Festive trees at Festival of Trees
CHERYL SCHWEIZER | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 5 years, 1 month AGO
Senior Reporter Cheryl Schweizer is a journalist with more than 30 years of experience serving small communities in the Pacific Northwest. She began her post-high-school education at Treasure Valley Community College and enerned her journalism degree at Oregon State University. After working for multiple publications, she has settled down at the Columbia Basin Herald and has been a staple of the newsroom for more than a decade. Schweizer’s dedication to her communities and profession has earned her the nickname “The Baroness of Bylines.” She covers a variety of beats including health, business and various municipalities. | December 10, 2019 3:54 PM
25th annual fundraiser for Habitat for Humanity
MOSES LAKE — The tree decorated by Paul and Shelly Detrick for the Habitat for Humanity Festival of Trees was seriously flocked. But that was part of the fun. The tree had a duck theme, so of course it was flocked. And of course it had a garland of (used) shotgun shells.
The 25th annual Festival of Trees filled the house at the Grant County Fairgrounds Saturday night; it’s the biggest yearly fundraiser for Habitat for Humanity of Greater Moses Lake.
“My husband’s work,” said Shelly Detrick. Paul Detrick came up with the idea during the 2018 Festival of Trees, went down to the shooting range and gathered up the empty shells, designed the decorating scheme, which featured cattails.
Kelly Frederick had her eye on a tree, and if she won it, she knew right where it was going – she had already picked out the spot at North Elementary, she said. Frederick is the principal at North, and heard stories about Habitat from students whose families were part of the program. When she saw what it meant to them to have a home they helped build, she got involved in decorating and donating trees, she said.
The families are involved every step of the way, and are required to do some of the work. Shelly Detrick said that’s one thing she likes about Habitat. Volunteer auctioneer and 2019 Golden Hammer Award winner Chuck Yarbro agreed with that. “I love that it’s a hand up, not a handout,” he said.
Bruce Gering said he and his wife Patti have things pretty good now, when he thinks about it. “We have so much. And there are people out there that need some help.”
Debbie Hassan attended the festival a couple of times as a guest, “then we started hearing the stories,” she said.
Trees were sponsored by Veronica Lisa Bradley and Renee Ballinger, Cynthia Harder, Tamy Roloff and Irene Packard, Guild Mortgage, Frontier Title and Escrow, Confluence Health, Fathom Realty, Jimmy and Shirley Kamada and Rolly and Lynn Garza, and Carisa Weitman. Paul and Shelly Detrick were helped by some friends, and so were Frederick, Robin Harrell and Jennifer Dennis. Roy and Judy Warnick donated the trees. There was a separate raffle for wreaths, designed and donated by Erik Lampi and Rosa Nambo.
Board chair Lynn Garza said Yarbro has volunteered his time for the Festival of Trees auction for a number of years, and has advised Habitat’s board of directors on marketing their event. Nor is Habitat the only organization for which Yarbro volunteers, Garza said. He’s presided over auctions that have raised almost $10 million for various charities, she said.
Yarbo said he’s run charitable auctions nationwide. “Pound for pound, nobody gives like the Pacific Northwest, especially the Columbia Basin,” he said. In his experience, when a cause needs help, the community responds, he said.
Habitat focuses on one project and one family, and in the ongoing conversation about changing the world, “that’s one way to do it, one person at a time,” Yarbro said.
Cheryl Schweizer can be reached via email at education@olumbiabasinherald.com.
MORE FRONT-PAGE-SLIDER STORIES
ARTICLES BY CHERYL SCHWEIZER
One infrastructure project complete, others planned for Royal City
ROYAL CITY — Cross one long, long project off the list. The last section of old water line in Royal City was replaced in 2024, wrapping up a project that Mayor Michael Christensen said took a while. “Over the years we’ve been trying to upgrade our water system, and now the entire city is upgraded,” Christensen said. “That was a long time coming and it was a bit of a task.”
2024 projects, challenges continuing into 2025 in Quincy
QUINCY — Accommodating growth and upgrading infrastructure were the big challenges facing the city of Quincy in 2024, and they’re the challenges going into 2025. Quincy City Administrator Pat Haley said the city’s water and wastewater treatment facilities have been, and will continue to be, at the top of the agenda. “(Evaluating) what’s required in terms of growth and upgrades. Our facilities are aged, or at capacity, and that’s probably true for those cities of our size or communities that are growing,” Haley said. “So, we’re still pretty aggressively working on those things.”
Othello Public Works set for a busy 2025
OTHELLO — Some long-term projects in Othello reached completion in 2024, and there’s a whole list of new projects planned for 2025. Public Works Director Robin Adolphsen summed it up. “There’s a lot going on,” she said. Summer 2024 saw the completion of a project that was first considered in 2019, the opening of the new Iron Horse playground in Lions Park. Most of the project was paid for with grants the city received from the Washington Recreation and Conservation Office and a capital appropriation from the Washington Legislature.