Read more… - Gramor Development

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Read more… - Gramor Development
MARCH 2016
Discover
S H O P,
D I N E
A N D
H AV E
F U N
Progress Ridge
TownSquare
C L O S E R
T O
H O M E !
Seasonal decor
Michelle Bottaro, A Flair for Gifts and Home
owner, sets the stage for spring – See Page 3
A S P E C I A L P U B L I C AT I O N O F PA M P L I N M E D I A G R O U P/C O M M U N I T Y N E W S PA P E R S
4
Let When The Shoe Fits experts help you
with your new spring purchases.
5
Ace Hardware at Progress Ridge, where you
meet the friendliest hardware people around.
7
Spring and summer are perfect times for
your new look from Perfect Look.
2
MARCH 2016
PROGRESS RIDGE TOWNSQUARE
Progress Ridge
TownSquare
Easy to find
We are nestled between the affluent neighborhoods of
Bull Mountain and Murray Hill, straddling the city
line between Tigard and Beaverton.
TO BEAVERTON
SW MURRAY
TEAL
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Publisher: Christine Moore
A Special Publication Of
Editor: Geoff Pursinger
A N OTH E R Q UA L IT Y D E V E LO PM E NT
Writer: Scott Keith
6605 S.E. Lake Road | Portland, OR 97222 | 503-684-0360
On the cover: Michelle Bottaro, owner of A
Flair for Gifts and Home, sets out many new
decor items for spring. Photograph by Jaime Valdez
Photography: Jaime Valdez, Adam
Wickham
Graphic Design: Dan Adams
www.gramor.com
Advertising: Christine Moore, J.
Brian Monihan and Joleen Pugh
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MARCH 2016
3
PROGRESS RIDGE TOWNSQUARE
Step into the season at
A Flair for Gifts and Home
You’ll enjoy roaming through
A Flair for Gifts and Home
and finding just the right item,
Bottaro said.
By SCOTT KEITH
Photography by JAIME VALDEZ
Y
ou’ll find colorful displays and
practical gifts year-round at A
Flair for Gifts and Home, but
during the spring, the colors just
seem to pop and crackle at the Progress
Ridge TownSquare store.
“They’ll find a variety of home décor and
gifts,” owner Michelle Bottaro said. “We sell
all types of different home décor. We follow
the seasons. We’ll also do seasonal, holiday
items and a wide assortment of gifts.”
March and April are busy months for Bottaro, who travels the country regularly to
find nifty and eye-pleasing home gifts for
the shop. Bottaro returned from a trip to
Dallas, Texas earlier this year.
“What March and April means is all new
inventory,” she said. “We have new inventory coming in daily. There’s always something new being put out on the floor.”
You’ll enjoy roaming through A Flair for
Gifts and Home and finding just the right
item, Bottaro said.
“It’s a friendly place. It’s welcoming.
There’s always something for the eye to
see.”
Items range from dinnerware, to lanterns, artwork, throw pillows and Sid Dickens tiles, which can be displayed on walls,
stands or book cases.
“Sid Dickens is an artist out of British Columbia and he creates these memory tiles,”
she said. “Each tile has a different meaning
and has an image on it. On the back there’s
the name of the tile and the meaning of the
tile. He has some really neat pieces coming
for spring.”
Bottaro makes sure to stay mindful of the
different seasons and holidays, she said.
“We always have some kind of seasonal
display,” she said. “Right now we have St.
Patrick’s Day and Easter, then we’ll move
into items for Mother’s Day, weddings, Father’s Day. Then we’ll hit the Fourth of July.”
LEFT: Spring gift ideas are available at A Flair for Gifts at the Progress Ridge TownSquare. RIGHT: A Flair for Gifts’ store is colorfully decorated with spring ideas for you
home.
Her customers are learning quickly that
her home décor items can change quickly.
“I tend to buy smaller quantities of inventory so we can change things out often,” she
said. “If you really like something, you need
to grab it, because it might be that we only
have a couple in stock, and I might not be
able to order them again.”
ETCETERA
Give them a call at 503-524-6616
Visit them on the web at
aflairforgiftsandhome.com
chase (excludes Sid Dickens and Consignment).
The store is done with its Spring cleaning and ready to make room for all the new
merchandise coming in. Enjoy 20 percent
off storewide with several items up to 75
percent off. Make sure you come in early
for the best selection (excludes consignment and Sid Dickens) n NATIONAL INDEPENDENT
RETAILERS MONTH (JULY 1-31)
Spend the entire month of July buying
various items on discount. Each week there
will be a 20 percent discount on different
merchandise.
n MIMOSA’S FOR MOM’S (MAY 6)
Join the store for mimosa’s all day and
tasty treats too. While sipping and shopping enjoy 20 percent off an item of your
choice as our gift to you (excludes consignment and Sid Dickens).
n LAST CHANCE SUMMER SALE (AUGUST 26-28)
It’s always a surprise when it will happen
but one weekend near the end of August
the store celebrate the close of summer
with one last summer sale. Enjoy 20 percent off all summer colored and themed
items.
n NATIONAL SPLURGE DAY (JUNE 18)
What better way to enjoy National
Splurge day than to enjoy a tasty treat, a
yummy drink and 20 percent off your pur-
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4
Are you
in the
know about
Beaverton
and
Tigard
PROGRESS RIDGE TOWNSQUARE
A perfect fit
Progress Ridge’s When The Shoe Fits wants
every customer to feel like Cinderella
?
By SCOTT KEITH
Photography by JAIME VALDEZ
A
lan O’Hara can describe his store in three words.
Excellence. In. Footwear.
O’Hara, a certified pedorthist and owner of Progress Ridge TownSquare’s
When The Shoe Fits, said that it’s important to find a balance between fashion and function.
“We have trained staff who know how to help people select shoes that are going to fit
and function,” said O’Hara. “We have the best of all the world’s major comfort brands.
We think that you shouldn’t have to substitute style
to be
We’re
on comfortable.”
a
different
path but When The Shoe Fits
Fashion styles change with the
seasons,
than
works hard to have the right shoe
forOregonian
any occasion, whether you want
It may seem
M
to look your best or are planning your next hiking trip, O’Hara said.
old fashioned,
“There’s a big movement, right now, in the footwear industry. The
OUROPINION
but O’Hara
brands that are having the most successes inSupport
retailofstores
across
the
immigrant
driver cards
said he
harm workingasOregonians
country are brands that are being deemed bywill
consumers
fashionVIEW
T said.CITIZEN’S
wants the
able yet have comfort features built in,” O’Hara
“That plays right
experience to into our major strength … knowing what to do with these better-qualremind you of ity shoes, now, and how to make them work.
At When The Shoe Fits, you’ll find brands including Taos, Earthies
visits to shoe
and Romika.
stores when
“Of course, we’ve always done great with Dansko and Keen, (too,)”
you were a
There are two kinds of people —
O’ Hara said. “But in the last several seasons, we’ve
seenand
major
strides
in the world
in Congress
youngster.
from some of the more fashionable brands atWmaking shoes that can
actually help people be more comfortable, but still
be fashionable.
MikelKelly
That’s where we’re seeing a lot of growth right now.”
Spring is a busy time at O’Hara’s store.
“March and April are our two biggest sandal months,” he said. “We’re loaded for bear
The Times editorial views
right now. By that first week of March, we look to try to get most all of our spring shoes
in — those first few warm days, people really start to think about getting something
springy. We’ve got all kinds of great stuff and fun colors.”
Expect a lot of one-on-one customer service at the Beaverton store, O’Hara said.
“That’s our difference. We know how shoes should fit and what’s going to work for
different people.”
It may seem old fashioned, but O’Hara said he wants the experience to remind you of
visits to shoe stores when you were a youngster.
“We actually fit shoes,” O’Hara said. “There’s no substitute for putting a shoe on a foot
and seeing how that actually interacts with a person’s foot.”
Tigard Sports
Tigard News
Opinion
any Oregonians will be thinking and talking about the future of print journalism
this week.
On Tuesday, the state’s largest and oldest
newspaper stopped its daily delivery to homes. As of
this week, subscribers to The Oregonian will receive a
delivered newspaper on Wednesday, Friday and Sunday — along with what’s been dubbed “a bonus edition” on Saturdays. (The Monday, Tuesday and Thursday editions will be available only at newsstands.)
When Oregonian Publisher N. Christian Anderson
III announced the change in June, he sent a clear message to readers that Portland’s 162-year-old daily
would follow in the cookiecutter path already being
taken by other daily papers
owned by New York-based
Advance Publications. This change in delivery follows
months — years, really — of cost cutting at The Oregonian that included shedding dozens upon dozens of
veteran journalists in Portland, suburban bureaus and
the Hillsboro Argus, which also is owned by Advance
Publications. It is a model Advance is rolling out
across the country, and as such, it demonstrates the
two divergent approaches being taken by the two largest news-gathering organizations in the Portland area.
The approach embraced by Advance includes a willingness to make dramatic changes in the delivery of
news, regardless of how a community might feel about
it. The second path, one the Pamplin Media Group will
follow, is defined by local news, local ownership and
local decision-making. Our company is
by longtime Oregon resident
The distinct owned
Robert B. Pamplin Jr., who leaves it up
competitive to managers at each of the 25 newspaadvantage pers within our group to make their
own decisions about how to best serve
for all of
their communities.
the Pamplin While they are under one umbrella,
newspapers the newspapers within the Pamplin Media Group have their own distinct tradiis that
tions and relationships with individual
our 80
communities. They range in age from
newsroom 132 years in the case of the Prineville
employees Central Oregonian and 127 years for the
concentrate Forest Grove News-Times to just one
year for the upstart Hillsboro Tribune.
exclusively The
Times newspaper you are reading
on local
right now has been serving this community for 58 years.
news.
The distinct competitive advantage
for all of the Pamplin newspapers is that
our 80 newsroom employees concentrate exclusively on local news. Plus,
our sales representatives understand
the unique needs of the markets in
which they work.
That advantage has been noted by national investors and industry observers who’ve been saying for
several years that local, community newspapers — as
opposed to metro dailies — are in the best position to
thrive in the digital era.
It also explains why a company such as Advance has
started up its own local newspapers in Forest Grove
and Beaverton: It wants to copy our success.
We’re flattered, but need to make a distinction.
The ongoing success of our newspapers can be seen
in what we produce each and every week. We publish
more local news and local advertising than any other
media in Oregon — and that includes The Oregonian.
A count of original local stories in our collective newspapers comes in at more than 1,000 per week, while
our ad count, not including classified advertising, exceeds 1,300 per week.
Stated simply, we have broader and deeper community-based information than anyone else, which is why
we have full confidence that our newspapers will be
successful for decades to come.
We also have confidence in something else: the ability of our newspaper managers and employees to listen
to their readers and advertisers and make smart
choices in coming years about how best to serve each
community where we do business.
For most of our employees, this town is more than a
stop on the journalistic career ladder or a place to
leave before the afternoon rush hour kicks in. It’s our
home.
Sure, the Pamplin Media Group will change with the
times, and it will help fill a news void left by a diminished Oregonian. The decisions we make, however,
will be determined locally — not by a parent company
in a faraway place — and they will be fully informed
by the interactions we have in our communities each
and every day.
Editorials are written by President and Publisher Mark Garber
(503-546-9853; mgarber@commnewspapers.com), Editor
Christina Lent (503-546-0735; clent@commnewspapers.com)
and other Pamplin Media Group editors.
6605 SE Lake Road
Portland, OR 97222
Phone:-503-684-0360
424458.062713
OPINION A5
www.tigardtimes.com
The Times October 3, 2013
Reach us Monday through Friday
from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The Times, (ISSN 8750-0795), an edition of
Times Newspapers, is published weekly by
Community Newspapers, Inc.,
6605 SE Lake Road, Portland, OR
97222. Periodical postage paid at
Portland, OR 97208 and
additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER:
Please send address changes to:
Times, P.O. Box 22109,
.02+!-$
8
For subscription information and service, call
620-9797. The Annual subscription rate is
32.&20)#.3-27!0%!!-$
32.&12!2%)1/%07%!0
Education
oday, the group Protect Oregon Driver Licenses will present
tens of thousands of
voters’ signatures to the Secretary of State’s office. What
those signatures will do: assure a place on next year’s ballot for a referendum measure
to repeal the recently passed
state law granting “driver
cards” to illegal immigrants.
Among the referendum’s objectives is to deny illegal immigrants a means by which they
can take and keep jobs from
working-class Oregonians. But
one of the referendum’s chief
foes is those Oregonians’ reputed champion — the state branch
of the AFL-CIO. In a recent
soapbox, branch president Tom
Chamberlain pledged his federation to “fight against” the referendum (“Washington County
workers face many challenges,”
Sept. 12 edition).
To understand the irony of
this, let’s examine how illegal
immigrants impact Oregon
workers.
In August, reported the Oregon Employment Department,
more than 150,000 Oregonians
were unemployed. A reason for
that: according to this year’s estimate of the Federation for
by Richard F. LaMountain
American Immigration Reform,
some 120,000 illegal immigrants
hold Oregon jobs.
These jobs are largely in
fields like food services, construction and building maintenance/groundskeeping — fields
in which, the Pew Hispanic Center reports, illegal immigrants
recently have comprised 12 percent, 17 percent and 19 percent
of the workforces. Though labor-intensive, they are jobs
that can and do provide valuable work experience, decent
livings and upward mobility to
young, minority and many
other Oregonians. Why, then,
does the AFL-CIO want to protect driving privileges for illegal immigrants — privileges
that would better enable them
to take these jobs from our
own people?
Many working Oregonians
are parents of teenagers. For
years, Oregon teens routinely
held part-time and summer
employment — positions that
gave them the entry-level
work experience that Reese
Lord of the WorkSystems
teen-placement program has
called “the foundation for a
family-wage job.”
But “in the past 10 years,”
reported the Portland Tribune
in July, “summer youth employment dropped from 46 percent to 7 percent.” A large part
of the reason? Over that same
period, FAIR and other sources estimate, Oregon’s illegalimmigrant population roughly
doubled — and, writes the
Center for Immigration Studies’ Steven A. Camarota, “immigrants and teenagers often
do the same kind of work.” By
fighting to protect illegal-immigrant driver cards, the AFLCIO will harm Oregon teens’
chances to find work in their
own state.
Last, consider illegal-immigrant jobholders’ impact on
the wages of low-skilled, lowincome Americans — an impact that has been recognized
and documented for decades.
In a seminal 2004 study, Harvard professor George Borjas
estimated that “between 1980
and 2000, immigration reduced
the average annual earnings
of... natives without a highschool education... by 7.4 percent” — and that half or more
of that reduction was due to
competition with illegal immi-
Or, she may hear about some evil dictator
e know there are two kinds of
in a Third World country who has executed
people in the world — on this
a whole village of his own countrymen and
we all can agree. Where we
get into trouble is when we try announce, “That never would have happened if a woman were running that counto decide what those two kinds of people
try.”
are.
And that’s when I chime in with my obTo the other person who lives at our
servation that maybe it isn’t a matter of men
house (TOPWLAOH), the world consists of
and women, but good and evil, right and
men and women. Women, of course, are
wrong — or stupid and nongood; men are bad.
stupid.
Everyone, it turns out, has
“Typical reaction — for a
his or her own take on this.
man,” she’ll almost certainly
To a member of the clergy,
reply.
there are the ones who probaOne of my favorite Tbly will go to heaven and the
shirts, which I bought at the
ones who won’t.
Tigard Value Village (on a
The police world sees those
half-price color tag, I might
who obey laws and those who
add) bears this message:
don’t.
“Never underestimate the
Children tend to divide the
power of stupid people in
world into kids and, you
J
U
S
T
A
N
O
T
H
E
R
large groups.”
know, the ancient ones who
POINT of VIEW
What’s really hilarious to
cause all their problems.
me is that everybody likes it
Social workers probably
— stupid and non-stupid alike.
can’t help but see rich people
“I like your T-shirt,” a slack-jawed yoand poor people.
kel will say pausing from cleaning his finOf course, what I notice when I look
gernails with a Bowie knife, then breakaround me is this one group over here —
ing into one of those combination chucklet’s call them the stupid people. And over
le-snort eruptions from down deep.
there, on the other side, are the non-stupid
As I have admitted before, I don’t conpeople.
This is often my comeback when TOPW- sider myself especially smart. I do indeed
tend to bounce back and forth from the
LAOH starts in on men.
ranks of the stupid to the non-stupid,
She will glare at me following a story
on the news about a serial rapist or a sui- sometimes several times a day.
I do realize, though, that there is a
cide bomber and ask, “How does it feel to
small (very small), third group that conbe a man?”
Saundra Sorenson
grants. More recently, write
FAIR’s Eric A. Ruark and Matthew Graham, even the liberal
Center for American Progress
has admitted that “reducing
the illegal-alien population in
the United States by one-third
would raise the income of unskilled workers by $400 a
year.” Driver cards would enable illegal immigrants to
reach jobs in our state more
easily — and to continue their
depressive impact on Oregonians’ wages.
In fighting the referendum
effort to repeal driver cards,
the AFL-CIO betrays its responsibility to the workingclass Oregonians it purports
to represent — and to add insult to injury, does so with
union members’ dues money.
AFL-CIO members and other
Oregonians should contact Mr.
Chamberlain and voice their
displeasure — and tell him that
next year, they will vote to repeal driver cards for illegal immigrants.
A former editor for several Oregon newspapers,
including the Woodburn Independent, Lake Oswego Review, Beaverton Valley Times and The
Times, Mikel Kelly now works on the central design desk for Community Newspapers and the
Portland Tribune and contributes an occasional
column.
Jonathan House
Kim Stephens
503-546-0748
503-546-0746
503-546-9818
kstephens@commnewspapers.com
503-546-9816
Christina Lent
Dan Brood
Mary Ratcliff
Deanie Bush
Charlotte Allsop
503-546-0735
503-546-0734
503-546-9836
503-546-0773
503-546-0751
Geoff Pursinger
Jaime Valdez
Don Atwell
Deb Steiger
Mindy Johnson
503-546-0732
503-492-5132
503-546-0778
503-546-0760
Christine Moore
PUBLISHER/
ADVERTISING DIRECTOR
503-546-0771
cmoore@commnewspapers.com
MANAGING EDITOR
REPORTER - TUALATIN
ssorenson@commnewspapers.com
SPORTS
clent@commnewspapers.com
REPORTER - TIGARD
503-546-0744
gpursinger@commnewspapers.com
PHOTOS
jhouse@commnewspapers.com
VITAL STATISTICS
dbrood@commnewspapers.com
mratcliff@commnewspapers.com
COMMERCIAL PRINTING
PHOTOS
jvaldez@commnewspapers.com
datwell@commnewspaperes.com
Most people think they know
what’s happening in their neighborhood only to be surprised that
something happened weeks or months ago and they missed it.
Richard F. LaMountain is vice
president of Oregonians for Immigration Reform and a chief petitioner of the referendum effort to
repeal illegal-immigrant driver
cards. He lives in Cedar Mill.
sists of the really, really smart. I know
this group exists because the evidence is
all around us. These are the people who
gave us television, open-heart surgery,
rockets to the moon, etc.
Nobody I know could build a rocket capable of traveling into space and returning safely to earth — or even a working
toaster, for that matter.
Myself, I’m doing pretty well just to
make myself a sandwich.
As this is being written, there are three
days left before Congress drives the country off a cliff — all over that line that was
drawn in the sand over the Affordable
Health Care Act.
This is where we all say, in unison, that
the reason for this insane behavior on the
part of our leaders is because there are
two kinds of people in Congress.
There are Democrats and Republicans.
There are men and women.
There may be good people and bad people, although I doubt that’s especially pertinent to this case.
And there are stupid and non-stupid.
Yes, even in Congress.
Maybe, just maybe, there’s a T-shirt out
there that covers this, too.
CIRCULATION MANAGER
TIGARD/KING CITY SALES
dbush@commnewspapers.com
TUALATIN/SHERWOOD
dsteiger@commnewspapers.com
Gini Kraemer
CIRCULATION
PROMOTION MANAGER
gkraemer@commnewspapers.com
ACCOUNTING MANAGER
callsop@commnewspapers.com
CLASSIFIED SALES
mjohnson@commnewspapers.com
Opinion Page
MARCH 2016
That’s where The Beaverton Valley Times and The Times
come in.
Every week we produce
Beaverton and Tigard’s
best source for local news
and advertising about your
town, your neighborhood,
Alan O’Hara,
The Shoeand
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has almost 30 years of experience in the shoe business.
yourWhen
friends
probably
your family.
etcetera
Whether your interest is
news,
opinions,
schools,
A series
of in-store
events,
with key vendors, is
planned. These events
are schedentertainment
or sports
uled weekly,
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mid-March
through
– we have it all neatly putthe
middle of April.
together in one great and
According to its website, When The Shoe
powerful
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pedorthics,
the design, manufacdeliver to and
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every
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Among other brand names at When The
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If you have foot conditions, including
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Visit them at whentheshoefits.com
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So subscribe today to make sure you really do know what’s
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Become a LOCAL expert with
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.com
www.tigardtimes
m
lleytimes.co
vertonva
www.bea
nshipWesteffLinnort
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takes down
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THURSDAY,
MARCH 19,
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ATIN
TIGA RD | TUAL
• THE TIGARD/TUAL
DAY, MARCH 19, 2015
ATIN LEADER IN NEWS
| SHER WOO D
VOLUME 60, NO.
FOR 58 YEARS •
metthe Portland
in Tigard and
the U.S. Post- ropolitan area.”
rial would urge
Postal
Doher ty has
their addresses. master General and the
It’s an issue
ors to
ple to look up
before.
ZIP codes are Even Tigard High School comes Service Board of Governas “Ti- tried to address
ty said she
as
codes, but those
Portland.”
97223 and 97224
For years, Doher officials to
design ated
to
up as being in Office is con- recognize
techn ically
“Portl and”
than “Portland.”
d with postal
sometimes
that
GER
Tigard’s Post tion under gard” rather seem like major worke
“Portland,” which Tigard resid, and when
“Tigard.”
change
By GEOFF PURSIN
not
it
substa
for
to
a
may
get
It
sidere d
issue that
ce. Ticauses trouble
, she decided
The memoriThe Times
tion, but it’s an
Main Post Offi
didn’t happen
y said.
dents, Dohert a very confus- Portland’s t have its own post- legisla residents have struggled
al made its way
it to Salem.
House of Rep- throu gh the
y said. bring
lot Tigard
“This can be
democ rat, has
u- gard doesn’
The Oregon
would cost a
decades, Dohert
Doher ty, a
for my constit
itDist. 35
master — that ty said — and with for
will vote on
ing situation
code labeled
House Comm
ented House
resentatives
g goods over
, Doher
Having the ZIP
she repres
Tigard its
sents when orderin ty said in a of money
tee on Rules on
d is misleading,
2009.
whether to give
community addres
since
for
Doher
Portlan
an
,”
yet
as
but
set
public
suburb
phone
d Post
been
the
odds with
Mond ay,
own ZIP code.
No date has
often find them- es are part of the Portlan
ret Doherty,
said, and “is at local governal
release. “They
eoand
In January, Marga in the Or- needs approv
routes.
House vote.
ing to salesp
DOHERTY
the
Tigard
Office’s “rural” s require fed- perception zational structure the
selves explain
who represents
es, from both
don’t live in PortZIP code change joint memo- ment organi
Representativ
ple that they
state House
businesses
egon House of
The
Joint Memoto become law.
Local small
eral approval.
introduced House Congress to and Senate currently split be- land. in that it’s hard for peois
asks
compla
Tigard
which
ZIP
rial 1,
ation for ZIP
97223 and 97224
change the design 97224 from tween the
and
codes 97223
husetts next month
lke heads to Massac
Shoot competition
r-old Graham Oe
Q Tigard’s 13-yeaionals for the Elks National Hoop
reg
after winning
Q Tigard, Tualatin
take opposing
views on pot
regulation
GER
By GEOFF PURSIN
The Times
ticking for TiThe clock is
in to make
gard and Tualatabout how to
up their minds ana facilideal with mariju
.
in their towns
ties opening
in — like
Tigard and Tualat County
ngton
severa l Washi marijuana facities — banned
year
opening last
cilities from
put
s worked to
while leader
to handle
place
in
regulations
influx of busithe expected
nesses.
cities’ bans
.
But while both
g
soon after
facilit ies are
will follow lopers are spendingon mariju ana
hexpire in a few
In all, deve
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By ERIC APAL
well over
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differe
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borhood een Beaverton Hight devel
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dreaming up Westgate
plan to deal
Road betw the west, Southwes
’s Old Tow
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nd
and
on
Beaverton me a lot newer.
the
ol
of
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which will
ue on the
beco
with the former
ard Aven
about to
Theater site, d into a
t on the
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al- Lomb
ations.
t Fifth Stree
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And talle tment complexes
be redevelope
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Two apar
truction in
piece of Beave
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ood insaries both
under cons neighbor- south y, the neighborh most key
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ready are
Toda
new downtown.
VALDEZ
that
city’s oldes
dof the city’s
TIMES PHOTO: JAIME
end May 1. At
one of the two more are sche
TED PHOTO
accepting applicludes some
in April.
age 8 SUBMIT
s
ies can begin
/ Page
hoods, and k ground in the comin Springfield, Mass.,
business owner
See OLD TOWN
National Finals
cations from
within
uled to brea A residential cares
about
shop
e in the Hoop Shoot
up
m is nonchalant lant
Oelke will compet
hoping to set
ing months. 100 or more room
Just as Graha
his Tigard home.
noncha
takes a shot at
however, he’s
their borders. ban dispensaall
facility with
Fame.
his winning,
Catholic School,
ence. What it
in the Hall of
at St. Anthony
Cities cannot are allowed
competition
whole experi
Hall of Fame.
but
was that he
als and the other brackets of about the
13, a seventh-grader
tball
said,
Oelke,
Region
he
Baske
to,
ries outright,
Graham
age
to
Robin
Memo rial
nable” regula
are divided into separated into came down thought he was going
the Sherwood
to make “reaso sses, though
par- rounds
N
each
Spons ored by
never really
thought he’d
he’s their first to 8/9, 10/11 and 12/13,
By CAITLIN FELDMA
tions on busine
divisons. At re- win. When asked if he
a
Hood Elks Lodge,
But talking
which made recboys and girls
response was
The Times
Measure 91 — ana use legal
t to make it. Ever.
participants from make it this far, his
four
,
ticipan
gionals
have no
didn’t think
reational mariju g in July —
shot, with each scoff and a smile.
Graham, you’d is.
raham Oelke
at school,
each division
’s free
this
in P.E. class
in the state startin counts as a
shooting 10 free
TO FOLLOW
idea how big
It all started
he’d win his school He
Sieg, anwhat
taking turns
a lot of
tition.
before going
does not say
teache r, Julie
“There were
tion.
throw compe
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throws in a row lineup and when his
shooting free
the
be
there,
win
rs
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he’d
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r
ed that
online
good shoote
didn’t think
back through
March Oelke’s progress
it’s not nounc that day, and that the winneof
either. And
That’s the questio
g 15 more. And re.
he said of the tition. at elks.org/hoopshoot
he said.
round
city competition, think
oper- where city councilors have
r
throws
shootin
now,
the
anothe
on
to
ry”
didn’t
pressu
tin,
gh
will
to go on
y was
Twitter using
Region al compe
he definitely
d Raleigh
as if there wasn’tcompe tition would get But this wasn’t Sieg’s first
ana facilities
When Perr Amanda McClure
certainshooters, or through
50-year-ol
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No, the
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have R2-D
“This is a
table, Dr.
in competition. the competition — she
boys #HoopShoot
he’d win distric to at win at regionals.
sited only
ent doesn’t
the ating feet away at the contr be
total silence
nd with
and in his 12/13where
be locate d
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participate in
ly didn’t expect won them all.
ore, Sher- go-rou
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r,
areas and can’t of any resithe fourth
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her students
Debi Whitm
for a docto surgery technology
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26 years.
tic
ted against
rom a da of a robotic surgery usedwithin
r-old St. Antho
the Elks Nation
for
s, parks or
latest robo his recovery from
Hoop Shoot for
a par- he compe Idaho, Alaska and Wash- wood Chairman for
has
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tion
make
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Providence St.
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The perfect shot
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G
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09PRC4
MARCH 2016
5
PROGRESS RIDGE TOWNSQUARE
From odds and ends to helpful advice
Ace Hardware is there to help with friendly service and knowledgable staff
By SCOTT KEITH
Photography by JAIME VALDEZ
T
FITNESS
S
erry Cain loves his job.
“I don’t know, there’s something
about the smell in a hardware
store,” he said. “It’s just the combination of things, I guess. There’s certainly a
lot for a kid to play with and look at.”
Whether you’re getting ready for your
spring home improvement projects or misplaced that last tool, nut or bolt you need,
Cain and the rest of the staff at Ace Hardwarde are here to help.
Cain, who owns Ace
Hardware at Progress
“Our goal is
Ridge TownSquare with
to provide
his wife, Gail, said his
top quality
store is about more than
hardware
its merchandise. It’s about
products and helping people.
“Everybody that is eiservices in a
professional, ther in this business as
an owner or as an associhelpful and
ate does it mainly because
friendly
environment.” they enjoy the interaction with people,” he said.
– Terry Cain
“Sometimes
customers
aren’t as comfortable as,
maybe, the associates are. Part of that is having people on board that know how to make
others feel comfortable.”
Products, and a lot of helpful advice, are offered at Ace Hardware.
“Our goal is to provide top quality hardware products and services in a professional, helpful and friendly environment,” Cain
said. “We’re really just, kind of, the neighborhood ‘go to’ for the odds and ends, and
maybe a little advice for some projects you’re
working on.”
At Ace, you can find just about everything
for your latest home improvement project.
And with spring upon us, many people are
out working in their gardens.
“This time of year, of course, we’re just
going into spring,” Cain said. “People are
thinking about all the soil-related products
(fertilizers, etc). People are starting to watch
the soil temperature, thinking about getting
Terry and Gail Cain, owners of Progress Ridge Town Square’s Ace Hardware, are ready to help customers with their home needs.
their gardens in. We’ve got the seed and later
on we’ll have plants.”
Ace is also known for its impressive electrical department. “Anything from wire
to switches to connectors to light fixtures
themselves,” he said, noting the emergence
of LED light bulbs. “The great thing about
LEDs is they pull very little power, they put
off very little heat and they last for a really
long time.”
Cain enjoys the atmosphere at Progress
Ridge TownSquare. Ace Hardware was one
of the first businesses to set up shop at the
Beaverton shopping center.
“It’s a wonderful neighborhood mix,” he
said. “But it’s also a wonderful tenant mix.
For us to be right in the middle of this, it’s
just tremendous.”
etcetera
Some of the products available at Ace
Hardware:
n Planting products, and tools
n Power tools include drills and saws.
n An impressive selection of kitchen
products.
Give Ace Hardware a call at 503-747-0299
Visit them on the web at acehardwareprogressridge.com
n Bark mulches to fix up your yard
n Deck clean-up supplies
n Ace Hardware is home to a big paint
department
n Patio heaters, fire pits, barbecues
(they carry the Weber line)
n For the tool shed, Ace has a wall of
long-handled tools. Look for shovels,
garden rakes, extending pruners,
hand tools, gloves.
n Craftsman tools
At Ace, you can find just
about everything for your latest
home improvement project.
And with spring upon us,
many people are out working
in their gardens.
n Screwdrivers, hammers, wrenches.
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Did you know
the foot has 26 bones, 33 joints, 107 ligaments,
19 muscles and numerous tendons?
Randy Bresee
Branch Manager, Rivermark Community
Credit Union
508516.031215 PR
Candace
Gregory, DPM
American Board
of Podiatric
Orthopedics &
Primary Podiatric
Medicine
Member of
American Podiatric
Medical Association
Common Foot & Ankle
Disorders:
Ankle & Foot Centers
of Oregon
• Common Foot
Problems
• Achilles Tendinitis
• Ankle Injuries
• Circulation
Disorders
• Diabetes
• Diseases of the
Skin
12325 SW Horizon Blvd.
Suite 27
Beaverton, OR 97007
503.597.5647
Evening and weekend
appointments available
• Ingrown Toenails
• Foot Surgery
• Knee Problems In
Children
• Nerve Conditions
• Heel Pain
• Childhood
Abnormalities
• Soft Tissue
Masses
• Sports Injuries
• Sports Medicine
• Tendon Injuries
• Toe Problems
• Foot Injuries
• Plantar Warts
Did you always want to get in the credit union business?
Any other careers on your road to becoming branch manager at
Progress Ridge?
Credit Unions were not my primary intent when I started my career.
I had always had an interest and fascination with money/business and
the strategies that made corporations successful and knew I wanted
to be involved in the financial field in some fashion. Out of college
I started in Consumer Finance, managing several offices prior to
moving to a credit union. I moved to a credit union as a result of my
passion for people and felt I could make a greater impact on members’
lives due to credit union’s philosophy of people helping people. This
also allowed me to continue my involvement with the financial side as
well.
What is the challenge of working in your business?
I think one of the biggest challenges is to identify those financial
solutions that really make an impact on our members’ lives. This
entails sitting down with members in private to try and discover
what’s important to them in their financial lives and then to come up
with truly meaningful solutions that will impact them the most. Folks
don’t always give a lot of thought on choices they have and it’s up to us
to help them recognize the financial benefits available.
Recipe of the Month!
Purple Potato Salad
What feelings do you want first-time visitors to Rivermark to
experience?
Ingredients:
2 tablespoons Oilerie Dill EVOO
2 tablespoons Oilerie Garlic EVOO
Juice of 1 lemon
1/2 cup creme fraiche
1/2 pound baby new potatoes
1/2 pound purple potatoes
Sea salt
Freshly ground black pepper
1/2 bunch radishes
1/4 cup mint leaves, chopped
1/4 cup chives, chopped
Olive Oil Bar® Store
Bread Dipping Oil
Balsamic Sauces
Lentils | Beans
Stuffed Olives
Salts & Spices
Italian Olive Salad
Bruschetta Toppings
Rubs | Orzo Pasta | Rice
and so much more!
The first thing I would like them to feel when they visit the Member
Service Center for the first time is….. Wow this is so cool! We are
providing an experience at Rivermark that so unique and 2nd to none
in the way members now interact with us as an organization and as
a branch…. As they visit us more, I would like them to feel and know
that we are there to support them and their families and that we are
in a way an extended part of their family and that they are a part of
Rivermarks extended family.
How is Progress Ridge TownSquare working out for you and your
staff?
Directions:
1. For the dressing: mix together olive oil,
lemon juice and creme fraiche.
2. Cook the potatoes in plenty of boiling salted
water until tender (about 20 mins).
3. Drain well.
Amazingly well. When we first moved into the complex 3.5 years
ago, the complex was new and people were still trying to locate the
center and figure out how to incorporate it into their lives. In addition,
the construction for local housing was in process and the community
was in an overall development stage. Since then as the community
has started to mature we have seen a tremendous increase in traffic
to the center and to our Rivermark Member Resource Center as well.
The demographics of the area is diverse which dovetails nicely into the
relationships we want to establish and maintain on a long term basis.
4. When cool enough to handle, peel the
potatoes and chop into bite-size pieces.
5. Mix with the dressing into the potatoes,
add the radishes and herbs, and season to taste.
Adapted from Jamie Oliver
Do you and your staff enjoy contributing to the community?
Community projects?
MARCH FLAVORS
OF THE MONTH!
We really love being involved in the community. We continue
to support Scholls Heights Elementary school with a kids bank
day once per month during the school year and sponsor other
events such as Dogs for Doernbecher in July each year as well as
maintain involvement in both the Tigard and Beaverton Chamber of
Commerce’s.
Garlic EVOO & Dill EVOO.
Buy a bottle of either the
Garlic EVOO or the Dill EVOO
save
1per bottle.
$
At the end of the day, what satisfaction do you get as branch
manager?
Buy both and
3per set.
$
save
EXPIRES 3/31/16
EX
12325 SW Horizon Blvd #29 • Beaverton, OR 97007
At Progress Ridge Town Square
503-530-8074
Oilerie Beaverton
555262.031716 PR
Mon-Sat 10-6 • Sun 12-5
You know, it really boils down to the answer in question number
one. I love the people ... Both our members and my staff. My passion
is twofold. One is to make sure my staff is engaged, developing
professionally, and providing the very best service they can for our
members and two, that our members feel valued, special, and that they
know we are providing them with solutions that make their financial
lives better whenever we interact with them. I can’t ask for any more
than that!
MARCH 2016
7
PROGRESS RIDGE TOWNSQUARE
At Perfect Look, customers
are treated like family
Customers cite the friendliness
that they receive from staff
By SCOTT KEITH
Photography by JAIME VALDEZ
W
hether you are looking for
a snappier haircut, or a
look that will turn heads,
the stylists at Perfect Look
Salon are ready to provide timely service
and get you ready for the warmer months of
March, April and May.
The stylists at Perfect Look get to know
their customers, said Danyelle Heinz, manager and one of four stylists at the Perfect
Look Salon at Progress Ridge TownSquare.
“We have a lot of regulars who like to
come in,” she said. “Basically, most of our
regulars are almost like family to us.”
Stylists bring years of experience to the
Beaverton salon. One stylist, Lonny, brings
more than two decades experience to the
salon.
“We want to provide a great service,”
Heinz said. “We get to know our clients. We
definitely don’t rush through our services.
We learn about their hair and what they use
at home.”
The salon caters to all ages, men and women. You don’t need to worry about setting up
an appointment days in advance.
“It’s a great location for your son or daughter’s first haircut. If your child has never had
a haircut before, and you’re bringing them in
for their first professional haircut, we have
this cute certificate that we fill out and you
can keep it for your baby book.”
But for the stylists at the Beaverton salon,
it’s about more than just giving a great haircut.
It’s about community.
In February, Perfect Look selected Oregon
Friends of Sheltered Animals, as the recipient of a month-long pet food drive.
“We put a sign up. We got a big box and we
decorated it,” Heinz said. “We handed out
flyers to everyone in the complex.” Pet food
donors received a coupon to the salon.
“We’re going to be doing it again, in April,
for the Oregon Humane society,” she said.
etcetera
At Perfect Look, Heinz said, it’s important
to do their part.
“We want (customers) to feel happy and
comfortable with their stylists and this location,” she said.
Perfect Look offers a wide range of hair
products, including shampoos, conditioners and hair sprays as well as its own line of
products, called Perfections.
n Perfect Look sells brushes, combs and
electric devises, such as curling irons, flat
irons and hot brushes.
n Services for men include haircuts,
shampoos and scalp massages.
n Services for women include cuts, perms,
colors and conditioning treatments.
n Gift cards are available
Visit them on Facebook at Progress
Ridge Perfect Look. Give them a call at
503-590-6640
Lonny Cada is a hair stylist at Progress Ridge TownSquare’s Perfect Look.
Danyelle Heinz is the manager at Progress
Ridge TownSquare’s Perfect Look.
The salon caters to all
ages, men and women.
You don’t need to
worry about setting up
an appointment days in
advance.
Walk-ins and appointments can be made at Progress Ridge TownSquare’s Perfect Look.
Join these
businesses and
lease space at
Progress Ridge
TownSquare
Rob Moneyhan and Kia Hartley
(503) 228-3080
548651_031716 PR
For leasing information, please contact:
8
MARCH 2016
PROGRESS RIDGE TOWNSQUARE
Know Your Neighbor!
Pho Nam offers a variety of
healthy fresh Vietnamese
dishes with veggies and your
choice of char-grilled meats.
We also offer tasty soups and
traditional Asian dishes.
554640.030116 PR
Hours: Sun & Mon 11am-8pm
Tues-Thurs 11am-9pm
Fri & Sat 11am-10pm
PHO NAM
Vietnamese & Asian Cuisine Restaurant
15035 SW Barrows Rd. #129 • 503-747-3114
Like any good
neighborhood, we
get to know those
around us.
Progress Ridge is a
close neighborhood
d
of retail stores,
restaurants, grocery,
y,
entertainment and
services. Here are a
few friends that would
ld
like to say “Hi!”
Meet Leslie
554633.030116 PR
to find apparel and
Where can you go
e
ages? A happy plac
accessories for all
ll
ughter? A place I ca
la
d
an
s
ile
sm
of
ll
fu
es
Boutique! Our pric
n
re
Si
t
ee
Sw
e?
m
ho
e
le and our items ar
ab
on
as
re
s
ay
w
al
e
ar
on!
ve. Come see us so
lo
h
it
w
ed
ck
pi
nd
ha
547774.031716 PR
Ziba Salon
HOURS: Mon-Sat 9am-7pm; Walk-Ins Welcome
15135 SW Barrows Rd #139, Beaverton
In Progress Ridge Town Square - 12325 SW Horizion Blvd, Suite 31 • Beaverton, 97007
503-430-0008
Truly Local Stein Distillery
555285.031716 PR
Meet
Jonathan Sanchez,
BEAVERT
N
Eye Health
Beaverton Eye Health is the sister location
of Sherwood Family Eye Health.
We offer eye exams, contact lens exams,
tasting room manager.
treat medical emergencies, co-manage
cataract surgery.
LASIK, KAMRA and more. We have a
fantastic selection of glasses, sunglasses
and contact lenses, as well.
Stein Distillery
offers a rye whiskey,
bourbon whiskey
and a blended
whiskey.
Come see us today!
503-350-2727 • www.beavertoneye.com
12345 SW Horizon Blvd., Ste 49
Beaverton, or 97007
12345 SW Horizon Blvd at Progress Ridge
Beaverton, OR 97007• (503) 352-4819
554644.031716 PR
Hello! I’m Kristin,
I am the owner of Rocket Fizz.
554650_031716 PR
rocketfizz@progressridge
12345 SW Horizon Blvd #51, Beaverton • 503-336-0263
Play Boutique inspires
STAY & PLAY or
creative moments that
nurture both parents
DROP & GO
and children to enrich
while your kids
family life balance while
cultivating a strong
LEARN & GROW
sense of community.
info@playboutique.com • www.playboutique.com
PROGRESS RIDGE | 12345 SW Horizon Blvd, Beaverton, OR 97007 | 503.352.5202
ADVERTISE
HERE!
Joleen Pugh
LAKESIDE TAP HOUSE
• Beaverton, OR 97007
503.469.2932 • theGrowlerie.com
15151 SW Barrows Rd
Direct: 971.204.7773
jpugh@pamplinmedia.com
Kelly Clark
Advertising Representative
Direct: 971.204.7795
kclark@pamplinmedia.com
555553_031716 PR
Advertising Representative
554660.031716 PR
554661.031716 PR
I wanted to tell you about what a great time
Spring Break will be to come in and try out
some of the treats at our nostalgic candy
and soda pop shop! We will be having daily
tastings, discounts and prizes, including several
$20.00 gift certificates! And we will be bringing
back a customer favorite - Spin the Wheel!
Check out our facebook page for details:
Facebook.com/RocketFizzBeaverton.
536551.031716 PR

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