Saturday, March 28, 2015

Pullman's Little Edisons School

No, Edison School in Pullman hasn’t reappeared. However, there is Little Edisons School (yes, plural Edisons, not Edison) at Schweitzer Engineering Labs. Story below by Josh Babcock of Moscow Pullman Daily News on 3/28/2015.
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SEL offers additional services for workers With new Family Center, SEL is one of few companies on Palouse to offer child and health care, workout facility
Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories' newly constructed facility is offering employees a mix of services that can't be found just anywhere on the Palouse.
With the construction of its 28,000-square-foot Family Center, SEL is providing its employees with on-site childcare services, a workout facility and healthcare services all in one.
The Family Center was a $4 million project and became operational this year.
The Little Edisons School handles all SEL's child-care services and claims the entire bottom floor of the two-story facility. LES has extended hours to accommodate both SEL's day- and swing-shift employees.
The school provides services for as many as 150 children and is operated by 26 full-time employees and five substitute teachers.
Michele Beehler, SEL's human resource manager, said parents will often walk over to the facility during lunch or dinner and eat with their children.
LES offers care for children of all ages, and while there are four different age classes at the school, all the children are taught similar subject matter so they can socialize and brainstorm topics together.
LES offers sign language, Spanish, music and physical education, as well as a few other courses.
The toddler and infant areas of the school feature small toilets with handles and miniature sinks in order to help potty-train the youngsters.
LES offers private rooms for mothers who are breastfeeding as well as rooms for children who are sick or waiting for a ride home.
Nichole Nicholson, the school's chef, said she makes 90 percent of all the school's meals from scratch. On top of that, Nicholson also prepares food for children with a number of different diets. Nicholson said some children she cooks for are vegetarian, have food allergies or require different dishes due to religious purposes.
Just like any other school, safety is one of the main concerns at LES.
To enter the building one has to use a biometric finger scanner, a device that measures the size and shape of a person's finger. Moreover, some major traffic exits are equipped with alarms to inform staff a child may have exited the building.
The LES playground is divided into two sections, one for toddlers and one for preschool-aged children and above. The entire playground is fenced-in.
Beehler said SEL employees who use the service aren't required to pay for diaper ointment, formula or an annual enrollment fee that is found at other child care centers.
For safety purposes, there are no stairs connecting the school to the Health Clinic and Well-Being Center on the second floor of the facility.
SEL's Health Clinic is a free service for employees. Beehler said the clinic has seven exam rooms and has already sent 300 referrals to physicians throughout the community in 2014. The clinic includes two nurse practitioners, two registered nurses, one medical assistant and one doctor of medicine, who will be starting at the clinic April 1. The upstairs health facilities opened in early March.
Stacey Doty, director of human resources at SEL, said the service can provide anything found at a regular clinic, excluding x-rays.
The SEL Well-Being Center is not only open to SEL employees but also for their families.
"We have over 75 spouses using the fitness facility," Beehler said.
Although SEL has had a workout room since 2010, the new space is much larger and can accommodate more people.
The Well-Being Center includes three wellness specialists, whom are all certified personal trainers and assist in physical and nutritional training.
These same trainers teach P.E. to the children downstairs at LES.

Beehler said other than the universities and hospitals, SEL is the only known company on the Palouse that offers on-site healthcare services, childcare services and a workout facility for its employees.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Country superstar Garth Brooks in Pullman memories



Country superstar Garth Brooks is performing five shows in Portland in April 2015.  This brings back memories of 1993 when Garth performed twice in Pullman.

His back-to-back sold out gigs were Saturday, Aug. 7, and Sunday, Aug. 8, 1993, in Beasley Performing Arts Coliseum at Washington State University. 

Garth’s shows were the largest events ever held at the coliseum, Jim Crow, then its director, to the Moscow Pullman Daily News. The shows set the building record for attendance (11,800 for the first concert and 11,400 for the second), gross sales, and were the first sellouts in coliseum's history.

This photo is of Garth posing with Pullman's National Lentil Festival mascot Tase T. Lentil, portrayed by George Sharp, then National Lentil Festival director and later to become Pullman Chamber of Commerce executive director. It was taken in a Coliseum room before the first Pullman performance.

As a promotional item, George had post cards made of the photo and asked people in Pullman and on the Palouse to mail post cards to family and friends inviting them to the 1994 National Lentil Festival. While the post card promotion was effective, it caused confusion since some recipients thought Garth was going to perform at the 1994 festival.

To clarify, Garth did not perform at the 1993 National Lentil Festival. He was in Pullman and performed at WSU in August 1993, but not as part of the festival.

George is now executive director of the Olympia Lacey Tumwater Visitor & Convention Bureau.

Thanks to Pullman :: Cup of the Palouse blog for this story and photo.