Archive for the ‘Top story of the day’ Category

Ron Reynolds to break silence about wife’s 1998 death

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

Updated at 5:45 p.m.

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

An attorney speaking for Ron Reynolds and his now-grown son Jonathan Reynolds said a press conference with the two men might help them clear the cloud that’s been hanging over them for almost 13 years, especially after they were named last month by an inquest jury as responsible for the homicide of former trooper Ronda Reynolds in their Toledo home.

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Ron Reynolds

That will happen tomorrow in the Olympia office of Cordes Brandt, attorneys at law.

Ronda Reynolds, 33, was preparing to leave her husband of less than a year when she was found with a bullet in her head, covered up by a turned-on electric blanket on the floor of a closet in their Toledo house. It was Dec. 16, 1998.

Ron Reynolds, principal of Toledo Elementary School, told deputies his wife committed suicide. His three sons, Jonathan, then 17, David, 14, and Joshua, 10, were allowed to leave as the first deputy arrived.

Olympia lawyer Rick Cordes said Ron Reynolds will be joined by his present wife and four of his five sons tomorrow.

Cordes will make some comments and he expects Ron Reynolds to speak, to present the Reynolds’ family point of view in some fashion.

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Jonathan Reynolds

“I don’t know, I know he wants to say something – we’ve not rehearsed it – I don’t know that he knows exactly what he’s going to say,” Cordes said.

The attorney said he expects Jonathan Reynolds will answer questions, but won’t offer any prepared remarks.

“Not Jon, he’s the most vulnerable, and he’s just shy,” Cordes said. “He doesn’t want to get up in front of TV cameras.”

Nobody has been charged in the death, and the Lewis County prosecutor made it clear there is not enough admissible evidence to prosecute them criminally. The jury during last month’s coroner’s inquest was able to make its findings based only on a preponderance of evidence, a lesser standard than a criminal proceeding.

Newly elected Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod said he held the inquest in an attempt to settle the controversial death.

Ron Reynolds’s then-attorney said his client lost his opportunity to clear his name when sheriff’s deputies neglected to perform gunpowder residue tests on him at the scene.

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Ronda Reynolds

Initially labeled by the sheriff’s office and then-Coroner Terry Wilson to be a suicide, the manner of death has been changed repeatedly over the years back and forth between undetermined and suicide as it was reinvestigated, moved through a civil suit brought by Ronda Reynolds’ mother, Barb Thompson, and finally last month was deemed by the coroner to be a homicide.

The television show 48 Hours, chronicled the events during the inquest, and expect to air their story next spring.

The case was the subject for true crime writer Ann Rule’s book last year, that put forth a theory that Jonathan Reynolds or some of his friends were responsible.
•••

Read the most recent story, “Breaking news: Ron, Jonathan Reynolds arrested, and released” from Friday October 28, 2011, here

Auditors tell Centralia fire authority to tighten up monitoring of grant-funded equipment

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

State auditors criticized Riverside Fire Authority for inadequate controls to verify that more than a half million dollars in radio equipment was used in accordance with the requirements of the grant which helped pay for them, according to a report released yesterday.

The fire department that protects Centralia and its surrounding area was responsible for administering the money that purchased communications equipment which was distributed among all fire districts in Lewis County in 2009.

The Washington State Auditor’s Office separately also made a finding that Riverside missed a federal deadline for an audit.

The two findings are related, Riverside Fire Authority Jim Walkowski said today.

“In order to submit your SEFA (Schedule of Expenditures for Federal Awards) you have to have the feds close out the grant, and the challenge was, the feds didn’t close it out,” Walkowski said. “When we realized that was going to happen, we contacted the auditor.”

In terms of the monitoring of the so-called sub-recipients of the equipment, Walkowski said Riverside neglected to list every requirement to the various fire districts.

There is no allegation of misappropriation of funds or equipment, Walkowski said.

The issue stems from an initiative from the Lewis County Fire Chief’s Association which helped secure a grant of $601,317 from FEMA, part of the Department of Homeland Security, according to the chief.

The new equipment to improve emergency communications between entities included about 300 portable radios, 90 mobile radios to go inside vehicles, 12 base stations and 39 mobile computers, Walkowski said, noting the particular numbers were not in front of him as he spoke.

Each fire district signed an agreement with Riverside about the responsibility for compliance with grant conditions, but upon being made aware of the deficiency, Riverside added further formal procedures to ensure compliance, according to the chief’s response to the auditor.

It was the first time Riverside had a federal grant which was passed through to sub-recipients.

More details and related issues can be found in the Washington State Auditor’s Office report.

Also released yesterday was a financial statements audit of Riverside for the year 2008 and a “close out” audit of Lewis County Fire District 12 for 2008.

District 12 and the Centralia Fire Department joined forces to create Riverside Fire Authority in early 2008.

New Toledo area fire commissioner will come from the Spahr family

Monday, November 7th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

After longtime Toledo area Fire Commissioner Lorraine Spahr died last spring, both her husband and daughter-in-law decided they would try to fill the vacant position, although neither knew the other was interested.

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Clark Spahr

Clark Spahr, 64, and Jacqui Spahr, 39, are both on the ballot for the fire commissioner race in Lewis County Fire District 2.

Both have roots in the fire service and both want to give their time to lead the district that protects some 98 square miles with less than 20 volunteer firefighters.

Clark Spahr thinks of it as a way to serve a community of people he’s come to care for very deeply following some 35 years of working as a volunteer firefighter.

“I figured with my background and experience, I could help the community a little longer,” he said.

The now-retired millwright joined the department in 1970, trained soon after to get certified as an emergency medical technician and worked his way through the ranks, even serving as chief in the early 1990s.

Way back when, his wife was his ambulance driver, and he recalls fondly those at the other end of the emergency calls, such as two different elderly couples who would phone the Spahrs at home when they needed help.

“In a way, it was a real compliment,” he said. “Instead of calling 911, they’d call Clark and Lorraine.”

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Jacqui Spahr

Clark Spahr retired from the department in early 2006, and two years later, retired from Longview Fibre.

Now he’d like to like to get involved again with the fire district, to “make sure the bills are paid, the books are in the black and help the citizens get good service,” he said.

Jacqui Spahr, who married Steve Spahr, Clark Spahr’s son, and moved to Toledo in 1999, first got involved in firefighting as a high school student in Rainier, Wash.

When she was in her mid-20s, a close call during a structure fire caused her to hang up her turnout gear, but she then launched a fire auxiliary group for the department.

She attempted a run at commissioner after moving to Toledo, but after losing out to someone else, turned to raising her family.

Today, Jacqui Spahr works for the state Department of Natural Resources in Castle Rock, and has been part of its wild land firefighting system for the past decade.

This summer, she applied for the interim commissioner position and was selected to be commissioner until this week’s election, when she will find out if she continues.

Jacqui Spahr says she feels like she has to work a little harder in the race, because her father-in-law is so well known.

She put a float in the Cheese Days Parade in July, and tossed some 60 pounds of candy, she said.

“When I vote, I think about, when it’s close, who put in the most effort,” she said.

She’s interested in using what she calls her natural leadership skills, and “common sense like you wouldn’t believe” to ensure top notch emergency services in the Toledo area. She has a particular interest in doing what she can to recruit new volunteers.

“I have a well-rounded background with business training and education that gave me the job to begin with,” she said. “And, experience in the fire service.”
•••

Brief bios

Candidate:  Clark Spahr
Age:  64
Occupation:  retired millwright from Longview Fibre
Resides:  Toledo
How long there: since 1969
Education: Winlock High School 1965; studies at Centralia College, including the second EMT class to be offered there in 1974
Political experience:  none

Candidate:  Jacqui Spahr
Age:  39
Occupation:  technician at Department of Natural Resources in Castle Rock
Resides:  Toledo
How long there: twelve years
Education: Rainier High School, 1990; studies at Centralia College and South Puget Sound Community College
Political experience
: ran for fire commissioner in Toledo in 1999 and lost

•••

Ballots are due before or on Tuesday. Review other local area races for fire commissioners:

• Lewis County Fire District 6, rural Chehalis: Kirk Johnston and Jim Martin, here

• Lewis County Fire District 15, Winlock: Randy Pennington and Dan Godat, here

• Lewis County Fire District 5, Napavine: Kevin Hanson and Jamie Guenther, here

•••

For preliminary election results shortly after 8 p.m. on Tuesday, click here or go to the “elections center” section of the county auditor’s page on the web site for Lewis County government.

Commissioner race: Incumbent, challenger, of different minds on where fire district money should be spent

Saturday, November 5th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Incumbent Kevin Hanson says the board of fire commissioners in the Napavine area have made huge improvements in a fire department that sometimes didn’t answer emergency calls until the third dispatch tone.

Response time was 10 minutes, now it’s six, according to Hanson.

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Kevin Hanson

Today, Lewis County Fire District 5 boast 25 active volunteers, some of whom don’t even live in the district but choose to volunteer there, he said.

The mostly volunteer department that protects 66 square miles surrounding Napavine, has seen 14 chiefs in the past decade, according to Hanson.

Hanson attributes the positive changes in District 5 to the commissioners’ decision to hire a full time chief at a competitive wage.

“I’ve taken a lot of heat for what we pay him,” Hanson said. “I know without effective leadership, we’re not going to be able to provide the service people want.”

The 45-year-old Napavine man is seeking a second six-year term as fire commissioner and much of the heat is coming from challenger Jamie Guenther.

Ballots are due in the Lewis County Auditor’s Office on Tuesday in the vote-by-mail general election.

Guenther, 52, decided to run when last year, the district went to taxpayers twice asking for more money. District 5 doesn’t need more revenue, it just needs to spend more wisely and shift its priorities, according to Guenther.

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Jamie Guenther

“I sat at home and thought, you know, this is crazy” given the economic climate, Guenther said.

“I’m basically of the mind if they want the spending to stop, the outlandish spending, that I’m the person to vote for,” Guenther said.

Guenther is an equipment operator for Lewis County Public Works. He owns the now-shuttered Jackson Prairie Speedway adjacent to his Mary’s Corner area home where he grew up.

He served as a volunteer firefighter and EMT for District 5 right out of high school, for about five years.

He’s been attending fire commissioner meetings and finds several areas he thinks the commissioners overspend.

Primarily, they are “administration heavy,” he says.

Besides Chief Eric Linn and three paid firefighters, they have a well-paid, full time secretary, Guenther points out.

The adjacent Winlock fire district pays one of its firefighters about $4,200 a year to handle secretarial functions, he says.

The Winlock chief is paid just $6,000 year, and the nearby District 6 chief was earning $72,000 year without benefits, he said.

Chief Linn is paid some $80,000 a year, with benefits such as health insurance.

Guenther can’t understand why the commissioners threatened to pull out of the paramedic program, saying it didn’t have enough money. He wants to make sure the district continues it relationship with Lewis County Medic One.

“What you’re getting is 24-hour, seven-day coverage of, basically a rolling hospital,” he said. “It’s very much worth whatever the costs are.”

The current board of fire commissioners worked out a deal, but Guenther doesn’t think the solution put in place is necessarily permanent, he said.

Since the District has a six and a half year employment contract with its chief, there’s not much that can be done about his salary, according to Guenther. But they can watch his spending more closely, he says.

Chief Linn’s discretionary spending limit is too high, he says.

For example, he purchased a lawn mower for $3,700 and paid a Tacoma firm some $4,000 to have the parking lot resealed, according to Guenther. And, Guenther wonders, why didn’t they choose to hire that work out locally?

“I think the commissioners need to make those decisions,” he said.

“I just want people to know I’ll be a very good steward of their money, and be very involved in how it’s spent,” he said.

Hanson is adamant he’s a good steward of the taxpayer’s money.

He points out District 5 is the third busiest department in the county, and had the third lowest tax rate.

Hanson especially defends the board of commissioner’s investment in the chief’s salary.

“It’s worth every dollar I spend on personnel,” Hanson said. It goes back to those two things I’ve said over and over again – saving lives, saving property – without him, you’re not going to get it.”

Other areas of contention:

Guenther: The fire chief uses his work vehicle to commute from his home in Thurston County.
Hanson:  He lives in Grand Mound, is on call 24-7, and the truck is not for personal use.

Guenther
: The district flew personnel to Palm Springs to buy a rig for the department.
Hanson: They paid $9,000, including airfare, for a 2008 surplus Dodge with factory-installed winch, worth more than $20,000.

Gunether: The district purchased a vehicle from its assistant chief
Hanson: They  paid $14,000 for a Chevrolet Tahoe he says Blue Book is over $20,000.
•••

Brief bios

Candidate
:  Kevin Hanson
Age:  45
Occupation:  Jail administrator for Lewis County Sheriff’s Office
Resides:  Napavine
How long there: past eighteen years
Education: Associate of Arts, South Puget Sound Community College in Olympia, 1989
Political experience: ran six years ago for commissioner and won
Find Hanson’s campaign info: on Facebook

Candidate:  Jamie Guenther
Age:  52
Occupation:  equipment operator, Lewis County Public Works
Resides:  near Mary’s Corner
How long there:  all his life
Education:  Napavine High School, 1977
Political experience:  none

Winlock real estate broker wants fire commissioner’s seat

Friday, November 4th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

A former Winlock area fire commissioner is challenging Randy Pennington for his post on the three-person board, saying he’d like to shift the resources of the fire department more toward emergency medical services.

Real estate broker Dan Godat wants to see the paid staff have paramedic credentials.

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Randy Pennington

“We’re paying out almost $100,000 a year for two firefighters, but most of our calls are medical,” Godat said.

Lewis County Fire District 15, with about 28 volunteer members, protects some 64 square miles in south Lewis County.

Pennington, a truck driver and reserve police officer who has served two consecutive six-year terms as a fire commissioner, is seeking re-election.

Ballots are due in the Lewis County Auditor’s Office on Tuesday in the vote-by-mail general election.

Pennington thinks the district has come a long way in the past few years and was concerned if someone came in who didn’t have the knowledge he’s got, the organization could end up going backwards, he said.

Pennington views the money spent on two full time firefighters as a positive. Previously, the response time was six to eight minutes, Pennington said. “Now, it’s immediate.”

Sixty-four-year-old Godat studied banking and finance and served two terms as fire commissioner in the 1980s.

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Dan Godat, photo unavailable

“So I understand the budget, won’t be a whole lot of training time getting up to speed on that,” Godat said.

He’s the real estate broker at Winlock Realty, but worked on many issues when he was a fire commissioner.

He said he was key in the movement to merge the city department with the district as well as was a founder of the organization that is now called Lewis County Medic One.

Multiple fire districts pay for the operation of a team of paramedics who work round the clock, responding with the fire departments when aid is needed. They are based in Winlock and formerly were called South County EMS.

One of Godat’s proudest accomplishments when he was commissioner was using the fire department’s concerns about a giant tire pile in Winlock to get other agencies to get rid of it, he said.

“I don’t think these are lifetime appointments,” he said. “If you don’t step in and step out, you don’t really get the sense on what the people think.”

Fifty-nine-year-old Pennington describes the jobs of the commissioners as demanding and challenging. Keeping current with the rules and regulations as well as rising costs without breaking the taxpayers takes a lot of work, according to the current commissioner.

He was a paramedic in Tacoma before moving to Winlock, where he’s been involved with the fire service since the early 1980s. Forty years altogether, he said.

He’s also a reserve police officer for the city of Toledo and drives a commercial lumber truck full time for M and M Transport.

Pennington spends some 10 to 15 hours a week on his work as a commissioner, with meetings of the district commission, county fire commissioners, and regional fire commissioners. He is currently chair of the board of Lewis County Medic One.

“What I tell people is from my experience from being a paramedic, being a fireman for so many years, I think I have a better insight into what’s needed, what’s not needed, how to get it financed and keep in step with regulations,” he said. “I think you’d be handicapped to try to administer the finances without that background.”
•••

Brief bios

Candidate: Dan Godat
Age
:  64
Occupation:  Real estate broker
Resides:  Evaline
Education:  studied banking and finance at Olympic Jr. College, University of Washington, University of Southern California
Political experience: previously was a fire commissioner

Candidate:    Randy Pennington
Age:    59
Occupation:  Truck driver and reserve police officer
Resides:    Winlock
Education:  attended University of Hawaii, paramedic school
Political experience: been elected fire commissioner for past 12 years

Breaking news: Oakville bank robbery suspect captured

Friday, November 4th, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Police have a suspect in custody following a bank robbery in Oakville this morning.

Officers called about 9:20 a.m. to the Sterling Savings Bank on U.S. Highway 12 learned a male brandishing what sounded to be a foot-long knife threatened the tellers and made off with cash out a side door, according to the Grays Harbor County Sheriff’s Office.

They since concluded his 25-year-old girlfriend was driving a getaway car, Undersheriff Rick Scott said.

Nobody was hurt and the amount of money stolen was not disclosed.

Officers from the Chehalis Tribal Police, McCleary and even the state Department of Fish and Wildlife assisted in setting up containment this morning, Scott said.

Law enforcement developed information that it sounded very similar to a hold up at a convenience store in Aberdeen late last night, Scott said. They began to look for a 23-year-old Hoquiam man, he said.

Early this afternoon, the man’s vehicle was stopped in Aberdeen and both individuals taken into custody, he said.

Police recovered some of the money and some items they say implicate the pair in the robbery, but not the weapon, according to Scott.

A District 6 volunteer will be the next new fire commissioner in rural Chehalis

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

Two longtime volunteer members of the rural Chehalis fire district are running in next week’s election for the position vacated when fire commissioner Dana Williams resigned.

Kirk Johnston and Jim Martin are running an amicable race, saying they share many of the same views on how to run Lewis County Fire District 6 and neither will be particularly upset if the other wins.

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Kirk Johnston

Johnston, 49, is a paramedic and one of two instructors who train emergency medical technicians locally.

Martin, 40, works at Cardinal Glass in Winlock, overseeing the computer programs that deal with customer orders and shipping. He’s also the plant’s emergency response team instructor.

Both live in rural Chehalis.

Johnston said he was asked by several people to run; he was appointed this summer to the three-person commission in the interim until the election.

He’s been studying the budget of District 6 and other fire districts for the past few years, watching where the dollars have been going, he said.

While Johnston’s campaign doesn’t include knocking on doors and handing out flyers, when asked, he tells people, “I feel I have a little more experience and understanding of the budget and history of the department,” he said.

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Jim Martin

The board of three commissioners meet twice a month and are paid a stipend, the amount of which Johnston said he didn’t know exactly.

The district protects about 145 square miles outside Chehalis, with some 40 volunteers, according to Johnston. Martin says he thinks the number of active volunteers is somewhere between 20 and 30.

The commissioners are in the process of a nationwide search  for a chief, following the recent resignation of Chief Bud Goodwillie. And they are in the in the midst of a building a new fire station in Adna – outside he flood plain – to replace the one ruined in the December 2007 flooding.

Both candidates talk of finding the balance in making sure citizens get a good value from the tax dollars that fund the department.

Johnston says the previous commissioners have done well; in that the district has very good equipment, probably some of the best in the county.

Martin says the fire department “has been blessed” in that it doesn’t currently have revenue issues.

Martin said he is running in part however because he thinks the fire district has been stagnant the last few years and he’d like to see it moving forward again.

“Our district is at a crossroads right now,” Martin said. “We still don’t have a chief, we have a vacant commissioner’s spot. I would just like to help lay the foundation for the district for the future.”

Martin says he tends to be vocal about issues and is willing to step up and help deal with them.

For example, a few years back, when he lived in Chehalis, he didn’t like the idea the city had of purchasing a building downtown for its fire department. So he ran for city council. He didn’t win.

A primary reason behind his decision to run for fire commissioner now are the discussions going on with District 6 and neighboring fire departments about the possibility of merging, he said.

“I was concerned someone would run who didn’t have the district’s well-being at heart,” he said. “I was willing to step up, and then my thought was, I need to step up.”

The general election is Tuesday. Ballots must be postmarked on or before Tuesday.

•••

Brief bio’s

Candidate:  Kirk Johnston
Age:  49
Occupation:  paramedic for Lewis County Medic 1
Resides:  rural Chehalis
How long there:  most of his life
Education: Para-medicine, Central Washington University, 2004
Political experience: none before now

Candidate: Jim Martin
Age
:  40
Occupation:  business systems analyst at Cardinal Glass
Resides: rural Chehalis
How long there:  about 15 years in the area
Education: EMT certification, 2005; classes at Centralia College
Political experience:  ran for Chehalis City Council and lost, a few years back
Ask Martin questions: on Facebook