Wednesday, January 30, 2008

A Flood of Words, and a Few Tears

It's 4:51 a.m., and I've finally finished editing the 2,053 inches of copy for the book our newsroom is putting together about the December floods. Now I'll pass on those stories -- slightly revised versions of the best of our coverage from Dec. 3 to Dec. 24, 2007 -- to Copy Desk Chief Sheyna Watkins, who has already begun putting together the 160-page, full-color book. We send it off the printers on Feb. 13, and it should be back and ready for buyers to pick up by early March.
Rereading these stories has been like a return to that crazy month for me. My family did not suffer any damage from the flood, except the loss of my presence for the better part of December. In fact, I'm still largely absent, with all the time this project has taken.
The final story in the book ran with the headline, "Christmas, Not Forgotten," from Dec. 24. Reporter Eric Schwartz and Photo Editor Mike Salsbury created a package that clearly displayed the enormous task facing the Boistfort Valley in general and the Dykstra family in particular. What shone through in the story is the resiliency and optimism, tempered with experience and pragmatism, that the Dykstras and their neighbors are bringing to this overwhelming recovery effort. 
The family lost their entire herd, including cows with a bloodline dating back to Pete Dykstra's grandfather. Here's a bit of Schwartz's story:

Life will go on for the Dykstras, but first they will have to pick up the pieces of a dairy farm operation that has been all but destroyed. Cindy Dykstra said that aside from the obvious pains brought on by the loss of the herd, they will also have to repair and replace the barn where the cows were held and the milking stalls.

However, like many other Boistfort Valley residents, the Dykstras will likely receive a lot of help. Already, Pete Dykstra said, church groups and complete strangers have stopped at his farm to offer a helping hand. They, in addition to the more than 35 friends and family members who have frequented the property in recent weeks, have helped accelerate the rebuilding process. 

...

But it will be at least six months before Pete Dykstra will be able to resume his milking operation. Still, help is coming in that regard as well. The International Dairy Federation, of which he is a member, has already sprung into action with offers of free cows pouring in from California to Canada and throughout Montana. 

Sandy Tibeau graduated with Pete Dykstra from Auburn High School in 1961. She is one of about a half-dozen members of that graduating class to travel to the Dykstra farm to assist with rebuilding. 

Tibeau explained that the loss of the cows was probably the hardest thing for Pete Dykstra to face. 

“For him, those cows were a life’s work,” she said. “He bred the same bloodline as the cows his father and grandfather bred before him.” 

In a serendipitous twist, Pete Dykstra said he will still have two of the cows from the same lineage of his family’s herd. That’s because in the late 1970s, a fellow member of the IDF lost his entire herd in a flood. In the spirit of helping a fellow farmer, Pete Dykstra sent over some of his own herd to help out. 

Now, with the Dykstras falling on hard times, that farmer is sending back two of the cows that descended from his father’s herd. 

“I lost bloodlines that go back to original herds,” he said. “It’s nice to think a couple of them are coming back.” 

Combine that with the tale of how the family took the time to set up their annual Christmas creche on the porch of the flood-ravaged home, and it was just a little too much for this grizzled young editor. It might sound corny, but I was actually wiping away tears as I finished editing that story. It's a testament to the good heart of people like the Dykstras, and the fine journalism of people like Eric and Mike, that ink on a page (or in this case, pixels on a screen) can take me straight into the mud and grime of the Boistfort Valley. 
Our book will be a tribute to the flood survivors. It will present in a new way The Chronicle's deadline reporting, which I believe captured much of the gritty reality of life during and just after the floods. The intensity of that effort has faded, leaving behind a still overwhelming task of cleanup and rebuilding. Our book will capture a moment in time, but our newsroom is still engaged with all the stories to be told about this flood, its survivors, and what we in the Chehalis Basin will do now. 
There is still much to do, and much for our newsroom to explore and detail. Rest assured that our journalists will continue to cover this event as our community moves forward through this battlefield of rebuilding and toward a time, years from now, when we can take the flood book off the shelf and realize that the deluge of 2007 is just a part of our common history as citizens of Lewis County and no longer a daily grind. 

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Friday, January 18, 2008

E-mail Down, Dander Up

Essential tools of the trade these days for journalist include: 
* Little notepad and a pen that works
* Computer for lap or desk
* E-mail
* Phones, wired or otherwise
Since around 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon, The Chronicle newsroom has been limping along on three legs. Our e-mail has been down after our service provider, Rainier Connect, made changes to their server. We were told that e-mail would be down for an hour and a half -- and that was 21 hours ago.
I'm frustrated and disgusted, but there's not much our techies can do until the Internet service provider makes the changes on its end. 
For now, I think that means all e-mails sent to us are bouncing back as undeliverable. If you want to send information to the newsroom, and it's not going through, please keep trying. Eventually our e-mail will return, and we'll get your information out to the community.
And if you're connected with Rainier Connect and you're reading this, please get things going here. I'll send you an e-mail of thanks, once I can. 

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Thursday, January 17, 2008

Digging Down Into Army Corps of Engineers Flood Plan

As I report in my column today, reporter Dan Schreiber and I spent much of Wednesday at the Army Corps of Engineers office in South Seattle digging into the details of the 2003 and 2004 Centralia Flood Damage Reduction Project. That plan, created based on the 1996 flood, is being resurrected now that the December 2007 flood has brought the issue back to center stage in the halls of Olympia and even Washington, D.C.


The plan itself is contained in three large three-ring binders. The supporting documents wouldn’t fit in my car if we tried to haul them home, the Corps project manager said with a laugh. 


If you want to learn more about the project, the Corps has some information on its Web site.


The Chronicle will continue to aggressively follow this plan as it is debated locally, in Olympia and in Congress. I’d love to hear your thoughts — click on the “comments” link below to start a discussion here about flood damage reduction.

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Thursday, January 10, 2008

Coverage of Flood Hearing in Olympia

Our politics reporter, Dan Schreiber, spent much of the day in Olympia, covering a Senate Natural Resources, Ocean and Recreation Committee hearing about the causes of the Dec. 3 flooding of West Lewis County. He'll have a full report in Friday's newspaper and online.
The hearing is described as: Public comment on the relationship between forest practices, flood events, and climate change.
Here's a link to the TVW coverage of the hearing, which begins with Lewis County Commissioner Ron Averill showing what he said were 130 photographs of flooding and damage, and includes testimony by other citizens and official types.

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Flooding and lawmakers, in their own words

My column today looks into the different perspectives offered by lawmakers and citizens about the causes of the Dec. 3 flood. My notepad didn't serve me adequately as I tried to convey the quotes from lawmakers in Tuesday's Associated Press legislative preview, so I spent some time perusing the TVW video of the event.

If you want to see the lawmakers answer my questions to them about flooding, you can watch the videos yourself. You'll need to jump forward to the middle of the tape, unless you find an hour of legislative discussion interesting (I do, but I'm willing to concede that I'm not really typical of most citizens.)
First, the leaders of the two caucuses in the House and Senate (with a Republican standing in the for the Senate minority leader) chat about flooding here. My question and their response come at 43 minutes, 30 seconds. 
The Senate Transportation Committee, including our own Sen. Dan Swecker, R-Rochester, discusses Interstate 5 and flooding here. The discussion on statewide transportation issues was a little more than an hour long; you can move forward to 1 hour, 2 minutes to see my question and the detailed responses from Swecker and his Democratic colleague, Sen. Mary Margaret Haugen.

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Eye on the Legislature

As Chronicle politics reporter Dan Schreiber reported today, our local legislators hope to hit the flooding issue hard during the 2008 Legislative session, which starts Monday.
Dan and I attended the annual Associated Press Legislative Preview in the Cherberg Office building Tuesday, directly across the parking lot from the marble dome of the capitol building. 
Lewis and South Thurston counties were well represented in the eight legislators who spoke Tuesday morning. Rep. Richard DeBolt, a Chehalis Republican, is House Minority Leader and spoke in a panel discussion with the heads of the Democratic caucuses in the House and Senate, and a stand-in for the Senate (minority) Republican leader. 
Sen. Dan Swecker, R-Rochester, is the ranking (minority) Republican on the Senate Transportation Committee, and spoke with his majority and minority counterparts in both houses. 
I’ll write more about the day in my weekly column in tomorrow’s Chronicle, but I have to share one photograph by the Associated Press that proves I was in attendance. The photo, by AP photographer Ted Warren, shows the crowd of editors and reporters listening, recording and photographing Gregoire. Waaaaaay in the back, taking notes, stands the assistant editor of The Chronicle. 
My dad says 90 percent of success in life is just showing up. Well, the AP can document that level of success for me for on one day this week, at least.

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Entry to the blogosphere

And so it begins: The Chronicle's assistant editor inaugurates a blog. I see this online conversation as a way to explain decisions we make in the newsroom and help readers understand what goes into the print and online Chronicle. 
I invite your participation and look forward to what this "On Deadline" blog becomes. 
See you in the (online) funny papers.