Skip to main content

The Observer, Fall 2022 - Issue 8

Page 1

VETS DAY PARADE

OPINION

SPORTS

Page 5

Page 8

Page 11

CWU combined Color Guard leading the parade

Top 10 Hip Hop albums of all time

Vol. 123 NO. 8

November 16, 2022

Student poll: voting habits and motivations

Morgana Carroll Scene Editor

See Story

Political analysts across various TV networks and their claims of an imminent “red tsunami,” plagued the airwaves months prior to the 2022 midterm elections. A “red tsunami” is when the Republican party gets a large increase in votes. The results of election day subverted those expectations, and those same analysts said this was largely due to the demographic of 18-29 aged voters. 27% of voters between the ages of 18-29 showed up to vote this year, according to NPR, making it the second largest midterm turnout for that demographic. The highest was 26% in 2018. Out of a poll of 100 CWU students, 63 said that they had voted.

Six local businesses receive grants from Ellensburg Downtown Association The Ellensburg Downtown Association (EDA) announced the winners of this year’s second bi-annual business awards program. The EDA awarded six downtown businesses a grant of $1,000 to help make improvements to their businesses. These businesses include Ellensburg Pet Center, Pearl Street Books, Claim Clothing, Yarn Folk, Law Offices of Tony Swartz and Blue Rock Saloon. According to EDA Executive Director Brenda DeVore, the program was started last year as a way to help struggling businesses during the pandemic. “There were businesses that knew they had to change the way we’re conducting business and it might cost them money to do the physical improvements and changes they need,” DeVore said. “Maybe they needed to move to an online store model or they needed to implement a POS system for online, we wanted to help them with things like that.” DeVore said that any business could apply for the program as long as they meet the criteria. “The criteria is very specific on the contest application and is fairly basic, they need to be located within the downtown area, businesses have to be in business for a year in order to apply,” DeVore said. “There’s a few other criteria, for instance [the grant money] cannot be used for employee wages, or a project that’s already been completed.” Once the business applications met the criteria, they were entered

International Education Week Page 3

Continued on Pg. 6

Graphic designed by Morgana Carroll

Omar Benitez Staff Reporter

Daeon Hudson reflects on football career at CWU

into the contest where the winners were selected by a jury. “We put together a jury of local business representatives in our countywide community,’’ DeVore said. “That jury selected our winners based on the criteria that we required for the contest.” The awarded businesses then provided a plan to the EDA on how the grant money would be spent. For Yarn Folk owner Ann Miner, this meant finally getting some lighting upgrades to her shop that she first opened in 2013. “A project that I had been thinking about for a while was doing some lighting upgrades in my space,” Miner said. “I had a couple of dead spots in the store and had been thinking about how to add some lighting to them and that seemed to fit within the scope of the requirements for the grant, so I applied for the grant and I was very happy to be selected.” For Liz Stone, owner of Pearl Street Books, this meant getting some new books and other needed upgrades. “We had a need for a new credit card processing system and we also wanted to bring in some new books,” Stone said. “We wanted to bring in more travel books, we have quite a few people in the community after those and our section was really small. So now we are able to offer more variety and give people what they’re asking for which is always huge with a small business.” Ellensburg Pet Center owner Daria Wheeler said this grant will help the business get some tech upgrades. “They helped get a new computer station built for us and a new box,

and it got installed yesterday and it’s up and running,’’ Wheeler said. “So yeah, we were thrilled.” According to the EDA, the other business improvements include equipment replacement and improvement for Claim Clothing, facade and beautification improvements for Law Offices of Tony Swartz and marketing and website for Blue Rock Saloon. Business owners expressed their gratification for the support from the EDA and the community. “I think it’s enormously helpful for small businesses like ours, we’re very small businesses, we don’t have huge staff and Ellensburg is also a very small town so our audience is limited,’’ Wheeler said. “Anytime the city steps in and recognizes that, and is of assistance, it’s always enormously helpful.” Miner of Yarnfolk said the collective support is really helpful. “We’re all in this together in terms of creating a vibrant community, a destination that people want to come and visit,” Miner said. Stone echoed the sentiment of feeling “in this together” with other small businesses downtown. “It shows the community is behind its businesses and it shows that they’re willing to actually put money towards the health and the wellbeing of the masses,” Stone said. DeVore said the sponsorship for grants changes from year to year. This year’s grants were sponsored by Umpqua Bank. Any businesses interested in applying for next year’s awards can stay connected by signing up for the EDA’s email updates on their website.

Parade of international flags. Photo by Katherine Camarata

Mental health grant introduced for wellness at Kittitas County Jail Megan Rogers Senior Reporter Kittitas County Jail received a $483,552 grant from the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of Justice Programs. These grants are designed to create mental health support programs for inmates in the justice system. “Somewhere around half, or more than half of people who come through the criminal justice system, have either a mental or behavioral health issue or a substance use disorder or both,” Christopher Whitsett, inspector and public information officer at the Kittitas County Sheriff’s Office, said. Whitsett said most people who come through jails are repeat offenders. To help lessen this, they want to explore different ways to reduce criminal activity. “If we can break that cycle, and get them to stop committing crimes by helping to provide tools, then that’s what gets us to our mission,” Whitsett said. “Our mission is the peace of the whole community and the safety of the whole community.” One tool the jail is implementing is new types of therapy and group therapy. With these methods, they want to get people out of cycles of violent and criminal behavior, which will hopefully allow the inmates to have a more productive role in society. Kittitas County Jail is planning to bring on a new case manager

and they hope to bring on an additional therapist. According to a press release from co.kittitas.wa.us, Kittitas County Jail “[h]as taken a leadership role in viewing incarceration not merely as punishment but an opportunity to intervene in cycles of drug abuse, mental and emotional health issues, and criminal recidivism.” United States Attorney Vanessa Waldref said these grants are designed to provide support for improving public health. “Having that mental health support can really be critical for a successful return to work, return to family and return to a healthy and safe environment,” Waldref said. Waldref said having mental health support programs in rural areas, like Kittitas County, is critical. “I’m thrilled to see these funds going to a county like Kittitas County, that serves so many individuals that don’t have the same resources that are available to them and services that are available as individuals in more urban areas,” Waldref said. Whitsett said he wants the community to know that this grant isn’t a way to coddle the inmates. “This is an effort to try to smooth things out for the future so that those people will stop these behaviors and produce higher levels of safety for our whole community,” Whitsett said.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
The Observer, Fall 2022 - Issue 8 by CWU Observer - Issuu