Hard-earned success
JOEL MARTIN | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 14 hours, 17 minutes AGO
Joel Martin has been with the Columbia Basin Herald for more than 25 years in a variety of roles and is the most-tenured employee in the building. Martin is a married father of eight and enjoys spending time with his children and his wife, Christina. He is passionate about the paper’s mission of informing the people of the Columbia Basin because he knows it is important to record the history of the communities the publication serves. | June 20, 2026 1:05 PM
MOSES LAKE — Genuine success is neither quick nor easy, as the students who graduated Thursday from Big Bend Community College attested.
There's a simple story I remember when I was younger,” Associated Student Body President Pedro Lopez said, alternating between English and Spanish. “It's about a kid who plants a seed. At first nothing happens. They water it every day, but the ground still looks the same. They start to wonder if anything is happening at all. They think about digging it up to check, that maybe it didn't work. Maybe nothing is growing. But they keep watering anyway.
“Days pass, then weeks and still nothing they can see until one day something finally breaks through the soil. Not all at once, not dramatically, but quietly, a small green sprout pushed upward. And what they realize is that growth … was just happening when they didn't see it.”
The 703 students who graduated Thursday evening at Lions Field came from all over Washington and from several states and other countries, said BBCC President Sara Thompson Tweedy in her introduction, and may have been the largest class in the college’s history. Every one of them, like Lopez, had arrived by a different route. Some of those routes were rocky and twisty, like student speaker Aubrey Griffith’s.
“My very first job was in an orchard thinning apples,” Griffith said. “Since then, I've worked just about every job you can think of. I had my son during my senior year of high school, but with an amazing support system behind me, I was able to graduate on time. The next 15 years were a blur of working two to three jobs at a time while raising two kids.”
In 2015, Griffith decided to go back to school full-time, while working flexible hours at her job. She earned her associate’s degree, then worked her way to a Bachelor of Applied Science in Applied Management. As a bonus, the son she had as a teen, Layden Griffith, was graduating alongside her.
“My son graduated from high school last week and today he's graduating with his associate's degree two years ahead of schedule,” she said. “He's done all this while balancing sports clubs and two jobs.”
Layden Griffith was one of more than 200 students who earned their associate’s degrees simultaneously with their last two years of high school through the Running Start program.
Also graduating from Running Start was Ayden Britt, who wore a garland of instant ramen cups around his neck. The ramen was a gift from his brother, he said, to remind him of what he’d be living on through the rest of his college days. Britt plans to go on to the University of Washington in Seattle to study finance, then real estate law, he said.
Alongside the ramen was Britt’s TRIO sash, an emblem of a program that supported him through his time at Big Bend.
“(TRIO) not only helped me with my classes, they helped me figure out my major and (got me through) financial stress,” Britt said. “Honestly, if it wasn't for them, I wouldn't have been here today.”
The students who were graduating had earned their laurels, said Vice President of Learning and Student Success Dr. Bryce Humpherys, but they didn’t do it alone.
“When you hold that diploma in your hand, remember to pause in grateful recognition of the many people who have supported you along your educational journey,” Humpherys said. “Thank your family, your friends, teachers, advisors, coaches and mentors who helped you achieve this accomplishment. Indeed, as you celebrate, know that you have fulfilled not only your own personal dream, but also the hopes of those who have loved you and who have supported you as a student.”
In her address, Griffith thanked her son and also his grandmother, who had stood behind her every step of the way, she said.
“Thank you for showing all of us that determination and resilience never go out of style,” she said. “And to the Class of 2026, or anyone out there still chasing something, don't wait until life slows down to chase something important to you … and don't be afraid to change direction if something doesn't feel right. Sometimes the wrong path leads you right to where you're supposed to be.”
ARTICLES BY JOEL MARTIN
Hard-earned success
BBCC students step into the world armed with diplomas and courage
MOSES LAKE — Genuine success is neither quick nor easy, as the students who graduated Thursday from Big Bend Community College attested. There's a simple story I remember when I was younger,” Associated Student Body President Pedro Lopez said, alternating between English and Spanish. “It's about a kid who plants a seed. At first nothing happens. They water it every day, but the ground still looks the same. They start to wonder if anything is happening at all. They think about digging it up to check, that maybe it didn't work. Maybe nothing is growing. But they keep watering anyway.
Pesticide applicators continue their education at trade conferences
MOSES LAKE — A driver’s license has to be updated every so often to make sure the driver isn’t a danger to themselves or others. So, it’s not surprising that a license to handle deadly chemicals would need renewing too. “This requirement has been in place for quite some time, probably 20 or more years,” said Washington State Department of Agriculture Licensing and Recertification Program Manager Christina Zimmerman, “There could be changes in pesticide application techniques and technology – it’s just changing so quickly right now – but it’s more making sure that licensees, pesticide applicators or consultants or even pesticide distributors stay abreast of any new requirements or restrictions.” Pesticide licensing isn’t a simple matter. The WSDA administers 27 different tests for individuals seeking their pesticide applicator license, Zimmerman said, and which ones and how many an applicant takes depend on the kind of work they’ll be doing.
Home Center changes ownership, but not quality
MOSES LAKE — After 31 years, The Home Center in Moses Lake is changing hands. “(Owner) Roger (McSteen) was ready to retire,” said Wendy Cox, who has taken over the store with her husband Ron Cox. “Instead of selling or trying to find new jobs for everybody, we decided that we would take on the monster.” Wendy is well equipped for it, she said. She’s been with the company for 28 years, and the general manager for about 15 years. McSteen started out with the original Home Center store in Stanwood, north of Seattle, and owned it for 53 years, she said. Another location, in Ephrata, opened in 2004, according to Columbia Basin Herald archives. Both the Ephrata store and the store in Stanwood closed a few years ago, Wendy said, leaving only the Moses Lake location.


