iconic association president and co-founder Rich Peters, who made the official presentation.
The 5-9, 200-pound Reynolds was nominated for the honor after a year in which he set personal competition bests in all lift categories.
He curled 171 pounds, benched 360, and deadlifted 623 before judges who also make sure lifters adhere to strict technique guidelines.
Reynolds also competed several times last year in the strength association’s Power Lifting division, where the squat is substituted for curls.
He set a personal best in the squat, with a 530-pound effort, at a meet this past summer.
Reynolds was attracted to the Natural Athlete Strength Association by its family atmosphere and Peters' long and tireless campaign to rid power sports of steroids and performance enhancing drugs.
"What I like about it," Reynolds explains, "is that I'm basically competing against myself. There's no place for steroids in that."
The lifters, he says, share a common bond. They travel from state to state to various meets, often using down time at the arena to encourage competitors.
Reynolds attends meets with his wife, Courtney, young daughters Callie and Kylie, and newborn son, Bryson.
He was introduced to powerlifting while a student at Mart High School, where Reynolds is the only athlete to have earned All-State honors in three sports in the same year.
He was the starting middle linebacker on Mart High’s 2006 State championship football team, then three months later set the school record for combined weight – 1,315 pounds – in the squat, bench, and deadlift at the State Power Lifting Meet in Houston, where he placed sixth.
He closed out his senior year by leading the Central Texas area in runs batted in as the Panthers' catcher, helping Mart High advance deep into the post-season.
But it was powerlifting that really grabbed Reynolds' attention after moving to Texas from La Conner, where his childhood friends included Braves' assistant basketball coach Carl Buher.
"I liked powerlifting a lot in high school," Reynolds says, "and decided it was something I wanted to keep doing."
Reynolds' sisters, Melissa and Lauren, have since returned home to La Conner. Melissa, who graduated from Mart High, is a first-year student at Skagit Valley College. Lauren is a sophomore at La Conner High School.
Reynolds, meanwhile, continues to train regularly at Mart High's Edd Burleson Weight Room, occasionally alongside fellow Panther alum Quan Cosby, now a member of the National Football League's Indianapolis Colts.
Another local product who turns up at Burleson is Jesse Plemons, a former Mart quarterback prospect and summer baseball teammate of Reynolds', who went into acting full-time and is best known for his role as Landry Clarke on the popular Friday Night Lights TV series.
And, if Reynolds continues to raise the bar as he did in 2011, Peters predicts he, too, will soon make a name for himself.
"I was glad when I saw that Mark had been nominated," Peters said last weekend, "and even more so when he won."
UPFRONT: The writer, who no longer lifts anything heavier than a camera, is Reynolds' father.