
KMAS Radio
Jeff Slakey·249 episodes
Long-form interviews and conversations from Mason County, Washington. Host Jeff Slakey sits down with local leaders, legislators, small business owners, and community voices for unhurried conversations about what's shaping the Hood Canal region — government, education, healthcare, the outdoors, and the people making a difference. New episodes drop throughout the week. For daily local headlines, subscribe to KMAS Morning News with Jeff Slakey.
Why listen
KMAS Radio is a grounded local interview show where Jeff Slakey gives Mason County, Washington the kind of unhurried attention small communities rarely get in audio. Episodes move from schools, sheriff updates, health care, farmers markets, civic groups, and local fundraisers to longer conversations with the people actually doing the work. It is best for listeners who care about Shelton, Hood Canal, rural Washington, or the practical civic life behind local headlines.
Episodes
One of the top 100 disc golf courses in the entire United States is tucked into the forest on Shelton Springs Road in Shelton, Washington, and unlike almost every other top-ranked course in the country, you can play it for free, any day of the year, on the same pads the pros throw.This weekend (May 29–31, 2026), the world's best disc golfers come to Mason County for the Discraft Cascade Challenge — the West Coast debut of the brand-new JomezPro Series on the Disc Golf Pro Tour. The number one men's and number one women's competitors in the world will both be in Shelton. And on Saturday night, in a Forest Festival weekend first, players and fans get to throw glow discs under stadium lights and the city fireworks, with the last tee time going off at 11:20 PM.Jeff Slakey sits down with three people who can tell you exactly why this is happening here: Ryan Smith and Justin Holzgrove from the Mason County Disc Golf Club, and Cascade Challenge Tournament Director Jeff Korns. They cover the course's UDisc Top 100 ranking, why the City of Shelton's partnership made it possible, what the pros actually say about the layout, and how a casual visitor can walk up, watch a 500-foot tee shot, and get an autograph from a world champion — all in the same afternoon.🎟️ Tickets: https://tickets.dgpt.com/event/cascade-challenge-h4yzzy🥏 Event info: https://www.dgpt.com/event/2026-cascade-challenge/#CascadeChallenge #DiscGolf #SheltonWA #MasonCounty #JomezPro #DGPT#PNW #PacificNorthwest #OlympicPeninsula #HoodCanal #Hoodsport #ExploreShelton #WashingtonState #Discraft #UDisc #UDiscTop100 #DiscGolfProTour #SheltonSprings #GlowGolf #ForestFestival #KMAS
Mason County is sitting in the lowest quartile in Washington state for community health — and Mason Matters, the local 501(c)(3) that quieted down during COVID, has come back online with a plan to move that number twenty percent.In this conversation, host Jeff Slakey sits down at the Economic Development Council building in downtown Shelton with Julie Knott, the director of Mason Matters. They cover where the organization came from (the steering committee behind Blue Zones Activate Mason County), where it’s going (a refreshed health-equity agenda built around food, the built environment, and child care), and the partnerships making it work — Mason County Public Health, Mason Health, the EDC, the YMCA of Shelton, and both hospital districts.You’ll hear how Mason Matters became the matching partner that helped the EDC land a major USDA grant — the largest awarded in Washington state and one of 43 nationally. You’ll hear about the Charlie Cart, a mobile teaching kitchen that just landed Mason County the distinction of being the first rural community in Washington to use one. And you’ll hear from a six-week pilot underway at South Side Elementary, where one student tasted homemade herb butter and asked, unprompted, if it had marjoram in it.Also in this conversation: Maria Parra and the work happening at Hope Plaza, the Catalyst Garden re-imagining at the Master Gardeners’ space on Harvard, the Salmon Center master plan, the new Mountain View Café at Mason Health, the Shelton and Belfair Farmers Markets, a county-wide child-care assessment landing in June, and what the multi-billion-dollar Bremerton shipyard project means for the workforce — and the kids — of Mason County.Plus: why Julie is biking from Shelton to Ketchikan, Alaska, this summer, and what Blue Zones founders bicycling across Asia have to do with Mason County life expectancy.📍 Mentioned in this episode:• Mason Matters — masonmatters.org (verify URL before publishing)• Economic Development Council of Mason County — choosemason.com (verify)• Mason County Public Health• Mason Health & Mountain View Café• YMCA of Shelton• Shelton Farmers Market & Belfair Farmers Market• Hope Plaza at Faith Lutheran (1212 Connection Street)• Master Gardeners’ Catalyst Garden• Salmon Center🎧 Subscribe to KMAS Radio & KMAS Morning News with Jeff Slakey wherever you get your podcasts.📻 Listen live on KMAS Radio.▶️ Watch the full conversation on the KMAS YouTube channel.
Amber Anderson from South Mason Fire & Rescue joins Jeff Slakey to preview a Mother's Day weekend full of community events on Arcadia Road in Shelton, Washington.First up: a FREE car seat checkup event Friday, May 8, from 11 AM to 2 PM at the South Mason Fire station on Arcadia. Certified car seat installers — being trained across multiple counties — will check your car seat is installed correctly, walk you through which seats fit your vehicle, and answer the question every parent eventually asks: when does my kid graduate to a booster, and when can they age out? No appointment needed.Then Saturday, May 9, from 9:30 AM to noon — the third-annual Mother's Day Pancake Breakfast. Pancakes, sausage and bacon courtesy of Taylor Station, served by your South Mason firefighters. Every mom gets a rose and a walk to her seat from a firefighter. Donations welcome (cash or check).Both events at South Mason Fire & Rescue, 2970 SE Arcadia Road, Shelton, WA 98584.#FocusOnShelton #KMASRadio #SheltonWA #MasonCountyWA #SouthMasonFire #MothersDay #PancakeBreakfast #CarSeatSafety #PNW #HoodCanal #ArcadiaRoad #FireDepartment #CommunityFirst #FirstResponders #SheltonNews #MothersDayWeekend
In this conversation, host Jeff Slakey sits down with Katie Arnold, treasurer of the Karen Hilburn Cancer Fund, to talk about the second annual Mother's Day Dash — a 4-mile run/walk that supports cancer screenings and treatment for uninsured and underinsured women right here in Mason County.For more than two decades, the Karen Hilburn Cancer Fund has helped over 600 Mason County residents access the screenings and care they need through partnerships with Mason Health. The Mother's Day Dash, alongside the fund's Denim and Diamonds auction, is one of the ways the all-volunteer board keeps that work going.Katie shares the race details — start time, route, parking, day-of registration — plus what brought her into the fund a decade ago, and why this work matters for women across our community. https://runsignup.com/Race/WA/Shelton/TheMothersDayDashEvent details:• Sunday morning · 8:00 AM start• Huff day-of registration available at the check-in tableConversations air on KMAS Radio and is available as a podcast and on YouTube. Follow KMAS for more conversations with the people, businesses, and organizations that make Mason County what it is.#MothersDayDash · #KarenHilburnCancerFund · #SheltonWA · #MasonCountyWA · #KMAS · #FocusOnShelton · #PNW · #CancerScreening · #CommunityRun · #4MileRun · #MasonHealth · #ShopLocalShelton · #PacificNorthwest · #WashingtonState · #MothersDay
In a national climate where political divides feel impossible to bridge, something different is happening in Shelton. The Mason County Peacemakers — six women from the Mason County Republican Women's Club and six from the Mason County Democrat Women — have been meeting since last fall to do one thing: get community work done together.In this conversation, Jeff Slakey sits down with four of them at The Alibi Room at Wild Irish for a wide-ranging conversation about the group's origins, the blood drive that drew 33 pints on its first run, their partnership with the local Veterans Stand Down, a current food drive for Choice and CEDAR High Schools, and a joint picnic planned for August 16.You'll also hear the line that may stick with you longer than any of it — Jane's reminder, by way of a Native American chief, that "the right wing and the left wing are attached to the same bird, and it takes both for the eagle to soar."This is what grassroots, across-the-aisle community looks like. Quiet. Practical. And — in 2026 — quietly radical.Recorded at: The Alibi Room at Wild Irish, Shelton, WAMentioned in this episode: Mason County Republican Women • Mason County Democrat Women • Faith Lutheran Church • Veterans Stand Down • Choice High School • CEDAR High School • League of Women Voters of Mason County • T's CafeUpcoming events: Blood Drive — June 16 at Faith Lutheran Church • Joint Picnic — August 16#FocusOnShelton #KMAS #SheltonWA #MasonCounty #MasonCountyPeacemakers #BridgingTheDivide #CrossingTheAisle #BloodDrive #VeteransStandDown #CommunityOverParty #PNW #WashingtonState #LocalNews #CivicEngagement #SmallTownStories
Mason County Sheriff Ryan Spurling joined Jeff Slakey at The Fjord Oyster Bank in Hoodsport for the monthly sit-down just before he met with the community for the monthly luncheon.Spurling walks through the Sheriff's Office's Neighborhood Watch revival under Deputy Matt Colbenson, why Mason County is again Washington's lowest-staffed sheriff's office per 1,000 residents (a point he traces back through department records to 1980), and what that means for rural communities like Hoodsport, Lake Cushman, Spencer Lake, and Allyn.He discusses the internal audit his office conducted in the wake of last month's double homicide, what they found, what they're changing, and the conversations he had with family members of the victims at the new evening community meeting at PUD 3. He addresses the 25 cases the district court had to dismiss without prejudice for lack of a public defender, and what concerned residents can actually do about it.And he gives his clearest public response yet to this week's Thurston County preliminary injunction blocking parts of SB 5974, the new state law that would have allowed an appointed panel to revoke a sheriff's certification and effectively remove them from office. "The sheriff is the only elected law enforcement official in the world," Spurling says. "It's controlled by voters, not by an appointment."Conversations with Sheriff Spurling are brought to you by OURCU.🎙 Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.📺 Watch on YouTube: KMAS Radio channel.📻 KMAS — Mason County's radio station, since 1962.#FocusOnShelton #KMAS #KMASRadio #MasonCounty #SheltonWA #HoodCanal #Hoodsport #SheriffSpurling #MasonCountySheriff #NeighborhoodWatch #PublicDefender #SB5974 #WashingtonState #LocalNews #PNW #PugetSound #OlympicPeninsula #CommunityRadio
Shelton School District Superintendent Wyeth Jesse joins Jeff Slakey for a wide-ranging conversation about what's happening in Mason County classrooms — and what's coming next.On this episode: a look back at the latest school board meeting and the marimba performance from Mountain View Elementary; the federal funding cuts threatening multilingual education programs; the departures of two longtime Shelton High School administrators, Ed Stewart and Bruce Kipper; how today's seniors — who started high school during COVID — are finishing strong; and the district's bold goal of having more than 50% of third graders meeting state reading standards.Plus, Wyeth announces a brand-new K–5 homeschool resource center launching for the 2026–27 school year, talks honestly about why district enrollment is shrinking, and explains why staff members — including the head of HR — are choosing to send their own kids to Shelton schools.And in the most candid stretch of the conversation: the superintendent's case for putting books — not devices — in students' hands, what national assessment data really shows about screens and learning, and why writing might be the single most powerful tool in education.Got a question for the superintendent? Email [email protected] for the next visit.#FocusOnShelton #SheltonSchools #SheltonWA #MasonCounty #KMAS #KMASRadio #PNWPodcast #WashingtonEducation #PublicEducation #Superintendent #SchoolBoard #ScreensAndKids #SmartphonesInSchools #Homeschool #EarlyLiteracy #ThirdGradeReading #COVIDRecovery #MultilingualEducation #SheltonHighSchool #MountainViewElementary
In this conversation, Jeff Slakey is on the line with Amber Anderson of South Mason Fire as the department prepares for a rare double push-in ceremony on Arcadia Road. Two new pieces of apparatus — a new fire engine and a new water tender — are heading into service tonight, and the community is invited to literally help push them into the bay.Amber walks us through the origin of the push-in tradition (it goes all the way back to the horse-and-buggy days), the moment in the ceremony when the new rigs are officially called into service, and the backstory most people don't know: South Mason Fire lost their previous engine in a 4th of July rollover, and the replacement process led to an unexpected second piece of equipment.If you live in Shelton, on Hood Canal, or anywhere in Mason County, this is a 5-minute reason to get the family in the car tonight: dinner at 6, remarks from the chiefs, then the push-in. Plus — Amber previews South Mason Fire's annual Mother's Day breakfast.📍 Double Push-In Ceremony — Tonight 4/30/26, 6:00 PM — South Mason Fire, 2970 SE Arcadia Road, Shelton, WA🎙️ Subscribe for more conversations with the people behind Mason County's stories.#SheltonWA #MasonCountyWA #SouthMasonFire #FocusOnShelton #KMASRadio #HoodCanal #FireServiceTradition #PushInCeremony #FirstResponders #PNWLife #ArcadiaRoad #MasonCounty #SheltonNews #VolunteerFire #CommunityFirst
The Shelton Farmers Market is back in downtown Shelton for the 2026 season, opening Saturday, May 2 in the Civic Center parking lot and running every Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. through October. Market manager Tammy Ramsey joined Jeff Slakey on Focus on Shelton to preview what's new this year, including an expanded push to bring small farms and backyard growers to market, a returning partnership with anchor vendor Skokomish Farms, and the market's SNAP and Market Match program that helps families stretch their food dollars on fresh, local produce.In this conversation, Tammy talks about why the Civic Center location on Cota Street has worked so well for the market, how the Shelton community has shown up week after week, and the barriers that keep smaller growers out of traditional markets — and what the Shelton Farmers Market is doing to change that. She also shares the single best argument for shopping local: the tomato on your plate might have been on the plant yesterday instead of shipped hundreds of miles to your grocery store.If you're a farmer, a crafter, a musician, or a volunteer looking to get involved, visit SheltonFarmersMarket.org or find the Shelton Farmers Market on Facebook.#SheltonWA #SheltonFarmersMarket #MasonCountyWA #ShopLocal #FarmersMarket #PNWFarms #SkokomishFarms #FocusOnShelton #KMAS #SNAPBenefits #MarketMatch #SmallFarms #BackyardFarmers #LocalProduce #PugetSound #WashingtonState #EatLocal #FarmToTable #CivicCenterShelton #DowntownShelton
Downtown Shelton is about to get loud, full, and fired-up for a good cause. On Saturday at 2 p.m., the Mason Hotel parking lot at 111 East Railroad Avenue becomes home to a food truck rodeo, a silent auction that runs all afternoon, and a live auction starting at 6 p.m. — all benefiting the Shelton High School Class of 2026 Safe Shelton Class of 2026 Safe and Sober grad party; downtown Shelton fundraiser; Mason Hotel event Shelton; Shelton High School graduation party; Mason County community event
In this month's check-in, Jeff Slakey sits down with Mason County Sheriff Ryan Spurling for a wide-ranging conversation covering some of the most significant issues facing local law enforcement and the Mason County community right now. Governor Ferguson has signed the controversial law enforcement decertification bill into law — and sheriffs across Washington state are pushing back. Spurling breaks down what the 'may decertify' provision actually says, why he believes it threatens voters' rights to choose their elected officials, and what the upcoming constitutional challenge in the courts could mean for elected sheriffs statewide. On a brighter note: the 35th Legislative District's representatives helped secure a major federal grant for Mascom — Mason County's 911 emergency communications center. That funding will help modernize the system and eventually support the center's move from the Civic Center to the Port of Shelton facility. Spurling also shares the Sheriff's Office approach to growing community involvement in public safety — including a new partnership blending neighborhood watch programs with emergency preparedness efforts being led in part by the Hood Canal Improvement Club. The goal: help neighbors know their neighbors before the next major earthquake or snowstorm. Plus: the Mason County DARE patrol car is turning heads on I-5 — and has just been invited to lead the pace car at a Moto America motorcycle racing event at Ridge Motorsports Park. This conversation is brought to you by Our Community Credit Union.#MasonCounty #SheltonWA #FocusOnShelton #KMASRadio #MasonCountySheriff #RyanSpurling #WashingtonState #LocalNews #PublicSafety #LawEnforcement #EmergencyManagement #NeighborhoodWatch #DAREProgram #MotoAmerica #CommunityPolicing #911 #MasonCom #WashingtonSheriff #SheltonWashington #PNWKMAS is the local radio station in Mason County Washington.
One day after Governor Ferguson signed Washington's new 9.9% income tax into law, State Senator Drew MacEwen and Representatives Dan Griffey and Travis Couture sat down with KMAS Radio's Jeff Slakey at the annual 35th District Legislative Wrap-Up breakfast in Shelton. In this candid hour-long conversation, the three Republican legislators discuss the longest floor debate in Washington House history (24.5 hours), the $880 million rainy day fund withdrawal, cuts to child care and rural school funding, the Belfair Bypass, federal Medicaid and SNAP changes, and what they say has become a "structural deficit" in Olympia.Hosted by the Economic Development Council of Mason County, the Shelton-Mason County Chamber of Commerce, and the North Mason Chamber of Commerce. Sponsored by Peninsula Credit Union and RCU. Catered by Taylor Station. Recorded March 31, 2026 at Shelton Civic Center.🎙 KMAS Radio — AM 1030 / 103.3 FM📺 Also available via Mason Web TV #35thDistrict #WALeg #MasonCounty #WashingtonState #Olympia #IncomeTax #SheltonWA #BelfairWA
Jeff Slakey sits down with Tamra Ingwaldson, named the 2025 Citizen of the Year by the Shelton Mason County Chamber of Commerce. Over nearly 20 minutes, they explore what it means to truly serve a community — and what keeps Tamra showing up.Tamra shares how growing up watching her parents coach sports she wasn't allowed to play planted the seed for a lifetime of civic engagement. As a single mother of two daughters in the mid-90s, she figured out how to model citizenship even when time and resources were thin — bringing her girls to board meetings with Happy Meals and coloring books, turning every community interaction into a teaching moment.She and Jeff dig into one of Shelton's most persistent challenges: how to get factions and silos talking to each other. Tamra's answer draws on 20+ years of nonprofit work — United Way of Kitsap and Mason counties, the Home Builders Association, and now New Horizon Communities and Shelton Veterans Village. She also introduces 'The Peacekeepers,' a local group of equal numbers of Democratic and Republican women who break bread together, do service projects together, and work to prove that compromise isn't a dirty word.Plus: her philosophy on volunteering for families who feel too stretched or unqualified to give back, the 'time, talent, or treasure' framework for finding your contribution, and a personal story about stepping into a church where she was the only person who looked like her — and what she found there.Recorded six years to the day from the COVID lockdowns, the conversation is a timely reminder that community is built one small act at a time — and that none of us can do it alone.#FocusOnShelton #SheltonWA #MasonCountyWA #CitizenOfTheYear #KMASRadio #CommunityService #CivicEngagement #Volunteerism #SheltonVeteransVillage #UnitedWay #ThePeacekeepers #LocalLeadership #PNWCommunity #WashingtonState #NonprofitLife #ServiceAboveSelf #NeighborhoodPodcast #CommunityRadio #MasonCounty #WesternWashingtonKMAS is the local radio station in Mason County Washington.
Jeff Slakey sits down at Shelton Veterans Village on North 13th with Executive Director Colleen Carmichael and Program Support Specialist Tamra Ingwaldson for a wide-ranging conversation about what's really happening inside this unique community of 30 veterans — and why the data says permanent supportive housing is one of the smartest investments a community can make. In this episode:• Who lives at Shelton Veterans Village, how residents are selected, and what 'permanent supportive housing' actually means• Why 85% of homeless individuals in any area were born or raised there — and the data behind the misinformation• How the village uses Saint Martin's University and Olympic College interns to provide behavioral health and nursing services• The real cost of homelessness vs. housing someone — and why leaving people on the streets costs taxpayers twice as much• A new dog training / behavioral support animal pilot program launching in 2024• What expansion could look like — and what it would mean for Mason County's chronically homeless population Shelton Veterans Village is located at N. 13th Street in Shelton, WA and serves disabled veterans experiencing chronic homelessness. The village operates as permanent supportive housing funded through HUD, with case management provided by Michael, Sondra, and supervisor Dave on site. Want to learn more or schedule a tour? Contact through the village directly. Resources and data mentioned in this episode — including research from the National Alliance to End Homelessness and Colleen's LinkedIn data posts — are linked below.National Alliance to End Homelessness- endhomelessness.org Colleen's LinkedIn data posts MASON COUNTY LOCAL HOMELESS HOUSING PLAN 2025-2030 Email for scheduling a village tour - [email protected] Focus on Shelton airs on KMAS Radio in Shelton, Washington. New episodes at kmas.com and wherever you get your podcasts.#SheltonWA #MasonCounty #VeteransVillage #SheltonVeteransVillage #WashingtonState #HomelessVeterans #AffordableHousing #PermanentSupportiveHousing #HousingCrisis #KMASRadio #FocusOnShelton #CommunityRadio #SheltonWashington #TinyHomes #VeteranSupport #HousingFirst #MasonCountyWA #WashingtonHomeless #ShelterNews #PublicAffairs
Mason Health and Mason General Hospital have several scholarship opportunities available for 2026 — including a brand-new $10,000 award from the Hospitalist Group designed to help Mason County students pursue careers in health care. In this episode of Focus on Shelton, Jeff Slakey sits down with Dr. Doug Lindahl and Dr. Jacqueline Gorzynski from the Mason Health Hospitalist Group, along with Dr. Darren Cuevas and Jennifer Capps, to break down everything students and career-changers need to know. Scholarships covered in this episode: • Mason Health Hospitalist Group Scholarship — $10,000, deadline April 30, 2026 (NEW) • Shelton High School Health Science Academy Nursing Scholarship • Mason Health Foundation Auxiliary Healthcare Scholarship •Centennial Guilds Scholarship These scholarships are open to students entering a wide range of health care fields, including medicine, dentistry, physical therapy, nursing, pharmacy, nutritional science, behavioral health, and healthcare administration. They are not limited to graduating seniors — anyone looking to enter or advance in the health care field may be eligible. #MasonCounty #SheltonWA #MasonHealth #MasonGeneralHospital #HealthCareScholarship #FocusOnShelton #KMAS #CommunityRadio #WashingtonState #HealthCareEducation #NursingScholarship #AlliedHealth #CollegeScholarship #MasonCountySchools #SheltonHighSchool #HealthScience #HospitalistGroup #MasonHealthFoundation #CareerChange #LocalHealthCare
They started meeting in living rooms. Now they've been shaping civic life in Shelton and Mason County, Washington for more than 55 years.In this Focus on Shelton conversation recorded at the historic Mason Hotel, Jeff Slakey sits down with Leslie Peterson, April Pooler, and Jayni Kamin of the Mason County Republican Women's Club to talk history, community, and what it actually looks like to build bridges across political lines in a small town.From Peggy Johnson's grassroots campaigns and her trip to meet President Reagan, to candidate forums in the park that invited every party, to a brand-new blood drive being co-organized with Democratic women under the banner of the Peacemakers, this is a conversation about what community service looks like when you set the partisan stuff aside and focus on the people in front of you.You'll also hear about the club's expanded speaker program, their presence at the Mason County Expo, charitable giving to Gethsemane Ministries and Care Net, and the upcoming Liberty Dinner on May 16th at Ridge Motorsports Park.If you've ever wondered what actually happens at a local civic organization meeting, or if you've been curious about getting involved, this is a good place to start.MEETINGS: 1st Friday 12:30-2pm | 3rd Wednesday 6pm @ The Mason Hotel, Shelton WALIBERTY DINNER — May 16 | Ridge Motorsports Park | https://mcrwclub.wixsite.com/mcwcPEACEMAKERS BLOOD DRIVE — March 31st#SheltonWA #MasonCounty #MasonCountyRepublicanWomen #FocusOnShelton #KMAS #CommunityRadio #WomensHistoryMonth #CivicEngagement #LocalPolitics #PNWCommunity #WashingtonState #CommonGround #Peacemakers #LibertyDinner #MasonHotel #SheltonWashington #GetThingsDone #CommunityService #GrassrootsOrganizingMore local conversations at KMAS.com
Shelton School District Superintendent Wyeth Jessee joins Jeff Slakey on Focus on Shelton for a candid, wide-ranging conversation about the state of public education in Mason County — and across Washington State.Shelton voters delivered a resounding 62% approval on the district's levy — one of the strongest showings for any comparable school district in the February election cycle. But that win has been complicated by enrollment decline, rising costs, and a state legislature that just cut the levy equalization dollars that high-needs districts like Shelton depend on.Jessee breaks down how every student lost equals $18,000 in revenue — and how a drop of roughly 170 students translates to a $350,000 gap and the equivalent of three to four teaching positions. He explains the compounding pressure of lower birth rates, reduced immigration, rising fuel costs, and now a state legislature trimming the very funds designed to support lower-income districts.Despite the financial headwinds, Jessee is emphatic that Shelton continues to outperform comparable districts on literacy, discipline, attendance, and graduation rates. He spotlights NJROTC, student athletes placing at state championships, students reading obsessively, and a local effort to rename the high school softball field in honor of a beloved community figure.This is an essential listen for any Mason County resident who wants to understand the real pressures facing Shelton's schools — and the remarkable things still being accomplished inside them.#SheltonWA #SheltonSchools #MasonCounty #FocusOnShelton #KMAS #PublicEducation #WashingtonState #SheltonCommunity #WyethJesse #SchoolFunding #LevyElection #SheltonAthletics #WashingtonSchools #EducationFunding #SheltonHighclimbers
Jeff Slakey sits down with Molly Wheat Baker inside her studio at Graffiti Community Art Space in downtown Shelton, Washington—and what starts as a conversation about her library exhibit quickly turns into a window on everything that’s growing in the Shelton arts scene right now.Molly’s work is everywhere in Shelton—murals on Cota Street, stickers and shirts, commission paintings, and now a solo show at the Shelton Timberland Library through the end of March 2025. She talks about what it’s been like to find her community here, how organizations like Mason County Blue Zones and spaces like Marmo have knit Shelton’s creatives together, and what it means to go from “living in the woods” to being part of a movement working toward official state Creative District designation.Oh—and she’s painting a bus.📍 Graffiti Community Art Space | Railroad Ave, Shelton WA (across from Tolley’s)🎨 Library Show: Shelton Timberland Library | Through end of March 2025🗓️ Tue March 24 | 2:45–4:45pm — Live painting session🗓️ Thu March 26 | 2:00–3:30pm — Artist talk (Tea Talk & Time Out)🌐 mollywheatbaker.com | 📧 [email protected]#SheltonWA #MasonCounty #FocusOnShelton #KMAS#SheltonArt #CommunityArt #LocalArtist #MuralArt #PNWArt #WashingtonArt#SheltonArtsWalk #CreativeDistrict #DowntownShelton #SheltonLibrary#PNWCommunity #SmallTownArt #PublicArt #WashingtonState #CommunityRadioFocus on Shelton is produced by KMAS Radio, your community radio station for the Shelton and Mason County area. New episodes drop regularly—subscribe so you never miss a conversation.
In this episode of Focus on Shelton on KMAS, host Jeff Slakey sits down with Jordanne Krumpols from the City of Shelton Parks & Recreation Department to talk about two exciting community initiatives. First: the PROST Plan — Shelton's Parks, Recreation, Open Space, and Trails six-year master plan is in the community input phase RIGHT NOW. The survey is live online and via QR code on posters throughout the city. Jordanne shares what the city is hoping to learn, what trends are emerging (spoiler: pickleball courts and a splash pad are leading the wishlist), and how you can get involved — including an in-person open house at the Civic Center in May. Second: Empty Bowls is returning to Shelton for three consecutive Wednesdays starting March 11. Come in and create your handmade clay bowl (free!), come back to glaze it on the 18th, and join your neighbors on March 25th for soup and bread donated by local Shelton restaurants — with all donations benefiting the Saints Pantry food bank. 🔗 PROST Survey: https://sheltonwa.gov/government/departments/parks_and_recreation/parks,_recreation,_open_space_and_trails_plan.php 🍲 Empty Bowls Info: https://sheltonwa.gov/government/departments/parks_and_recreation/shelton_arts_commission.php 📧 Contact Jordan: [email protected]#SheltonWA #FocusOnShelton #KMAS #SheltonParks #SheltonPROST #SheltonRecreationKMAS is the local radio station in Mason County Washington.
The Mountain View Café at Mason Health is officially reopened — and it’s better than ever.Culinary Manager Ashlee Johnson joins Jeff Slakey on location to talk about:• The 9-month remodel • Prime Rib Fridays ($12 plates, 4:30–7pm) • Healthy, locally sourced ingredients • Partnerships with Colvin Ranch and Skokomish Valley Farms • Blue Zones and Mason Matters collaboration • Community art and gathering space • Ashlee’s inspiring journey from GED to culinary managerThe café is open to the public and serving breakfast, lunch, and dinner.📍 Located inside Mason Health in Shelton, Washington 🔗 Weekly menu available at https://www.masonhealth.com/visit-us/bistro-menuIf you love supporting local food, community spaces, and Shelton businesses — this one’s for you.#SheltonWA #MasonHealth #SupportLocal #PrimeRibFriday #MasonMatters #HoodCanalLife #LocalFood #MasonCounty
Shelton City Manager Mark Ziegler sits down to talk about being named “Boss of the Year” by the Shelton Mason County Chamber of Commerce, what leadership really looks like inside city hall, and where the City of Shelton is headed next.In this conversation, we cover:Why Mark sees himself as a collaborator, not a “boss”Managing nearly 100 city employeesWorking with the Shelton City CouncilAdvocating in Olympia with 35th District legislatorsHousing growth and Olympic Heights developmentInfrastructure investments and long-term planningCommunity outreach challengesStrategic planning and performance trackingA potential partnership with the Humane Society of Mason CountyParks, trails, and the future Simpson Railway multi-modal trailWe also talk about city culture, employee recognition (the “Shelte Awards”), communication styles, and what it takes to build trust in a growing community like Shelton.If you live in Shelton or Mason County and want to understand how local decisions are made — this is a good one.#SheltonWA #MasonCounty #LocalGovernment #CityManager #CommunityLeadership #SheltonWashington #EconomicDevelopment #PublicService
Peninsula Credit Union has been named the 2025 Business of the Year by the Shelton Mason County Chamber of Commerce, marking the second time the organization has received the honor.In this conversation, CEO Jim Morrell and Shelton Branch Assistant Manager Charlie Allmendinger talk about what the award means to their team, their mission of listening, serving, educating, and caring, and how that mission shows up every day for members across Mason, Kitsap, and Jefferson counties.The discussion covers Peninsula’s focus on community development, financial education, bilingual services and outreach to the Hispanic community, leadership development from within, and real-world examples of how credit unions help members during difficult financial moments. It’s a look at how a locally rooted financial institution balances growth, inclusion, and hands-on community support.#PeninsulaCreditUnion #BusinessOfTheYear #MasonCounty #SheltonWA #CommunityBanking
Local historian and author Don Trosper joins KMAS Radio to talk about his newest book, This Can’t Be History… Or Is It?, a collection of 100 short stories from across Southwest Washington. The conversation covers Tumwater, Thurston, Lewis, Grays Harbor, Pacific, and Mason counties, touching on early settlers, logging towns, railroads, Native trails, and the small, often overlooked moments that shaped the region. Trosper shares how he researches these stories, why short-form history works, and how places like Tumwater, the Deschutes River, and Old Highway 99 connect generations through lived experience and memory.#Tumwater #SouthwestWashington #LocalHistory #WashingtonHistory #KMASRadio
Shelton School District Superintendent Wyeth Jessee joins Jeff Slakey to discuss the early results of the district’s three-year levy, currently passing with 61% of the vote.The conversation covers what that level of community support means during challenging economic times, including how gas prices and financial pressure can impact levy outcomes across Washington State.Jessee outlines measurable progress within the district, including being ranked number one in the state for early literacy growth, a 77% reduction in discipline incidents, and 53 students attending Evergreen State College tuition-free compared to just four the year prior.The discussion also explores what would have happened if the levy had failed, including potential cuts to more than 100 employees and programs such as mental health supports, arts, athletics, and student leadership opportunities.The episode closes with leadership news at Shelton High School, as Assistant Principal Jordan Stray is announced as the incoming principal, and what that transition means for the future of SHS.#SheltonWA#MasonCounty#SheltonSchools#LocalEducation#kmasradio KMAS is the local radio station in Mason County Washington.
The Great Bend Center for Music has been named Nonprofit of the Year by the Shelton-Mason County Chamber of Commerce, and its impact stretches far beyond Mason County. In this conversation, Jeff Slakey sits down with Matt Melendez to talk about how a locally rooted music nonprofit now serves young learners in nearly every U.S. state and multiple countries through its early learning programs.They discuss Great Bend’s conservatory-style online music education for toddlers, plans to bring in-person programming back to Mason County, and new community-building efforts like the Lip Sync Battle fundraiser that supports multiple local nonprofits. Matt also breaks down the science behind group singing, how music builds connection and reduces stress, and why community-based music matters now more than ever.The conversation also previews Great Bend’s full post-pandemic concert season, including upcoming performances tied to Black History Month and American composers, along with the launch of a new CTE music and sound production pathway in partnership with Shelton School District. It’s a wide-ranging look at how music, education, and community come together in Mason County—and why Great Bend Center for Music earned statewide recognition.#GreatBendCenterForMusic #MasonCounty #SheltonWA #NonprofitOfTheYear #CommunityMusic #ArtsInEducation #LocalImpactGlobalReach #KMASRadio
Shelton School District Superintendent Wyeth Jesse joins KMAS Radio’s Jeff Slakey to recap recent school roundtables across the district, highlighting major changes at Shelton High School, Choice and Cedar, Evergreen Elementary, and Bordeaux Elementary. The conversation focuses on literacy improvements, student-centered learning, family involvement in reading, and why Shelton now leads the state in early literacy growth since COVID. Superintendent Jesse also addresses questions surrounding a recent student walkout at Shelton High School, explaining how the district prioritizes student safety while remaining nonpartisan. The discussion wraps with a reminder about the upcoming school levy and ballot drop-off deadlines in Mason County.#SheltonSchools #MasonCounty #PublicEducation #LiteracyMatters #KMASRadio
Mason County Sheriff Ryan Spurling joins Jeff Slakey at the Fjord Oyster Bank in Hoodsport to discuss proposed Washington State legislation that could impact how sheriffs are elected or removed from office. The conversation covers Senate Bill 5974, concerns from the Washington State Sheriffs Association, and what the bill could mean for voter authority. Sheriff Spurling also previews the upcoming Polar Plunge fundraiser at Alderbrook Resort and highlights 2025 life-saving and employee awards within the Mason County Sheriff’s Office.#MasonCounty #HoodsportWA #KMASRadio #SheriffSpurling #WALeg #PublicSafety #CommunityConversation #PolarPlunge #LocalGovernment #LawEnforcement
FC Olympia is hosting its fourth annual Valentine’s Gala Dinner on February 13 at the Olympia Ballroom, bringing together live comedy, community support, and South Sound soccer. The event features headlining comedian Sam Miller, along with dinner, a bar, and a silent auction with items ranging from local dining experiences to signed Sounders memorabilia.Proceeds from the gala support FC Olympia’s mission, including free ticketing for kids, scholarships for youth camps, and ongoing club operations. In this conversation, FC Olympia’s Ryan Perkins and Sam Miller talk about the purpose of the fundraiser, what makes the event unique, and what’s ahead for FC Olympia’s upcoming season as global attention turns toward soccer with the World Cup approaching the Pacific Northwest.The Valentine’s Gala takes place February 13 at 6:30 pm at the Olympia Ballroom in downtown Olympia and serves as an early kickoff to another busy and growing season for FC Olympia.#FCOlympia #OlympiaWA #ValentinesGala #SouthSound #OlympiaEvents #SupportLocalSports #LiveComedy
Washington State Representatives Dan Griffey and Travis Couture join Jeff Slakey for a wide-ranging 35th District legislative update. The conversation focuses on newly proposed income tax legislation in Olympia, concerns over constitutionality, and how a so-called “millionaire tax” could impact households, small businesses, professional sports teams, and local industries like shellfish farming. The discussion also covers state spending priorities, economic growth projections, and several public safety bills, including changes related to stalking, domestic violence services, and sheriff oversight.#35thDistrict #WALeg #WashingtonPolitics #MasonCounty #StateBudget #SmallBusiness #PublicSafety #Olympia
Newly selected Shelton Mayor Sharon Sherman sits down at Uracco Coffee to talk about how city government really works in Shelton. In this conversation, Sherman explains the council-manager form of government, what the mayor’s role does—and doesn’t—include, and why progress often takes time. She shares her perspective as both a business owner and council member, touching on downtown vacancies, small business support, homelessness, public safety, and the balance between growth and city basics like infrastructure. The discussion also looks at housing, zoning, walkability, and what Shelton can do to attract investment while staying within state law.#SheltonWA #CityGovernment #LocalLeadership #SmallBusiness #MasonCounty
Shelton School District Superintendent Wyeth Jessee shares what it looks like to be inside classrooms every week—and why those visits matter. From unannounced walkthroughs to coaching principals on school improvement plans, Jessee explains how leadership, data, and student engagement connect to real outcomes.Recorded on site at Mountain View Elementary, the conversation also highlights how talking directly with students—about books, learning goals, and yes, even height—offers insight no report can provide. This episode gives a clear look at how district leadership supports schools while staying grounded in day-to-day classroom experience.#SheltonSchools #EducationLeadership #PublicEducation #StudentSuccess #KMAS
Mason County Auditor Steve Duenkel and Deputy Auditor Marie Stevenson join KMAS to walk through several important election updates ahead of the February 10 special election and the April special election.The conversation begins with a critical change in U.S. Postal Service postmarking policy that could affect whether ballots are counted if they are mailed too close to Election Day. Election officials explain why voters are now encouraged to mail ballots at least seven days early, use official ballot drop boxes by 8 p.m. on Election Day, or request a hand-stamped postmark at the post office.The discussion also covers ballot drop box locations, ballot tracking through VoteWA, observation opportunities at the Elections Office, and what happens to ballots on election night.In the second half of the interview, Dunkel and Stevenson explain the Verified Voter Pilot Project, a voluntary option being introduced for the April special election. The pilot allows participating voters to authenticate their ballot using objective information such as date of birth and a state-issued ID number, rather than relying solely on signature verification. The goal is to reduce rejected ballots, improve equity, and gather data that may help inform future statewide election policy.This full conversation provides transparency into how elections are administered in Mason County, what voters need to know to make sure their ballots are counted, and how local election officials are testing new ideas to improve voter confidence and access.#MasonCounty#Elections#VoteEarly#BallotDeadline#MailInVoting#ElectionSecurity#VerifiedVoter
In this community forum recorded at Shelton High School, KMAS Radio host Jeff Slakey sits down with school leaders to give families and community members a deeper look at how the high school operates and supports students.Principal Bruce Kipper, Assistant Principal Jordan Stray, CTE teacher Katie Shrum, and Superintendent Wyeth Jessee discuss enrollment, staffing, extracurricular participation, and the academy-based model that guides students through career and college pathways.The conversation explores the Freshman Seminar and High Climber Academy, including how students are oriented to high school life, supported academically and socially, and given space to explore interests before choosing an academy pathway. Leaders explain how pathways remain flexible, allowing students to adjust as their goals evolve while still meeting graduation requirements.The forum also covers student engagement, campus culture, safety and security measures, mental health supports, attendance strategies, and the district’s approach to discipline focused on growth rather than punishment. Educators address the cell phone policy, community partnerships, CTE opportunities, athletics, clubs, and how levy funding directly impacts programs and services at the high school level.This episode is part of an ongoing series of Shelton School District community forums designed to provide transparency, context, and a closer look at how local schools serve students and families.#SheltonHighSchool #SheltonSchools #K12Education #CareerPathways #KMASRadio
In this conversation, 35th District Representative Dan Griffey reflects on Survivor Advocacy Day in Olympia and the real-world impact of domestic violence legislation. Griffey shares personal perspective on why survivor services matter, highlights the role of organizations like Turning Pointe Survivor Advocacy Center, and explains how faster rape kit testing and legal resources can change outcomes for victims.The discussion also shifts to broader state issues, including public defender shortages, forensic lab backlogs, Medicaid funding cuts, and growing concerns about Washington’s budget outlook. Griffey outlines why he’s worried about capital flight, small business pressures, and the long-term sustainability of state spending, while emphasizing the need to keep survivor advocacy and public safety at the forefront.Recorded as part of ongoing legislative session check-ins from the 35th District. (Yes, Dan's video goes out at the end but the audio stays)#DanGriffey#35thDistrict#SurvivorAdvocacy#DomesticViolenceAwareness#WashingtonLegislatureKMAS is the local radio station in Mason County Washington.
Recorded at Urraco Coffee, this in-person conversation with Congresswoman Emily Randall focuses on the challenges and opportunities facing rural communities across Washington’s 6th Congressional District.The discussion covers pressures on small and micro-businesses, rising costs tied to tariffs and supply chains, and how immigration policy is impacting local employers. Randall also addresses health care access in Mason County, why the area is considered a child care desert, and what federal and state roles look like in expanding child care availability in rural communities.The conversation wraps with tourism and international visitor concerns ahead of major events like the World Cup, cross-border relationships with Canada, and ongoing challenges around education funding, special education, and the importance of fully funding IDEA.#MasonCounty #SheltonWA #SmallBusiness #ChildCare #Education
Shelton School District Director of Finance Clinton Sherman breaks down the district’s recent financial turnaround, projecting a positive fund balance after years of deficit concerns. In this conversation, Sherman explains how quick budget recalibration, staffing reductions, and tighter operational spending helped stabilize finances — and why long-term sustainability is still the goal.The discussion also clears up confusion around per-student state funding, how basic education dollars differ from state and federal grants, and how enrollment, special programs, and homeschooling impact district revenue. Sherman explains how funding flows through Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction, why per-pupil numbers vary, and how levy dollars help fill gaps not covered by the state.Additional topics include post-ESSER funding challenges, changes brought on by the McCleary decision, salary pressures, modern budgeting practices, and how Shelton Schools are working toward a more stable financial future while protecting classroom quality.#SheltonSchools #SchoolFinance #EducationFunding #SchoolLevies #MasonCountyWA
Love is in the air as the Mason General Hospital Foundation gets ready for its annual Business Luncheon, returning Friday, February 13 to the Sa-Heh-Wa-Mish Room at Little Creek Casino Resort.Host Jeff Slakey sits down with Jen Capps, Amber Trail, Lisa Woodard, and Brad Miller to preview this year’s Valentine’s-themed fundraiser, which combines great food, friendly competition, and strong community support for local healthcare. Guests will enjoy a lively dessert auction featuring everything from gourmet brownies and cheesecakes to gluten-free treats, all while raising funds for an important cause.This year’s luncheon is proudly sponsored by Heritage Bank and Our Community Credit Union, highlighting the power of collaboration and “people helping people” across Mason County. The conversation also dives into why community involvement matters, how local businesses and financial institutions support critical services, and what makes this event such a meaningful way to give back.Proceeds from this year’s funded item appeal will support the Mason Health Birth Center, helping purchase a new fetal monitor to improve care for local families. Tickets are available now, and the event promises to wrap up in time to enjoy the rest of your Valentine’s Day.#MasonHealth #MasonGeneralHospitalFoundation #CommunityGiving #ValentinesEvent #MasonCounty #HealthcareSupport
With ballots heading out across Mason County, lawmakers from Washington’s 35th Legislative District join KMAS for a timely conversation on education funding, school levies, and public safety priorities during the current legislative session. Representatives Travis Couture and Dan Griffey discuss why school districts are facing financial strain despite record K-12 spending, how levy equalization changes have impacted rural communities, and what challenges districts like Shelton are navigating right now.The conversation also covers ongoing bipartisan efforts to reform the sexually violent predator system, reduce toxicology lab backlogs that delay DUI prosecutions, and improve outcomes for victims while strengthening public safety statewide. This episode offers context and clarity on issues directly affecting families, schools, and communities across Mason County and the 35th District.#MasonCounty #35thDistrict #WashingtonLegislature #SchoolLevies #EducationFunding #RuralSchools #PublicSafety #WashingtonPolitics #KMAS #LocalGovernment
Shelton School District Superintendent Wyeth Jessee joins Jeff Slakey for an in-depth conversation on school funding, local levies, and what it really costs to operate schools in Washington state.Jesse responds to claims about per-student funding, explains why rising operating costs like insurance, utilities, and transportation are outpacing state revenue, and why Shelton’s levy request is about maintaining services — not expanding them. He also discusses unfunded mandates, budget pressures, and how districts are being asked to do more with less.The conversation shifts to student success stories, including Shelton’s strong DECA program, internships, career pathways, and classroom experiences that help students graduate prepared for college, careers, or trades. Jesse also addresses school safety, discipline, vaping concerns, and the district’s focus on changing behavior rather than relying on punishment.Recorded in Shelton, Washington, this episode provides local context to statewide education issues and highlights the work happening inside Shelton School District classrooms every day.#SheltonWA #SheltonSchools #PublicEducation #SchoolFunding #EducationMatters #WashingtonSchools #MasonCounty #StudentSuccess #LocalLeadership
Forest Festival is coming up sooner than many people realize, and this year brings expanded opportunities for students across Mason County to get involved while earning scholarship support.In this conversation, Jeff talks with Anna Lilges about the 2026 Forest Festival theme, Legends of the Timber, and the expanded royalty and ambassador programs now available to students in grades 6 through 12. For the first time, freshmen and sophomores can participate as ambassadors, opening the door earlier for students who want to represent their schools, build leadership skills, and stay connected to community traditions.High school students in grades 9–12 can apply for Forest Festival scholarships, with awards ranging from $500 up to $2,000. These scholarships come with opportunities to participate in community events, attend Forest Festival weekend, and represent Mason County at other festivals around Western Washington. The application deadline for high school scholarships is Friday, February 6. Applications are submitted online at masoncountyforestfestival.com, and students will need to provide a resume, a copy of their school transcript, and meet the minimum 3.0 GPA requirement.Younger students can also take part through the Junior Royalty program, open to 6th, 7th, and 8th graders from schools across Mason County. Junior Royalty is selected through a short essay contest and requires a lighter commitment, including participation in the Forest Festival parade. Junior Royalty essays are due by Friday, February 27, and should be based on this year’s theme, Legends of the Timber.The conversation also covers the popular Forest Festival Button Contest, which is open to 3rd through 12th graders, giving students another creative way to participate and connect with the festival.Looking ahead, Forest Festival weekend will take place May 28 through May 31, the first full weekend after Memorial Day. Anna and Jeff also preview Coronation Night, happening Friday, March 14 at 6:00 PM at the Shelton High School Performing Arts Center, where scholarship recipients, royalty court members, the parade grand marshal, and the button contest winner will be announced.Anna shares her own experience as a former Forest Festival royalty member and how the scholarship program helped shape her education and career, highlighting why this long-standing tradition continues to matter for students, families, and the wider community.This episode is a must-listen for parents, students, educators, and anyone interested in keeping Forest Festival’s history and community spirit moving forward.#ForestFestival #MasonCounty #StudentScholarships<
School counselors play a much bigger role than many people realize. In this conversation, two longtime counselors from the Shelton School District break down what that role really looks like today — from early elementary support to helping high school students prepare for life after graduation.Recently retired elementary counselor Brian Wirzbicki shares how counseling has evolved over the years, especially in connecting families with academic, social-emotional, and community resources. CHOICE/Cedar counselor Susie Wirzbicki explains how counseling at the high school and alternative program level focuses on helping students discover who they are, build skills, and successfully “launch” into adulthood.The conversation covers the shift away from the old “guidance counselor” model, why counselor-to-student ratios matter, how schools balance proactive and reactive support, and why ongoing family involvement remains critical even as students grow more independent. Parents, educators, and community members will gain a clearer understanding of how counselors support the whole child — and the whole family — throughout the K–12 journey.#SheltonSchools #SchoolCounselors #StudentSupport #FamilyEngagement #EducationMatters #MentalHealthInSchools #K12Education
As the 2026 Washington State legislative session gets underway, Jeff Slakey checks in with Drew MacEwen, State Senator for the 35th District and Deputy Leader of the Senate Republican Caucus.MacEwen shares his reaction to the Governor’s State of the State address, raising concerns about continued tax increases, rising costs for families, and what he describes as a growing disconnect between Olympia and working-class Washingtonians. The conversation digs into property taxes, labor and fuel costs, and how those pressures are showing up at kitchen tables across Mason and Thurston counties.The discussion also covers education funding and local school levies, including unfunded mandates placed on districts, declining test scores despite high per-pupil spending, and what MacEwen believes needs to change to stabilize K-12 education.Later, MacEwen weighs in on public safety and governance issues, including a proposal that could allow an unelected commission to remove elected sheriffs, as well as the growing strain on county public defense systems and the need for more state involvement.This is a wide-ranging, candid conversation focused on budgets, priorities, and the real-world impacts of legislative decisions during a short, fast-moving session in Olympia.#WALeg #DrewMacEwen #WApolitics #35thDistrict #StateOfTheState #WABudget #EducationFunding #PublicSafety #PropertyTaxes #CostOfLiving #Olympia #MasonCounty #ThurstonCounty
This conversation steps away from policy and meetings and focuses on the person behind the title. Shelton School District Superintendent Wyeth Jessee joins Jeff Slakey and parent Shiloh Littlesun for a candid discussion about fatherhood, growing up with an IEP, working in special education, and how those experiences shape the way he leads today. From raising his own children to supporting students with disabilities, this is a parent-to-parent conversation about trust, growth, and doing right by kids.#WyethJessee#SheltonSchoolDistrict#PublicEducation#SpecialEducation#ParentPerspective#EducationLeadership#SchoolSuperintendent#InclusiveEducation#MasonCounty#CommunityConversation
As Washington’s legislative session gets underway, 35th District Representatives Dan Griffey and Travis Couture sit down to discuss what lawmakers and residents can expect in the weeks ahead.The conversation covers the State of the State address, a projected multi-billion-dollar budget deficit, tax policy debates, and how rising costs are impacting families and small businesses across Washington. The lawmakers also talk about trust in tax promises, long-term fiscal sustainability, and the challenges of affordability in one of the nation’s most expensive states.The discussion closes with public safety concerns, including DUI enforcement, toxicology lab backlogs, and why enforcing existing laws matters for community safety. A wide-ranging look at the issues shaping the 2026 legislative session and what they mean for the 35th District and Washington State.https://traviscouture.houserepublicans.wa.gov/https://dangriffey.houserepublicans.wa.gov/#WALeg #WAState #StateOfTheState #WashingtonPolitics #BudgetDeficit #TaxPolicy #Affordability #PublicSafety #DUIEnforcement #35thDistrict #OlympiaWA
Habitat for Humanity of Mason County Executive Director David Brandt joins Jeff Slakey to explain a short-term cash flow issue that may be circulating in the community. Brandt breaks down how Habitat funds its homebuilding work, why a delayed house closing created a temporary liquidity crunch, and why this is not a budgeting or mismanagement issue.The conversation also covers the difficult decision to temporarily lay off staff, the remarkable response from employees who immediately returned as volunteers, and how the community can support Habitat during this brief transition. Habitat expects normal operations to resume once a home sale closes in early February.#HabitatForHumanity #MasonCounty #SheltonWA #AffordableHousing #NonprofitTransparency #CommunitySupport #HabitatStrong
Mary M. Knight School District Superintendent Matt Mallery joins Jeff for an in-depth conversation about the district’s upcoming EP&O levy on the February 10 ballot and what it means for students, families, and the broader Matlock community.The discussion starts with a look at why EP&O levies exist and how they differ from basic state education funding—especially for smaller, rural school districts. Mallery explains how levy dollars help cover staffing and programs that aren’t fully funded by the state and why local support continues to be critical for Mary M. Knight.A major focus of the conversation is the district’s expanded Career and Technical Education offerings. From construction and welding to forestry, horticulture, and business and marketing, Mallery outlines how these programs serve as both graduation pathways and direct preparation for local jobs and industries that have long been part of life in Mason and Grays Harbor counties. He also talks about recent efforts to connect students with employers through site visits and youth-focused conversations about workforce barriers and opportunities.Athletics and extracurricular activities are another key piece supported by the levy. The episode covers the growth of co-ed flag football, the return of middle and high school baseball, continued success in track and golf, and the pilot launch of high school wrestling. Mallery explains how expanding these options helps students stay engaged and connected to school.The conversation also touches on steady enrollment growth at Mary M. Knight, with more families moving into the area or returning to the community, and how that growth creates both opportunities and challenges for a small district.Mallery breaks down the specifics of the February 10 EP&O levy proposal, emphasizing that it is a replacement levy—not a new tax—set at the same rate as the current levy: $2.08 per $1,000 of assessed property value. He also explains how passage of the levy would qualify the district for approximately $500,000 in additional state Local Effort Assistance, keeping tax dollars paid by residents working locally instead of being distributed elsewhere.The episode wraps up with details on ballot timing, community outreach efforts, and where voters can find accurate information before casting their ballots.This conversation offers a clear, local view of how school funding works, why levies matter in rural districts, and how community support directly impacts students' opportunities at Mary M. Knight.#MaryMKnight #MatlockWA #SchoolLevy #EPOLevy #MasonCounty #EducationMatters #CTEPrograms #RuralSchools #LocalEducation
“You’re voting about the kids and the services are for them. You’re not voting about Wyeth Jessee or the school board. You’re voting literally for resources and supports. That money goes straight to services for kids — regardless of who’s sitting in these roles.”Superintendent Wyeth Jessee sits down to walk through the upcoming Shelton School District levy and what it means for students, staff, and the wider community. With ballots arriving in mid-January and the vote set for February 10, this conversation focuses on the facts—what the levy funds, what happens if it fails, and why timing matters more than many people realize.Jessee addresses common questions and misconceptions he’s hearing across the community, including concerns about student behavior, district finances, and accountability. He explains how levy dollars support nurses, counselors, librarians, para-educators, athletics, activities, and day-to-day school operations that go beyond what the state fully funds.The discussion also outlines the real consequences of a failed levy, including staffing reductions, program cuts, and the tight timelines districts face when planning budgets. Jessee emphasizes that levy votes are about services for students—regardless of who sits in leadership roles—and encourages residents to seek accurate information, tour schools, and engage directly with district leadership and the school board.This is a straightforward, informative conversation designed to help voters make an informed decision.#SheltonSchools #SchoolLevy #EducationFunding #MasonCounty #K12Education #CommunityConversation
Oakland Bay Junior High has changed a lot in the last few years, and this extended conversation offers a clear look at what that transformation actually looks like day to day.Recorded on site at OBJH, Jeff Slakey sits down with Principal Marianne Marshall, seventh-grade ELA teacher Andrea Smith, and Shelton School District Superintendent Wyeth Jessee for an in-depth roundtable discussion about how the school is creating a safer, more predictable, and more welcoming environment for students in grades 7 and 8.The conversation covers how consistent routines, shared expectations, and common language across classrooms help students know what’s expected of them — from the moment they walk into the building to the way they engage in learning throughout the day. You’ll hear how visual expectations, “Do Now” activities, and structured classroom entry and exit routines reduce distractions and increase instructional time.The group also talks candidly about why junior high is such a critical stage for students. Seventh and eighth graders are navigating identity, independence, social pressures, and growing academic demands, and the adults in the building emphasize relationships as the foundation for helping students succeed. There’s a thoughtful discussion about listening to students, meeting them where they are, and giving them space to find their voice while still maintaining clear boundaries and expectations.You’ll also hear details about:How the cell phone policy has improved focus and behaviorHow reading instruction works in a seventh-grade ELA classroomThe role of electives, clubs, band, and CTE classes in student engagementWhy extracurricular activities matter for social developmentHow data, assessments, and interventions guide instructionHow families can get involved and support the schoolHow levy funding supports programs that aren’t covered by basic education dollarsThis is part of an ongoing series of conversations highlighting schools across the Shelton School District, aimed at giving families and community members a clearer picture of what’s happening inside classrooms and hallways — beyond headlines or old reputations.#OaklandBayJuniorHigh #SheltonSchools #SheltonWA #PublicEducation #MiddleSchool #JuniorHigh #StudentSuccess #SchoolCulture #EducationMatters #CommunitySchools
Flight of the Blue Ox is an original Christmas radio play written by Rachel Hansen and performed by a full cast of local voices who bring Camp Grisdale to life. The show opens with Joel as the narrator, guiding listeners into a cold and stormy Christmas Eve deep in the Wynoochee Woods. Inside the logging camp, Paul Bunyan—voiced by Rich—and his steady partner Babe the Blue Ox—played by Will Stone—are settling in for a quiet night when the weather turns rough and talk turns to whether Santa - voiced by Jim, will make it through the storm.The camp children, voiced by Ilana and Gina as Ginny and Jimmy, worry that Christmas might not come at all. Tony plays Brody, their father, trying to keep spirits steady as the storm pushes in. Erin and Scooter appear as the cook and cook’s helper, filling the camp with simple comforts as everyone prepares for a long winter night.But everything changes when a streak of red light flashes over the Olympics and Santa’s sleigh crashes near Mount Ellinor. Jim steps in as Santa, while Fuzz voices Comet, the injured lead reindeer. With Comet unable to guide the team, Santa needs help fast. Paul Bunyan answers the call, and with Babe at his side, the two fight through wind, ice, and snow to reach the crash site.What follows is the turning point of the story: Santa gives Babe a spark of Christmas magic, allowing the blue ox to fly. Babe lifts the sleigh into the sky and takes the lead for a full night of travel around the world, delivering gifts while Comet recovers. The children of Camp Grisdale wake at dawn to see Santa return with Babe still glowing from the journey. The play closes with the camp gathered around the great Douglas fir as Paul and Babe take in the quiet morning after a long night.This local cast delivers a warm telling of how a blue ox stepped up when Christmas needed him most. The production blends familiar folklore, Mason County landmarks, and a classic holiday rescue story into one radio-style performance made for all ages.#FlightOfTheBlueOx #ChristmasRadioPlay #PaulBunyan #BabeTheBlueOx #KMASRadio #SheltonWA #ListenLocal #HolidayTradition #FamilyFriendly #ChristmasStory
Operation Scrooge is coming to Mason County with a full 24-hour telethon featuring 24 local bands helping raise money for families in the Hood Canal School District and across the county. Chris Eaks joins Jeff to talk about how the idea started, what the need looks like in the schools, and how people can stream the event live on Facebook, YouTube, and Twitch. They also dig into the fundraising goals, the bands donating their time, and how folks near and far can share the event and support the cause.#OperationScrooge #MasonCounty #UnionWA #HoodCanal #LocalMusic #CommunitySupport #Telethon #PNWMusic #HolidayGiving #KMAS
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