Clallam: Forum gives public first look at PA council, port, hospital candidates

The public got a chance Tuesday night to hear from candidates running in the primary election for seats on the Port of Port Angeles and Olympic Memorial Hospital boards of commissioners and the Port Angeles City Council.

The candidates gave short presentations about their positions on various issues and answered questions from the audience of about 50 persons during the two-hour forum.

While the primary is Sept. 18, mail-in ballots are being sent to registered voters in the appropriate voting districts today.

The primary election is being conducted entirely by mail.

Port Angeles City Council

Incumbent Larry Williams is seeking a second four-year term. The real estate agent will face John Logelin, a blind man, and Karen Spence, an accountant, in the primary election for Position 2 on the City Council.

They were asked whether they favored the petition method or direct-vote method for the city’s potential annexation of unincorporated residential and business lands between its eastern limits and Morse Creek.

Williams said he wouldn’t say whether he favored either method, saying both were valid.

As for annexation, it has become a political and revenue question now, it is no longer a service issue since the city allowed water and other services to be extended outside its boundaries earlier this year, Williams said.

Logelin said residents and property owners should have a right to vote on the annexation.

One right people have in this country is to vote and — that is what he would expect to happen, he said.

Spence didn’t directly address the vote issue but said annexation should occur only if a majority in the area favored it.

She said growth in the Port Angeles area will happen no matter what, and it is better that the city manage that growth rather the county.

Everyone has concerns about annexation, but she said her research with city officials indicated that all views will be heard, that it won’t be a hostile takeover.

Port of Port Angeles

Corby Somerville, Tim Fraser and Bill Hannan, all of Sequim, are running for the District 1 Port of Port Angeles commissioner, representing the Sequim area.

They were asked which Port real estate holdings they would sell off if necessary to raise needed cash.

Somerville said he can’t identify the properties to sell until a detailed survey is done. Then the commissioners could examine those holdings and talk about what to sell off, he said.

Hannan said he would inventory all the Port’s assets. The Port has short term problems but also long term goals, he said.

The Port’s assets must fit its goals. It can’t simply dump real estate to raise money, he said.

Fraser said some properties should be marketed, such as the Oak Street property and acreage by the airport. He also questioned why The Landing Mall on the Port Angeles waterfront wasn’t owned by a private company.

Olympic Memorial Hospital

Marv Chastain is one of two challengers facing incumbent Connie Lawrence for Position 1, District 3 on the board of commissioners for Olympic Memorial Hospital.

The other candidate is John Borah, who did not appear at the forum.

They were asked about the hospital’s ownership of two nursing homes in Sequim that the hospital purchased in 1997.

Chastain said he would look at the nursing homes and if was making money and they couldn’t find a suitable buyer, then they should keep it.

Lawrence said the Sequim nursing homes are now in the black, and she would like to continue the hospital’s ownership of them, that they are “a community asset.”

The forum was sponsored by the Port Angeles Chamber of Commerce, Port Angeles Business Association and Port Angeles Downtown Association/Main Street.

More in News

Steve Mullensky/ for Peninsula Daily News

Steve Chapin, left, and Devin Dwyer discuss the finer points of Dwyer’s 1980 standard cedar Pocock designed single scull. This scull and others are part of a display at the Wooden Boat Festival at Point Hudson Marina
Racing shells made from cedar built with ‘oral tradition’

Builder obtained smooth-grained materials from Forks mill

Clallam’s budget projects deficit

County to attempt reduce its expenditures

Housing project to receive $2M from tax fund

Commissioners approve use for North View complex

Security exercise next week at Naval Magazine Indian Island

Naval Magazine Indian Island will conduct a security training… Continue reading

Daytime alternating traffic planned for Elwha River Bridge

Travelers will see one-way alternating traffic on U.S. Highway… Continue reading

Paul Gottlieb
Retired reporter highlights impactful stories

Suicide prevention, fluoride two significant topics

Expenses to outpace revenue for Clallam Fire District 2

Projection based on rejection of levy lid lift

David Gritskie of Stripe Rite from Bremerton guides a stripe painting machine Wednesday east of Port Angeles City Hall. The new parking lot is using permeable pavement over a layer of gravel of 2 feet to 4 feet thick. The project is retrofitting the east city hall parking lot with a new stormwater detention and treatment infrastructure. The project will help manage runoff, slow down peak flow and remove pollutants before connecting and flowing into Peabody Creek. The parking lot will reopen to the public on Monday. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Parking lot project

David Gritskie of Stripe Rite from Bremerton guides a stripe painting machine… Continue reading

Looking to stay cool, several people jump off the Rainbow Bridge over the Devil’s Punch Bowl on the Spruce Railroad Trail on Lake Crescent in Olympic National Park over Labor Day weekend. A heat advisory has been issued by the National Weather Service with temperatures expected to reach the 80s and possibly the low 90s through today. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Heat advisory

Looking to stay cool, several people jump off the Rainbow Bridge over… Continue reading

Port Angeles police to join program to help those in need

Funding could pay for food, hotel or other means of aid

Port Townsend sewer pipe could be replaced by Friday

Sinkhole expedites work projected for this winter