Some local museums to open, others to stay closed
CHERYL SCHWEIZER | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 5 years, 8 months 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. | August 26, 2020 12:12 AM
QUINCY — The Quincy Valley Historical Society & Museum will open to the public Friday, following an announcement from Gov. Jay Inslee on Aug. 20 that museums could reopen on a limited basis. Other museums in the area have responded differently to Inslee’s announcement.
Director Pat Witham said the Grant County Historical Museum and Village, in Ephrata, will remain closed.
“We won’t be opening until next May,” Witham said.
Research and educational exhibit facilities owned by Grant PUD are still closed.
Museums were closed, along with most businesses, in March to combat the coronavirus outbreak. State officials announced a reopening plan in May, with museums allowed to reopen in the third phase. But Inslee’s announcement last week allowed museums to reopen at 25 percent capacity.
It was welcome news for the directors of the Quincy Valley Historical Society & Museum, which operates the Quincy Heritage Park. Director Harriet Weber said a new exhibit on the history of Quincy has been set up at the Reiman-Simmons House.
“Nobody in the public has seen that yet,” Weber said.
Visitors to the Quincy museum campus will be required to wear masks and follow social distancing rules, Weber said.
The museum is open Friday and Saturday from 12:30 to 4:30 p.m. It’s located at 415 F St. SW, Quincy.
The Moses Lake Museum & Art Center will open as soon as its reopening plan is approved by Grant County Health District, museum manager Dollie Boyd said.
“We’re waiting on clearance from the health district,” Boyd said. City workers will install some barriers to increase social distancing, and once that’s done, the museum will open.
“Friday at the earliest,” Boyd said, or as soon as the plan is approved by the GCHD.
The current exhibit will be on display through Oct. 1, Boyd said. It covers the efforts of women to obtain the right to vote, along with information on the struggle of African Americans to exercise the right to vote. The museum is located at 401 S. Balsam St., Moses Lake.
The Wanapum Heritage Center near Priest Rapids Dam and the visitor center at Wanapum Dam are still closed. Both are owned and operated by Grant PUD.
Ryan Holterhoff, PUD public affairs officer, said the governor’s announcement is being reviewed by the PUD’s incident management team. There’s no timeline for reopening, Holterhoff said.
Reopening the Grant County museum in Ephrata is a complicated business, Witham said, and as a result it will stay closed. In a normal year, the museum is open from May to September, and when the season is over, volunteers prepare it for winter.
“We’re still winterized,” Witham said.
Getting the 38 buildings, the exhibits and the grounds ready to open takes about six weeks, Witham said, and it would be ready to open just about the time the season ended.
The Old Hotel Museum and Art Gallery in Othello has been open since June after classifying as a retail space, director Jenn Stevenson said. The Othello Community Museum will remain closed this year because its board of directors and most of its volunteers are at high risk for complications from the coronavirus, Stevenson added.
ARTICLES BY CHERYL SCHWEIZER
Energy and energy alternatives discussed at Newhouse summit
MOSES LAKE — Representatives of industry, government and power generation spent Monday discussing the present and future of power production at an Energy Summit hosted by Fourth District Congressman Dan Newhouse. Newhouse said the goal was to talk about solutions as well as challenges. “(The summit) focused on – well, a lot of different aspects of energy,” Newhouse said. “Tremendous need, that’s probably the best word for it. A shortage, which is not allowing our potential to be realized here in Central Washington. How do we address that? How do we increase the amount of energy production in a timeline that makes sense? We can’t wait years and years; we need to get things done as quickly as possible. How do we do that at a cost we can afford?”
Port of Moses Lake power generation project moving forward
MOSES LAKE — Some existing Port of Moses Lake customers are considering expansion, and potential customers are looking at Moses Lake as an option. But, said Shannon Souza of Sol Coast Consulting, there are some roadblocks.
BBCC student information not hacked during computer shutdown
MOSES LAKE — Personal information of Big Bend Community College students was not compromised as the result of a cyberattack against a company that provides system management software. Matt Killebrew, BBCC director of communications, said the college does use the Canvas system, which allows students to access class and financial information, and communicate with instructors, among other things. The company that owns the Canvas system was hacked in early May, according to information on the Wired website. “We still don’t know who did it, but we do know no important information was accessed,” Killebrew said.