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Compass for the Week of 1/27/20

While continuing their long and active careers, dancers and choreographers Bill Evans and Don Halquist have chosen Port Townsend as their home. Recently, Evans, Halquist and Claire Porter, renown comedic dance and movement artist, showcased part of Porter’s repertoire to sold-out audiences at Key City Public Theater. We caught up with all three performers between rehearsals for opening night, and talked about their performing lives and the works they have created, both as solo and ensemble artists.

Then we speak with Justine Gonzalez Berg of the Housing Solutions Network, a recent initiative of the Jefferson Community Foundation that addresses the need for more community engagement on the issue of affordable and available housing in our county. This is an important conversation that has increased over the last several years. Justine discusses HSN’s efforts to bring people into the fabric of a larger community dialogue needed to explore solutions to this crisis.

Tossed Salad for 1/24/2020

January 18 was Phil Andrus‘ birthday. So what better way to celebrate it than enjoy a slice of Tossed Salad Cake! He sent us a photo to share with you. And this Friday afternoon, we can all listen to another great show:
1:00Shelly Leavens, Jefferson County Historical Society, with Terra Coyan and Jessie Michaels of The Friends of Swansonville
1:30 – PT Songlines and JCIRA, music and conversation
2:15Bob Rosen, South County Report
2:45Brad Stone and Glen Gately
3:00Al Cairns, guest DJ, music of protest
4:00Dana Sullivan and Nhatt Nichols, comic artists
4:30Deborah Kate, reading

Seaweed Farming

(First airdate: January 23, 2020) This time on Coastal Café we speak with Dr. Meg Chadsey of Washington Sea Grant who is part of a research project in Washington State that is exploring commercial seaweed aquaculture as a mitigating element toward ocean acidification and as a potential food stock.

Welcome to Johnny’s Garage

Music-loving friends, save the date: Buzzy Donahue has invited Jonathan Evison back to spin records from his vast collection this Saturday, January 25, from 2-4pm. Jonathan will handpick some favorites from his unwieldy collection of vinyl, and he’s calling it Johnny Evison’s Garage. Those listeners not on the peninsula can live stream it here on KPTZ.org.

Giving Circles-Crowdsource Your Impact!

(First airdate: January 21, 2020) Missy Nielsen of Everybody Can speaks with Dale Nienow, Giving Circle member, and Alecia Kleiner, Manager of Engagement for Jefferson Community Foundation about Giving Circles. Learn about this unique and impactful funding approach that supports charitable causes and fosters community building as members develop awareness of needs. Check out this intimate look into hands-on charitable giving.

Tess Gallagher

(First airdate: January 21, 2020) Sheila talks with Port Angeles poet Tess Gallagher about her career in poetry and her poems, her early days learning from famous poets, and the ways she collaborates with and encourages other artists. Her newest book Is, Is Not received a 2020 Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Award.

Compass for the Week of 1/20/2020

In early December the Washington Department of Natural Resources released a long-awaited management plan for State Trust forests that has at its heart a concern for sustainable harvests and a court-ordered conservation plan for the marbled murrelet, a tiny threatened seabird that relies upon large tracts of old growth forest for successful breeding. Considering the DNR’s concurrent and seemingly contradictory missions to conserve the forests for the likes of the murrelet and to maximize timber sale revenues to support schools and other tax districts, it is perhaps not surprising that lawsuits challenging the legality of the plan have this month been filed on both sides of the issue, with state trust lands revenue beneficiaries on the one hand arguing that the plan breaches the DNR’s fiduciary responsibility to them by “dramatically” reducing revenues, while a consortium of environmental groups has filed a complaint that the plan does not go far enough to protect the public’s interest in conserving the forest.

In this week’s Compass, we first reprise a story we did a little more than six years ago, when the marbled murrelet was at the center of another lawsuit against the DNR, and then we catch up with the fortunes of the murrelet in a follow-up phone interview with Maria Mudd Ruth, the author of a book about the bird who was one of those consulted in devising the controversial management plan.

Nature Now #445
Dungeness Valley Water Use

(First airdate: January 15, 2020) Hydrologist Ann Soule discusses with host Mary Robson the relationships of water use history and water sources in the Dungeness Valley.

Tossed Salad for 1/17/2020

Ready to warm things up this cold, cold week? Phil Andrus brings us heart-warming entertainment all Friday afternoon. Snuggle close and listen to:
1:00 – Marcia Reidel & Jim Scarantino, for COAST
1:15 – Jessica Randall & Wendi Wrinkle on Hive Mind
1:45 – Simon Lynge, songwriter and singer
2:30 – Scott Wilson (of “A Short Step Back in Time”) interviews KPTZ’s own Donn Tretheway
3:00 – Bill Tennent, guest DJ
4:00 – TBD
4:30 – Don White reading “The Moor”, by Russell Banks