Rockin' for College
Nick Rotunno | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 13 years, 5 months AGO
COEUR d'ALENE - Guitars shrieked, drums pounded and young musicians rocked the parking lot on Saturday at the Long Ear record store.
Bands from Coeur d'Alene and Post Falls high schools, junior highs and the Coeur d'Alene Rock School jammed all afternoon. A swarm of teenaged fans crowded near the stage as performers cranked out metal, rock and country songs.
A wide range of musical genres were on display, and tickets were only $5.
"It's really fun. It's cool that there's an opportunity for more local bands to get out and have a concert," said guitarist Robert Montgomery, a Lake City High junior who plays in a band called 70 Percent Celt.
The six-hour show - officially titled the Rock for College Concert - raised money for Educational Talent Search, a federally-funded program that steers local students toward a college education.
Administered through the University of Idaho College of Education, ETS provides academic advising, tutoring, study skills and assistance with college admissions. The programs serves more than 700 students at 11 North Idaho schools, according to a press release.
Proceeds from the Rock for College Concert will fund a scholarship for future ETS participants.
"It puts a little bit more meaning into the music that we're playing," Montgomery said.
Back behind the stage, area artists showed off their paintings and sketches. Vendors sold food and drinks, while the ETS tent kept visitors informed.
Michael Koep, an ETS continuing education specialist and musician, was bouncing around the lot on Saturday. Coordinating the bands, occasionally hopping on stage, he made sure the concert ran smoothly.
"It's incredible. We've got the perfect day," Koep said. "Students raising money for students, through the beautiful medium of rock n' roll."
The Long Ear, he added, is a first-rate venue for a local concert, and is "the last and only important record store in town."
Lake City senior Jaki Whitmore emceed the event, announcing the performers as they took the stage.
"We're enjoying the weather, and educating everyone on what ETS is," she said during the show.
Behind her, a rock band from Post Falls was blasting through a set.
"It's been so good. The best music is people that aren't heard often," Whitmore said.
Casey Hubbard and Tiana MacArthur, both juniors at Lake City, said they enjoyed the concert's pulsing music. It was pretty cool, and it was for a good cause.
"I really like how the festival is set up, how it's all for a scholarship," Hubbard said.
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There is a sense of urgency with the project, the commissioner added, as county Grant Writer Colleen Allison has announced her pending retirement at the end of the fiscal year on Sept. 30.
"I don't want to go out and hire one person to replace Colleen, if there's a better way to do things," Green said, adding that he hopes to make recommendations before Allison leaves.
Commissioner Todd Tondee said he supports the analysis and is interested in any ideas it will bring up.
"With Colleen retiring, I think it's a good time to be doing it," he said. "We have several million dollars that we're administering in grants, so it's a big part of our process."
Allison, county grant writer for the past 12 years, said she spends about 10 hours a week hunting down available grants, some from the federal government, the state or foundations.
She usually writes the grant applications herself, she said. But sometimes department heads write them, or the 10 other grant writers within county departments.
Much effort is invested in researching the need that grants could satisfy, she added.
"The whole basis is, whoever writes it, whether I write it or one of the grant writers in their department, you've got to have a fire in the belly for the program," said Allison, who also wrote grants when she was mayor of Columbia Falls, Mont. "You write a better grant (application) if you're really enthusiastic about a program."
If a grant is awarded, Allison keeps a "report card" of how it is used, she said, by keeping up with quarterly reports from departments and tracking financing to confirm the reports are true.
"That's a big part of my job," she said, adding that the federal government has given the county an A plus rating for grant management.
The county applies for about 200 grants a year, she estimated.
"Of that, you're lucky to get 50 percent," she said. "Everybody else in the world is writing them (applications), too, every other city and county."
Nick Snyder, director of county Parks and Waterways, said he writes all grant applications for his department.
That's how he prefers it, he added, since he oversees projects from their beginning to end.
"It's important for the project manager to have oversight of the grant, so the ideas and the concept and the end result is memorialized in the grant," he said.
Snyder doesn't see any problems with how the county currently applies for grants, he added.
"The process has been very accommodating," he said. "The commissioners have been very supportive of our projects, and have been helpful throughout the process."
Obtaining grants is crucial for the Sheriff's Department, said Lt. Stu Miller, due to increasing demand coinciding with shrinking budgets.
"It's an ongoing battle," Miller said. "It seems like all the time we're trying to find funding."
Allison has helped the department obtain much needed equipment and personnel that probably wouldn't otherwise be possible, he added.
But the Sheriff's Department would love to have a grant writer just for its department, he added, to focus only on finding law enforcement dollars.
"When you're processing grants for as many departments as Colleen does, it can be hard to focus on one department," Miller said, adding that Sheriff's staff members don't have much time for pursuing grant applications themselves. "It would nice if we had a little more assistance in that realm."
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Allison said she is proudest of grant writing successes like obtaining $374,000 in stimulus funds to reroof several county buildings last year. She has also obtained grants to fund the hiring of 10 officers at the Sheriff's Department over the last 12 years, she added.
"It's a good feeling when you get them," she said.
Allison is ready to retire at 83, she said, though she is open to working part time for the county later if her help is needed.
She didn't have any suggestions for improving the grant writing process, she added.
"I've totally enjoyed this job," Allison said. "I'm proud of any grant I've gotten."